strad wrote:Many of these arguments are to allow a driver to over drive the car or out drive his talent and the whole idea to my thinking is to stop exactly that. To make them slow down more so they don't go off.
I don't want to see anyone hurt but I do want them to be forced to respect the track, their ability and the cars ability.
IF there is some accident involved, with todays super safe cars it would still be one they can walk away from but ruin their race. They would then quickly change their driving styles and tactics.
Watch Button at Monaco, Webbers off unabated head on into the barriers and a dozen others and realize it would take a very special set of circumstances for them to even sprain an ankle. Many act as though ANY accident would be fatal.
Not so in todays cars.
Racing doesn't need to be totally safe there should be some danger.
If you would go back a few pages to my quotes you'd see that the drivers themselves think it's too safe and want some of the thrill and danger returned.
You do have a point here, but recognize that as the speeds increase, so does the danger. I have refrained from making the following argument because I know most people would just find it heretical to the religion of F1. I present it here for the sake of conversation, but I am pretty sure the response won't be positive.
Leave walls in place, or even build new ones, but slow the cars down. I'll leave the question of how much slower up for debate, but consider the possibilities.
Smaller displacement engines can still be technologically wonderful. Imagine a lawn mower sized engine pushing a F1 car in excess of 150mph.
More mass with the requirement that most of the added mass be used to meet increased front, rear, lateral and offset front and rear impact standards.
This strategy will also have a couple of knock on effects that might be viewed as positive, if the views expressed in other topics are any indication.
As the speeds reduce so to will the effect of aero including the negative consequences of following. This is not to say that the cars will be bricks. Well financed teams will still strive to maximize aero efficiency, but the return on investment analysis will change.
As mass increases there would be an increased need for mechanical engineering solutions and driver ability. (Especially in light of the reduced aero)
Increased mass and need for driver ability would reduce the temptation to stick a driver in the cockpit just because he has big sponsorship money.