Cockpit Safety

Here are our CFD links and discussions about aerodynamics, suspension, driver safety and tyres. Please stick to F1 on this forum.
kilcoo316
21
Joined: 09 Mar 2005, 16:45
Location: Kilcoo, Ireland

Re: Cockpit Safety

Post

In my opinion, you do not want anything above the driver's head*.


*if you do, a full hoop structure will be required, one which is tolerant of impacts from front, side and rear. For a composite structure, this is not easy due to the isotropic nature of the loadings.


A version of the old McLaren windscreen on steroids is a more practical option... however I am still of the opinion that the risk** associated with the problem is so low that pursuing a solution is nearly a waste of time.

Image


**understand the actual meaning of risk before ranting back at this.

axle
3
Joined: 22 Jun 2004, 14:45
Location: Norfolk, UK

Re: Cockpit Safety

Post

kilcoo316 wrote: however I am still of the opinion that the risk** associated with the problem is so low that pursuing a solution is nearly a waste of time.

**understand the actual meaning of risk before ranting back at this.
I do, and agree...the potential for a re-occurance is low.
- Axle

User avatar
ISLAMATRON
0
Joined: 01 Oct 2008, 18:29

Re: Cockpit Safety

Post

kilcoo316 wrote:In my opinion, you do not want anything above the driver's head*.


*if you do, a full hoop structure will be required, one which is tolerant of impacts from front, side and rear. For a composite structure, this is not easy due to the isotropic nature of the loadings.
The roll hoops now have to pass FIA standards, and is considered one of the strongest parts of the safety cell.

User avatar
machin
162
Joined: 25 Nov 2008, 14:45

Re: Cockpit Safety

Post

Even more reason why my concept for a futuristic F1 car posted afew weeks back would be a good idea.....

See here.... viewtopic.php?f=1&t=7023

and for those who missed it:-

Image

Nothing wrong with a bit of self-promotion!!!! :lol:
COMPETITION CAR ENGINEERING -Home of VIRTUAL STOPWATCH

User avatar
ISLAMATRON
0
Joined: 01 Oct 2008, 18:29

Re: Cockpit Safety

Post

was hoping you'd repost that... love it, except for hat shark fin

needs bigger wings for more advertising but leave em single plane.

axle
3
Joined: 22 Jun 2004, 14:45
Location: Norfolk, UK

Re: Cockpit Safety

Post

machin wrote:Even more reason why my concept for a futuristic F1 car posted afew weeks back would be a good idea.....

See here.... viewtopic.php?f=1&t=7023

and for those who missed it:-

Image

Nothing wrong with a bit of self-promotion!!!! :lol:
Can't wait to see someone burn to death inside it, by being trapped upside down or due to a faulty/damaged release system

But in all seriousness, humans NEED risk, take it away and people will get bored.
- Axle

User avatar
WhiteBlue
92
Joined: 14 Apr 2008, 20:58
Location: WhiteBlue Country
Contact:

Re: Cockpit Safety

Post

http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/85617?

Double wheel tethers are decided for 2011. Good move after a wheel almost hitting Glock on Sunday.
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)

User avatar
Giando
93
Joined: 10 Jan 2012, 17:56
Location: Milan (Italy)

Re: Scuderia Ferrari SF70H

Post

As an italian Ferrari supporter, what i really do not like about the SF70H is the roll-hoop area, from a safety point of view.

Maranello's designers have choosen after years of 'closed structures' to follow the path introduced by RedBull and other teams in 2009, with the front roll hoop somehow separated and visible from the outside...

It certainly passes the crash tests but to my eyes it seems so thin and fragile...

Also, the headrest is sooo low behind the helmet, and so the 'line' of the chassis connected to it, so there's space under the snorkel/air intake for blunt objects to go through there... also from behind.

Image

Funnily enough, RedBull abandoned this roll-hoop concept right this year with the new RB13.

On a side note, after what happened to poor Jules Bianchi, I would have liked the teams to work together on a bigger and safer structure in that part of the car, not that crappy Halo thing that doesn't block objects flying towards the helmet and makes harder for the driver to leave the car when upside-down. Instead, side head protections structures are every year more and more invisible, while they should have gone for a mandatory 1996-F310-like solution, imho.

May I ask your opinion think on this?

mattia.bobbo
2
Joined: 06 Feb 2015, 09:36

Re: Scuderia Ferrari SF70H

Post

oh, Jules Bianchi again, no please.. He died due to the extreme acceleration his body could not withstand. No halo or roll hoop could have saved him.

to your eyes seem fragile, but if it passes crash test, it's not fragile and in the correct place. Which object can pass through the roll hoop and the head rest? it's very hard foreseeing an object coming from that side..

User avatar
Giando
93
Joined: 10 Jan 2012, 17:56
Location: Milan (Italy)

Re: Scuderia Ferrari SF70H

Post

mattia.bobbo wrote:oh, Jules Bianchi again, no please.. He died due to the extreme acceleration his body could not withstand. No halo or roll hoop could have saved him.

to your eyes seem fragile, but if it passes crash test, it's not fragile and in the correct place. Which object can pass through the roll hoop and the head rest? it's very hard foreseeing an object coming from that side..
Hi, i think you didn't read properly my - supposedly kind, btw - post.

The Jules Bianchi part was a side note, as clearly written.

As for the core point: i think that a suspension arm could easily go through the space below the air intake.
Competition cars accidents dynamics could be very surprising and unpredictable, and sadly we have had proof of this many times.

So i think the point I made out about the SF70H is still valid. Glad they had gone for a more 'extreme' design in many areas, nonetheless i am concerned with safety in that particular zone of the car.

User avatar
Callum
6
Joined: 18 Jan 2009, 15:03
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland

Re: Scuderia Ferrari SF70H

Post

Giando wrote:As an italian Ferrari supporter, what i really do not like about the SF70H is the roll-hoop area, from a safety point of view.

Maranello's designers have choosen after years of 'closed structures' to follow the path introduced by RedBull and other teams in 2009, with the front roll hoop somehow separated and visible from the outside...

It certainly passes the crash tests but to my eyes it seems so thin and fragile...

Also, the headrest is sooo low behind the helmet, and so the 'line' of the chassis connected to it, so there's space under the snorkel/air intake for blunt objects to go through there... also from behind.



Funnily enough, RedBull abandoned this roll-hoop concept right this year with the new RB13.

On a side note, after what happened to poor Jules Bianchi, I would have liked the teams to work together on a bigger and safer structure in that part of the car, not that crappy Halo thing that doesn't block objects flying towards the helmet and makes harder for the driver to leave the car when upside-down. Instead, side head protections structures are every year more and more invisible, while they should have gone for a mandatory 1996-F310-like solution, imho.

May I ask your opinion think on this?
Giando,

I suspect that a lot of the strength is hidden here and is in the roll hoop structure. I'm sure that the struts pictured will help the strength but are possibly also there for flow conditioning.

roon
412
Joined: 17 Dec 2016, 19:04

Re: Scuderia Ferrari SF70H

Post

Callum wrote:
Giando wrote:As an italian Ferrari supporter, what i really do not like about the SF70H is the roll-hoop area, from a safety point of view.

Maranello's designers have choosen after years of 'closed structures' to follow the path introduced by RedBull and other teams in 2009, with the front roll hoop somehow separated and visible from the outside...

It certainly passes the crash tests but to my eyes it seems so thin and fragile...

Also, the headrest is sooo low behind the helmet, and so the 'line' of the chassis connected to it, so there's space under the snorkel/air intake for blunt objects to go through there... also from behind.



Funnily enough, RedBull abandoned this roll-hoop concept right this year with the new RB13.

On a side note, after what happened to poor Jules Bianchi, I would have liked the teams to work together on a bigger and safer structure in that part of the car, not that crappy Halo thing that doesn't block objects flying towards the helmet and makes harder for the driver to leave the car when upside-down. Instead, side head protections structures are every year more and more invisible, while they should have gone for a mandatory 1996-F310-like solution, imho.

May I ask your opinion think on this?
Giando,

I suspect that a lot of the strength is hidden here and is in the roll hoop structure. I'm sure that the struts pictured will help the strength but are possibly also there for flow conditioning.
Primarily they are there to provide the mandated pass-through for a lifting strap.

wuzak
444
Joined: 30 Aug 2011, 03:26

Re: Scuderia Ferrari SF70H

Post

Giando wrote:Maranello's designers have choosen after years of 'closed structures' to follow the path introduced by RedBull and other teams in 2009, with the front roll hoop somehow separated and visible from the outside...

It certainly passes the crash tests but to my eyes it seems so thin and fragile...
http://i65.tinypic.com/v5ip9z.jpg
The strap you identify is not, IMO, the roll-over structure.

You cannot see the roll-over structure at all, since it is enclosed within the bodywork.

User avatar
TEHNOS
8
Joined: 03 Nov 2011, 19:02

Re: Scuderia Ferrari SF70H

Post

Image

Image

User avatar
Giando
93
Joined: 10 Jan 2012, 17:56
Location: Milan (Italy)

Re: Scuderia Ferrari SF70H

Post

Thank you Callum, Roon, Wuzak and TEHNOS for your kind answers.

So those two external supports have no structural purpose at all but to allow the car to be lift up by the marshals.

That said, the distance between the helmet and the 'real' hidden roll-hoop seems to be quite big in side view, then (not just on the Ferrari of course) while i think it may be better to have the highest point of the roll-hoop vertically aligned right where the headrest connects to the chassis. But this is maybe a more general subject to be discussed into a specific thread.