Love
it or loathe it, Formula One has a halo
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[March 14, 2018]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - It is safe to say
that Formula One's clunky 'halo' head protection device, the most
obvious novelty of the 2018 season, has divided opinion.
Strong enough to support the weight of a London double-decker bus,
the prominent T-shaped structure around the cockpit is also ugly
enough for Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff to want to take matters
into his own hands.
"I'm not impressed with the whole thing," the Austrian declared at
the launch of his team's gleaming W09 car. "And if you give me a
chainsaw, I would take it off."
Niki Lauda, the retired triple world champion who is non-executive
chairman of Mercedes F1, is another fierce critic of the device.
"We are just trying hard to get new fans for the sport with fast
cars and getting closer to the spectators, and now this is destroyed
by an overreaction." the 69-year-old Austrian said last year.
Concern has been expressed that drivers might not get a clear view
of the start light gantry, or overhead stop/go signals in the pits,
when they look up but few such worries emerged during pre-season
testing.
"We’ve done some testing in the simulator... and it was no problem
on any circuit with the start lights. You could always see at least
with one eye and that’s enough," said Mercedes' Valtteri Bottas.
Drivers have mostly taken it in their stride, and Mercedes' four
times world champion Lewis Hamilton suggested people would soon stop
talking about it.
"You definitely notice it. You’ve definitely lost some visibility
with it, naturally," said the Briton of the driver's eye view.
"But you get used to it... your mind learns to work around it so it
doesn’t really affect you in corners... I think it will become
second nature at some stage."
FLIP-FLOP
The halo, tested extensively by the governing International
Automobile Federation (FIA) who also tried out alternatives, is
designed to shield a driver's head from flying debris and the danger
of being struck by bouncing wheels.
Such protection has become a priority since the deaths of drivers in
other series.
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F1 Formula One - Formula One Test Session - Circuit de Barcelona
Catalunya, Montmelo, Spain - February 26, 2018 Kimi Raikkonen of
Ferrari during testing REUTERS/Albert Gea/File Photo
"It's going to save lives, no doubt," said Williams' Canadian
teenager Lance Stroll.
"The fact that our head was exposed before at these high speeds, god
forbid anything would happen if a piece would hit us in the head."
The look of the device, fixed at three points with its central
upright in front of the driver's vision and an overhead loop, has
been compared to the thong on a flip-flop beach sandal.
Made of titanium and weighing in at around seven kilograms, plus
fittings, the halo has been a trial for designers who like to
distribute weight as low as possible on the car.
A standard part made by external suppliers, teams are allowed to
swathe the device in an aerodynamic fairing and attach mini-wings of
up to 20mm.
Immediate drawbacks are that getting in and out has become trickier,
partly because of the appendages on the cage-like structure, which
has also raised questions about emergency extractions.
Toro Rosso driver Pierre Gasly said he had ripped several race suits
already.
"I don't like it (the halo). It's just a big mess to get in the car
and get out," he told reporters.
"With all the winglets you have on the halo you cannot really pull,
to get out you cannot really touch it," added the Frenchman.
Bottas said the FIA had made allowances for that in tests of
drivers' ability to extricate themselves quickly.
"I think it takes maybe three or four seconds more to get out of the
car," said the Finn. "To get in, it’s a bit more tricky but it’s
OK."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Ken Ferris)
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