• Re: Bone shakers

    From a425couple@a425couple@hotmail.com to rec.autos.sport.f1,rec.autos.sport.cart on Fri May 20 12:38:56 2022
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.sport.cart

    On 5/20/2022 6:20 AM, Alan wrote:
    On 2022-05-19 4:15 p.m., bra wrote:
    https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2022/may/19/formula-one-carlos-sainz-worried-health-drivers-bouncing-porpoising


    As I have posted before, we have entered a norm in which the old
    pleasing notion of 'becoming one with the car" is now exposed as
    serious drawback.

    This is quite different from latter day drivers who bounced around in
    their seats in inefficiently-sprung cars on rough tracks.

    Today's drivers are superbly strong and fit and healthy, but, as a
    Dakar winner once described modern rally driving, "Your body is like a
    milkshake."-a At the Austin track, a W Series driver suffered two
    vertebral compression fractures vertebrae [and they HEARD the crack]
    from simply running onto a sausage kerb and getting bounced.

    People who were primed to scoff at Hamilton's and Russell's complaints
    may now listen to a Ferrari driver.

    I never scoffed at either of them.

    I cannot imagine how bad that is for the drivers. I know my 60-year-old
    body couldn't possibly stand it.

    I believe it was probably Henry Manley writing fiction
    for Road and Track magazine back in the 1970's was
    expressing concerns of needing selective breeding
    or surgical additions to handle the increasing
    forces of then 'modern' F1 cars. i.e. detaching
    retinas and separating kidneys...

    I know I never had felt such forces until I bought
    a modern light weight very high downforce car
    capable of cornering in excess of 3 G's. It gets brutal.
    Well, then my neurosurgeon wanted me to quit
    being a multi-G Bobble head. Tough choice, sell
    the exciting car, or revisit the stroke ward???
    Oh well - it was wild!

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  • From Mark Jackson@mjackson@alumni.caltech.edu to rec.autos.sport.f1,rec.autos.sport.cart on Fri May 20 19:10:23 2022
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.sport.cart

    On 5/20/2022 3:38 PM, a425couple wrote:
    On 5/20/2022 6:20 AM, Alan wrote:
    On 2022-05-19 4:15 p.m., bra wrote:
    https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2022/may/19/formula-one-carlos-sainz-worried-health-drivers-bouncing-porpoising


    As I have posted before, we have entered a norm in which the old
    pleasing notion of 'becoming one with the car" is now exposed as
    serious drawback.

    This is quite different from latter day drivers who bounced around in
    their seats in inefficiently-sprung cars on rough tracks.

    Today's drivers are superbly strong and fit and healthy, but, as a
    Dakar winner once described modern rally driving, "Your body is like
    a milkshake."-a At the Austin track, a W Series driver suffered two
    vertebral compression fractures vertebrae [and they HEARD the crack]
    from simply running onto a sausage kerb and getting bounced.

    People who were primed to scoff at Hamilton's and Russell's
    complaints may now listen to a Ferrari driver.

    I never scoffed at either of them.

    I cannot imagine how bad that is for the drivers. I know my
    60-year-old body couldn't possibly stand it.

    I believe it was probably Henry Manley

    Henry N. Manney III

    writing fiction
    for Road and Track magazine back in the 1970's was
    expressing concerns of needing selective breeding
    or surgical additions to handle the increasing
    forces of then 'modern' F1 cars.-a i.e. detaching
    retinas and separating kidneys...

    I don't recall such, but if so it was probably one of the articles in
    the Cyclops saga.
    --
    Mark Jackson - https://mark-jackson.online/
    COBOL could be here forever. Thus, Y2K+N problems are
    likely to recur for all nonnegative integer values of N.
    - Peter G. Neumann
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  • From Alan@nuh-uh@nope.com to rec.autos.sport.f1,rec.autos.sport.cart on Fri May 20 16:45:09 2022
    From Newsgroup: rec.autos.sport.cart

    On 2022-05-20 4:10 p.m., Mark Jackson wrote:
    On 5/20/2022 3:38 PM, a425couple wrote:
    On 5/20/2022 6:20 AM, Alan wrote:
    On 2022-05-19 4:15 p.m., bra wrote:
    https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2022/may/19/formula-one-carlos-sainz-worried-health-drivers-bouncing-porpoising


    As I have posted before, we have entered a norm in which the old
    pleasing notion of 'becoming one with the car" is now exposed as
    serious drawback.

    This is quite different from latter day drivers who bounced around
    in their seats in inefficiently-sprung cars on rough tracks.

    Today's drivers are superbly strong and fit and healthy, but, as a
    Dakar winner once described modern rally driving, "Your body is like
    a milkshake."-a At the Austin track, a W Series driver suffered two
    vertebral compression fractures vertebrae [and they HEARD the crack]
    from simply running onto a sausage kerb and getting bounced.

    People who were primed to scoff at Hamilton's and Russell's
    complaints may now listen to a Ferrari driver.

    I never scoffed at either of them.

    I cannot imagine how bad that is for the drivers. I know my
    60-year-old body couldn't possibly stand it.

    I believe it was probably Henry Manley

    Henry N. Manney III

    writing fiction
    for Road and Track magazine back in the 1970's was
    expressing concerns of needing selective breeding
    or surgical additions to handle the increasing
    forces of then 'modern' F1 cars.-a i.e. detaching
    retinas and separating kidneys...

    I don't recall such, but if so it was probably one of the articles in
    the Cyclops saga.


    I have a vague recollection of that article as well...
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2