The Star Early Edition

Drivers not wild about ‘flip flop’ halo

Lauda and others criticise new F1 cockpit protection system

- REUTERS

FORMULA One’s decision to introduce a ‘halo’ cockpit protection device next year is a mistake, according to former champion Niki Lauda.

The Austrian, who is non-executive chairman of world champions Mercedes, told Germany’s Auto, Motor und Sport that he recognised safety had to be improved where possible.

However a convincing solution had yet to be found to protect drivers’ heads from debris.

“We tested the Halo, the Red Bull Aeroscreen and Ferrari’s Shield as a cockpit protection. None has convinced 100 percent. You have to make the right decision in such a situation. The halo is the wrong one,” he said.

Lauda, a triple world champion who retired from racing in 1985 after a near-fatal fiery crash in 1976, said the halo destroyed the “DNA of a Formula One car”.

“The FIA has made Formula One as safe as it gets. Also the danger of flying wheels is largely eliminated, because the wheels are always more firmly attached. The risk to the drivers has become minimal.

“We are just trying hard to get new fans for the sport with fast cars and getting closer to the spectators, and now this is destroyed by an overreacti­on.”

The governing FIA announced last week that the halo would be introduced for 2018 rather than the transparen­t ‘shield’ tested at Silverston­e on the weekend of the recent British Grand Prix.

The halo, which is fixed to the car at three points including a central pillar in front of the driver that supports a protective loop above his head, has been widely criticised on aesthetic grounds.

Some have compared its appearance to the toe strap of a flip-flop.

 ??  ?? The FIA has decided to implement the halo from next season.
The FIA has decided to implement the halo from next season.

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