Formula One is facing fresh calls to consider closed cockpits after French driver Jules Bianchi’s accident in Japan last weekend, though opinions are mixed about the potential benefits.

Cockpit covers were tested by the FIA after Felipe Massa suffered severe head injuries when he was hit by a bouncing spring in Hungary in 2009.

In 2012, tests were carried out using a forward roll hoop – a metal structure placed right in front of the driver – after other experiments with a jet fighter-style canopy and windshields.

None were developed but drivers and teams suggested at the Russian Grand Prix they could be revisited after Bianchi suffered a severe brain trauma when his Marussia crashed into a recovery tractor at Suzuka.

The Frenchman remains ‘critical but stable’ in hospital.

“I probably tend to agree to at least check and try or test the idea,” Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso said of the closed cockpit idea.

“I think we are in 2014, we have the technology, we have aeroplanes, we have had many other examples that they use in a successful way so why not think about it?”

Alonso gave as an example the 2012 Belgian GP, where Romain Grosjean’s Lotus flew into the air and skimmed over his car, missing his head by a matter of centimetres.

“I could probably have died there if it had been 10 cms closer. If the technology is there and available, and there is the possibility, I would not exclude it, for sure,” he said.

The problem with canopies, apart from aesthetics which offend purists in a series that has always had open cockpits, has been ensuring good visibility in poor conditions and the risk of a driver becoming trapped if a car overturns.

Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel, who has a keen sense of the sport’s history and traditions, said he had mixed feelings.

“I think it (open cockpits) is one of the things that are very special about Formula One,” the German told reporters.

“On the other hand, as Fernando touched on, there’s a lot of reasons why we should look into closed cockpits for the future.”

Such a cover would have probably allowed Massa to escape unscathed from his injury, with the Brazilian lucky anyway that the spring hit the helmet just above his eye rather than the plastic visor.

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