Puddles on track limits
Puddles on track limits
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Teddy Lop

Original Poster:

8,301 posts

89 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
quotequote all
With all the drama on track limits, why not just have a strip of water at the limit?

1 inch at its deepest, 12 inches wide. (Or whatever is considered or god forbid tested to be eough to punish a little bit, while allowing the driver to recover)

driver slides wide, gets tyres cooled a little bit, or has to go off but recovers on tarmac runoff. Solves the grass/gravel/tarmac fight/compromise between differing motorsports as you can simply drain/fill to suit

Tell me why this isn't the greatest idea since elimination qualifying.

TheDeuce

30,857 posts

88 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
quotequote all
Teddy Lop said:
With all the drama on track limits, why not just have a strip of water at the limit?

1 inch at its deepest, 12 inches wide. (Or whatever is considered or god forbid tested to be eough to punish a little bit, while allowing the driver to recover)

driver slides wide, gets tyres cooled a little bit, or has to go off but recovers on tarmac runoff. Solves the grass/gravel/tarmac fight/compromise between differing motorsports as you can simply drain/fill to suit

Tell me why this isn't the greatest idea since elimination qualifying.
The logistic of keeping each one topped up would be quite complex, especially those on corners through a change in elevation. Then each would have to be re-filled each time a tyre went through, as the water would be almost entirely displaced. Lastly, it could be described as a little unfair for the next guy to come through, balls to the wall on a warm and sunny day only to discover the corner has just been sprayed with water because the last guy cut a corner.

How about spikes? Or just... nothing at all - a sheer drop of a couple of feet.

Teddy Lop

Original Poster:

8,301 posts

89 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
quotequote all
TheDeuce said:
The logistic of keeping each one topped up would be quite complex, especially those on corners through a change in elevation. Then each would have to be re-filled each time a tyre went through, as the water would be almost entirely displaced. Lastly, it could be described as a little unfair for the next guy to come through, balls to the wall on a warm and sunny day only to discover the corner has just been sprayed with water because the last guy cut a corner.

How about spikes? Or just... nothing at all - a sheer drop of a couple of feet.
its generally no more than one or two corners per circuit that cause an issue, few that have elevation issues. Topping up could be as simple as an underground pipe controlled by nearest marshals where they can pump or suck water to adjust and repelish on the fly. Before you ask the puddle would be designed with overflow accounted for so an errant Marshall can't flood the track;)

Would dragging water on circuit be an issue? I'm not envisaging that much water, what there is may be boiled off quickly by the hot tyres, and most drivers would find themselves have to turn in to correct so going off and back on rather then dragging moisture back on to the corners racing line - but you're right this would have to be carefully considered.

anonymous-user

76 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
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It would be stated as too dangerous. Car loses it and it could cause a major crash.

I remember when they use to have astroturf and that was then banned after cars ripped it up. Higher curbs would also be considered dangerous.

Gravel traps at the slower corners would be a great addition.

Or just plant grass like the old days biggrin

Perhaps something like the DRS being disabled or a joker style lap where the driver has to negotiate a slower section during the lap in a designated area.



Edited by anonymous-user on Saturday 27th July 17:55

TheDeuce

30,857 posts

88 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
quotequote all
ELUSIVEJIM said:
It would be stated as too dangerous. Car loses it and it could cause a major crash.

I remember when they use to have astroturf and that was then banned after cars ripped it up. Higher curbs would also be considered dangerous.

Gravel traps at the slower corners would be a great addition.

Or just plant grass like the old days biggrin

Perhaps something like the DRS being disabled or a joker style lap where the driver has to negotiate a slower section during the lap in a designated area.



Edited by ELUSIVEJIM on Saturday 27th July 17:55
I think just grass. Good old fashioned grass - gets the job done and doesn't cause a lot of issues, other than for the chumps that take the piss and clip it.



TheDeuce

30,857 posts

88 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
quotequote all
Teddy Lop said:
its generally no more than one or two corners per circuit that cause an issue, few that have elevation issues. Topping up could be as simple as an underground pipe controlled by nearest marshals where they can pump or suck water to adjust and repelish on the fly. Before you ask the puddle would be designed with overflow accounted for so an errant Marshall can't flood the track;)

Would dragging water on circuit be an issue? I'm not envisaging that much water, what there is may be boiled off quickly by the hot tyres, and most drivers would find themselves have to turn in to correct so going off and back on rather then dragging moisture back on to the corners racing line - but you're right this would have to be carefully considered.
You might struggle to believe this, but I have made something of a career from pools of water, especially level controlled and auto top-up pools. Getting the 'puddle' refilled each time would take time, more than enough time than the gap between cars so it wouldn't always be ready. The overflow drainage would also be tricky, the water would need to drain to a local sump and be pumped clear in many situations to avoid it finding it's way back to track.

I did a Rolls Royce 'driving through a puddle' sequence once, had to refill 'reset' the puddle on demand between each take. Despite being a far larger puddle than you suggest the sheer speed that a tyre evacuates the water ahead of it's path was sufficient to also carry away the water that was nowhere near the path of the tyre.

I don't like to put down ideas though - the fact I see problems doesn't mean the problems aren't solvable, I could definitely make such a system work complete with redundant filling and drainage provision. But as you allude..the biggest problem would be safety as the water could end up on the track in unexpected quantities. If that causes a spin, the chap who signed off the scheme is going to feel a bit of a pillock.

I'm thinking this new zero tolerance policy for leaving the track will prove pretty effective, and it's effectively free - albeit annoying for many a driver today..

Kraken

1,710 posts

222 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
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All it needs is sensors and penalties just how it's done in basic club racing in the UK on MSV circuits. F1 could easily afford that. Problem is they keep harping on about this "gaining an advantage" rubbish. A racing driver doesn't drive off the track at the same point for any other reason than gaining an advantage. Do it once no problem, twice get a warning flag, three times 5 second penalty, four times 15 seconds, five times black flag and you're out.

anonymous-user

76 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
quotequote all
TheDeuce said:
Teddy Lop said:
its generally no more than one or two corners per circuit that cause an issue, few that have elevation issues. Topping up could be as simple as an underground pipe controlled by nearest marshals where they can pump or suck water to adjust and repelish on the fly. Before you ask the puddle would be designed with overflow accounted for so an errant Marshall can't flood the track;)

Would dragging water on circuit be an issue? I'm not envisaging that much water, what there is may be boiled off quickly by the hot tyres, and most drivers would find themselves have to turn in to correct so going off and back on rather then dragging moisture back on to the corners racing line - but you're right this would have to be carefully considered.
You might struggle to believe this, but I have made something of a career from pools of water, especially level controlled and auto top-up pools. Getting the 'puddle' refilled each time would take time, more than enough time than the gap between cars so it wouldn't always be ready. The overflow drainage would also be tricky, the water would need to drain to a local sump and be pumped clear in many situations to avoid it finding it's way back to track.

I did a Rolls Royce 'driving through a puddle' sequence once, had to refill 'reset' the puddle on demand between each take. Despite being a far larger puddle than you suggest the sheer speed that a tyre evacuates the water ahead of it's path was sufficient to also carry away the water that was nowhere near the path of the tyre.

I don't like to put down ideas though - the fact I see problems doesn't mean the problems aren't solvable, I could definitely make such a system work complete with redundant filling and drainage provision. But as you allude..the biggest problem would be safety as the water could end up on the track in unexpected quantities. If that causes a spin, the chap who signed off the scheme is going to feel a bit of a pillock.

I'm thinking this new zero tolerance policy for leaving the track will prove pretty effective, and it's effectively free - albeit annoying for many a driver today..
To be fair some ideas do need putting down and this does look like one of them......

We all know who's going where, just make it clear where the limit is and penalise consistently.

SpudLink

7,559 posts

214 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
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Many tracks are not just used by F1 cars. Hitting a ditch filled with water is going to cost a Moto GP rider more than a bit of lap time.

minghis

1,576 posts

273 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
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The answer is a wall. Just like on many circuits already - a nice, firm wall.


Zarco

20,053 posts

231 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
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Grass and gravel traps are the answer.

Blib

47,044 posts

219 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
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Mines?

Very small ones.

TheDeuce

30,857 posts

88 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
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Banana skins. Anyone who's played Mario kart knows that's the answer.


Graveworm

9,020 posts

93 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
quotequote all
minghis said:
The answer is a wall. Just like on many circuits already - a nice, firm wall.

Lots of safety cars and less overtaking on the wrong circuit though.

Cold

16,361 posts

112 months

Saturday 27th July 2019
quotequote all
TheDeuce said:
Banana skins. Anyone who's played Mario kart knows that's the answer.
Or a surface similarly slippery. What's that stuff they use on expensive frying pans?

TheDeuce

30,857 posts

88 months

Sunday 28th July 2019
quotequote all
Cold said:
Or a surface similarly slippery. What's that stuff they use on expensive frying pans?
Teflon wink

Not a bad shout for a slippery surface that can't be transferred to the track.

SpudLink

7,559 posts

214 months

Sunday 28th July 2019
quotequote all
So, after today’s race, the answer is to have a wet drag racing track on the outside of the corner.