The technical bit my favorite part about F1 too. It's also why I primarily see F1 as a constructor's sport rather than a driver's sport.Indy isn’t for me and I watch a few types of racing. I stick with F1 very loosely and don’t even watch highlights of every race, but still read up on what is going on and the developments. I enjoy the technology aspect as I’m from an engineering background and F1 is the pinnacle for that. It’s a habit after following it for 35 years even if it’s gone downhill in terms of excitement over the past decade and a half. Nothing beats road racing for me, it’s the last type of pure high speed racing. It’s all on the rider and the courage they have. Much like F1 used to be. The closer they are to death, the higher they feel.
‘Those who risk nothing, do nothing, achieve nothing, become nothing’ DJ.
They pipe air into the helmet a lot like close-cockpit cars use. Not a whole lot of air makes it into an F1 cockpit either, so they both get quite toasty.I agree. Not sure how drivers in IndyCar get the air flow through the front helmet vents to stay cool when the cockpit has a full frontal shield? It must be so hot. At least with the halo it is almost invisible when watching the racing.
That's fine. It's all a matter of personal taste. I don't mind either one really. IndyCar's aeroscreen is actually made by Red Bull and is based on their proposal for an F1 design when the halo was being evaluated. I personally liked the look of the Ferraris that tested different windshield designs. The main problem with the original tested design was the bulbous shape that distorted the driver's view, which the current IndyCar design does away with.ugh.
Strongly Disagree.