As we're just going to go round and round on who would do better in which situation, I'll focus instead on the practicalities of your solution:
WhiteBlue wrote:myurr wrote:That assumes the cars are formed up behind the safety car, something which is unlikely. Take Hamilton in Valencia - he pitted for a new nose and was out again without losing a place. How would you have dealt with that? The pack took another two laps to form up, so you would either have let him leave under the green light and keep his place or you would have held him under a red light for about 4 to 5 minutes until the pack was fully formed and he could rejoin at the back of the pack and two laps down. Which would it be?
If the pack isn't formed and a straggler joins somewhere in the middle he must fall back and let the the other cars pass to take his position. It is the same procedure when a car cannot hold the safety car pace due to a defect. Alternatively his team can help him exit the pits when he the tail goes by. It is not rally a problem. As pitting is generally prohibited there will be no or very little confusion. With a closed pit lane safety cars will be a very relaxed issue.
Taking the case of a safety car in the latter stages of a race:
On lap one when damaged cars are pitting the pack is spread round the entire lap. They are all going to pit and exit before the safety car has formed any kind of train and possibly before the safety car has even picked up the leader.
Lap two cars are starting to form up behind the safety car and are being released until the leader of the race is the lead car behind the SC.
Lap four all cars are now likely formed up behind the safety car.
1. At which point do you expect cars that had to pit for damage to be released from the pits? Lap 1, 2, 4?
2. If cars are simply released when they're able and then have to let other cars past until they're at the back of the pack:
a) who is responsible for policing the positions?
b) what happens with lapped cars? Do drivers form up in front of them or behind them? If behind do they drop a lap behind or are they effectively just behind them and about to lap them so that the back markers will be blue flagged at the restart?
c) what happens if / when cars are allowed to unlap themselves? Do they go to the back of the pack or do the cars that pitted have to drop behind them?
Taking another hypothetical situation, that has a solid basis in reality so isn't an edge case but is quite likely, can we look at the race in Turkey and specifically the incident between Vettel and Webber. I know we apportion blame differently but hopefully we can be objective about what should happen.
In this incident Webber was able to pit, replace his punctured wheel, and then carry on having lost only two places. Hypothetically speaking if a SC was required to clear Vettel's car or debris from the track do you think it right that Webber should have been dropped to the back of the grid rather than being able to carry on to a podium finish? If you do, do you believe that Webber would have continued to the end of the race or just retired and saved the engine and gearbox?
I doubt you will agree with the answers I would give to those points, but hopefully you can at least see why I have a big problem with your proposed solution and wish to carry on questioning it.