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Nilesh Sane (nileshsane) wrote,
@ 2004-04-21 12:52:00
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    Current mood: thirsty

    HILL: SENNA WAS TO BLAME
    Source itvf1
    =========================================================================================================
    Damon Hill believes Ayrton Senna was responsible for the crash that claimed his life 10 years ago.

    Hill, who was Senna?s team-mate at the time, has dismissed claims that the Brazilian?s car was at fault.

    Instead he makes the bold suggestion that the Brazilian hero, adored the world over, actually did the unthinkable he made a mistake.
    ==========================================================================================================

    I think he is probably correct about the fact that the steering rack didn't brake. It was broken in the car after the crash, but so was almost every other component of the car so its not suppressing.

    Some years ago, there was an independent investigation done into the crash and the results were presented in a magzine and some television programs.

    It came to the a similar conclusion, the suggested that the sequence of events was something like this.

    1. JJ Lheto's crash caused the safety car to be deployed.

    2. Once the safety car left the circuit the race resumed but the tyres of Senna?s car had cooled due to the slow running

    3. The old Taburello was very fast and bumpy, while accelerating through this corner Senna's car hit the bumps.

    4. The floor of his car momentarily grounded causing air flow under the car to cease.

    5. The resulting momentary loss of down force combined with the cold tyres caused
    Senna?s car to overseer.

    6. Senna applied some opposite lock to correct the problem.

    (4,5,6 lasted merely tenths of a second)

    7. At the same time the car lifted from the roads surface and down force increased to normal levels.

    8. At this point the car griped on the road again but Senna was steering away, not into, the corner which caused him to leave the circuit and hit the wall.

    Many believed that the steering rack broke because on the on-board camera, you can see the steering wheel move horizontally as Senna tried to steer away from the wall. This however, was not uncommon with the cars and the steering wheel on the Williams did move up/down/left/right by a few inches as was demonstrated in the program.

    You could argue that it was driver error, as Senna may have kept accelerating throughout the overseer, but we cant be sure, but the conditions were very tricky with the bumps and cold tires.



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Sheer Brilliance or Cold Calculative approcah
(Anonymous)
2004-04-21 12:14 (link)
with due regards and respect to his command over the machine,I still feel Senna was those adventurous kind.
Rather it was one of those reason where he looked down upon his opponents ,Notably Prost ,Schumi.
In fact I remember When Prost Didn't Drive one of the races as Track was too Wet claiming Hazard.he was heckled by many on circuit
but I guess there is fine line between being adventurous & Rash ( bit Like Sachin Pre 2003 and Sachin 2004). Senna was know to tread that line frequently in his career and that made him Darling of Crowd ,But in the End He paid his price .

I don't whether it tells of my Nature
but I always preferred Methodic Prosts & Gavaskars Better than Senna/Sachins

One Aberration though is John Mcnroe ( But he was also methodic genious), and 9/10 times when he had burst with chair his sharp eye was right to argue on call
later though his fame(?) grew bigger that linespersons & chairs had their kicks by provoking him & he played to them


Mahesh

P.S I was expecting post on this subject ,good to find it here

(Reply to this) (Thread)

Re: Sheer Brilliance or Cold Calculative approcah
nileshsane
2004-04-23 00:36 (link)
Thats an excellent point you made about Senna being the advanterous kinds and lookins down on other drivers.
I think drivers like Prost, have been extremely methodical in their approach, aka Schumacher types, but in the end one remembers guys like Senna more than Prost, just because they push ther car even when it is not the best machine in the pit lane.
To say it was senna's error is maybe going to far, but he was most definatly pushing to get back on terms with MS after a poor start to the season, so maybe he was pushing too hard?

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