Mgas Posted Monday at 07:39 PM Report Share Posted Monday at 07:39 PM I’m sure this has been discussed many times before by more intelligent and better informed people than me, but with Tobias’s injury’s and a clip from Poland doing the rounds I’ve been wondering what can be done to stop safety fencing lifting? More and more often a rider or riders have an incident where the bike hits the fencing first and lifts it leaving the rider to go underneath and impacting with whatever is behind. My opinion is that attaching them to the concrete below the shale might make a difference. Possibly eyelets in the concrete to attach to? let’s be honest we all like a little off but people being hurt or worse is not what anyone wants to see. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Triple.H. Posted Monday at 07:52 PM Report Share Posted Monday at 07:52 PM 2 minutes ago, Mgas said: I’m sure this has been discussed many times before by more intelligent and better informed people than me, but with Tobias’s injury’s and a clip from Poland doing the rounds I’ve been wondering what can be done to stop safety fencing lifting? More and more often a rider or riders have an incident where the bike hits the fencing first and lifts it leaving the rider to go underneath and impacting with whatever is behind. My opinion is that attaching them to the concrete below the shale might make a difference. Possibly eyelets in the concrete to attach to? let’s be honest we all like a little off but people being hurt or worse is not what anyone wants to see. The fence should be partially buried by about a foot, the normal tethering system at top and bottom used and however much of the fence below track level filled with water. The section filled could be totally separate from the airside. Riders will no doubt still get hurt but airfences lifting or sections separating is a common problem, so my idea may appear daft but if you don't try you don't find out. Alternatively phase in foam fences as and when air fences reach their replacement date. I cannot recollect any incidents where the foam fence lifted. No doubt I'll be informed about them sooner rather than later. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IainB Posted Monday at 08:10 PM Report Share Posted Monday at 08:10 PM The foam fences do seem a lot less forgiving than the air fences though... I've always thought that a solid deformable barrier should be placed in front of the air bags, made from thin aluminium or something Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stevehone Posted Tuesday at 12:49 PM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 12:49 PM 17 hours ago, Mgas said: I’m sure this has been discussed many times before by more intelligent and better informed people than me, but with Tobias’s injury’s and a clip from Poland doing the rounds I’ve been wondering what can be done to stop safety fencing lifting? More and more often a rider or riders have an incident where the bike hits the fencing first and lifts it leaving the rider to go underneath and impacting with whatever is behind. My opinion is that attaching them to the concrete below the shale might make a difference. Possibly eyelets in the concrete to attach to? let’s be honest we all like a little off but people being hurt or worse is not what anyone wants to see. any eyelets or straps at the bottom would soon become a danger Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spoofer Posted Tuesday at 01:03 PM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 01:03 PM They are struggling with this everywhere so it's something that needs looking at very closely. Mencel went underneath the fence on Saturday in Ostrow because it doubles as the pit gate. Anywhere you have a pit gate on a bend you cannot dig down the required level or anchor it the same as other panels so that area has massive vulnerability. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mgas Posted Tuesday at 04:00 PM Author Report Share Posted Tuesday at 04:00 PM 3 hours ago, stevehone said: any eyelets or straps at the bottom would soon become a danger I more imagined flush or recessed eyelets secured by very short strapping or clips but I understand what you’re saying. It’s would be trial and error to start with as I don’t think the money exists to do development that isn’t on a live track. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mgas Posted Tuesday at 04:05 PM Author Report Share Posted Tuesday at 04:05 PM 2 hours ago, Spoofer said: They are struggling with this everywhere so it's something that needs looking at very closely. Mencel went underneath the fence on Saturday in Ostrow because it doubles as the pit gate. Anywhere you have a pit gate on a bend you cannot dig down the required level or anchor it the same as other panels so that area has massive vulnerability. Yes that is exactly the clip I had seen, it looked horrific. I think the only way to avoid that exact scenario is banning pit entrances on corners. Easier said then done though. As a matter of rider protection I think any fence lifting is a huge issue. It’s never going to be a safe sport but more needs to be done to mitigate risk. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Whitelinehugger Posted 1 hour ago Report Share Posted 1 hour ago Polystyrene panels would be ideal Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.