Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Formula 1 start lights moved to compensate for halo protector

- Reuters

MELBOURNE: Formula One has changed the positionin­g of race start lights to ensure drivers can see clearly around the new halo head protection system that debuts in Australia this weekend.

The halo, a titanium structure fixed at three points with a central upright in front of the driver’s vision and an overhead loop, has been introduced to protect against the risk of bouncing wheels and other debris.

Some drivers have expressed concern about seeing the start lights, depending on where they line up on the grid. “With the halo, what we’ve asked every circuit to do is to make the lights at a standard height above the track,” the governing FIA’S race director Charlie Whiting told reporters on Thursday.

“We’ve also put a repeat set of lights, in this case off to the left, over the verge.”the repeat set were introduced around 2009 when higher rear wings made it harder to see the lights, but aerodynami­c changes have now fixed that problem.“now the wings have been lowered, there’s no need for those (lights) halfway up the grid so I’ve decided to utilise them somewhere else,” said Whiting.

“Pole position seems to be the worst case scenario with the halo there — maybe the driver can’t quite see the lights, or see only half of them, and he might have to move his head too much.”

The new arrangemen­ts will be tried out on Friday after the two practice sessions at Albert Park, with drivers allowed to rehearse starts on the grid.

Whiting also played down fears that the halo would make it harder for fans to see drivers’ helmets as a means of identifyin­g who was at the wheel.

‘MORE DIVERSITY’

Four-times world champion Lewis Hamilton has called for more diversity in F1 after highlighti­ng how little he felt had changed since he came into the sport in 2007.

The Briton, a favourite to win Sunday’s season-opening race, on Thursday posted a video on Instagram panning around the Melbourne paddock from his Mercedes team’s hospitalit­y.

“There is barely any diversity in F1, still nothing’s changed in 11 years I’ve been here,” the 33-year-old told his six million followers. “Kids, people, there’s so many jobs in this sport of which anybody no matter your ethnicity or background can make it and fit in.” Hamilton, whose paternal grandparen­ts emigrated to Britain from the Caribbean island of Grenada, grew up in social housing with his father carrying out multiple jobs to make ends meet.

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