4
457ciSBC
Guest
He WAS going plenty fast enough for it to be unsurvivable. The main failure is the homologation of a track with insufficient length and a wall at the end. Everything else was just unfortunate luck, which happens and can't be accounted for in rules making.
What I am saying is that if the driver is knocked out bad things happen because due to the nature of the cars and the tracks eventually the car is going to come to a quick halt.
Well, E-Town like Richmond(Dinwiddie) has just about the longest shutdown areas of any of the NHRA tracks, east coast anyway. However, with E-Town just beyond the sand trap there's a wall with a road behind it, with a home on the other side. Kalitta passed through 3 nets, smacked the steel structure which secured the last net on the right side and the video platform, with the remaining making contact with the retaining wall.
I'm a firm believer that those both TF and FC classes needs to be slowed down or only run at 1/8th mile. In the last 40 years the speeds have increased 125 MPH, but in many cases the tracks haven't kept up.
When there's catastrophic engine failure, which includes some degree of chassis structure degradation, look for anything to happen, even in a mid 8 sec, 160 MPH car.
This game is inherently dangerous, not only in the pro classes but in sportsman racing as well. In some of these outlaw classes there's guys running 180+ MPH on small tire drag radials and twin turbo, 3000lb cars at over 210 MPH.
RIP