Anyone else think that irrespective of how off line a driver gets, (barring actually hitting the barriers), then nothing on the track should cause part of the car to fail even at full commitment?
I'm assuming of course that there wasn't an actual manufacturing fault etc with Massas suspension. Given that assumption I don't see that it would be that hard to know the kind of stuctural strength the cars all have and design at track that won't break bits if it if they get hit full speed. Just build in large safety margins in to the height/severity of kerbing to ensure they can't produce enough force in the cars structure to break anything.
I accept that kerbing is there to "discourage" drivers from cutting the corners etc, but it shouldn't be to the point that it might actually terminally damage the car IMO. At least not so that it causes catastrophic failure leading to loss of control.
BTW I'm talking generalities here, not specifically about the actual bit of kerb that Massa hit. But as I say, assuming it's not down to some fault in his car, the kerb should never have been able to break his suspension IMO.
I'm assuming of course that there wasn't an actual manufacturing fault etc with Massas suspension. Given that assumption I don't see that it would be that hard to know the kind of stuctural strength the cars all have and design at track that won't break bits if it if they get hit full speed. Just build in large safety margins in to the height/severity of kerbing to ensure they can't produce enough force in the cars structure to break anything.
I accept that kerbing is there to "discourage" drivers from cutting the corners etc, but it shouldn't be to the point that it might actually terminally damage the car IMO. At least not so that it causes catastrophic failure leading to loss of control.
BTW I'm talking generalities here, not specifically about the actual bit of kerb that Massa hit. But as I say, assuming it's not down to some fault in his car, the kerb should never have been able to break his suspension IMO.