The only thing that would save Jules was race officials who are not greedy and know what is logical thinking.The only thing that would've saved Jules would have been to go slower. He was going to fast for the conditions.
The only thing that would save Jules was race officials who are not greedy and know what is logical thinking.The only thing that would've saved Jules would have been to go slower. He was going to fast for the conditions.
Btw: where were the Marshalls ? Panic all over the place and none of them seemed to actually know what to do. Reaction time was massively slow during all 'interventions', not only in Hulks case. All of their actions were not coordinated at all... Really bad imo.
No. You consistently claim more victories for the Halo than it is entitled to, discredit the Shield when it was shelved before it had a chance to be thoroughly tested, and seem to think that anyone who questions this line of logic is an idiot. I'd like to add you to my ignore list like I did on GT Planet to make sure I never talk to you again, but you're a staff member. So I have to settle for the disagree button.Oh, and by the way, Propaganda is biased and twisted information for the benefit of the writer. What I wrote is factual, unbiased and proven.
I agree on most, and I do know what I'm saying.Marshalls are volunteers who sometimes put their lives on the line in order to make the races happen. (A marshall died at the Canadian GP not too long ago. Another one died in Australia when he was struck by Jacques Villeneuve's car.) So they may have been a little slow in your opinion, but the fact is, there is every reason to think that they already knew that Hulkenberg was ok and so time was not a big concern. The only way to have a "perfect" crew of marshalls would be to have a permanent, fully-paid crew that goes to every race. That would probably way too expensive.
I agree on most, and I do know what I'm saying.
In every case where the marshalls had to react during this particular race, they were (way) too slow and undecided, as if they had no clue how to react. For that you need training and experience, volunteer or not. There should be automatisms. That was not the case and (most of) these guys were clearly not ready for the task.
If you get the chance, watch the incidents closely, focusing on them and you'll see.
I'd gladly take that jobThe only way to have a "perfect" crew of marshalls would be to have a permanent, fully-paid crew that goes to every race. That would probably way too expensive.
It DEFINITELY hinders leaving the car. That is without question. Whether it would've killed him or not, is debatable. I suspect in a panic situation, and you could hear a bit of panic in his voice, it could be the difference between life and death.Halo isn't perfect, but it is better than nothing. In this case it MAY have hindered his leaving the car.
At this point, we don't really know for sure.
Maybe it was his body weight against the harness keeping him from escaping.
We do know the lack of halo has been at the core of driver deaths...Justin Wilson comes to mind.
That's a LOT of crap, and I mean, a lot. I was going to reply something more elaborated, but below sums up what I was going to write.I still think the introduction of the halo was a knee-jerk reaction to an accident caused by one driver failing to stick to the rules (i.e. Bianchi not slowing down sufficiently under double yellow flags).
Absolutely. One of the changes for the following year was to make the Asian and Australian races start earlier. If Bianchi's crash was 100% his fault, why the need to start the races earlier ?The FIA absolutely had blood on their hands after the Bianchi crash, so they had to put the blame onto Bianchi rather than themselves. The decision to have a tractor on a live race circuit was what killed Bianchi, not the fact he was going “too fast”. He was a racing driver, it was his job to push the car to the edge, even in the yellow flag zones, in fact backing off might cause that to get worse as you have less downforce and would likely aquaplane more.
The FIA, bowing to “commercial pressures” to keep the racing running on time (and not dispatch a safety car) is what killed Bianchi.
There can be a locking pin external to the body work that a marshal can pull. There is one that cuts of electricity or the engine. right near the fuel tank.best avaible between only two tested solution sadly... FIA doesn't even care about Scalabroni's Active Windscreen (wich have, unfortunately only on paper, a saefty sleeve pin wich can be released by pilot inside or marshall outside), they always want Halo and they do it so...
Anyway this was an edgy situation where Halo should have a button that made possible the release of the structure, wich i was thinking was implemented since beginning and not made it attached to the car.
Extraction is down to Marshals and the Medical team. If he had been in a coma or injured there would have to be a alternate procedure. But he was ok and that is important.The way the car landed it hindered the extraction of the driver since it came to rest upside down, I would have a rethink of the design of the halo to make sure if the car is upside down the driver is able to get out, also if that fire had got hold how would the driver have gotten out, so I would consider it a double edged sword in this case, it saved his life, yes BUT it also hindered the extraction since the car needed to be rolled over but again to get the Hulk out of there....
There would be advantages and disadvantages. The local crew would have years of experience with their own track, they'd know the whole facility like the back of their hand, even little things like which entrance gets flooded during heavy rain could be invaluable.The only way to have a "perfect" crew of marshalls would be to have a permanent, fully-paid crew that goes to every race. That would probably way too expensive.
Still don't understand that the did not started with the halo intruducing it in lower formula classes.
Seen more accidents there where it could have made a difference than in F1 actually.
For Sophia Flörsch it might have saved her from neck-injury.