The reason no one has answered your TT safety question is probably because it is irrelevant to the thread, as I will explain shortly. But, to answer your TT question first: there are new safety measures that get implemented regularly in all motor sports, including the TT. For example, this year at the TT a debris fence was installed on Glencrutchery Road in front of the big scoreboards.
Well you might think you are being big and clever Nox, but you are not. And it doesn't matter if your fellow staff members agree or not. In my opinion you don't know what you are talking about. The safety measure you quoted was for the safety of the Boy scouts that do the score boards, not the racers. Many safety measures have been implemented for the safety of the marshalls and the spectators and that is a good thing. I asked what anyone could think of to make the riders safer. I think it is relevant, you don't. But it is because it could and will get out of hand. Many idiots over the years have tried to ban the TT or make silly and stupid idea's on how to improve safety.
But answer my question properly and keep in in context. The racer at the TT has experienced it all. Every time one of them dies the whole world and his dog writes to the media complaining about how stupid the TT is, how dangerous it is, when is it going to be banned etc etc etc. So this is relevant despite what you think. What if the TT organisers gave in to the incessant call to ban the TT just because the namby pamby's said so? Yes no TT, no real road racing, the end of an era.
How many F1 drivers have died in the recent years, say 2000 till now? How many? Compare that with how many people die choking on food or crossing the road or free climbing or water skiing. F1 is already a million times safer than it was 20 years ago and it is far safer than motorbike road racing. For gawd's sake knee jerk reactions need to stop.
The following sums it up for me and I think it applies to every racer.
Why?
That’s the question hanging over this race, which has always been the target for critics calling for it to be stopped. Just why would anyone want to take part in something where the chances of serious injury and death are so high, and the rewards – at least financially – are nothing like they would be in the slightly safer environment of something like MotoGP? And should they even be allowed to? A good place to find an answer is Rick Broadbent’s brilliant book on the TT, That Near-Death Thing. The title sums it up pretty well, a quote from competitor Guy Martin when dealing with this very question.
Martin, talking about a horrific crash he suffered at the TT from which he emerged battered but unbowed, went on: ‘The buzz from that was just unbeatable. That moment between crashing and almost dying. That’s raised the benchmark. I want to get back to that point. Money can’t buy it. Everything’s been so sanitised with bloody PC nonsense and health and safety that there’s nothing else is there? If it was dead safe I wouldn’t do it.’
Another viewpoint comes from Bridget Dobbs, whose husband Paul was killed at the TT in 2010. Dobbs, who returned to the TT a year later with her two children, told Broadbent the event had to continue.
‘People just have a way of getting on with life,’ she said. ‘Not everybody would choose to be a firefighter or an ambulance driver. Not everyone wants to see the nasty bits of life. We all buy our meat wrapped in plastic because we don’t like to think about the animal that died. Nobody likes the idea of killing a rabbit or a chicken, not even a butcher, but you just get on with it.
‘You don’t stop because you stop winning. You don’t stop because you have a scare and you don’t stop because you see someone else have a fatality. None of those things change the fact you love racing.’
http://metro.co.uk/2013/05/31/isle-of-man-tt-the-worlds-most-dangerous-sporting-event-3816587/
So in my defence, this is where I am coming from and it is relevant in any discussion regarding the major changes to a type of racing. F1 is dangerous, but not as dangerous as some motor sports and it should be left alone and not sanitised in my opinion. Racing is dangerous. So unless MotoGP, TT Road racing and speedway are getting enclosed motorcycles I don't see what the issue is. Nascar, rallycars, etc are enclosed and filled with all the best safety gear and yet people still die. That's racing.
Motorsport is dangerous. With closed cockpits, you could have accidents where the driver may suffer should the cockpit be jammed closed - if that happens, and a driver dies, then we will have another debate on whether or not we should get rid of closed cockpits.