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This is the discussion thread for a recent post on GTPlanet:
This article was published by Michael Leary (@Terronium-12) on February 10th, 2018 in the Formula One category.
Well that title isn't incredibly biased...
It's amazing to hear the venom spat at the F1 halos, and yet in Indycar, they just got finished testing their deflectors at the Phoenix test, and most of the response, both from fan and drivers, is positive.
https://www.gtplanet.net/forum/threads/please-read-general-motorsports-forum-rules.349092/To be brutally honest, i really hope that in the first race of the season, there is a crash where a wheel or something bounces off the halo and saves a driver's life, so everyone can shut up about "ooh, the halo is disgusting, get it off *cry* *cry* *cry*".
First, the basics:
Do not wish any harm, injury or incident upon any driver
The moderating staff understand that people have their favourites in motorsport, and that they might therefore wish the rivals of their favourites to undergo misfortune. Fair enough, but if we see any crash or physical harm being wished upon any participant in any form of motorsport, then we shall immediately issue an AUP violation infraction.
I am clearly not wishing harm upon anyone. I'm hoping the halo stops them getting harmed.
Did I say anything about harm? You literally just wished for a crash, which is against this sub-forum's rules. Re-read the underlined sections again.I am clearly not wishing harm upon anyone. I'm hoping the halo stops them getting harmed.
I dont know why they don't just have closed cockpits at this point
Because it doesn't look terrible by any chance?
What I'm trying to say is that the sooner the halo proves itself, the better. It is surrounded by people looking at the what, not the why, and therefore discussions about it degenerate into useless insult matches as soon as it is mentioned. When the halo proves itself, this will all stop and everyone will finally shut up about it.Did I say anything about harm? You literally just wished for a crash, which is against this sub-forum's rules. Re-read the underlined sections again.
This has been part of this sub-forum's rules for a decade, and didn't change with the "recent" (18-month old) update.
How long have F1 been active? How much more data and time do they need to develop this? I'm sure it's been brought up for many years.Takes time to develop, without side doors extraction is a serious problem for single seaters
I think f1 has lost the plot. I won’t be buying f1 2018 this year and I haven’t watched a proper f1 race for ages now. 70s to early 2000 was the best then lost interest. Don’t care for it this year at all.
What I'm trying to say is that the sooner the halo proves itself, the better. It is surrounded by people looking at the what, not the why, and therefore discussions about it degenerate into useless insult matches as soon as it is mentioned. When the halo proves itself, this will all stop and everyone will finally shut up about it.
If I'm not allowed to defend the halo because it's against the AUP, then the AUP needs tweaking.
What is the halo doing apart from stopping injury in a crash. When else does it work?"Your rules don't work for me; change them."
If you can't defend the halo without wishing for a crash, you're — possibly intentionally — missing the point.
What is the halo doing apart from stopping injury in a crash. When else does it work?
It would seem though that a lot of fans don't think this way, and it will take the halo being proven for them to change their opinion.The car my girlfriend and I regularly drive has a raft of safety features. I could talk about them at length, and how they could minimize injury if a crash happens. That's quite a bit different from saying "I hope my girlfriend gets in a crash to show how safe the car is."
I don't know how to simplify that any further.
It would probably have worked for Massa in Hungary when Barrichello's rear suspension springWhat is the halo doing apart from stopping injury in a crash. When else does it work?
What is the halo doing apart from stopping injury in a crash. When else does it work?
It would probably have worked for Massa in Hungary when Barrichello's rear suspension spring came flying toward him, and there would probably have been no crash to speak of.
Not to be silly, but wouldn't Massa's car be totally different from this one? Even his seating position in that instance?Actually, in that particular incident, no it would not have.
I won't post a video here, but if you go find the footage from the T-camera, you'll see that the suspension spring doesn't travel down the centre line of the car, but to the left of it, so the halo's front central support wouldn't have stopped it.
Also, the angle of the hoop means that it wouldn't have stopped the spring either. The point of contact with Massa's helmet was just above his eye brow, but well below where the hoop would be. Using the photo below as a reference, it would've struck where the Hublot branding is.
So against larger objects like tyres for example, yes, the halo does its job. But anything smaller than the gap between the hoop and the chassis will get through.
Not to be silly, but wouldn't Massa's car be totally different from this one? Even his seating position in that instance?