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Spool party: How F1's drivers will fight against turbo lag in Monaco

Feature
Formula 1
Monaco GP
Spool party: How F1's drivers will fight against turbo lag in Monaco

Why Norris and Leclerc have been summoned to the FIA stewards before hitting the track in Monaco

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Why Norris and Leclerc have been summoned to the FIA stewards before hitting the track in Monaco

Marquez to "forget" about Hungarian GP podium as he offers recovery update

MotoGP
Hungarian GP
Marquez to "forget" about Hungarian GP podium as he offers recovery update

What makes the Le Mans 24 Hours so special?

Feature
WEC
24 Hours of Le Mans
What makes the Le Mans 24 Hours so special?

Bagnaia: Lack of Balaton Park safety changes linked to circuit's uncertain MotoGP future

MotoGP
Hungarian GP
Bagnaia: Lack of Balaton Park safety changes linked to circuit's uncertain MotoGP future

F1 teams fit unique rear wings for Monaco GP

Formula 1
Monaco GP
F1 teams fit unique rear wings for Monaco GP

Newey set to return to F1 paddock in Monaco

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Newey set to return to F1 paddock in Monaco

The best Saturday of the year? Why F1 must accept Monaco for what it is

Feature
Formula 1
Monaco GP
The best Saturday of the year? Why F1 must accept Monaco for what it is

FIA plans to introduce cockpit protection to other categories than F1

The FIA is committed to introducing additional cockpit protection to other categories once the halo concept has been proved in Formula 1

Last month motorsport's governing body announced it would make the halo device mandatory for F1 from next season.

IndyCar has made clear it is evaluating cockpit protection devices and Formula E expects to adopt a version of the halo as part of its 2018/19 car.

FIA safety director Laurent Mekies has confirmed that the plan with the halo has always been to have something that can eventually be used in all types of single-seaters.

"There would be no additional frontal protection without a possibility to put it into the other formulas," he told Autosport.

"It does not mean that it is strictly the same versions, but as a concept, nobody will accept that only the top guys are protected, and this is certainly not the route we are favouring.

"F1 is the best possible environment to experiment and research these sorts of things, and so naturally this is where we are developing it.

"But the intention is obviously to cascade it down."

While the halo has split opinion among F1 drivers, it has been publicly backed by Grand Prix Drivers' Association chairman Alex Wurz.

Mekies said consultation with drivers was crucial to the FIA.

"Drivers are very supportive of the safety effort, and we have a very direct relationship with the GPDA," he explained. "We exchange a lot.

"It's not enough to have good ideas, if you are unable to convince the people around you that these ideas are good, and should be supported, then they are useless.

"The president of the FIA [Jean Todt] is pushing us all the time to speak with the drivers - they are in the cars, so speak with them, to a greater extent than we would do otherwise.

"And in the end this is where we also get the inspirations about what we have to push, and how hard we have to push."

Mekies said the FIA would not slow down in its pursuit of great motorsport safety, and said its work extended well beyond well-publicised examples like the halo.

"In F1 because everything is pushed so much to the limit, you have implications - as soon as you change something it has consequences for something else, so maybe you speak about it a bit more," he said.

"But we do that all year long through the technical working groups of each category.

"As the FIA we are structured with research groups, and in these research groups, everybody is participating.

"IndyCar, NASCAR, all the players are there, because it's about putting together what we know to make things better for everybody."

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