Please discuss here all your remarks and pose your questions about all racing series, except Formula One. Both technical and other questions about GP2, Touring cars, IRL, LMS, ...
myurr wrote:
Think more burned alive. If the car is upside down and resting on the canopy then how are you going to get it off? If the release system is damaged in the crash, again how are you going to remove it? What about smoke in the cockpit incapacitating a driver? How would a canopy even react to the catch fencing? Would it have helped in Wheldon's case or would it have been destroyed or ripped from its mounts?
Maybe canopies are the answer but it is not clear cut by any means.
When was the last time there was a crash fire in f1?
I thought FIA has done good enough a job that there are no more crash fires.
When was the last time a driver was killed in F1? Just because something hasn't happened for a while doesn't mean you can get complacent against it.
There have been smoke and fires in F1 more recently - e.g. Kimi with smoke in the Ferrari from KERS, and Heidfeld twice this year with fires in the Renault.
Not saying that it will not happen, but saying that that has been considered, evaluated and adequate precaution has been taken to contain a fuel spill. For a closed cockpit more precaution can be taken in making the system leak proof and using materials for construction that are non-inflammable
In case a car is upside down, even in the current design of a cockpit, adequate space is not available for the driver to crawl out on his own. Hence a driver getting trapped while upside down is a common problem for a open and closed cockpit. As in the picture below, it depends the final resting position of the car to get out.
Best way of improving fire safety is to have the quickest reaction by the track marshals to contain the fire as soon as possible and prevent situations like Nike Heifield's in Hungary.
Here's a great piece by Gordon Kirby, just shows how f**ked up IMS and Dallarra is
The Way It Is/ An opportunity lost?
by Gordon Kirby
Last week I discussed the problems with racing Indy cars on high-banked ovals with Bruce Ashmore. At the end of last week's column Ashmore said he believes IndyCar has made only minor incremental changes both in terms of crash safety and eliminating safety problems with the dreaded 'pack racing'. This week we explore more of Ashmore's analysis of the new Dallara and discuss what the correct formula should be for Indy cars.
First of all, most fans and all the drivers, past and present, want to see more power. The fans want the drivers to lift for the corners, use the brakes, then get back on the power and drive their cars, using their advantage in every area to cleanly execute a pass rather than droning around in packs straining for lap after lap to gain the tiniest advantage. Using the brakes and throttle to best effect is what automobile racing was all about for most of a century until NASCAR invented restrictor plate racing and the IRL followed suit with its squalid little formula.
Personally, I think the classic CART car with tiny speedway wings was as elegant an Indy car as there's ever been. It worked well and put on a good show on all types of tracks with plenty of power--900 and upwards of 1,000 horsepower--to be able to pass and race back and forth. It was necessary to get out of the throttle for the corners and possibly use the brakes, then judiciously get back on the power. Ashmore believes the 2012 Dallara-Honda/Chevy/Lotus combination is only a small step in the direction of the old CART formula and falls far short of the objective.
"They're trying to go somewhere else to create what was there before," Ashmore remarks. "Well, that's not right. Go back to what was there before. I'm sure you can attain what was there before if you go back to that formula. There was nothing wrong with it. So just re-run it."
Ashmore has no doubts the power needs to be substantially increased.
"You never hear the drivers talk today about how hard the cars are to drive. When I came into CART in the eighties every weekend was a struggle about how to keep the tires under the driver. You worked on that all the time trying to get the car through the whole race. But now everything is the same through the whole race. Everyone goes 'round and 'round at exactly the same speed with no change. They're not being strained. They're too easy to drive. And nobody can pass."
It's true not only on oval tracks but also at road courses like Mid-Ohio and Infineon Raceway where passing is equally impossible and a procession ensues looking more like Indy Lights or GP2 cars than full-blooded Indy cars. Given that the new formula is likely to retain the same characteristics as the old one the new Dallara's bodywork has been designed to attempt to reduce the chance of wheels interlocking and cars flying. The idea was a key component in Ashmore's BAT design and he believes the new Dallara doesn't go far enough in this regard.
"I've wanted to stop wheels interlocking and tread to tread contact for some time," Ashmore comments. "I worked on it and discussed it in the CART days and then in the IRL. When you're cornering at the maximum of the vehicle's grip as soon as the tires touch each other tread to tread one car lifts off the road and it goes sideways and then the crash happens.
"They think they've made some steps on that but they've still designed a car with a flimsy front wing, a flimsy piece of bodywork around the front wheels and no bodywork behind the rear of the front tire. The front tire is still exposed so you can still have a tread to tread or interlocking wheel accident which is what starts the flying accident. And that will still happen with the new car. They think they've solved it because that was in their mandate. But if you look at what they've designed the bodywork is not strong enough to stop the start of the accident."
Ashmore also believes not enough attention has been paid to the driver's seating position.
"I think the drivers need to sit more upright so they don't crush the driver's spine when they crash," he suggests. "I don't believe the seat is that much different in the new Dallara. They've made a change but it's only a small step. It's not a big enough change. We knew that the CART car had a problem and we needed to sit the driver in a more upright position.
"I know from the study I made to design our BAT car that the car you needed to make would not fit into an Indy car transporter. You need a more upright seating position and another four or five inches above the driver's head for the roll hoop and it's too tall to go into an Indy car transporter. It would have to go in a NASCAR transporter. But they specified the car had to fit in the current IndyCar transporter because the teams couldn't afford scrapping or modifying all their transporters.
Ashmore has a bleak view of the process that took place in last year's contest for IndyCar's 2012 car. He believes each of the contestants was used unethically by IndyCar and Dallara to produce the new car.
"In my view the way they went about it was quite dishonest. All of us competing car builders had to sign our ideas away. All our ideas went into a pot and we had to sign a document saying that if we didn't win the contract they kept our ideas.
"That's one thing, but the sad part is they awarded the contract to a racing car building company in Italy who are just building another in a range of racing cars. It's a lot like their other cars and they're not using all the ideas that we put forward. They're only scratching the surface and, as I say, making a five percent step. They completely ignored a lot of what we suggested. They've just done what they felt like.
"All of our ideas and Lola's ideas and Swift's and the Delta Wing group's ideas went in and they took our ideas to make this new car. But they only took a small portion of them so that they've only made a five percent step. So what's the point?"
Ashmore remains dismayed and deeply disappointed with the way the Iconic committee's decision unfolded.
"I put my heart and soul into the design of a car that I believe they wanted to win the bid. I designed what I thought should have been the next Indy car and it could have been used as a rule book or it could have been used as a spec car. I offered it both ways. It would have been a spec car built in Indianapolis with Indianapolis companies and suppliers. Or it could have been used as a rule book.
"We lost the bid because the winner put in a business plan, not a plan for the car. It was a building on Main Street in Speedway and a business plan for the build and supply of all the cars but nothing for the design of the car. The rest of us believed we were putting in a plan for the design of a car and that the winner would be the best design.
Ashmore also believes IndyCar has set Dallara up for some difficult if not impossible budget-balancing.
"They've been stuck to a budget," he says. "They've been told what price to sell the car for. People don't understand that when you dictate that you've got to have this carbon fiber chassis and carbon fiber wings and a lighter aluminum gearbox. They've dictated a lot of the more expensive items in the manufacturing but they've also dictated the sales price too. It's ridiculous.
"If you really want to have a cheaper price and better product then let the rules be open about the materials. Maybe you would use a lot more steel fabrication and the weight would go up but it would be cheaper. I believe the weight they set was unrealistically light and the materials are unrealistically expensive, so they have to compromise."
Ashmore is equally sure that IndyCar's 2012 engine rules are too restrictive.
"If you look at the rules that they've saddled Chevy, Honda and Lotus with, they're going to build the same thing. Okay, there will be three different badges on three different engines but the rules are so tight that you can't make anything really different."
Nor is he aware of much if any activity in the Dallara project from the American or Indianapolis racing industry's component manufacturers and suppliers.
"The cars are being built in Italy and the gearboxes (Xtrac) are being built in England," Ashmore says. "I don't know anybody in America who's making components for that car which is very sad because IndyCar seem to have conned the government officials in Indianapolis along with the Indiana tax payers who ultimately are footing the bill for the grants to the team owners to subsidize the purchase of this new car, a car that was supposed to have had its components made in America."
"You need to have a rulebook with a few simple rules," he says. "You've got to come up with something that reduces the downforce. The price will take care of itself because as soon as you've got competition in the pitlane one guy will figure out how to make a cheaper car and will outsell the other guy. That's what happened before in the CART days and that's what they need to do again. You need to have multiple chassis builders and multiple engine builders and you need to not run them on the tracks we know they don't work on."
Ashmore is a big believer in IndyCar returning to America's great road courses and developing a schedule of races much like CART enjoyed at its height.
"They need to go back to nice venues like Laguna Seca and Elkhart Lake," he comments. "The reason I thought CART worked so well was it had a very good mix of venues. The teams were owned by wealthy car owners and they wanted to go to nice places and they would bring along their friends who would bring along sponsors. So as the cost went up the sponsorship went up but there were nice places to go to. I thought it was really clever.
"We went to Canada in Toronto and Vancouver and then when we went outside North America we went to Surfers Paradise in Australia. All of them were really nice places and attractive to sponsors. Almost every race was a nice race to go to. There were a few odd ones like the Michigan 500 but they thought they ought to race there because it was near Detroit.
"It was fun and it worked, but you go in the paddock today and everyone is miserable. They don't have any sponsorship and they don't enjoy the cars or venues. They don't know why they're doing it."
Ashmore reflected on how CART's many managers and marketing men told the teams and the car and engine builders through the organization's hedays that the fans turned out only to see the drivers. There was little or no appeal in the cars or engines claimed those many geniuses who helped drive CART into the ground.
"When it was 1,000 horsepower and four engine companies were going at it and you had all the combinations of three different chassis and four engines we were always told that wasn't what the fans came to see," Ashmore recalls. "We were told they came to see the star drivers and we always wondered how true that was. We used to ask let's see what happens when everybody is driving the same equipment. Let's see how many fans you've got. I guess we have the answer to that today don't we?"
We've witnessed a sad, inexorably silly and lethal story over the past fifteen years. The lack of leadership, technically and otherwise, has been stunning. And so it continues.
Auto Racing ~ Gordon Kirby
Copyright 2011 ~ All Rights Reserved
A report said the pole "intruded in the cockpit and made contact with the driver's helmet and head".
IndyCar chief executive Randy Bernard said: "Several factors coincided to produce a perfect storm."
Bernard added: "It is impossible to determine with certainty that the result would have been any different if one or more of the factors did not exist."
......
But officials say the starting field of 34 cars was "deemed to be acceptable" and that the accident could have occurred with "any size starting field at any track".
They took two months to find that Wheldon's head collided with a fence pole. That is very cynical. Obviously they just wanted the thing to cool down and vanish in the off season before xmas.
The bolded quotes are such a load of bullshit that they almost make me puke. The accident was predicted by many experienced racing professionals including Jacques Villeneuve who turned the proposal down due to the unacceptable risk. Every F1 race on a proper homologated F1 circuit with the right number of cars and the right track length would have avoided the accident. Those organizers should be tried for man slaughter in my view.
Formula One's fundamental ethos is about success coming to those with the most ingenious engineering and best ..............................organization, not to those with the biggest budget. (Dave Richards)
WhiteBlue wrote:They took two months to find that Wheldon's head collided with a fence pole. That is very cynical. Obviously they just wanted the thing to cool down and vanish in the off season before xmas.
The bolded quotes are such a load of bullshit that they almost make me puke. The accident was predicted by many experienced racing professionals including Jacques Villeneuve who turned the proposal down due to the unacceptable risk. Every F1 race on a proper homologated F1 circuit with the right number of cars and the right track length would have avoided the accident. Those organizers should be tried for man slaughter in my view.
You would be right except for the fact his car was NOT the only one to get into the fence in that crash and NOT the only car to get into a fence before. It was a perfect storm. His car hit the fence cockpit first. That's what happened. How many times has one of those cars hit the fence and the guy/girl driving it hopped out and was talking to the media in perfect health 15 minutes later? It was bound to happen and it finally did, the amount of cars or the type of track is irrelevant. Like the officials said in the report, it was chance, and it finally happened. Manslaughter isn't really applicable because drivers know and accept the risk on a personal, professional and legal level. The poles should have been on the other side of the fence, but it's happened many times before at tracks that are just as fast with just as many cars on it. You're grasping at straws here. Those drivers agreed to get in their cars and race, that makes them responsible for what happens as well as the officials directing the race. I suppose everyone involved in hosting the race, building the cars, Jack Clarke, and the marshals involved at Brands Hatch when Henry Surtees was killed should be tried on manslaughter charges as well?
The data they sifted through was vast and I'd bet 50 bucks you didn't read a single word of that technical finding before you commented on it's contents. Not only were they finding out the causes and timing of the events, they found areas of data collection and driver data collection points where they can improve upon. Had you read the entire document, or even part of it, you'd know that in the course of the investigation they realized that the earplugs the drivers use has a cord that can be made too short and will unplug with sufficient impact on the car and it won't record the G forces the drivers head went through. That seems like a valuable part of the process and part of the reason it took them this long to collect the data, analyze it and compile a report on exactly what happened and what can be improved upon. Go read the actual document, it's completely free to read and you just might learn why it took them that long and the circumstances around what happened in that crash.
I'm all for having more power and seeing good racing, but making a racecar hard to drive with 1,000 horsepower is an EXTREMELY stupid idea. Advocating making it not only harder to maintain grip and having way more horsepower than the car can put to the ground is asking for the slightest error to throw them headlong into a fence. What a completely stupid stance to take.
EDIT: Also, much of that was a guy bellyaching about his design not being picked. I guess he's forgotten that the economy is tight and not many teams can afford huge R&D budgets to design cars with whatever materials they want. He also forgets that racing at "NASCAR tracks" means they don't have to build their own. If that idiot is more than willing to drop a couple hundred million dollars (of his own money) on each of a few tracks for them to exclusively race on, I'm sure IndyCar would be happy to watch him piss his money away. What is going through that mans head is a mystery. Where does he think all this money for individual teams to design and research materials to build race cars with, and have tracks that aren't "NASCAR tracks" is going to come from? Cows? Rainbows? Frosted Flakes boxes? Has he forgotten that the worlds economy has almost imploded completely at least three times in the past 20 years? That guy is a grade A moron looking to pick a bone with a series that he lost a design competition to and for all the wrong reasons.
I've read most of the report. With the exception of the funny looking rear brake pressure of Wheldon's car, there are no surprises.
WhiteBlue wrote: Every F1 race on a proper homologated F1 circuit with the right number of cars and the right track length would have avoided the accident. Those organizers should be tried for man slaughter in my view.
WB, I would agree that more cars in a pack increases the likelyhood of an accident like this, but the only way to sove the problem would be to have races with one car. Webber crash in Valencia could have had the same results had the car gone cockpit first and that was in a pack of only 2 cars. Where do you draw the line?
To me the logical progression (after the introduction of safer barriers etc)is to start looking at improving the catch fencing. It is something that will have no detrimental effect on the cars or the racing and will undoutedly save lives in the future.
If someone could come up with a catch fencing which is also possible to properly see through, it would massively improve the show for the spectators.
A report said the pole "intruded in the cockpit and made contact with the driver's helmet and head".
IndyCar chief executive Randy Bernard said: "Several factors coincided to produce a perfect storm."
Bernard added: "It is impossible to determine with certainty that the result would have been any different if one or more of the factors did not exist."
......
But officials say the starting field of 34 cars was "deemed to be acceptable" and that the accident could have occurred with "any size starting field at any track".
They took two months to find that Wheldon's head collided with a fence pole. That is very cynical. Obviously they just wanted the thing to cool down and vanish in the off season before xmas.
The bolded quotes are such a load of bullshit that they almost make me puke. The accident was predicted by many experienced racing professionals including Jacques Villeneuve who turned the proposal down due to the unacceptable risk. Every F1 race on a proper homologated F1 circuit with the right number of cars and the right track length would have avoided the accident. Those organizers should be tried for man slaughter in my view.
whitewashed coverup, shut the league down, bunch of morons
I'm all for having more power and seeing good racing, but making a racecar hard to drive with 1,000 horsepower is an EXTREMELY stupid idea. Advocating making it not only harder to maintain grip and having way more horsepower than the car can put to the ground is asking for the slightest error to throw them headlong into a fence. What a completely stupid stance to take.
EDIT: Also, much of that was a guy bellyaching about his design not being picked. I guess he's forgotten that the economy is tight and not many teams can afford huge R&D budgets to design cars with whatever materials they want. He also forgets that racing at "NASCAR tracks" means they don't have to build their own. If that idiot is more than willing to drop a couple hundred million dollars (of his own money) on each of a few tracks for them to exclusively race on, I'm sure IndyCar would be happy to watch him piss his money away. What is going through that mans head is a mystery. Where does he think all this money for individual teams to design and research materials to build race cars with, and have tracks that aren't "NASCAR tracks" is going to come from? Cows? Rainbows? Frosted Flakes boxes? Has he forgotten that the worlds economy has almost imploded completely at least three times in the past 20 years? That guy is a grade A moron looking to pick a bone with a series that he lost a design competition to and for all the wrong reasons.
xorry , but ASmore credentials are pretty solid, working for lola, Reynard F1, Dallara got the contract becausee they would build a office in Indy, paid for by the taxpayers, so now they are stuck with a pile of a supercrapwagon, , IMS record dealing with vendors sucks,
cossie wrote:
xorry , but ASmore credentials are pretty solid, working for lola, Reynard F1, Dallara got the contract becausee they would build a office in Indy, paid for by the taxpayers, so now they are stuck with a pile of a supercrapwagon, , IMS record dealing with vendors sucks,
My point still stands. The Dallara contract may be political in nature, and I don't know enough of that backstory to refute his claims, but that man is nuts if he thinks that IndyCar as a series can afford to have tracks it calls its own, and the teams don't have the money or the sponsorship to go nuts developing their own cars with their own materials. I don't know where you're from but even the cash cow that is NASCAR has had a very hard time with its participants getting sponsors here. Viewership and attendance have been on the decline for years in that series. IndyCar has nothing like the following that NASCAR does and they are struggling like crazy to get exposure. Shooting off at the mouth saying IndyCar teams should be spending an assload of money on their own designs or looking down their nose at racing on "NASCAR tracks" smacks of ignorance of the economic climate in the US or being butthurt about not getting your way. IndyCar is struggling and it's not because the teams don't develop their own cars or because they are racing on what that man considers inferior tracks that don't meet the requirements they like. Adapt or die. That man is talking out his ass, I don't care what he has framed on his wall as far as credentials go.
Never read this much bullshit! Please, stop the wanking, please! If you bunch up 30 or 40 open wheel single seaters on a short oval with banking and no run offs the mathematical probability of having a fatal accident is almost certain. If you spice up the gladiatorial spectacle by a $5m trophy for a guy who rolls up the field under such circumstances from behind you simply exercise a money for blood scheme like Nero did in Rome. Criminals in my view.
Formula One's fundamental ethos is about success coming to those with the most ingenious engineering and best ..............................organization, not to those with the biggest budget. (Dave Richards)