The physics of Webber’s Valencia crash

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Have a look at the current issue of Red Bulletin for an interesting perspective on Mark Webber’s terrifying crash with Heikki Kovalainen in Valencia.

Professor Thomas Schrefl does the maths on Webber’s aerial flip and comes up with some fascinating figures:

Doing the maths we see that the potential energy and the rotational energy take up about one to two per cent of the kinetic energy. After hitting the ground, Webber’s car slides towards the tyre barrier. Sliding means friction. The frictional force is FR = ?é?Ámg, whereby ?é?Á is the friction coefficient between the car and the ground. The work, FRs, done by the frictional force is calculated simply: force times distance to the barrier. Friction reduces the kinetic energy by roughly 10 per cent.

From the reduced kinetic energy we find the velocity at which Webber hits the barrier to be around 280kph (174mph, 4, 5).
Professor Thomas Schrefl

He reached a height of two metres during his brief flight seen in the video below:

Find the full article in the current issue of Red Bulletin.

Read more: Webber hits Kovalainen and flips

Author information

Keith Collantine
Lifelong motor sport fan Keith set up RaceFans in 2005 - when it was originally called F1 Fanatic. Having previously worked as a motoring...

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83 comments on “The physics of Webber’s Valencia crash”

  1. David Sherwood
    5th August 2010, 9:07

    The speed with which the Red Bull moves across the run off area is incredible, with no retardation at all.

    I have heard a few people, e.g. Martin Brundle, say that a return to gravel traps would help with racing as too many people are getting away with mistakes that would previously have cost them a finish.

    Would a gravel trap have slowed the RB down safely here? If so, they should be brought back quickly.

    1. I’m not sure if it would have made that much difference at that speed. He probably would have just skidded over the top of the gravel.

      I would like to see gravel traps come back though.

      1. Or the airbox might have dug in and started him spinning.

      2. Probably would have just skimmed it at that speed – but the friction coefficient is probably still higher than plain concrete. And kinetic energy squares with velocity, so every little bit of speed that can be dissipated through friction will reduce the energy at impact.

        And yes, bring back gravel traps. If we can argue that they save money they will be back in flash…

        1. Does anyone know why the high-friction asphalt used at Paul Ricard has not been considered at any other circuits? It isn’t the most television friendly set up, with blue lines and swirls off the track, but it would eliminate any advantage gained by running wide such as at turn 1 of Spa and the Hungaroring, and I believe could have taken off more energy in Webber’s crash.

          1. Well…Paul Ricard has absolutely huge runoff areas to implement those, so it might be a space concern? Most corners requiring runoff on modern F1 tracks probably don’t have enough space to accomodate both the blue and red asphalt the HTTT has.

          2. Maybe high-friction run offs aren’t used because the tracks are also used to host motorbike events. Gravel is best option in that situation.

    2. Mark Blundell hit a concrete wall at 185 mph + in Rio in 1996 and broke nothing (122 g’s at impact)but his internals were all re-arranged.

      1. I remember watching that one as a kid. That and I remember being entirely unimpressed with that track X). Little did I know it was a reconfiguration of something much bigger.

        1. the record was set by david purley at silverstone at 174g in a crash into a grass bank. it was in the guiness book of records, i don’t know if it still is. purley survived the crash but i assume he was a bit messed up.

    3. I don’t want to see drivers having to retire from the race – an F1 car stuck in gravel, wheels spinning, looks pathetic, and the marshals are in danger for a long time while they recover it.

      But if somehow drivers could lose more time and positions if they run wide, that would be better. More abrasive run-off area surfaces? Or some gravel, dirt or bumps at the point where the driver rejoins the track from the run-off area.

      1. Just make sure there’s enough oil/debris that drivers will probably have to pit for new tyres and they’ll soon stop using so much runoff. Bernie will probably like it to, he can advertise the specific type of oil!

  2. Same, bring back gravel traps, though of course if his car had dug in the accident could have been a lot worse. Somewhere like Valencia you are probably unlikely to get gravel traps even if they were brought back.

  3. I don’t believe for a second that he hit the barriers at 174. He’d have serious injuries if that was the case. Air resistance as the car flew broadside through the air would have immediately had the car well below 174.

    1. professor thomas schrefl has shown his math, please show yours.

      1. My Year 12 physics last year tells me, that this is riddle with problems, Keith I know I wasn’t nice recently but, I really would like to know where you got this from, pretty please?

        “Doing the maths we see that the potential energy and the rotational energy take up about one to two per cent of the kinetic energy”
        Ok I don’t like this, First, Newtons 3rd law of motion means that this, Can’t be correct, Assuming the Vehicle is travelling in a straight line towards the barrier, and it only travels directly up and down, (which is what my understand of physics necessitates we do), there is now reason ignoring air resistance, that the vehicle once airborne should slow down.

        This is because for it to slow down a force must act on it to slow it down, the only forces that can affect it while airborne are gravity and air resistance, of which gravity will not affect it’s speed in a perpendicular direction to the gravitational pull of the earth, and air resistance is being ignored.

        “After hitting the ground, Webber’s car slides towards the tyre barrier.”
        A lot of the cars velocity would already have been bled of by air resistance, (MUCH! more than 1 or 2%.
        ” Sliding means friction.”
        Correct

        “The frictional force is FR = µmg, whereby µ is the friction coefficient between the car and the ground.”

        I’d like to know how he knows the friction coefficient, most ideally this could be estimated by working out the contact patch of the tyres, (and each tyres friction coefficient from that) but that assumes all four wheels were touching the ground constantly from when Webber landed, not only that, but it assume that Webber has the brakes on and the wheels can’t rotate. in which case, the rolling friction would be significantly less than the sliding based friction (bad terminology I know!)

        “The work, FRs, done by the frictional force is calculated simply: force times distance to the barrier.
        Friction reduces the kinetic energy by roughly 10 per cent.

        “This would require me to get my physics book, I never fully understood work.
        So I’ll accept 10%.

        “From the reduced kinetic energy we find the velocity at which Webber hits the barrier to be around 280kph (174mph, 4, 5).”

        That’s wrong, 1) He has ignore Air resistance, put your hand out of a car window to see if it’s important, and then pretend the car was going over 200km/h and your hand was the size of an F1 car. (I think i made my point)

        Also, When the car hit the ground it would have been travelling in a diagonal direction (or there abouts) which means a equal force would exert itself on the car, slowing it down as part of that force (once broken down into parallel and perpendicular to the gravitation force using Vectors) would be opposite the direction of the cars velocity, ergo slowing it down.

        I am quite proud of myself!

        1. I really would like to know where you got this from

          Red Bulletin – it says in the article.

        2. there is now reason ignoring air resistance, that the vehicle once airborne should slow down.

          Should read

          There is no reason it should slow down, if you ignore air resistance.

          1. The Professor is right to simplify it, otherwise it would be impossible, but the negation of air resistance means the reults, as they were would be way off,

            I think rather than a demonstration of the physics of the crash his working could demonstrat it once the car has hit the ground, but, he has that bit about “one to two per cent of the kinetic energy” which, I can’t see how that could happen, if no forces are acting against the car. (ignoring air resistance as he did.)

    2. Exactly! this is not taken into account in calculations at all. Drag at 170 on its own gives deacceleration grater than road car at full brakes. On the top of that when he spins surface are of whole floor acts as huge air brake.

      1. After reading the document, air resistance is definitely not included. He only considers conversion to potential energy (energy required to raise the car the into the air), rotational engergy (energy required to rotate the car) and friction on the ground.

        He claims it was 2m in the air, but the car hits the sign (14 seconds into above video) and is upside down at the height of the sign. Judging by the height of rear wing (1m), the blue barriers are slightly higher than the car, wire fencing appears 2x height of blue barriers, and the sign itself appears to be about 1m high. That means the car was raised 3-4m, up to double that which he suggested.

        Failing to include the drag is a big flaw in the calculation. Airbrakes make a huge difference to deceleration. The equation for drag is Fd = (pv^2CdA)/2 (Fd = force of drag, p = density of fluid, v = speed relative to fluid, A is the area and Cd drag coefficient). High speed creates high drag (it’s squared), the larger the area A, the higher the drag (and the area of a F1 car’s floor is large). Whilst I don’t have the figures to plug into the equation, having a high velocity and high area is going to create a high drag force. To leave this out of the equation is a significant omission.

        I would therefore suggest that the actual impact speed was much less than 174mph. How much less, I don’t know.

        1. Agreed, it doesn’t include air resistance.

          Most dynamics equations don’t include this as it’s incredibly hard to factor in. For this problem you’d need to model the changing drag as the car rotates through the air; possibly doable if you had the might of RBR’s CFD at your disposable, but probably not possible if you’re working it out on the back of an envelope.

          The weirdest thing is that a physicist would let an article bearing his name to be quite obviously wrong!

          1. “Most dynamics equations don’t include this as it’s incredibly hard to factor in.”

            Most dynamics equations in undergrad and below level physics, that should be. That’s why most exam questions include the disclaimer: “Not accounting for air resistance”.

          2. It’s quite an important point for what his subject is, also, He talks about loss of kinetic energy due to rotation and potential energy, which is height, but, and this is what I can’t understand, The height only occurred because of the collision of the cars, yet, he’s ignored the actual collision’s effect, Which means the initial speed when it took off, is wrong.

            So it can’t be demonstrating the collision in my mind, on the other hand it could be used as an example of a physics principle, as if used in a classroom environment.

    3. If anyone can come up with a better mathematical model for the crash than the professor’s that’s a Comment of the Day right there.

      1. V = (174m ~ 280k) > F in fast = Omg x (ouch)

        1. Ha! Nice.
          I’m no mathematician, but I do think ‘Omg’ should be ‘Omfg’ :)

        2. Hahahaha! Good one!

      2. I well and truly hope someone can come up with that!

        Not to say i am completely useless with physics, i did understand what mike and graham228221 are saying, but that’s where it ends for me.

        Very interesting subjet.

  4. Yes no way he hit the barrier at 174mph, it only took 70mph at Silverstone to break Schumis leg…cars have come on since then but no way 174mph…

    1. Actually, I believe the regulations beefed up the nose-cone structure as a result of that crash to better protect drivers from intrusions like suspension components.

      Also, am I remembering rightly that Schumi was very unlucky and somehow managed to crash right between the tyres or something? Also resulting in a rethink on barriers…

      1. Yeah, they added a belt to the tyre wall to prevent the nose cone of a crashing car going inbetween the tyres.

      2. Timo was cut by his suspension at Suzuka last year wasn’t he? That was a pretty high speed accident too though

  5. I haven’t read the document yet, but are they seriously telling me they don’t have an accelerometer in that car to know exactly how hard it hit?

    Or, I don’t know… maybe look at the video and do distance/time?

    1. those normaly work from wheel rotation speeds, so not of much use when airborne, or air into a pivot, which would have been pretty useless when doing a salto (and it would have been close to the nose cone he lost in the crash)

      1. Modern day 3 dimension accelerometers are very small,
        http://www.dimensionengineering.com/accelerometers.htm
        and fitted to a lot of laptops, and if you have one fitted in your laptop you can help track earthquakes for the scientists.
        http://qcn.stanford.edu/

  6. Alex Andronov
    5th August 2010, 10:23

    This gives me a chance to pull out my favourite physics joke… Why did the cat fall off the roof? Because it lost it’s µ (pronounced Mu).

  7. It looks really slow, and instead of bringing gravel traps i think sand traps are better because it won’t damage the car.

    1. Great idea, until there is some wind…..

      1. Or is rains…

        Then, it will either resemble quicksand, (which at least will punish drivers for going of track) or concrete….

  8. Surely the easiest way of checking it is to know the distance he travelled on the ground and measure the time. Estimating number of car lengths may help. It doesn’t appear that he decelerated much once skidding on the runoff, so it’s probably a fair estimate of his impact speed.

  9. get rid of tarmac in the run of area, when there was gravel no driver could make a mistake, now they just pushing but there is no real limit … white line ? No thats not a limit…

    Lets pick just few tracks with gravel traps, Spa – Sepang – Melbourne – when there is gravel the races are much better.

    If drivers makes a mistake or is over the limit he is stuck in gravel but on tarmac, they just cut the road

    1. yes but (a) tarmac run off = more cars left in race as opposed to (b) gravel traps – less cars left in race (a) = better for spectators

    2. “Lets pick just few tracks with gravel traps, Spa – Sepang – Melbourne – when there is gravel the races are much better.”

      Surely you’re not suggesting gravel traps are the primary decider of where races are good.

    3. I would normally agree that I’d like to see a return to gravel traps to better punish mistakes. HOWEVER, in this case, a gravel trap could have been majorly disastrous. If his car had caught any crest in the gravel, it could have started it rolling. And rolling at that speed heading into the barrier doesn’t bear to think about. We might not have our 5 championship contender right now.

  10. FIA need to look at over track signage, if the sign webber hit was stronger the accident would have been horrific

    1. “FIA need to look at over track signage, if the sign webber hit was stronger the accident would have been MORE horrific”

    2. I presume they have. It crumpled up pretty nicely. It’s bridges that are a real issue in such accidents.

      1. As demonstrated by the Superleague crash.

  11. If you reverse engineer the calculation as the Professor gives it then he only lost about 10-15 mph through the whole thing, which I find difficult to believe.

  12. How about “stingers” instead of run off/gravel? that would make things interesting.

  13. We probably have a high Reynolds number meaning quadratic drag.

    drag equation: F = (p*u^2*C*A)

    p = density of air at 35 degrees 1.15 kg/m3.
    A = area exposed = about 10 m2
    C = average drag coefficient (of such a rotating body) 0.5
    u = speed relative to air = 85m/s (190 mph, this is Valencia)

    So, F = about 20000 Newtons

    Using Newton’s second law:
    (F*dt)/m = dv

    Car is about 650kg. Time through the air about 2 seconds.

    so dv = -30 m/s (approx)

    Hence before the friction comes into play, we have scrubbed about 35% of the speed, although this is a bit exaggerated because as the car slows, so the drag decreases.

    So before the friction came into play, Webber was doing about 120mph. He probably hit the wall at about 100-110 mph I reckon, although this is all approximate of course!

    1. I’ll nominate this one for post of the day, for both the physics and getting the numbers to look sensible :-D

    2. I tried to copy your drag arguments but I think you might have missed a factor of 2 in Newton’s equation (2 seconds), which would make dv a massive -60m/s.

      As you said, the answer is exaggerated as the drag depends on the velocity (pretty strongly too).

      F = (pCAv^2)/2 (I think you forgot the 1/2 here but given that you found F=20.000 you must have taken it into account) i.e. F = 2.875*v^2

      Then, F = -m*dv/dt, i.e. dv/dt = -0.0044*v^2

      Integrating, we find 1/v = 0.0044*t + 1/85 (the 1/85 comes from the initial condition), i.e. after 2 seconds we have v = 49 m/s or 180kph.

      The velocity affects the drag pretty heavily, hence if you calculate the drag for the total “journey” (I took this to be 5 seconds, from memory) you find v = 30 m/s or 108kph.

      Friction would reduce the speed even further.

      I am not sure about the A parameter – is it really as much as 10 m^2? A reduced A would change the calculations quite a bit so if someone has a suggestion please correct me.

      1. Thanks for correcting my sloppiness, and integrating for a changing velocity.

        The area is obviously dependent on the time due to the rotation of the car in quite complex way, so the 10m^2 would not be exposed for the full 5 seconds, that’s why I only took the time flying through the air.

        And in this period, you’re right that 10m^2 is a bit over the top (it’s probably about half that – especially as the angle of the floor is always changing to the direction of travel).

        Plus there are the impact forces when he hits the ground that probably slow the thing down too… and the bridge contact… etc!!

        1. Well done John H and Ino! The only interesting point I can add to that is that single seater racing cars typically have a Cd of around 1, even when they’re facing in the right direction. It’s a surprisingly high number (most road cars are in the range of 0.2 to 0.4) but that’s where they get all the downforce. But then, as you note, 10m^2 is too high so it probably balances out.

          Prof. Schrefl – whose main field of interest appears to be micromagnetism and simulation of other micro- and small-scale material properties, rather than anything directly related to this subject – additionally neglected to take into account the external force applied by Heikki’s rotating rear wheel. He also assumed that the rotational kinetic energy of Mark’s rolling car had been converted from straight-line speed (whereas in fact it was purely down to aerodynamics and the external force I just mentioned), and forgets that the rotational kinetic energy in at least two axes, like the potential energy term, was absorbed by the car & suspension when it landed back on its wheels.

          1. Thanks for the Cd reference, I didn’t know what that was but it clearly depends on the car orientation. The area is also hard to calculate.

            Basically, the final speed depends so much on the drag that it almost doesn’t make sense to try and calculate it. For example, if we take half the drag (say A=5m^2) then the speed after the full 5 seconds is about v=45m/s (or thereabouts- I did the calculations earlier and threw that piece of paper away!)- much higher!

            And there’s extra complications: the friction, the impact with Heikki’s car, the impact when it landed on the ground again, etc.

            What is “for sure”, is that Professor Thomas Schrefl doesn’t make much sense…

    3. I loved physics in scholl and all but right now, my head is melting! :P

      1. Sorry, “school”!

  14. I think in physics we normally ignore the air resistance. But in reality its relevent.and the fact that the car’s front is upside provides more surface area for resistance.and when webber’s car lands a lot of kinetic energy will be converted to pot energy on the basis of Mgh we may find out the exact loss of k.e. So the total k. energy of the car at the time of crash= k.e before the crash – loss of k.e at the time of contact-air resistance-loss due to the car rotation(given)- loss of k.e. At the time of landing-loss of k.e due to kinetic friction. Which will result in quite less then the predicted 175mph impact velocity. I m guessing only Bcoz i’m a 17 yrs old student only.

  15. Good morning everybody. I have to say that’s my main job is to assess risks involved in these kind of accidents, especially for riders but not only, and I investigate daily the physics law and the tarmac friction/gravel bed run-off areas pro/cons.

    Said this…all F1 cars have an ADR onboard (Accident Data Recorder) that record like a black box all speed and forces generated in an impact. So RedBull know perfectly the speeds. I don’t know about Prof Schrefl knowledge about these accident data, but his formulae and result are correct (IF the starting speed is right and if the friction coefficient assumed is too).

    What I suggest is that I don’t think that the speed was so high in impact because in that point, if I’m not wrong, there was a conveyor belt with three layers of tyre barriers behind a concrete temporary block. FIA knows for sure (because they tested it), that these kind of barriers don’t resist to a F1 penetration at over 150/180 kph. Obviously here the Webber’s car was not hitting in straight, but I think that 280 Kph could be too high.

    On the friction side, I would say that the tarmac reduces his friction while increasing the speed, so the coefficient to use at 300 Kph is less than the one you need to use at 200 kph. Is anyway absolutely believable that the decreasing of speed was so less, because the friction between carbon fiber and tarmac is very low, and the speed decay curve give reason to this.

    Once again, despite formulae are good, we need to know that starting data are good too. Reversing the video could for sure check the result.

    Last but not least: the Paul Ricard run-offs are painted only for graphical reasons. The friction is made with the tarmac compound, not with the color, so it could be (but it cost too much) deployed in any tarmac run-off.

    1. Thanks very much for this post Jarno! Although you don’t have the auto COTD for the right formula you shed a lot of light onto what is going on here.

      Thumbs up.

  16. Wasn’t there a bridge near the incident? If he hit that, he would be gone.

    1. At the beginning of the “straight” (in inverted commas because its not really straight!) there was a thin bridge with a DHL sign hanging off it, I believe.

  17. Just reversed the video. The impact speed was at about 115 Kph ±3%

    I guess all aero considerations on the other comments are right.

    1. Wow, that’s pretty accurate!

    2. Yes, I was also more thinking something like a 100 kph from just watching the footage. Really nothing considering broad siding a tyre wall and conveyor belt should be relatively gentle at these speeds. If you could make out from the footage how many frames passes from wall contact to full stop (the recoil looks omittable) we’d be able to calculate the average G-force. Too bad (again) we don’t get HD, with twice the frame rate.

  18. Jraybay-HamiltonMclarenfan
    5th August 2010, 12:38

    well in the end it was a big wreck D:

  19. So tarmac doesn’t slow cars down enough and allows for no punishment for drivers going wide. But gravel increases the risk of a car digging-in and starting to spin.

    What we need here is some huge water tanks. That would help slow the cars down, and the splash would be spectacular!

    Drivers would have to wear scuba equipment at all times so they can still breathe when the car sinks to the bottom.

    This is not a serious suggestion, by the way.

  20. e=mc^2

    It’s quite difficult to measure any of this without knowing the actual specs.. how much did the car weigh after each collision? how fast was he going in the first place? how abrasive is the surface? who cares!? it was quite the flight and he’s all good!

  21. There’s a snippet in the new F1 Racing magazine that says Webber’s car was about 740 kilos, hit the barrier at about 80 mph, and reached a height of 5 meters.

  22. First, there is no way it was going 174. I didn’t exactly rock Physics in college but a very light car going 200 is going to lose more than 30 mph after flipping through the air, first with the undertray forward, and then skidding on the ground for a couple seconds. He would have lost more than 30 mph in that total distance if he had just let off the gas, given the massive drag of an F1 car and drag at that high speed. I don’t buy it.

    When you see how close Webber came to being nailed by his tire, as well as a fusilade of substantial debris raining in behind him as he hit the wall like a round of grape shot, you see how lucky he was.,

  23. The tarmac/gravel run-off debate is lasting from many years. Basically FIA wants an all-tarmac everywhere. FIM doesn’t. FIA’s thinking is that in the most cases tarmac let cars not to roll (and recover from mistakes) and decrease braking space (supposing that all brakes, suspension, tyres and aero are functioning). So where FIA could they deploy all tarmac arrestor bed.

    The problem occurs when there is a total loss of control. In any case where a mechanical failure occurs (remember the Gachnang’s Abu Dhabi crash) tarmac run-off are simply pointless.

    The Holy Graal is to balance the dimension of tarmac and gravel. There is no an always good solution. Depending on how’s the corner, what’s the purpose is, what you have to arrest (vehicle or rider), you need to assess risks and design the run-off to suit at best your provisional needs.

    But very few racetracks now are designed like I said.

    That’s why we see so many tarmac around.

  24. Does anybody know where to find the RB6 dimensions, its chassis length in particular?

    1. How accurate do you need the numbers to be? All F1 cars are very similar in size due to the regulations. This year they are a little longer than other years (I think) but here’s a good reference:
      http://www.formula1.com/inside_f1/rules_and_regulations/technical_regulations/5260/

      “As a typical example, the 2007 season Toyota TF107 is 453cm long, 180cm wide and 95cm high.”

      1. Okay, so here is my math:
        First I completely abandoned any idea of trying to calculate his speeds from the impact point because it is so complex, all the different forces, and so on, it is impossible for anybody to do it.

        So I took the only real time footage we got from the crash, and studding it hard I worked out that it takes three and a half frames for him to cover an RB6 car’s length right before the moment of impact, I of course also had to take into account that his front wing was missing, and that he was going in a slight angle.

        As Jarno below provided that a healthy bull’s length is 5 meters, and the video was playing 25 f/s. So the calculation is v=5*25/3.5=35.7 m/s, that is 129km/h and 80 mp/h.

        As you can see the figures are quite far from those in the article above. But I believe that this figure are much closer to the actual one. In the above article pretty much all of the figures in the equation is an assumption, not to mention that the equation itself is not complete. This equation hove ever is very simple, only the accuracy of my observation is a variable, but even then the margin of error isn’t as big.

        But if you ask me, I still wouldn’t want to hit a barrier at 80 mp/h, especially with my feet just a few centimeters from the impact itself as there were no front nose at that point.

        1. That matched pretty closely with the figure that Jameson quoted from F1 racing.

  25. I think I understand why the FIA prefers concrete, see Alex Wurz’s flips in the 1998 Canadian GP in Ned’s First lap crashes thread. (Thanks Ned) But couldn’t they make the concrete run off areas so it is difficult to regain the track.

  26. David Sherwood
    6th August 2010, 8:29

    OK, so tarmac stays for safety reasons, so how about one of the following, if a car runs off during a race, purely for driver error:

    1) An automatic X seconds added to race time

    2 Marshall holds car back for X seconds

    3)Drive through for using run off

    4) Any other ideas!

  27. we just need the tarmac to be bordered with grass, like at hockenheim turn 1. The penalty for running wide, is a quick foray onto a (very) narrow pice of grass, which upsets the balance, and although the driver and car can recover unhurt and undamaged, the resultant loss of speed and therefore time is great enough for it never to be the fastest way round the corner. Once over the grass (it’s only about 3 foot wide on that turn in hockenheim) you’re back onto tarmac again and can speed back up. I’d say this loses the drivers at least a second or two, and therefore is never going to yield an advantage – whilst being safer than gravel traps as well.

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