RF Grand Prix 1979 Manual 1.01
RF Grand Prix 1979 Manual 1.01
RF Grand Prix 1979 Manual 1.01
CREDITS
Research/Text/Layout: Alex Martini
Ground-Effects: Jon Denton
Setups: Jon Denton/Renato Simioni
Screenies/Test-Driver: Bob Simmerman
Renders: Shutt1e
Cover Art/Art: Julian Dyer
Proof/Quality: Spadge Fromley
CONTENTS
FOREWORD — 5
INTRODUCTION — 6
THE 1970s — 10
THE TYRE WAR — 27
THE ENGINE WAR — 28
GROUND-EFFECTS AND MINI-SKIRTS — 44
SETTING-UP A GROUND-EFFECTS CAR — 53
AUTODELTA ALFA ROMEO — 58
WARSTEINER ARROWS RACING TEAM — 62
ATS WHEELS — 67
PARMALAT RACING TEAM — 71
TEAM ENSIGN — 76
SCUDERIA FERRARI SPA SEFAC — 80
FITTIPALDI AUTOMOTIVE — 89
LIGIER GITANES — 93
MARTINI RACING TEAM LOTUS — 98
MARLBORO TEAM MCLAREN — 104
TEAM MERZARIO — 109
TEAM REBAQUE — 113
EQUIPE RENAULT ELF — 117
SAMSON/INTERSCOPE SHADOW RACING TEAM — 123
CANDY TEAM TYRRELL — 127
ALBILAD-SAUDIA RACING TEAM — 132
OLYMPUS CAMERAS WOLF RACING — 137
SEASON REVIEW—THE TRACKS OF 1979 — 143
FOREWORD
The Grand Prix 1979 mod has come a long way since Shutt1e began modelling
the first Ferrari back in 2004 along with Tony X, originally for GP4. Since then, the
project has constantly evolved, feeding from the passion of everyone who has
been, or at one point were, involved in its creation. The goal has always
remained the same: To recreate, as faithfully as we possibly could, all the
excitement, drama, and romance of this fantastic era of the sport.
This demanded no small amount of dedication from all of its contributors, and
consumed a good deal of our lives throughout its development period. It has,
however, always remained an extremely rewarding exercise of passionate team
work, from which friendships developed among folks who would otherwise have
remained complete strangers. Irrespective of the quality of the end result, this
has already paid off big time.
This manual, developed by the AutoSimSport magazine crew with the support
from Grand Prix Classics team, has the purpose of not only feeding some
hopefully pertinent tips to the users of the mod, but also of taking readers
somewhere else, back to when this piece of the sport´s history was being
written, by Villeneuve, Scheckter, Andretti, Chapman, and company.
We hope you all enjoy the ride!
—Renato Simioni (Grand Prix Classics team)
INTRODUCTION
Turn Up the Boost!
At last! ‘Grand Prix Legends 2’—or something that looks and sounds very much
like it—has arrived ... albeit half a decade late, and after the death of its intended
parent, Papyrus. Renato Simioni and his multinational Grand Prix Classics crew
have done what sim-impressario extraordinaire Dave Kaemmer and all the king's
horses (well, the might of the French waterworks cartel, which begat Vivendi)
couldn't do: bring a totally believable ‘Dawn of the Turbo Era’ simulation to life
for our die-hard sim-racing community.
And it was ... it is ... good. Very good.
GPC's ‘GP79’ mod for rFactor is as rich in features, authenticity and detail as any
commercial product could ever hope to be. Plus, of course, it's a blast to drive.
But consider, if you will, the season it is simulating: 1979, a time of tumultuous
change in Formula 1 (it was the first year a turbo-charged car won a proper
Grand Prix), and of great diversity.
Looking at contemporary footage of that season (Paul Zimmerman, of
motorsportcollector.com, who almost single-handedly got MGM to release
‘Grand Prix’ on DVD, was good enough to provide us with a copy of Duke Video's
‘The Grand Prix Collection’, a 10-volume history of Formula 1 in the 1970s), the
most striking visual is the sheer number of cars on the grid. Up to twice as many
cars sallied forth in those races as compete in Formula 1 nowadays, a plenitude
faithfully duplicated in all the marques and models and upgrades represented in
Grand Prix Classics's mod.
Many of the real-world 1979 cars were unabashed copies of the revolutionary
ground-effects Lotus Type 79, which had won the World Drivers Championship
for Mario Andretti the year before. Many copies were in fact superior (indeed,
Lotus would not win another Grand Prix until 1982). Of these, the best
newcomer was undoubtedly Frank Williams's FW07-Cosworth (Ford), but it
didn't really come alive until the second half of the season, by which time Jody
Scheckter and teammate Gilles Villeneuve (Jacques's father) had a firm grip on
the Championship in their screaming 12-cylinder Ferrari T4s.
Another strong contender was Guy Ligier's JS11-Cozzie V8 which won the first
two races (Argentina and Brasil) and later the Spanish GP. The Championship
points system was bizarre that year, with drivers only allowed to count their best
four finishes in each half of the 16-race season (15 after the Swedish GP was
cancelled). The second half was dominated by the Williams drivers Alan Jones
and Clay Regazzoni, who swept the British, German, Austrian and Dutch events
in a row, and the Canadian GP thereafter.
But it was the Ferrari 312 T4 which won the Drivers Championship for Scheckter
(with 51 points and wins at Belgium, Monaco and Italy; to Villeneuve's 47 points
and wins at South Africa and the U.S., both East and West) as well as the
Constructors Championship (113 points for Ferrari vs. Williams's 75; Ligier was
third with 61). However, if you like driving for an underdog team, GPC’s mod also
offers you both the outclassed Lotus 79 as well as the troublesome Type 80 (its
intended replacement; the best it got was a third in Spain), plus the lovely Tyrrell
009-Cosworth, the pointy-nosed Brabham-Alfa Romeo V12, the lone Wolf (sry.),
the never-raced Renault RS11, not to mention backmarkers like the Rebaque,
Merzario, ATS, and Emerson Fittipaldi's hard-to-pronounce Corpersucar (which
scored a solitary point). Only the forgettable Kauhsen is absent.
Far and away the most significant car of the year, though, was the Renault RS10,
which won only one race (the French GP), but which would usher in what many
believe was postwar Grand Prix racing's ‘Golden Age’: the Turbo Era. And thanks
to Renato and his band of merry men, it's now yours to drive, all 39 car models of
it (according to SimHQ), and 27 drivers of the 34 who actually started that season
(according to Wikipedia).
Enjoy!
—Steve Smith (fmr. Editor of ‘Car and Driver’, ‘Motor Trend’, ‘PC Computing’, etc.)
THE 1970s
Disco Inferno!
Looking back at the history of Grand Prix racing, it would be difficult to argue
against the disco-decade being the sport’s most influential and finest:
Technically, the cars had never been more experimental, with the grid packed
(pre-qualifying was the norm in those years for the 30 or so cars that would turn
up at every event to contest for the 24 starting berths) with anomalous shapes
and solutions as designers were given the (comparative) freedom to test the
limits of their imagination and technical understanding; the drivers, too,
compared to today’s commercial products, were seemingly bigger-than-life,
involved, as they most certainly were, in a deadly sport, and it was still possible
for a privateer team to buy an off-the-shelf DFV and go racing with the
possibility of success (Lord Hesketh’s mid-1970s adventure being a case in
point). The tracks, too, remained terrifying tests of spirit and will, yet to be
emasculated by the rise of commercialism, while the grid was chock-a-block with
personalities, both in and out of the cockpits: James Hunt, Clay Regazzoni, Luca
Cordero de Montezemolo, Bernie Ecclestone, Don Nichols, Mo Nunn ... Indeed, a
quick glance at the designers, their cars and drivers of that era is to shine a light
on the very pulse of what Formula 1 racing was designed to be, and the ‘formula’
has never been so widely interpreted, with every season bringing about
substantial evolutions in design implementation.
However, there really have only been three definitive revolutions in the technical
development of Formula 1 cars since the formula’s inception back in 1947, two
of them serving as perfect bookends to the 1970s era: First, though, was the
introduction of the rear-engined chassis by Cooper which debuted in a Formula
2 car driven by Jack Brabham at Monaco in 1957 (Enzo Ferrari was reputed to
have noted that he’d never seen a horse push a carriage and, as a consequence,
the English garagisti must be out of their minds) before the end of the 1960s saw
the inauguration of wings by Jim Hall's Can-Am Chaparral team (which was
imported to Formula 1 by Colin Chapman), and finally, the end of the 1970s (the
winter of 1977) saw Colin Chapman introduce the voodoo-science of ground-
effects to Grand Prix racing.
(Previous Page: Still taken from the archives showing the aftermath, in 1973, of
local hero Dave Charlton’s lunge at Carlos Reutemann coming into Crowthorne
Bend. Charlton spun, and collected an innocent Mike Hailwood in a Surtees. The rest
of the drivers managed to brush past the wreckage until Clay Regazzoni, unsighted,
smashed his BRM into Hailwood’s stricken car. Regazzoni's BRM, along with
Hailwood’s Surtees, immediately burst into flames. Even worse, Regazzoni had been
knocked unconscious by the impact. Hailwood, instants after this still (which
AutoSimSport will release sometime next month, along with our Kyalami Super 8mm
film), jumped from his burning wreckage, and literally dived into the flames to
unstrap Regazzoni’s belts. He then dragged the Swiss driver out as the marshals
doused the flames. Hailwood—with flames engulfing him—would then desperately
sprint across the track to extinguish the flames by rolling into the grass. He would
later win the George Medal for his bravery.
…10-time motor-bike world champion Hailwood would die in 1981, aged 40, when
he, and his daughter, were involved in a senseless road-accident while driving to get
dinner, a fate that this fine man did not deserve In 2006, Clay Regazzoni, too, would
lose his life in a traffic accident.)
Even more incredibly, a minnow team from France, Ligier, who were in their
third season of Formula 1, had stumbled—some (perhaps cruelly) have said by
sheer chance—on an ideal ground-effects solution, aided considerably by the
fact that they had dumped their French engine supplier (Matra, and its lustful
V12), during the winter in favour of a factory-spec’ DFV that moulded itself
perfectly to the needs of their ground-effects designer, Gérard Ducarouge.
Ferrari, on the other hand, found themselves—for the third time that decade—at
an impasse: The transverse gearbox solution that had brought them so much joy
since 1975 was again, along with their ultra-wide ‘Boxer’ engine, a complete
liability, and Forghieri and his engineers developed what can only be described
as a fudged ground-effects car in response: It was an ugly but effective solution.
A cursory look at the difference between 1978’s 312T3 and the 312T4 goes a
long way in demonstrating the quantum leap that the teams had to take in the
winter of 1978 to remain competitive.
Lined up on the grid to race these cars (a very challenging experience since,
optimally, a ground-effects car means stiff suspension, and strange {not to
mention frightening} cornering characteristics {the faster the cars went, the
more grip they generated}) was arguably one of the strongest fields in Grand
Prix history: World Champions (past and present) included Nelson Piquet, Niki
Lauda, James Hunt, Keke Rosberg, Mario Andretti, Jody Scheckter, and Emerson
Fittpaldi, all of whom joined young chargers such as Gilles Villeneuve, Didier
Pironi, veterans like Jacky Ickx along with an embarrassment of world-class
talent and race winners such as Depailler, Reutemann, Watson, Jabouille,
Tambay, Arnoux, Brambilla (and many others), for what would prove to be a
topsy-turvy season rich in racing incidents that have since come down to us as
legend.
Formula 1, too, was still in its ‘infancy’ commercially, and the field was sprinkled
with privateers: Mexican millionaire Hector Rebaque bought himself an off-the-
shelf DFV engine, then persuaded Colin Chapman to give him a Lotus 79 chassis,
while Merzario and Fittipaldi continued their disastrous forays into oblivion:
Meanwhile, at Williams—who were, by then, into their second decade of racing
(and still seeking their first win—indeed, Williams was the veritable Minardi of
the 1970s)—things were shaping up very well indeed with their strong driver
line-up, and Head’s soon-to-be celebrated FW07.
Jones who must have rued the lost opportunities earlier in the season as he
stormed off to victory in Germany, Austria, and Holland.
Monza, in the autumn, is always a good month to be in Milan, and 1979 saw the
tifosi gather in the knowledge that a win for Scheckter would give Ferrari both
the Drivers’ and Constructors’ titles. Indeed, Scheckter’s persistence and
experience (he’d collected points at virtually every round of the season) had left
him virtually without challenge for the championship—everyone, that is, except
for his own team-mate, Gilles Villeneuve, who spent the afternoon watching
(and guarding) Scheckter’s tail-pipe in a display of honour and team-work that
would, in 1982, come back to haunt him—and Ferrari. But that afternoon was all
about Ferrari’s triumph, and Jody Scheckter’s fulfillment of a life-time ambition.
Villeneuve was allowed free reign for his home Grand Prix, but the Williams of
Jones was too good at Montreal, claiming victory before the circus finished up at
Watkins Glen where Jones lost a wheel allowing Villeneuve to claim victory and
ending the year on a high-note for the team from Maranello. Little did they
suspect that it would be another two decades before they would taste such
success again, three years after Gilles’s own son would clinch the championship
himself, and 18 years after Gilles would pass away at the wheel of a Ferrari.
far too thirsty, which all but made its legendary power (and sound!) meaningless.
Murray—before the end of the 1979 season—convinced Ecclestone that a DFV
engine, while less powerful, would be far better suited for his purposes, and
Brabham reverted back to V8 power, a decision which caused Lauda—who had
been driving high-revving V12s for seven years—to, promptly quit Formula 1.
Chiti, meanwhile, perhaps sensing the winds, convinced Alfa Romeo to enter
Formula 1 with their own team run by Chiti’s Autodelta outfit that had brought
the manufacturer so much success in sports cars … the car, however, the Tipo
177, would prove to be as unhandsome as it was slow (using the Flat 12) while its
evolution, the Tipo 179, introduced later in the season (this time powered by the
V12) didn’t fare much better. Alfa Romeo would continue to persevere with a
programme that was perpetually one breakthrough away from success, but after
Depailler lost his life testing the 1980 Alfa at Hockenheim, and after Andretti had
spent an entire year trying (and failing) to develop it, the project lost its way, and
would eventually fold up in 1985.
The Alfa Romeo V12—and the Flat 12—were probably the most powerful
engines in Formula 1 at the time … but its inherent faults made it unable to
sustain a championship run, even in a team as well-funded and run as Brabham
were in the late 1970s.
Chapman, in 1976, conceptualised that the underbody of the car—that is, the
largest single section of malleable surface area on a race car—could be
manipulated in order to become one big aerofoil. In other words, rather than
have wings on the car, the car itself could, in theory, become the wing—or, to
put it simply, a ‘wing car’.
Chapman subsequently emerged from his cupboard, and provided a document
to his chief engineers, Peter Wright and Martin Ogilvie, detailing this theory, and
prompted them to put it to the test.
Peter Wright was well suited to the job: Under previous roles at both BRM and
March, he had considered the idea of running sidepods with deep diffusers in
them, mostly for the benefit of tidying airflow around the wheels, but no
significant advantage had been seen. This was mainly because the cars it was
implemented on—those of the late 1960s—ran far too high from the ground to
realise any benefits from the diffusers themselves.
The Lotus engineers, with Chapman’s thesis at hand, set to work on realising
Chapman’s vision of a ‘wing car’. They began in 1976 by shaping the underside
of the sidepods into inverted aerofoils; immediately, the team found a notable
increase in downforce. Notable … but certainly no quantum leap.
It was not until further into the development phase that the concept of ‘skirts’
came along, and with them, the final piece in the puzzle that would give
Chapman his world beating car.
Testing the ground-effects technology (throughout the winter of 1976, in great
secrecy) had given Lotus some rather tantalising feedback: It was found that, at
higher speeds, when the car ran closer to the ground (due to the increase in
download force), even greater amounts of downforce could be determined than
at slower speeds. Wind-tunnel tests revealed the reason: When the test-car’s
ride-height was lowered, less air escaped from the sides of the car, meaning an
increase in the amount of air that was pushed through the ‘venturi’. The ‘venturi-
effect’ is easily understood: Fluid (or air, itself a fluid) that flows through a tube
with a constriction in it will speed the fluid up, thereby reducing its pressure and
producing a partial vacuum; this, in turn, makes the diffuser more effective at the
AUTOSIMSPORT Special—February 2007
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GP79 Car-Owner’s Manual—Ground-effects and Mini-Skirts
rear of the sidepods. The need, then, to ‘protect’ the air from escaping from the
side area of the sidepod became crucial; ‘sealing’ the air to the ground meant
considerably less air could ‘seep’ out, and since more air meant more downforce,
this was absolutely crucial for the ground-effects experiment to work.
(Incidentally, this is the reason why many of the cars in the 1979 field had no
front wing since ground-effects cars live or die by the amount of air they can
force under the car: Logically, a front wing will ‘spoil’ the airflow that flows under
the car: The larger the amount of air, the more of it will pass through the venturi,
and the more downforce will be {potentially} generated.)
In order to avoid air ‘slipping’ away from the sides of the cars, then, Lotus began
experimenting with ‘skirts’: Initial tests, using ceramic skirts, prompted
unprecedented results. Laptimes dropped along with jaws as a near doubling of
total downforce occurred simply by the addition of these skirts.
The skirts were not without their problems however; the ceramics were tearing
out chunks of track, as well as upsetting the car itself since it was literally like
running on a surfboard should ride-heights be compromised, leaving Lotus to
search for alternative solutions: After much deliberation and testing of various
materials, a flexible skirt was designed that would move up and down along
with the car itself. With the skirts no longer ‘fixed’, they would not carve out
divots from the track, while vehicle instability was equally cured. Even better, the
skirts would also not wear away over the course of a race, as initial tests with
rubber skirts had done.
The initial ‘wing-car’ was ready for the 1977 season: It would prove immediately
competitive, scoring 5 wins and 7 poles, as well as 2 wins in the opening three
races of 1978. Even more remarkably, the technology employed had remained a
secret from the entire paddock!
In 1978, Lotus—still running the 78 model for the early long-haul races—was
busy preparing and improving the ground-effects formula which would become
known to the world as the Lotus 79, quite possibly the most important race-car
ever created. Unlike the Lotus 78, the Lotus 79 was designed entirely with
ground-effect principles in mind; this meant that the diffusers were larger, the
chassis was stiffer (in order to ‘hold’ the weight of the increased downforce), and
aerodynamic drag from the bodywork was significantly reduced.
This, indeed, was the real key to the success of ground-effects: That is, creating
massive amounts of downforce using external wings is a simple thing, but the
drag that it creates makes their use all but worthless. With ground-effects, on the
other hand, the underbody will generate considerable amounts of downforce,
but it does so with little or no drag penalty. The result is that the aerofoils placed
on the car’s bodywork—and the bodywork itself—can be designed to have a
lower co-efficient of drag, or in other words, to be more ‘slippery’. The net result
is a car that can pull huge downforce through fast corners, but also maximise
top speed and acceleration on straights. Chapman’s invention was the Holy Grail
of race-car design.
The Lotus 79 went on to dominate the 1978 season, Lotus clinching both
championships with Mario Andretti and Ronnie Peterson between them scoring
8 wins and 12 poles (6 wins and 10 poles for the Lotus 79). Ground-effects had
truly arrived, and in 1979, it was time for everyone to catch up.
In following years, other teams copied and improved on the Lotus design until
cornering speeds became dangerously high, resulting in several severe
accidents which prompted the authorities to legislate for flat undersides for the
1983 season. Part of the danger of relying on ground-effects to corner at high
speeds is the possibility of the sudden removal of this force; if the belly of the car
makes contact with the ground, for instance, the airflow will be overly-
constricted, resulting in almost total loss of any ground-effects. If this occurs in a
corner where the driver is relying on this force to stay on the track, its sudden
removal can cause the car to abruptly lose most of its traction, with inevitable
results (made even more dangerous due to the fact that the car generated more
downforce the faster it traveled due to the amount of air that was literally
sucked-in from the front).
Aerodynamic efficiency is what Formula 1 aerodynamicists are employed to
achieve; generating downforce is one thing, doing so without generating any
drag, is another altogether. To look at a racing car’s overall efficiency, we must
look at firstly, how much downforce is generated, and, secondly, how much drag
is generated, before finally determining the all-important lift-to-drag ratio for
that car.
If we take a Sauber C9 sports car as an example here (which was racing at a
period of the World Sports Car Championship when ground-effects was legal,
and in full effect), we will find the followingℑ:
1,253 Kgs @ 150 mph, with 313 Kgs of drag
1,804 Kgs @ 180 mph, with 451 Kgs of drag
2,227 Kgs @ 200 mph, with 557 Kgs of drag
Lift-to-drag ratio: 4:1
As a comparison, a modern day Formula 1 car generates similar levels of
downforce, but, significantly, greater drag. With smaller surfaces along with less
design constraints, the pinnacle of the ground-effects cars of 1979—the Williams
Cosworth FW07—boasted an unprecedented lift-to-drag ratio.
2,278 Kgs @ 150 mph, with 285Kgs of drag
Lift-to-drag ratio: 8:1
ℑ
Downforce and drag figures for Sauber C9 1988—Sprint configuration
In simple terms, the static rake angle is adjusted in the garage by changing the
static ride height settings. If you set the front ride height to 20mm, and the rear
to 40mm, then the rake angle is steeper than if you have the ride heights set at
20mm-and-30mm front-to-rear.
Careful adjustment of the rake is key when seeking to optimise the amount of air
being pushed into the diffuser; moreover, it is also crucial in determining the
velocity (the higher the better) of the air as it passes through the diffuser before
it escapes out from the rear of the car.
Finding this optimum setting is critical for ground-effect cars since, if the front of
the car (which must lower than the rear, to achieve a venturi) is set too low, it will
constrict incoming airflow, and, if the rear is set too high, the diffuser will ‘stall’.
Ride height remains the most obvious influence on rake; however, determining
the ideal ride height is not as simple as a cursory glance at the static rake angle.
This is because the static ride height that is visible when the car is parked in the
garage can bear very little relation to what the rake angle ‘becomes’ when
downforce is acting on the car—some thing that can only be determined when
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GP79 Car-Owner’s Manual—Settimg-up a Ground-Effects Car
the car is out on track, at high speed. As the car’s speed increases, the aerodynamic
devices on the bodywork, in conjunction with the underbody ‘venturi’, conspire to
push the car downwards (by how much depends on spring stiffness, and overall
available suspension travel). If you take a MoTeC trace of Kyalami on GP79 Version
1.0’s default setup, you will find that the ride height at peak speed, just before
braking for Turn 1, is considerably different to the static ride height.
What you will typically find is that, where the default setups offered high wing
levels, (to help beginners), the rear of the car is pushed harder to the ground than
the front, thus preventing the ‘venturi’ from doing its job because the rake angle is
not providing an adequate venturi. For a ground-effects car, this is far from ideal,
since downforce is generated not only by the wings. In fact, considerably more
downforce can be achieved by the correct use of the underbody.
What you may also find from a MoTeC analysis is that the change in rake angle
under hard acceleration and hard braking, due to the chassis pitching, is
considerable. Both of these issues are problems that need to be resolved in order
make the ground-effects car work for you.
Changes to static ride height must go hand-in-hand with the addition of packers
to the suspension. Packers, as their name would imply, are inserted in order to
physically restrict the amount of available suspension travel. This will potentially
make the car skittish, but, at the same time, will provide high speed body control
while restricting pitch-and-roll. Careful insertion of packers also determines the
position at which the chassis will ‘rest’ when at high speed and under high aero
load.
Packers provide an aid in giving you fine control over the rake angle at high speed
and, whilst this makes them a good friend, they can also be a tad on the feisty side
since, when the car is running packers, they will provide a finite limit to the
suspension’s travel, thereby causing the car to reach its grip limits very quickly.
What this results in is a car that will be far ‘edgier’ than one that is setup without
packers (an increase in pitch-and-roll giving the driver a far more comfortable
ride): It will also, of course, be a faster car.
{As an aside: When developing the FW07, Alan Jones, in testing at Paul Ricard early in
1979, pulled into the pit and reported back to Patrick Head that the car was so rock
hard that the vibrations were making driving the car a really ‘uncomfortable’
adventure. Patrick Head responded by suggesting that Jones sit on his wallet. Jones,
never one to suffer a jibe without a comeback, then suggested Head give him
something to put in it!}
Once you find the optimum high speed rake setting, you should feel, along with it,
an increase in downforce: Once that has been achieved, you can then set to work
on reducing drag (and therefore higher top speed and quicker acceleration) by
reducing wing levels.
A lot of this will seem like trial and error at first, but in reality, because of the lack of
complexity to the tracks in rFactor, once you get a basic ’feel’ for the optimum
settings for a given car, they can often be moved from track to track
Ride height settings usually want to be between 21mm-to-24 mm at the front, and
35mm-to-40mm at the rear, with varying levels of packers, and spring stiffness.
Testing and hard work will reveal the optimum, as will careful studying of MoTeC
telemetry. While you may not see immediate improvement in laptimes, due
possibly to changes in the car’s driveability, what is worth noting is how the car
feels. As the car picks up more underbody downforce, you will probably not notice
an increase in cornering speed if you are still running high wing levels, but you
may find that you are able to reduce wing levels, and still maintain the same
corner speed. Of course, reducing those wing levels has an effect on the load
being put upon the chassis, and thus the level of compression the suspension is
put under, so a change in wing levels may require a re-assessment of spring rates,
and packer depth.
Generally, one works carefully in this situation: Reduce wings until such a time as
you find a notable decrease in downforce, at which point, begin to work with the
high speed rake to try to claw some of the downforce back, then continue to
reduce the wings until you can extract nothing more from the underbody. If the
balance of under-to-overbody aero grip is predominantly coming from the
underbody, you should find not only good levels of grip, but competitive straight-
line speed also.
At the same time, because of the lack of pitch in the chassis due to the body
control afforded by the packers, you should notice more stability under braking
which will allow you to brake later. Compare laps in MoTeC between those you ran
earlier, and look at exits from medium speed corners; you should find that, if
things are going well, you will be getting on the throttle earlier, and mid-speed
rear traction will have improved.
Due to the constraints of the ISI engine, this method works best on medium and
high speed circuits since the inherent stiffness required makes the car something
of a handful at low speeds. As such, lower speed circuits like Monaco or Long
Beach require something of a trade off between a stiff car, and good downforce,
and a compliant chassis at low speed.
However, even at Long Beach, there are improvements in traction out of middle
speed corners to be seen though employing these methods.
Whilst at first the changes to the chassis may make if feel trickier to drive,
adaptations to dampers, and roll bars, to adjust the balance more to you liking,
should tie up with the increased grip, which, after some laps of acclimatisation, will
bring results.
Other Considerations
Setting your wheel to speed up the steering ‘rack’ of the car is crucial. Do this by
looking at the turn rate in degrees under car setup, and tying this up with the
rotation setup on your wheel. For instance, if your wheel has 400 degrees of turn,
you do not want to have to use that much steering lock all the time, so set the
front wheel turn rate in the setup to be higher in order to provide a more direct
steering rack. This setting will vary from wheel to wheel, and also from track to
track. Some tracks, Monaco in particular, require more steering angle in the front
wheels to be able to actually negotiate the tighter corners.
The simple formula is: The greater the degrees of rotation on your wheel, the
higher the number of degrees in the car’s setup. This will result in an increase in
the angle of the front wheels for every degree of wheel rotation; a higher
number in the car setup screen for wheel degrees denotes more direct steering.
(Note, this is in contrast to real life where the steering ratio would be more direct
for a lower number, where road cars often have a ratio between 12-20:1, and
racing cars generally around 5-10:1).
Changes to the steering rack can be one of the most difficult things to get used
to as a driver, but once you get there, you will find that power-slides become a
matter of precision, not panic.
Tyre Manufacturer Specifications
The Michelin tyres, being radials, present a stiffer sidewall, and thus less
compliance in the tyre. As a result, when compared to the Goodyears, you
should notice a steeper drop-off in lateral grip when pushing the envelope of
the slip curve; the Goodyears, you will find, are more compliant on the limit. At
the same time, though, the Michelin tyres provide for a more precise feel on the
limit.
Manufacturer Opt. Temp. Range Opt. Pressures F/R Opt. Camber F/R
Goodyear 100C 125C –3.0/–2.0
Michelin 100C 126C –3.5/–2.5
ϒ
All weights include driver averaged at 70Kgs
Drivers
36. Vittorio Brambilla
November 11, 1937—May 26, 2001
Wins: 1
The ‘Monza Gorilla’ (as much in tribute to his birthplace—Monza—as to his
exuberant style of driving) started his Formula 1 career with the unforgettably
orange Beta Tools March in 1974 after having enjoyed much success in the
junior formulas. But it was in 1975 that Brambilla would demonstrate his
blistering pace with a pole position in Sweden followed by a superb win in the
rain in Austria. So happy was Brambilla at winning the race that he started
punching the air after crossing the line—and promptly binned the victorious
March into the wall. That, sadly, was the highlight of Brambilla’s career;
uncompetitive drives followed with Surtees before disaster struck—where
else?—at Monza in 1978 in the accident that claimed Ronnie Peterson’s life.
Brambilla suffered serious head injuries that put the unfortunate Italian in a
coma fighting for his life. His recovery was slow but, exactly one year later, at—
where else?—Monza, in an Alfa Romeo, Brambilla would stage an emotional
come-back … but he seemed ill-at-ease, and perhaps past his prime, although
he was still capable of some scintillating laps such as his quite astonishing pole
position at the Glen in 1980 in a very outclassed Alfa Romeo. He drifted into
retirement thereafter, with the occasional forays in GT and saloons right up to
the 1990s. He died of a heart attack while gardening at home.
35. Bruno Giacomelli
September 10th 1952
Wins: 0
Giacomelli, after storming to the 1978 Formula 2 title (while managing to
compete five times in Formula 1 for McLaren) signed a very lucrative deal with
the works Alfa Romeo team for 1979. The Autodelta run team, however, proved
to be uncompetitive, and Bruno left in 1982 with a one single podium—Las
Vegas in 1981—as reward for his loyalty. Without a doubt a very quick driver, his
three years at Alfa Romeo pretty much closed his career in Formula 1 (along with
a final season with Toleman), after which he migrated to the U.S. to compete in
Indy Cars for a few years. He made a final attempt at Formula 1 in 1990 for the
Life team, but didn’t qualify. A talent that promised so much more, Bruno raced
in the Porsche Supercup series that ran with the Formula 1 circus in the late
1990s, and was well-known for his glass of red wine before test-sessions.
According to Mario Andretti, it made him faster, too!
Alfa Romeo
After dominating the early years of Formula 1 in the post-war years (using
engine blocks built before the war, and a chassis designed in the mid 1930s), and
clinching the first-ever Formula 1 World Championship in 1950 with Italian
Farina at the wheel (beating out Fangio, also in an Alfa, the Argentinian winning
the championship in 1952, again for Alfa), Alfa Romeo disappeared from the
series in 1953 when the Italian government would not come to its aid,
financially, to develop a replacement for their two-decade-old racer, the Tipo
158, which had finally been defeated by ex-Alfa employee Enzo Ferrari and his
team of giant-killers.
Their absence from motor-sports’ greatest arena would last until the mid-1970s
when they were enticed back by a combination of Carlo Chiti’s ambition, and
Bernie Ecclestone’s ... savoir-faire.
With Ferrari’s 12 cylinder engine enjoying so much success, Brabham team-
owner Bernie Ecclestone approached Carlo Chiti, the former Ferrari engineer
who was now responsible for building Alfa’s Flat 12 engine for their sports cars
programme, about supplying Brabham with their engines—and this being
Ecclestone, the deal had the proviso that the engines would be provided for
free!
In 1976, Brabham began using the Flat 12s with some success, but it was only in
1978 that they tasted victory with Ferrari refugee Niki Lauda in the cockpit. With
the development of the engine progressing well, 1979 saw Chiti convince Alfa’s
top-brass to make a full return to Formula 1, debuting at Zolder with a car—
developed by Autodelta—that was as ugly as it was slow, the Tipo 177. This was
quickly succeeded by the Tipo 179, with its very healthy sounding V12 tempting
Patrick Depailler to join for 1980. Sadly, he was killed in testing, and the Alfa
project never really recovered. A couple of decent races in the next five seasons,
using its turbo-engine, was not enough for the management, and Alfa Romeo
turned their back on Formula 1 yet again 1985, going on to enjoy great success
in Touring Cars.
Drivers
29. Riccardo Patrese
April 17th 1954
Wins: 6
The honour of having enjoyed Formula 1’s longest career was not something
many would have thought possible when Patrese started his career in 1977 for
the Shadow team: Indeed, many felt he’d be lucky to walk away from the sport
(as opposed to carried away in a box). Immediately branded as the bad-boy on
the grid, Patrese was both quick and—to many of his fellow competitors—
dangerous, and it all culminated in the 1978 pile-up at Monza that claimed the
life of Ronnie Peterson. The drivers, looking for a scapegoat, quickly rounded up
their victim—Patrese (unfairly, in many peoples’ opinion, though James Hunt
would take his animosity all the way to the commentator’s box to verbally abuse
Patrese at virtually every race that Hunt commentated on), who was duly
banned from the following race as punishment. His speed and uncompromising
commitment, though, was not affected, and it saw him almost claim a shock win
at the South African Grand Prix in 1978 driving an outclassed Arrows. Patrese’s
pace kept him at the business-end of the grid for the new decade when he
moved on to Brabham for the turbo-era, but by the mid-1980s, and without a
championship to his name, Patrese slowly began to fade into mid-field obscurity.
His savior would prove to be Frank Williams, who offered the Italian a drive in
1988, and so began Patrese’s golden-era as he developed a tremendous
technical relationship with Williams’s head designer Patrick Head, a relationship
that would see the Italian gun for the championship in 1991 (out-driving Mansell
throughout the first half of the season) before being out-staged by an on-form
Mansell in 1992. 1993 saw Patrese move on to the Benetton team where he was
partnered with a new-arrival to Formula 1: Michael Schumacher. It was enough
to convince Patrese that he had seen his best days … Patrese was probably
Italy’s best hope for a world champion since Ascari, but it never quite happened
for the man from Padova.
30. Jochen Mass
September 30th 1946
Wins: 1
Jochen Mass is perhaps best remembered for his role in Gilles Villeneuve’s life-
ending smash at Zolder in 1982. However, this would be unfair to a man whose
career was as varied as it was successful. In Formula 1, though, like Jacky Ickx,
Mass never got the drive he deserved and, when he did, was unable to make the
most of it. Debuting well in 1973 at Silverstone (the race in which Scheckter
decimated half the field), Mass was given a full season in 1974 with the Surtees
team before landing a plum ride for 1975 as team-mate to reigning world
champion Emerson Fittipaldi at McLaren. Mass won one race that season, the
shortened Barcelona event (in which four spectators died after a series of deadly
mistakes), but wasn’t able to compete against the Ferrari 312T of Niki Lauda. In
Arrows
The birth of the Arrows team, in 1977, was, even by Formula 1 standards, a little
eccentric. It started when the top echelons of the Shadow team (run by the
rather mysterious Don Nichols) walked out, en-masse, at the end of 1977 in order
to form their own concern—Arrows, which comprised the initials of,
respectively, Franco Ambrosio (Arrows’ financier, who would give the team the
‘A’ in its name), Alan Rees, ex-driver Jackie Oliver, and designers Dave Wass, and
Tony Southgate.
The team, however, seemed cursed from day one: Ambrosio would be
implicated in a financial irregularities scandal in Italy, while their first-choice
driver—the highly-respected Gunnar Nilsson—would sadly be diagnosed with a
fatal illness, and, finally, to top it all off, Shadow’s chief Don Nichols would sue
Arrows for allegedly basing their FA1 (which had been built in a scant 50 days!)
on Shadow’s DN9. Hardly surprising, of course, since Southgate had designed
the DN9 before leaving Shadow! Knowing this, Southgate began designing a
new car while the High Court in London deliberated over Nichols’s claim:
Meanwhile, the FA1 did rather well for itself, leading the 1978 South African
Grand Prix with the very wild Riccardo Patrese at the helm, and finishing a solid
second in Sweden. Lord Justice Templeman, however, would put an end to the
FA1 by ruling in favour of Shadow—in his ruling, Templeman noted that 40
percent of the FA1 was directly taken from the Shadow DN9, and was therefore
‘in breach’ of Shadow’s design.
Southgate, expecting the ruling, had his next car, the A1, ready in time for the
next race of the 1978 season. But while that was a rush job, Southgate was far
more deliberate with his next project—the A2 that would be his reply to
Chapman’s ground-effects revolution.
The A2 was a futuristic looking car dubbed the ‘buzz-bomb’ by the press, and
had the distinction of not having any front wings at all. David Tremayne and
Mark Hughes, in their ‘Concise Encyclopedia of Formula 1’, describe the A2 as
follows: “… an extremely low bullet-shaped car with faired-in bodywork. Its
engine and gearbox were canted upwards at the back to facilitate the use of a
full-width under-tray to maximize the amount of downforce generated by the air
flow. Unfortunately the engine installation raised the centre of gravity and, in
this era of experimental engineering, the team never satisfactorily discovered
the cure to persistent ‘porpoising’ at speed. This was an aerodynamic
phenomenon in which the air forces acted upon the car—the centre of
pressure—moved about constantly as it raced.”.
Arrows continued racing in Formula 1 until, half-way through the 2002 season
and under the stewardship of Tom Walkinshaw, they finally called it a day,
having never won a race.
ATS WHEELS
Technical Specs
Designers: Nigel Stroud, Giocomo Caliri
1979 Chassis: ATS D2
Engine: Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8—470BHP @10,600 RPM
Weight: 695 Kg
Front Wheel Track: 1727mm
Rear Wheel Track: 1600mm
Wheel Base: 2750mm
Tyre: Goodyear
Wins: 0
Poles: 0
Podiums: 0
Points: 2
Drivers
9. Hans-Joachim Stuck
January 1st 1951
Wins: 0
Son of legendary pre-war racer Hans Stuck (of Auto Union fame), Hans Jr.
entered Formula 1 in 1974 after handsomely claiming the European Formula 2
Championship. Stuck’s speed was never in doubt, but his consistency proved
somewhat turbulent at March that year. In 1977, though, with the death of
Carlos Pace (a rare talent who, had he lived, Brabham would never have needed
Niki Lauda, according to then Brabham-boss Bernie Ecclestone), a seat opened-
up at the highly-fancied Brabham team, and Stuck responded by enjoying his
best season to date … but Ecclestone’s ambition required more, and Stuck
found himself moving on to the Shadow team for 1978, before heading off to
German outfit ATS for 1979. The season offered very little, and Stuck turned his
back on Formula 1, which could offer him nothing more than mediocre drives, to
enjoy a wildly successful career in sports cars.
ATS Wheels
Back in 1963, Carlo Chiti, along with a handful of exiled Ferrari engineers,
abandoned Maranello to set up their own team called ‘Automobili Turismo e
Sport’ (ATS) with financial backing from Count Giovanni Volpi. They entered the
1963 season with American world champion (1961) Phil Hill, and highly-touted
Italian charger Giancarlo Baghetti. The venture, alas, would prove disastrous. A
quarter of a century on, and ATS made a rather unexpected come-back to
Formula 1 under the auspices of German alloy-wheel tycoon Hans Günther
Schmid, whose ATS Wheels (‘Auto Technisches Spezialzubehor’) team was
founded on the shoulders of Roger Penske’s failed Formula 1 project, and whose
assets were bought by Schmid. The ATS-Wheels team debuted in 1977 with a
Penske chassis while Robin Herd got to work on the 1978 challenger. It was slow,
and Schmid—who liked to tinker with his design team—soon hired Caliri to pen
the 1979 D2—before replacing him with Nigel Stroud, who designed 1979’s D3
that scored the team’s first points at the U.S. East Grand Prix at Watkins Glen.
Results, though, were never forthcoming for the team that ran many young
Germanic drivers such as Gerhard Berger and Marc Surer, but it certainly wasn’t
from a lack of financing: Schmid was smitten with Formula 1, and even
purchased BMW’s turbo-engine for the 1983 season, while the D7 would be one
of the first cars to feature a carbon fibre chassis; all of it proved fruitless, though,
and the team kept struggling until Schmid shut down the operation at the end
of the 1984 season.
Drivers
5. Niki Lauda
22nd February 1949
Wins: 25
Lauda’s start to his illustrious career is a text-book study on how a man with self-
belief can rise to the top despite the rest of the world’s indifference. Indeed,
much of his career was forged around him needing to prove people wrong. It all
started when Lauda, in the early 1970s, was unable to secure himself a drive in
Formula 1—with all roads bordered, Lauda mortgaged himself up and bought a
ride in 1972 for the March team. The car, sadly, was awful, and it seemed as if
Lauda’s gamble had backfired … but his fighting spirit, along with his pace, did
not go unnoticed, and come 1973, BRM offered him a third seat besides Clay
Regazzoni and Jean-Pierre Beltoise, two of Formula 1’s hardest-chargers. Lauda
frequently out-paced them both that season and, by season’s-end, found himself
negotiating a lucrative deal with Ferrari. 1974 would prove a pivotal year for
Lauda at Ferrari—quick all season, he secured nine pole positions, but his race-
form was inconsistent, leaving him in a distant fourth place in the championship.
For 1975, though, Lauda had matured through the winter—along with
Forghieri’s 312T—into world championship material, and he duly won the 1975
crown in some style. 1976 should have been his second championship, but fate
had other ideas for the Austrian: His awful smash at the ‘Ring resulted in Lauda
listening to a priest reading him his last rights. Incredibly, he returned that same
season to fight for the championship, but at a rain-soaked Japanese Grand Prix
at Fuji, it appeared clear that the scarring was not only physical as a tired Lauda
pulled his healthy Ferrari into the pits leaving James Hunt to edge to the world
championship. Ferrari—never a man to allow emotion to interfere with
business—decided that Lauda was no longer a driver capable of challenging for
the world championship, and quickly set about hiring Carlos Reutemann to lead
the Scuderia’s challenge for 1977. Once again Lauda found himself isolated, and
determined to prove the doubters wrong: With nothing more than his self-belief
(and disfiguring scars), he went on to demolish not only Reutemann, but the
entire field to clinch the 1977 World Championship. Having proven Ferrari
wrong, and with relations with Maranello at a low-point due to what Lauda
correctly perceived as a lack of faith in his abilities, he turned his back on
Maranello and joined Brabham (for a reputed $1million a race contract) for 1978.
The season offered little, but much was expected for 1979. Lauda, however,
found himself at odds with the new ground-effects cars, and was frequently
outpaced by young team-mate Nelson Piquet; when Brabham changed from
V12s to the Cosworth V8s for the Canadian Grand Prix, Lauda found he had lost
his motivation, and promptly quit Formula 1. He returned in 1982, and won his
third championship in 1984, out-foxing the ‘professor’ Prost by half-a-point.
6. Nelson Piquet
August 19th 1952
Wins: 23
Piquet debuted in 1979 as team-mate to double world champion Niki Lauda—
and so devastating was his pace that many believe it prompted Lauda’s early
retirement: That retirement promoted 25 year old Piquet into Brabham’s de-
facto number one driver in what was his first season—both in Formula 1, and in
one of its top teams. Piquet was unflustered by his meteoric rise, and 1980 saw
him challenge for the championship that he would ultimately claim three
times—in 1981, 1983 (with Brabham), and in 1987 with Williams. In 1991,
though, after three indifferent seasons, the three-time world champion would
see history repeat itself when he was lined-up with a very young charger by the
name of Michael Schumacher. Piquet promptly retired, heading for the U.S.
where an enormous shunt in qualifying for the Indy 500 ended his top-level
racing career.
Brabham
In 1963, Australian Jack Brabham—world champion in 1959, and 1960—decided
to found his own company along with fellow Australian Ron Tauranac. The
fledgling company was to be named MRD—until it was pointed out that the
name sounded a lot like what the French refer to as crap! Brabham’s team went
on to secure its first win in 1964, before propelling Brabham (powered by
Australian spare-parts supplier Repco) to his third championship in 1966. In
1971, with the team struggling and Brabham now retired, Tauranac sold the
company to a London used-car salesman by the name of Bernie Ecclestone
whose first decision was to retain—and indeed promote—one of Tauranac’s
designers, South African Gordon Murray, into the position of lead designer.
Ecclestone also retained the ‘BT’ moniker that demarcated all Brabham’s chassis
(Brabham/Tauranac), and set about producing the first car of Brabham’s new era,
the BT42: It proved successful, and its evolution, the gorgeous BT44, went on to
score three wins in 1974. For 1976, Ecclestone secured a 12 cylinder engine from
Alfa Romeo (rendering Bernie’s infamous quote: "Anyone who doesn't speak
English isn't worth speaking to" pretty much dishonest), but, despite good
showings through the next few seasons, it was not until 1981 that Ecclestone
and Murray would win their first world championship using DFV power.
Ecclestone would withdraw Brabham from racing in 1987—but it was returned
in 1989 for an ungodly three years before vanishing for good at the end of 1992.
TEAM ENSIGN
Technical Specs
Designers: John Baldwin, Shahab Ahmed
1979 Chassis: N179 Mk1, and Mk2
Engine: Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8—470BHP @10,600 RPM
Weight: 690 Kg
Front Wheel Track: 1778mm
Rear Wheel Track: 1626mm
Wheel Base: 2670mm
1979 Chassis: N177
Engine: Ford Cosworth. DFV 3.0 V8—470BHP @10,600 RPM
Weight: 675 Kg
Front Wheel Track: 1473mm
Rear Wheel Track: 1575mm
Wheel Base: 2590mm
Tyre: Goodyear
Wins: 0
Poles: 0
Podiums: 0
Points: 0
Drivers
22. Derek Daly
March 11th 1953
Wins: 0
Irishman Derek Daly started in Formula 1 in 1978 with Lord Hesketh’s team that
was already in terminal decline, having enjoyed its halcyon days with James
Hunt (and an entourage of the beautiful people and their hangers-on) in the
early 1970s. Daly was entered for three races, and failed to qualify for any of
them. The Ensign team, though, must have seen some potential because they
signed him up for the rest of the season. Daly would pay them back with a hard-
fought sixth place in Canada. 1979 would see Daly return with the Ensign team
for the first part of the season, but the pace of the Ensign was awful. Luck,
though, was always on Daly’s side, and Tyrell offered him a ride as replacement
for Jean-Pierre Jarier. More luck was to follow the Irishman in 1982 when he
inherited Carlos Reutemann’s seat at Williams: It was the year his team-mate
Keke Rosberg went on to win the world championship while Daly managed to
secure not even one podium. With his career in Formula 1 now over, Daly went
over to the U.S. to race in Indy Cars without much distinction, before transferring
his talents to the commentary box for U.S. television.
22. Patrick Gaillard
February 12 1952
Wins: 0
Frenchman Gaillard was drafted into the Ensign team after a disillusioned Daly
moved on after failing to qualify for the Monaco Grand Prix, and Ensign’s first
choice driver (and now big-time TV pundit) Tiff Needell was denied a
superlicense. Gaillard attempted to qualify the Ensign five times, and was
successful twice, before being dropped for Marc Surer. He went on to race sports
cars before becoming an instructor at the AGS Racing School in France.
22. Marc Surer
September 18th 1951
Wins: 0
Marc Surer won the Formula 2 championship in 1979—the same year as his
debut in Formula 1, taking over racing duties at the Ensign team for three races.
He managed to qualify the rather reluctant N179 at Watkins Glen, and, based on
this, secured a contract with Ensign’s horrific 1980 season. The season was
merely minutes old before Surer suffered an horrific accident at Kyalami which
put him out for the season with badly damaged legs. Undeterred, he returned in
1981, again for Ensign, and promptly crashed again—at Kyalami, again—injuring
his legs ... again. He would return—a year later—and raced on without incident
until 1984 before turning to sports cars and a TV career.
Team Ensign
Ensign was the team founded around the legendary figure of Morris ‘Mo’ Nunn.
Having been successful in Formula 3 and 2, Nunn took the leap into Formula 1 in
1973, soon finding backing from the equally legendary Far-Eastern racing fan
and millionaire Teddy Yip. Well-funded, the mid-1970s were relatively successful
for the fledgling privateer team that had started life in Nunn’s garage, but 1978
brought bad tidings: With costs sky-rocketing, the little team saw their money
dry-up as Yip went off to found his own team, and it left Ensign with no new car
for 1978. Right on the cusp of the ground-effects evolution, this gap-year sealed
the team’s fate, and designer Baldwin’s N179 looked about as bad as it ran when
it turned up at Kyalami for 1979’s South African Grand Prix in March. Much
evolution followed, but the car was unable to find any sort of pace, and found
itself in the DNQ column for most of the season. 1980 was an even worse year for
Ensign: It started well enough, though, with money secured through Unipart and
with Regazzoni—who they’d run in the 1970s—as their number one driver. But
at Kyalami, Surer endured a season-ending smash and, at Long Beach, things
turned even uglier when one of the paddock’s most loved drivers, Regazzoni,
suffered an enormous smash that left him paralysed for life. Ensign, without a
top-talent to develop their cars, found themselves adrift. The team soldiered on
for two more indifferent seasons until Yip stepped in and bought the team out,
combining it with his Theodore outfit that comprised the remnants of what was
the Shadow team. Nunn then went to the U.S., where he enjoyed much success,
including Fittipaldi’s 1989 Indy Car title.
Drivers
11. Jody Scheckter
January 29th 1950
Wins: 10
Scheckter won the local Formula Ford Championship in his native South Africa in
1970: The prize was a European scholarship. Scheckter made full-use of his
opportunity (and raw talent) by tearing through the lower Formulas in the U.K.
and, a scant 18 months after his arrival in England, he had secured his Formula 1
debut at the 1972 season-ending U.S. East Grand Prix for McLaren. Scheckter was
quick, brave, and his early career peppered by a rather fruity scrapbook of
shattered chassis along with a healthy mix of hard-charging drives. His youthful
exuberance, though, would finally get the better of him in the 1973 British Grand
Prix at Silverstone where he lost it in a big way around Woodcote, the spin
triggering a mammoth pile-up that took out nigh on half the field. Ken Tyrrell,
though—unquestionably the best judge of talent in Formula 1—quickly signed
Jody up for the 1974 season to replace retired triple world champion Jackie
Stewart, and his acumen was rewarded with a matured Jody who won twice and
finished a solid third in the championship. Two more seasons at Tyrrell proved
fruitful, with the six-wheeler P34 giving Scheckter (or ‘Fletcher’ as he was
sometimes known, a nickname bestowed on him by his good friend James Hunt,
in tribute to the clumsy bird out of ‘Jonathan Livingston Seagull’) yet another
third place in the championship. For 1977, Jody moved on to the Wolf team, a
move that many felt was a step back in his career. Buy Jody’s instincts—which
proved quite uncanny both during and after his career (he seemed to have a
nose for finding the right team just at the right time)—were proven correct, and
he went on to win three races in Wolf’s debut season, finishing runner-up to
Lauda’s Ferrari. Wolf’s 1978 WR5, though, was a disappointment for both Jody
and Bobby Rahal, and Jody quickly realized his career was running out of
momentum. But by 1979, Scheckter was on the A-list of drivers, and fortune was
but a phone-call away; when it came, Scheckter wasted no time in signing for
Ferrari with, as he would confess later, only one goal in mind: To become World
Champion. Pitted against him was the quickest Grand Prix driver on the grid—
Gilles Villeneuve, who started the 1979 season by claiming back-to-back victories
in South Africa and California. Jody, though, was undeterred, and had the
experience to know that consistency was what won championships—a maturity
no-one would have expected from the Jody of the early 1970s. At Monaco, for
the start of the European season, he watched his team-mate continuously
hammer over the notorious bump that led onto the front straight without lifting,
and predicted what would happen in the race: Indeed, Villeneuve duly broke his
transmission, giving Scheckter the win—and a lead in the championship which
he would not relinquish all year. By Monza, Scheckter was South Africa’s first
(and so far last) world champion. In 1980, with Ferrari’s star declining, Scheckter
made yet another of his wise decisions, hanging-up his helmet to start a security
firm in the U.S., after which he marshaled his son into a successful career in the
IRL. Scheckter is now involved in the biodynamic agriculture sector on his farm
in England.
12. Gilles Villeneuve
January 18th 1950—May 5th 1982
Wins: 6
The legend—and for anyone who is curious as to what would induce middle-
aged men to go all dewy-eyed at the mention of the name Gilles, they need not
look any further than his 1979 season: The blown tyre at Zandvoort, the duel
with Arnoux at Dijon, the pass on Jones on the outside of Tarzan, the astonishing
qualifying lap at Watkins Glen (a full 10 seconds faster than anyone else in the
rain!) defined the 1979 season, and along with it Gilles’s enduring status as
Formula 1’s greatest ever racer. Starting off with snowmobiles in his native
Canada, though, a poverty-stricken Gilles never even dreamed of getting into
top-level racing: But fate—and a talent which remains unmatched to this day—
saw him both meet—and find—men who would help his fledgling career, first in
local formulas before, by the mid-1970s, Formula Atlantics in both Canada and
the U.S. Villeneuve was untouchable in those years, but it was only in an
invitational Formula Atlantic meeting (which featured world champion James
Hunt) that Villeneuve’s name began making the rounds of a notoriously
insulated Formula 1 paddock: And indeed, it was Hunt who was doing Gilles’s
P.R. work after having watched the Canadian make short work of the field at the
invitational event. Hunt convinced McLaren to give Villeneuve a run for the
British Grand Prix of 1977. In a two-year old car, and on a track that he had never
seen, Gilles managed to cling grimly onto the coat-tails of the race leaders in
what was described at the time as the most impressive debut in Formula 1 since
Jacky Ickx had done similar at a rain-soaked German Grand Prix a decade before.
For reasons that remain, to this day, unclear, McLaren chose to pass on
Villeneuve’s talents—but at Maranello, he had made a very deep impression on
Enzo. Ferrari had seen something both unique and special in the Canadian, and a
deal for the 1978 season—as replacement for the departing Niki Lauda—was
quickly offered. Gilles, awe-inspired by the whole sequence of events, landed-up
returning to Canada with a fist-full of dollars (secured by his manager and friend
Gaston Parent, with whom Gilles had argued to ‘just accept the fucking deal’
while negotiating in Enzo’s office at Maranello), and his specially fitted Ferrari
seat for the his 1978 drive traveling shotgun alongside him! 1978 would prove a
disappointment though, as the Lotus 79 swept all aside while Ferrari struggled
with Michelin’s radial tyres. Not that this diminished Gilles’ appetite: The ‘little’
unpretentious man did not know how to drive except flat, and he thrilled the
fans and tifosi alike with outrageous displays of sheer, raw passion. But the press,
both British and—as the results did not come, Italian—turned on him, with the
Italians clamouring for his dismissal as chassis-after-chassis, and engine-after-
engine were binned throughout the season. Enzo Ferrari, though—who had
been around Grand Prix racing for 60 years—had become deeply attached to his
young charger, and Gilles’s antics would frequently leave the Old Man grinning
with delight in his office at Maranello. With everyone wanting Gilles out, the
Canadian found a powerful ally in Enzo, who understood that all that needed to
happen in order for Ferrari to enjoy the fruits of the most inimitable talent to
emerge in Grand Prix racing since Tazio Nuvolari was patience and time. Enzo, in
his 80s, enjoyed both. Villeneuve finally got it all together for his home Grand
Prix at Montreal at the tail-end of 1978 and, throughout the winter of 1979, he
prepared himself for what he knew would be his first assault on the world
championship. Indeed, as early as the 312T4’s debut in South Africa, it was clear
that Ferrari had a car capable of winning the Championship: But Gilles was
number two that season to veteran Jody Scheckter, and, come September, he
duly accepted team orders at Monza to allow the South African to win the race—
and the Championship along with it. Gilles had then to endure two agonizing
seasons as Ferrari found itself outpaced and outclassed, and 1980 would see him
score a total of 6 points. 1981 was not much better, even if it included two of his
most celebrated wins: At Monaco, and, three weeks later, in Spain, Gilles took the
turbo 126C to its maiden wins in what remain two of the most astonishing feats
in Grand Prix racing. Indeed, at Jarama, Gilles’s win came after he held back a
group of much faster cars for the entire race, while his team-mate, Pironi,
finished a full lap down. Monaco, on the other hand, was about nothing more
than—put simply—a driving talent that had never been seen before—or since—
in Grand Prix racing. No-one at the time would imagine this would be his final
triumph. The 1982 season, however, was to bear the fruit of Gilles’ patience with
Ferrari who had finally refined their turbo car into a winning one. Moreover, with
many of the top runners stuck with underpowered DFVs, the pundits agreed it
would take an exceptional set of circumstances to deprive Gilles of his first world
championship. And so it would prove, Ferrari capturing the Constructors’
Championship despite, by season’s end, having lost both its drivers. The season
started badly for Gilles: An expired turbo in South Africa, an accident in Brasil,
and a DQ at Long Beach meant that Gilles arrived at the San Marino Grand Prix in
April without any points. At Imola, though, the FOCA/FISA war had reached a
critical level, and only 12 cars were entered for the race. This did nothing to
dampen the enthusiasm of the tifosi as they gathered at Tosa to cheer as Ferrari,
predictably, dominated, with Gilles slowing in the final laps to allow his team-
mate Pironi to close-up for a photo-finish: Unbelievably, Pironi passed Gilles on
the last lap and crossed the line in first place. Gilles was inconsolable: Angered at
what he saw as Pironi’s blatant indifference to team-orders, he was further hurt
when Ferrari’s management failed to back his cause—Gilles suddenly realized he
had spent two agonizing years being loyal to Ferrari only for the team to betray
him now, when finally he had a car worthy of his talent. He had allowed
Scheckter to win the 1979 Championship, too, obeying team-orders—in short,
he had paid his dues to deserve his number one status at Ferrari. Moreover, he
could easily have won the San Marino Grand Prix on merit. His status as number
one in the team had come through hard work, dedication, and a unique passion,
and Gilles—along with the tifosi who would jeer at Pironi for the remainder of
the season—were incensed. Bitter and disillusioned, Gilles arrived at Zolder in
May with only one goal in mind—to destroy Pironi on-track. During qualifying,
Gilles, trailing Pironi on the time-sheet, went out for one last run and came
across a slowing Jochen Mass; Gilles, as always, was absolutely committed to his
lap, and he was not about to lift: In a split second, he made his decision. Mass’s
intention was something else, and the two collided with Gilles’s 27 Ferrari
launching off the rear-tyres of Mass’s March. The resulting accident proved fatal,
Gilles’s Ferrari barrel-rolling into infamy as the little Canadian was launched from
the cockpit to what was an awful death. Gilles remains, for the tifosi, the greatest
Ferrari driver of all time, and it is pretty much unquestionable that, had he
survived, he would have won the 1982 World Championship. And from there,
who knows what this talent would have gone on to achieve.
Scuderia Ferrari
The most successful team in Formula 1 history, and the oldest, having contested
every round of the championship since its inception in 1950 (but one must look
all the way back to the 1920s in order to trace the Scuderia’s history), Ferrari is
loved and loathed in equal measure, but even its most vehement detractors
acknowledge that, without Ferrari, Formula 1 would, for many years, have been
nothing more than a single-engine spec’ formula. Indeed, for decades, Ferrari
remained the only team willing to build both its chassis and engine in-house.
Like many of the independents (though Ferrari was bought out many years ago
by FIAT), Ferrari remains in Formula 1 for one reason only: To go racing. Back in
The Day, Formula 1 was about Britain vs. England in Formula 1, and, at the dawn
of aero, Ferrari—never the fastest to accept change—noted: "Aerodynamics is
for those who cannot manufacture good engines."
Scheckter’s 1979 title was the final one for 21 years. So long was the wait that
Gilles’s son, Jacques, would be crowned world champion before Ferrari
managed to end what many felt as the French-Canadian’s curse.
FITTIPALDI AUTOMOTIVE
Technical Specs
Designer: Ralph Bellamy
1979 Chassis: F6A
Engine: Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8—470BHP @10,600 RPM
Weight: 687 Kg
Front Wheel Track: 1702mm
Rear Wheel Track: 1620mm
Wheel Base: 2780mm
Tyre: Goodyear
Wins: 0
Poles: 0
Podiums: 0
Points: 1
Drivers
14. Emerson Fittipaldi
December 12th 1946
Wins: 14
Emerson Fittipaldi was a winner from the day he started racing, and his rise in
international motor-sport was spectacular. Only with Alonso’s 2005 title did
Fittipaldi lose his mantle as the youngest ever world champion, claiming his first
in 1972 with Lotus, aged 25. He won his second with McLaren in 1974, before
finishing runner-up to Lauda in 1975. At which point he made what was, with
hindsight, a calamitous decision—he joined his brother Wilson’s fledgling
Formula 1 team for 1976. For five long years, Emerson struggled along at the
back end of the field (though his talent managed to get him up the order on
three memorable occasions) before finally giving it all up and heading off to the
U.S. where, in 1989, he would win the Indy Car title to join his Indy 500 victory.
Emerson continued racing well into the 1990s before retiring to his native Brasil
from where he develops young drivers.
Fittipaldi Automotive
The team was conceived by Emerson’s brother, Wilson, early in 1973 … with
backing from Brasil’s state sugar company, Copersucar, and Richard Divila
designing the car, much was expected from Fittipaldi on its debut in 1975.
Wilson drove the car throughout the season, but he—along with the car—
proved to be uncompetitive. Come 1976, however, and Fittipaldi Automotive
would have two-time world champion Emerson behind the wheel for the season
opener in Brasil. Emerson qualified fifth, but didn’t finish, setting the scene for
what would be the team’s story for the next six seasons. 1979 saw the
introduction of the F6A designed by Ralph Bellamy, and it turned good toward
the end of the year with some promising runs at Watkins Glen and Canada. 1980
saw designer Harvey Postlewaithe (who would go on to great success with
Ferrari, penning their constructors’ winning turbo cars of 1982, and 1983) join
the team, but he was unable to get anything out of the Fittipaldi, and with
Emerson’s star fading, and the money drying up, it was only two years later—in
1982—that the team shut-up shop for good. It achieved very little, except for
derailing the career of Fittipaldi himself, who spent the prime years of his life
piddling around mid-field even as world championship winning manufacturers
came begging for his services.
LIGIER GITANES
Technical Specs
Designers: Gérard Ducarouge, Michel Beaujon, Robert Choulet,
Paul Carillo
1979 Chassis: JS11
Engine: Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8—485BHP @10,700 RPM
Weight: 660 Kg
Front Wheel Track: 1738mm
Rear Wheel Track: 1608mm
Wheel Base: 2800mm
Tyre: Goodyear
Wins: 3
Poles: 4
Podiums: 8
Points: 58
Drivers
26. Jacques Laffite
November 21st 1943
Wins: 6
Jacques Laffite was a late starter in Formula 1 (though for a driver to enter
Formula 1 in his 30s was far from unique in the 1970s, or even before—Fangio
was 43 when he won the first of five world championships), having served out a
long apprenticeship in the lower formulas in France and Europe. For Laffite,
however, the apprenticeship started on the wrong side of the cockpit—as a
mechanic, in 1968, working on a Formula 3 car run by his best friend, Jean-Pierre
Jabouille. That season’s ‘spannering’ for his friend gave Laffite the racing bug,
and he entered himself into Formula 3 the next year. It was a long haul for Laffite
to finally enter Formula 1, but he got his break in 1974, in one of Frank Williams’s
ISO Marlboro Team cars. The pair hit it off, Laffite being the archetypal Williams
driver with his quick wit and hard-charging nature, and the Frenchman was
confirmed for 1975. Sadly, it ended when Williams’s ISO team went under, but
Laffite would be back in 1977, signed up for Guy Ligier’s well-funded outfit.
Lafitte went on to make history that season at the Swedish Grand Prix: His first
victory was the first by a French driver in a French car with a French engine (the
Matra V12). That was as good as it got, though, as Matra’s V12 struggled until
Ligier, fed-up, dropped them in favour of the Cosworth V8 in the winter of 1978.
1979 got off to a great start for both Ligier and Laffite, who promptly won the
first two races of the season, and seemed well on his way to the title. But Ligier
dropped the ball on development, and gone was their one and only chance at
winning the world championship. Laffite soldiered on with Ligier until 1983,
when he teamed-up again with Williams. By 1985, though, the 42-year old Laffite
was past his prime, yet still had enough to offer—experience-wise—for Ligier to
hire him once more: Lafitte went on to enjoy numerous podiums throughout
1986, until a shunt in the British Grand Prix closed-off his career. The good
humoured Frenchman served in an advisory role for Ligier, (and later Prost), and
remains a ‘personality’ on the Formula 1 grid to this day. Indeed, many believe
that the stunt driver for Claude Lelouche’s ‘Rendezvous’ was none other than
Jacques Lafitte.
25. Patrick Depailler
August 9th 1944—August 1st 1980
Wins: 2
Debonair Patrick Depailler was the quintessential 1970s Grand Prix driver: Never
without a smoke dangling from his lips, he debuted in Formula 1 in 1972 for
Tyrrell just as the team began its steady decline: Still, the six-wheel Tyrrell
improved Depailler’s fortunes, but it was only in 1978, at Monaco, that he would
record his first win. In 1979, he stepped into the Ligier team as their second
driver—his ability in developing cars being much sought after—and looked set
for a great season, winning in Spain before smashing his legs in a hang-gliding
accident. He returned in 1980 for the Alfa Romeo team, helping them develop
their V12 programme but, while testing at Hockenheim, the suspension of his
Alfa failed, pitching Depailler into the Armco at the Ostkurve, an accident that
proved fatal.
25. Jacky Ickx
January 1st 1945
Wins: 8
Belgian Jacky Ickx was a victim of misjudgments throughout his career, landing
up at the wrong team and the wrong time with uncanny regularity. In 1966, 21
year old Ickx was given a Formula 2 car by Ken Tyrrell at the ‘Ring: He started at
the back of the grid, and was pitched into battle against Grand Prix legends in
Formula 1 machinery. Ickx put in an absolutely astonishing drive, rocketing up to
fourth place and, in so doing, announced his arrival on the international motor-
racing scene with a debut that has rarely been bettered. It secured him a
contract with Ferrari for 1968 (after a season with Cooper) with whom he raced
until 1974, winning often, and gunning for the championship in 1970. But
Ferrari, by 1971, were struggling; Ickx stuck it out for another two years until,
frustrated at Ferrari’s inability to give him a championship winning car, he
defected to the Lotus team for 1975—just as Ferrari came good again. Ickx then
flirted with Williams, Ensign and finally—after Depailler’s hang-gliding
accident—landing up with Ligier for his final Formula 1 season in 1979. He left
the circus at season’s end to become a sports car legend … but never did secure
the title that his talent so richly deserved.
Ligier
Guy Ligier’s friend, Jo Schlesser, died while racing the magnesium, air-cooled
experimental Honda RA302 in July 1968: His death would touch Ligier deeply,
and the capped rugby player from Vichy, who had been toying with motor-
racing for a number of years without much success, quit the sport all-together.
He would return, however, some years later, this time as a manufacturer, and all
of his cars would carry the ‘JS’ designation to honour Schlesser’s life. Ligier, a
well-connected and affable man who struck it rich in the construction business,
began his new career as car builder in sports cars, and by 1975 had secured a
second place at Le Mans. The year before, however, Ligier had bought out the
assets of Matra Sports (the company that had seen much success with Jackie
Stewart and Tyrrell in the early 1970s) with the intention of entering Formula 1,
which he duly did, in 1976, with the JS5. His Le Mans sponsors, Gitanes, were
more than happy to fund Ligier’s foray into the top level of motor-sports, and
Ligier paid them back almost immediately as the Ligier JS5 proved quick right
off-the-bat, scoring its first pole position in 1976, followed by its first win in 1977.
Come 1979, and Ligier’s designer, Ducarouge, penned what was, with perhaps
the exception of the Williams FW07, the best car in the field—the JS11. No-one
really knew why it worked, but work it did, and with the Cosworth engine
providing a solid and reliable platform, Ligier won the first two races of the
season, and then scored a third in Spain. But the team lost its way mid-way
through the season, and the Ferrari 312T4—and later the Williams FW07—would
go on to dominate the season. Ligier carried its form on to 1980, however, with
Didier Pironi providing the team with some fine drives, and Ligier itself finishing
runner-up in the Constructors’ Championship. Pironi, however, would move on
to infamy at Ferrari for 1981, and from there, Ligier’s fortunes went into decline
despite Ligier’s friend, Mitterand, becoming President of the Republic, and
strong-arming companies (such as Renault) to fund the Ligier team that hit
serious financial trouble in 1983. By 1992, though, with Ligier getting jeered at
Monaco, Guy Ligier had had enough, and sold out the team. Ligier would go on
to claim another fortune in the natural fertilizer business, while the team that
carried his name would eventually fall into Alain Prost’s hands; this proved a
complete disaster, and this one great name faded into oblivion at the end of
1997.
continue in its development: Indeed, you will see that the 80 has now sprouted
wings, front and rear, which, Andretti reports, has cured the instability issues.
The problem, however, is that it has tamed our straightline advantage. We
expect Top 6 finishes, though, and perhaps even some podiums with either the
79 or the 80, both of which we have found to be pretty comparable in overall
performance, if not overall possibility. So, old hat, you can choose either chassis,
though we’d prefer—and we hear you have the appendages to match our
desires, what?—that you give the 80 a good run, there’s a good man.
Drivers
1. Mario Andretti
February 28th 1940
Wins: 12
A triumph of the Will, Mario Andretti—a penniless immigrant whose family had
become refugees in post-war Italy (his home-town having been annexed by
Yugoslavia)—wanted nothing more than to race cars and emulate his hero, Alberto
Ascari , who, legend has it, the young Mario had seen in action whilst peering over
the wall at a test-session in Monza somewhere in the early 1950s. The Andretti family
finally made their way to the U.S. after seven years displaced in the post-war mix-up,
and after barely a few years in the U.S., Mario—along with his twin brother Aldo—
began racing Sprintcars, debuting in 1959. Aldo would soon quit after an enormous
shunt, but Mario’s speed—not to mention fearlessness—soon earned him the
moniker of ‘SuperWop’ as his career rapidly progressed through the local Sprintcar
tracks in Pennsylvania to Indy Cars in the early 1960s, a series in which he would
clinch the title in 1965, 1966, and 1969, (and in-between finding time to claim the
Daytona 500 in 1967). Andretti was quick in whatever he raced, but his eyes—and
heart—were always set on Formula 1: 1968 saw him debut for Lotus at Watkins Glen,
and he qualified—almost inevitably—on pole for his first race. But that proved to be
a one-off, as he then went on to struggle in Formula 1; unable to commit full-time
(running both Indy Cars and Formula 1 throughout the early 1970s), stints at Ferrari
and Lotus both proved unspectacular. 1974 saw Andretti settle full-time in Europe in
order to take a final crack at the Formula 1 title. In 1976, he joined up with Colin
Chapman’s struggling Lotus concern, and this proved a fertile marriage indeed. With
Andretti’s guile and mechanical sympathy, and Chapman’s design genius, Lotus
went from strength-to-strength until both were rewarded with the World
Championship in 1978. And from there, Andretti’s form began to fade as Lotus went
into a slump, and his year at Alfa Romeo (that had all the romantics in Formula 1
smiling in 1981) turned sour: By the end of the season, Andretti had retired. 1982,
however, saw him asked to return for a swansong by none other than Enzo Ferrari
after Pironi and Villeneuve’s accidents, and he qualified on pole for that season’s
Monza Grand Prix at the sprightly age of 42. "The passport changes, but the blood
doesn't," Andretti replied to the question of why he would return to drive for Ferrari.
That would be his farewell to Formula 1; returning to the U.S. and Indy Cars, Andretti
would secure his fourth title in 1984, and his final win in the series in 1993, at the age
of 53. The only major event Andretti never won was the Le Mans 24-hours …
2. Carlos Reutemann
April 12th 1942
Wins: 12
Reutemann started his Formula 1 career in 1972 with Brabham, and his debut
Grand Prix, in front of his home-fans, typified what would be his decade-long
career—a superb pole position followed by a distant seventh place finish.
Reutemann’s decade in Formula 1 would be filled with such extremes as his
natural pace ensured that he remained a title contender for practically every
season of his career, all culminating in his failed push for the 1978 title with
Ferrari. 1979 saw him join a fading Lotus concern, but a switch to Williams in
1980 brought him into yet another championship winning team, and he helped
Jones claim the title before, in 1981, storming to a championship lead that
looked, by August, pretty-much insurmountable. But then the ‘Reutemann-
factor’ set in, and the second half of the season was strewn with sub-par
performances concluding at the season-ending Las Vegas Grand Prix where he
needed simply to finish ahead of Piquet to clinch the championship. Reutemann
was on form for qualifying, sticking his Williams on pole—and the race was
indeed won by a Williams (in the guise of Alan Jones) while Reutemann
inexplicably slipped away into a distant eighth place, conceding the title to a
barely-conscious Piquet who clinched fifth and the world championship (before
feinting!). 1982 started well for Reutemann with a strong second place in South
Africa—but he never turned up for the second round in Brasil, and announced
his retirement from his home in Argentina. Reutemann drifted into a successful
life in politics in his native Argentina and was, in the late 1990s, touted as a
future president; in 2003, he won a seat in the National Senate.
Lotus Engineering
Colin Chapman belonged to that legendary group of engineers working in post-
war Britain whose technical acumen and engineering brilliance lead Britain in
becoming the world’s leader in Formula 1 car design, a distinction which remains
to this very day. Between 1958 and 1970, British teams and designers would claim
no less than 11 Championships, and it is not coincidental that it all began the year
Colin Chapman entered Formula 1. It would be a brave man indeed who would
argue against Chapman being (along with Enzo Ferrari), the most innovative
engineer in post-war motor-racing, founding Lotus Engineering Ltd. in 1952 (with
a loan from his wife), before, after a handful of successful years in the smaller
formulas, entering Formula 1 in 1958. Four years later, with legendary Jim Clark at
the wheel, Lotus began its ascent into the dizzy-heights of world champions with
the 1962 Lotus 25 that featured an innovative monocoque chassis and Jim Clark in
all his glory. Clark would win two world championships with Lotus, and claim the
Indy 500 in 1965. Clark’s death in 1968, while a personal blow to Chapman, did
little to slow the Lotus team’s domination of the sport (1968 would see them win
their third Constructors’ title), and Rindt would help claim number four by winning
the Drivers’ Championship in 1970 (despite losing his life before the end of the
season). 1972 then saw Fittipaldi win yet another championship for the
Ketteringham Hall-based team, at which point the team fell into a slump that
lasted until 1977 when Chapman introduced probably his most remarkable
innovation (this from the man that had introduced the first monocoque in
Formula 1, as well as the first car to have the engine as part of the chassis, not to
mention the introduction of wings and, perhaps less significantly, the first team to
don sponsored liveries)—this time, the innovation was ground-effects, an
innovation he had set in motion after handing his designers a typed-up thesis on
Bernoulli’s Principle. 1978’s Lotus 79 was a triumph of design and
experimentation, and it stormed to the title with Andretti at the wheel. Sadly, on
the day Andretti secured the title at Monza, his team-mate (and surely future world
champion, Ronnie Peterson) lost his life in a first-turn pile-up. This would prove to
be Lotus’ final championship. 1979 saw Lotus take an enormous gamble on the
‘wingless wonder’, the Lotus 80, and for once Chapman got it completely wrong;
the chassis proved not rigid enough to support the G-forces from the downforce
loads the undertray developed, and the car was abandoned in favour of the Lotus
79 mid-season. This marked the beginning of the end for Lotus: With Chapman’s
rumoured involvement in the De Lorean fiasco in 1981, and his cars now off the
pace and without turbo power, Chapman succumbed to the pressure and died of
a heart attack in 1982, at age 54. Even Senna could not help the team re-establish
itself in the mid-1980s, and Lotus, after having been salvaged by James Hunt’s
brother, vanished from Formula 1 in 1994, leaving behind one of the sport’s most
glorious and enduring legacies. Indeed, so advanced was Colin Chapman’s designs
that still today his Lotus 7 design of 1957 is being manufactured in the guise of
Caterham 7s by Caterham Cars.
Drivers
7. John Watson
May 4th, 1946
Wins: 5
Watson debuted in Formula 1 in 1973, followed by a full season in 1974 running in a
private ride sponsored by Paul Michaels. The mid-1970s saw him race for the Roger
Penske’s team (as replacement for Mark Donahue, who had died in Austria during
morning practice in 1975), with whom he would win one race, before Penske’s
closure led Watson to Lotus. Unable to find a winning car there, he was on the move
again by year end, landing up at Brabham, where he put in some notable
performances, culminating in his move to McLaren for 1979, just when the team hit
its lowest ebb. Watson, however, sensing McLaren would eventually get it right,
struggled on with uncompetitive rides—until Ron Dennis’s arrival in 1981 signalled a
change in fortune for the Woking-based team. Watson became a title contender in
1982, only losing out to his team-mate Niki Lauda in the championship, while 1983
would seal his status in Formula 1 lore in what remains one of the great drives in
Formula 1 history as he went from 22nd on the grid at Long Beach to an absolutely
brilliant win. 1984 should have been his World Championship year, but Dennis
summarily dropped him favour of Alain Prost, and that brought the curtain down on
Watson’s career. He would move on to sports cars and commentary work for
Eurosport.
8. Patrick Tambay
June 25th 1949
Wins: 2
Parisian Patrick Tambay was educated in both France and the U.S., and he would
use both countries as a stepping-stone to Formula 1: Frustrated by opportunities
in Europe after competing in the lower formulas from the early 1970s, Patrick
accepted the invitation to cross the Atlantic to take over injured Brian Redman’s
drive in the Haas-Hall Racing Lola T333CS-Chevrolet Can-Am with which he won
the 1977 Can-Am Championship. The win attracted the attention of Formula 1,
and he was entered for the British Grand Prix for 1977—joining fellow rookie
Gilles Villeneuve, who debuted for McLaren; the two would go on to become
very close friends (he is Gilles’s son, Jacques Villeneuve’s godfather), and it was
Tambay who would be offered the McLaren ride for 1978, whilst Gilles would go
on to Ferrari. Gilles got the better deal, as McLaren were in the doldrums by that
stage; frustrated at the lack of race-winning machinery, Tambay left for the U.S.
again in 1980, where he won his second Can-Am title. He returned to Formula 1
in 1981 to race for both Theodore (Teddy Yip’s team), and then Ligier, who
decided to drop him for the 1982 season. Angered, Tambay turned his back on
Formula 1 for good. But fate had other plans: The death of his friend Gilles
resulted in the call from Maranello, and Tambay raced for Ferrari in 1982 and
1983, the year in which he almost won the world championship (helping the
team clinch the Constructors’ Championship). Tambay, well-educated and
pleasant, was one of the good guys—and in the ‘Piranha Club’, the good guys
rarely finish first. Dropped by Ferrari for 1984, Tambay drifted around Formula 1
for another season before hanging it all up for a career in broadcasting.
McLaren
New Zealander Bruce McLaren was spotted by Australian legend Jack Brabham
in the late 1950s, and Brabham organized to have McLaren run in Formula 1 for
Cooper in 1959. McLaren responded by becoming Formula 1’s youngest-ever
race winner (at 22), and by 1963, after four years in Formula 1, he formed his own
team, ‘Bruce McLaren Motor Racing Ltd’. He continued driving for Cooper,
however, until the end of the 1965 season saw him commit to his own marque,
running fellow New Zealander Chris Amon for 1966. McLaren himself secured
the marque’s first win, at Spa, in 1968. But it was in sports cars and Can-Am that
McLaren made its biggest splash, winning the Can-Am series in 1969. McLaren,
sadly, lost his life testing his Can-Am chassis at Goodwood in 1970, leaving
behind a marque that had won at Le Mans, Can-Am, Formula 1, and Sebring, and
Indy Cars: Three years later, the McLaren M23s driven by Peter Revson and
Denny Hulme began challenging the top teams in Formula 1. 1974 brought
them their first wocrld hampionship in Fittipaldi’s hands, and 1976 delivered
them their second with James Hunt. The ground-effects revolution, though,
caught McLaren by surprise, and they were struggling until the early 1980s when
team-owner Teddy Mayer sold part of the team to Australian Ron Dennis’s
‘Project Four’ Formula 2 team. Dennis brought designer John Barnard with him,
and together they set about creating a whole new legacy for McLaren’s team
(now simply rebranded McLaren Team) with a string of wins in the 1980s
culminating in the glory of 1988 where they won every race but one—the Italian
Grand Prix, in which Ferrari scored a 1-2 mere weeks after Enzo Ferrari had
passed away.
TEAM MERZARIO
Technical Specs
Designer: Giorgio Valentini
1979 Chassis: A2
Engine: Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8—470BHP @10,600 RPM
Weight: 677 Kg
Front Wheel Track: 1670mm
Rear Wheel Track: 1620mm
Wheel Base: 2640mm
Tyre: Goodyear
Wins: 0
Poles: 0
Podiums: 0
Points: 0
Drivers
24. Arturo Merzario
March 11th 1943
Wins: 0
Arturo Merzario became famed as much for his white cowboy hat and chain-
smoking persona as for his driving talents, which were, on their day, quite
formidable. In sports cars, for both Alfa Romeo and Ferrari, Merzario can boast
the Spa 1,000 Km, the Targa Florio (twice), and the Rand 9-hours to his C.V.
Indeed it was his sublime form in 1972—racing the Scuderia’s sports cars—that
resulted in Ferrari giving him his break in Formula 1. He raced for Ferrari through
the end of 1973 when his talent was spotted by young team owner Frank
Williams. Things didn’t go according to plan, though, and Merzario left Williams
in the middle of the 1975 season. He was back for 1976 in a privately run March,
but results would not come his way and, tired of being offered no-hope rides, he
chose to enter his own March again for the 1977 season. The rest is a steady mix
of failure coupled with desperation that saw Merzario’s slow decline into
Formula 2 before he quit motor-racing for good in the mid-1980s.
Merzario
Merzario founded his fledgling team in 1976, buying a chassis (the 761) from
March … the team struggled, however, leaving Merzario no choice but to accept
a drive for Wolf for the last few races of that season, shelving his team’s plans for
1977 when they would return, again with a March (the 761B), and again with not
much distinction (for the seven races the team entered, they managed to qualify
just four times). Fed up with what he perceived was March’s failure to build a
competitive chassis, Merzario went to work on designing his own car for 1978:
The first ‘Merzario’ was named the A1—it was the product of budget constraints,
and it is doubtful there were many talents around that could have done with it
what the small Italian with the huge heart did: Despite all his efforts, though, he
failed to qualify in any of that season’s races. His heroic efforts, however, have
gone on to become the stuff of legend as he wrestled the ugliest and slowest car
on the field to some quite astonishing times. 1979 dawned with Merzario still—
quite amazingly considering the dismal failure of the year before—racing the A1
until Spain, when his ground-effects A2 debuted. This car proved to be even
worse than the A1, and it too never qualified for one race. Desperate, and with
bankruptcy a hungry wolf at his door, Merzario bought out the still-born
Kauhsen F1 team, and hired legendary Gianpaolo Dallara (who has set up the
headquarters to his design-firm in Varano Melegari) to refine that chassis. It did
absolutely nothing to alter the destiny of Merzario’s team, and all the expense
and time resulted in little Arturo never qualifying for another Grand Prix.
Exhibiting, perhaps, the never-say-die attitude he’d displayed on the track
throughout his career, Arturo next decided to ditch Formula 1 altogether, and
take his team into Formula 2, where he struggled on for four long years,
achieving one solitary ninth place in all that time, before he finally called it quits.
TEAM REBAQUE
Technical Specs
Designer: Geoff Ferris
1979 Chassis: HR79
Engine: Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8—470BHP @10,600 RPM
Weight: 660 Kg
Front Wheel Track: 1778mm
Rear Wheel Track: 1646mm
Wheel Base: 2762mm
Tyre: Goodyear
Wins: 0
Poles: 0
Podiums: 0
Points: 0
Drivers
31. Hector Rebaque
February 5th 1956
Wins: 0
Mexican Hector Rebaque was the son of wealthy parents and, from a young age,
wanted to emulate the exploits of the legendary Rodriguez brothers. His racing
statistics certainly do not qualify for him to be spoken of in the same paragraph
(let alone sentence) as those two legendary Mexicans, but Rebaque did indeed
make history when he ran the first (and so far only) Mexican Grand Prix car in
Formula 1. Aided by his father’s considerable fortune, Rebaque began in the
junior formulas in the U.K. at the very tender age of 18 before securing himself a
ride with the Hesketh team in 1977, age 21. Results did not come though, and
the string of DNFs resulted in the phone not ringing for 1978. Rebaque wsn’t
about to let that get in the way of his ambition: With financing secured from
Mexico, Rebaque went about creating his own team, securing the use of an ex-
Andretti Lotus 78. The 78 was a good chassis, even if a year old, and should have
seen Rebaque do a lot better with it than he did—indeed, the first half of the
season was a nightmare for the young man (including a DNF in Brazil when he
quit due to fatigue), but the second half of the season saw a maturing Rebaque
score one point. Still, there wasn’t a rush for his services for 1979, which saw him
re-enter as a privateer, again with a Lotus chassis—albeit in the guise of the 79
that had just won the 1978 World Championship. The season was a disaster
though and, with what he felt was a lack of help from Lotus, he decided to build
his own chassis for the final three races of the year. For this he hired John
Barnard (who would go on to design successful Ferraris in the early 1990s), and
had the chassis built at Penske’s old H.Q. in Poole. Rebaque’s on-track fortune,
sadly, did not improve: But his luck did, for the start of the 1980 season saw
Bernine Ecclestone’s Brabham concern on the look-out for a pay-driver to
replace the woeful Zunino, and Rebaque fitted the bill perfectly. He would spend
1980 learning alongside Nelson Piquet, and in 1981 he had a fair season in a car
that was a not only a race winner, but good enough to give Piquet his first world
championship. He spent a further year with Brabham before being replaced by
Patrese, at which point Rebaque headed off to Indy Cars for 1982 where he won
one race before a massive shunt at Michigan persuaded him that he had
achieved all he was going to in the sport, and promptly retired.
Team Rebaque
Ostensibly a Lotus 79—which had given Andretti the title in 1978—the HR79
suffered from a low-end Cosworth engine, and very little development work.
Towards the end of the season, Rebaque commissioned a new chassis built by
Penske, (the HR100), and designed by legendary John Barnard; it too was based
on the Lotus 78, but it proved a spectacular disaster. Rebaque closed the team
down when he was offered the Brabham seat for 1980.
But don’t be too discouraged, because we are already in the final stages of
development for this, the RS10. You will be assigned chassis number RS13. This
car features (after two years in the experimental phase) our twin-turbo solution,
which Jabouille reports as a significant improvement on the engine
management front. However, with its long wheelbase and heavy chassis, the
RS10, we believe, will be more at home on high speed tracks (indeed, we shall be
skipping Long Beach this year entirely for this reason) that on the tight circuits.
With our ability to offer you a boost in-cockpit, there is no reason why you
should not find yourself on pole position many times this season, and careful
engine management could result in victories. We expect pole positions and
victories in what we feel is the fastest car on the grid—bon chance!
Drivers
15. Jean-Pierre Jabouille
June 27th 1942
Wins: 2
Jabouille, who had studied art at the Sorbonne, and engineering at college, was
a late starter in motor-racing; it was not until 1977 (age 33) that he had his first
full-season in Formula 1 (single outings for Tyrrell and Williams the season
before signaling his debut) after having spent his 20s dabbling in hillclimbs and
the junior formulas, frequently helped by his mechanic and good friend Jacques
Lafitte. The 1977 seat was with Renault, who hired him as much for his speed as
his mechanical sensitivity, and engineering background, and he was charged
with developing their entire Formula 1 programme—including their highly
ridiculed turbo project which yielded very little besides blown engines for two
long years until, in France, in 1979, Jabouille became the first man to win a
Formula 1 race with a turbo-charged engine—the fact that it was in a French car,
in France, added to the triumph which, indeed, had much to do with Jabouille’s
mechanical and engineering flair. So much so that his team-mate Arnoux—who
began out-pacing Jabouille from Dijon on—benefited immensely from using
Jabouille’s set-ups (not to mention three years of mechanical development).
Jabouille would have to wait another year, though, before he would win again—
in 1980, in Austria, before, in Canada that year, he badly damaged his feet at the
same spot Olivier Panis would break his legs a decade later driving for the
Renault-powered Ligier team. Jabouille returned for Ligier in 1981, but after a
handful of races it was obvious his best years were behind him, and he retired
from Formula 1, having been offered a management role at Renault. But his
desire for racing brought him back to Touring Cars where he raced with Peugeot
for a number of successful seasons until—with Jean Todt leaving for Ferrari—
Jabouille was offered the role of Race-Boss, all culminating in him running their
dismal Formula 1 programme for two seasons, ending in the mid-1990s.
Jabouille runs a restaurant in Paris, as well as his own sports car team, ISRS.
Drivers
17. Jan Lammers
June 2nd 1956
Wins: 0
Born in Zandvoort, it was perhaps inevitable that Lammers would land up in
Formula 1. The Dutchman debuted in 1979 for the Shadow team alongside
another up-and-coming youngster, Elio De Angelis. Strangely, at the start of the
season, De Angelis was seen as just another wealthy pay-to-drive runner, while
Lammers was perceived as the talented one who would inevitably secure a solid
future in Formula 1—come the end of 1979, though, and it was De Angelis who
had secured a drive with high-fliers Lotus while Lammers, who had failed to
impress all season, moved on to the struggling ATS team. Alas, this was to set
the scene for his career, with Lammers struggling with DNQs before moving on
from Formula 1 to race various formulas and series until a final attempt at
Formula 1 in 1992 resulted in failure.
18. Elio De Angelis
March 26th 1958—May 15th 1986
Wins: 2
For many, Elio De Angelis remains Italy’s best chance at winning the driver’s title
since Alberto Ascari. Finding himself in Formula 1 at the tender age of 20—
pretty much unheard of in those days, thanks to backing from his wealthy
family—Elio quickly set out his stall that year with an impressive debut which
culminated in his being offered a drive for Lotus in 1980. He spent five years with
Lotus, winning two races and impressing many—including the entire paddock
for his concert-level ability with the piano during the 1982 FOCA strike in South
Africa. Indeed, his sister remains a popular musician in Italy. De Angelis found
himself partnered with a young Aytron Senna for 1985, and, despite being a
match for Senna’s prodigious talents, he had become a marginal figure at Warr’s
Lotus by the end of the season, even after having led the championship by mid-
season. He accepted a contract from Ecclestone, and moved on to Brabham for
1986. The Brabham BT55, however, proved to be uncompetitive, and De Angelis,
in May, was testing the machine at Paul Ricard when the rear-wing failed,
pitching the helpless Italian into the barriers, over which his BT 55 would vault,
flip, and crash to earth in a burning wreck. Marshals—in those days virtually non-
existent at test-days—were late getting to the scene, with De Angelis unable to
flee his burning Brabham. He died of asphyxiation, and an autopsy would show
that he had sustained nothing more than a broken collar bone: A death that
could—and should—have been avoided.
Shadow
American Don Nichols, who set-up the Shadow Team in 1968 in the U.S.,
(entering the Can-Am series in 1970 with backing from Univeral Oil Products),
was, to use the euphemism, the original international man of mystery—at least
as far as international motor-sports is concerned. Indeed, Nichols’ exact job for
the U.S. Army—in both the Korean and Vietnam wars—remains classified by the
U.S. government. Many, however, have long suspected him of being the boss of
a shadowy group named the 6004th Air Intelligence Service Squadron. Whatever
the truth, Nichols was based in Japan during the 1960s, from where he not only
developed a small racing team, but also played a part in setting-up the Mount
Fuji race track. By 1968, Nichols was back in the U.S., where he founded the
‘Advanced Vehicle Systems’ team whose first development was a 1970 Can-Am
car. The car—the ‘Shadow’—would feature a rather strange logo to go along
with the name—a silhouette of a cloaked spy. It enjoyed mixed success with the
black liveried cars that were both fast and unreliable, and this fuelled Nichols’s
ambition to enter Formula 1, which he duly did in 1973, setting-up his base in
the U.K. The Southgate designed DN1 was immediately successful, and 1974
promised even better with hot-shoes Jean-Pierre Jarier and Peter Revson at the
wheel. Revson’s death, at Kyalami, meant Shadow drafted-in an even more
prodigious talent by the name of Tom Pryce, and he and Jarier pushed the black-
liveried UOP cars into the higher-reaches of the field. 1975 saw Jarier often
competing with Lauda for pole, but the results just wouldn’t come, and UOP
withdrew sponsorship for 1976. Shadow struggled through the year, and 1977
saw Pryce teamed up with Renzo Zorzi who, at Kyalami, broke down just after
the dip as Pryce, unsighted, came over the crest at something approaching
300km/h. Sadly, a young marshal by the name of Van Vuuren had decided to
rush across the track to aid Zorzi, but he had misjudged the speed of the
approaching Pryce who would cut the marshal in half before being struck in the
face by Van Vuuren’s fire extinguisher. Both marshal and driver were dead
instantly. It was a sad end for a driver who promised much, in a car that had so
much potential—a fact demonstrated by Alan Jones who would score Shadow’s
one and only victory later that season in Austria. 1977—with money yet again
scarce—saw the split with Southgate and the top management as they left to
found Arrows … Nichols sued, and won, but Shadow were by now in terminal
decline. In 1980, fed-up, Nichols sold out to Macau businessman Teddy Yip, who
shut down the Shadow concern mid-way through the season.
Drivers
4. Jean-Pierre Jarier
July 7th 1946
Wins: 0
Jarier discovered racing early on, but it was on bikes that he first began fulfilling
his passion for speed. His mother, concerned, convinced him to race cars
instead, and so began a promising career for the Parisian who enjoyed his debut
in Formula 1 in 1971’s Monza Grand Prix. 1972 saw him return to the lesser
formulas, with money tight, but 1973 saw his talent—and he was fast, as well as
fearless with a rather notorious ability at writing-off chassis—in Formula 1 yet
again. 1974 saw him secure a couple of poles for the Shadow team in his first full
season, although no wins followed, and by 1977, he’d moved on to ATS. Ronnie
Peterson’s death, at the tail-end of 1978, saw Jarier take his seat, and he almost
won in his first race in the Lotus 79, but Chapman settled on Reutemann instead
for the 1979 season. Jarier moved on to Tyrrell for 1979, but by then Uncle Ken’s
team were years past their glory-days, and in two years, they could not provide
Jarier with a winning car. He drifted on to Osella and then Ligier before ending
his Formula 1 career in 1983. He ran Vipers in the FIA GT series in the 1990s, and
fans of John Frankenheimer will recognize Jarier as the guy who did most of the
stunts for 1998’s ‘Ronin’.
Didier Pironi
March 26th 1952—August 23rd 1987
Wins: 3
The man who should have been France’s first world champion, Pironi, like Alain
Prost—who would become France’s first champion—was a product of the Elf-
funded racing programme that brought a host of world-class French talent to
Formula 1. After clinching the Formula 3 race at Monaco in 1977, Pironi debuted for
Tyrrell the next season (old Ken knowing a world-class talent when he saw one), and
went on to have a brilliant season, scoring a string of Top 6 finishes; away from
Formula 1, he also found time to win the Le Mans 24-hours. 1979 saw him struggle
with Tyrrell, but he did enough to outpace the very quick Jarier for most of the year
and, on the back of this, landed up with what seemed—on 1979 form at least—like a
plumb drive for 1980: Ligier. He duly polished the floor with Jacques Lafitte, winning
once along the way, and enjoying an absolutely sublime race at Brands Hatch.
Maranello, on the look-out for a top-level number two for Villeneuve after Jody
Scheckter’s retirement, secured his services for 1981, the season in which Formula 1
fans would get to see two of Formula 1’s hottest talents run side-by-side in the same
team. Those new to Formula 1 often criticize Ferrari for not running two top-line
team-mates: The events of 1982 may give an indication why. For the first time in his
career, Pironi found himself outpaced throughout 1981, Gilles winning twice while
Pironi’s best finish was an inherited fourth place. But Pironi was made of stern stuff:
He had frequently spoken of what he believed to be his destiny—the world
championship—and throughout the winter of 1981, as Ferrari got to work on their
turbo for 1982, Pironi’s relationships with the chiefs at Maranello became close. 1982
saw him well-prepared to challenge the driver many believe to have been the fastest
in the history of the sport. The season, though, got off to a bad start for both Pironi
and Gilles: But at San Marino, in front of the tifosi, things were destined to change.
Sadly for all involved, the Ferrari 1-2 came at a cost that would haunt Maranello to
this day as the rivalry between the two men would take on a sinister twist: Against
team orders, Pironi beat Gilles in front of the tifosi and Gilles, angered, went on to
Zolder with only one mission—to prove he was Ferrari’s number one. In qualifying,
Gilles would end his life in an appalling shunt, leaving Pironi in Formula 1’s dominant
car. Pironi, seemingly unaffected by Gilles’s death, began putting together what, to
everyone watching, seemed to be a world championship run, winning and scoring
well, and taking a healthy lead as the season stretched into the dog days of summer.
But those close to him began to see—and whisper—that Pironi was acting
strangely; he seemed aloof, arrogant, and possessed of a self-belief that veterans in
the paddock saw as dangerous in a sport that could end a career—and a life—in a
split second. Prof. Sid Watkins—the resident doctor of the series—has since written
that Pironi was about the only driver he had never been able to get along with, and
insiders acknowledge that, after Villeneuve’s death, Pironi’s persona seemed to
change dramatically. In Canada, at the track renamed ‘Circuit Gilles Villeneuve’ for
1982, Pironi had to endure a hostile reception from the partisan crowd: Almost
unbelievably, Pironi stalled at the start,, and a young rookie from Italy named Paletti
smashed into him at unabated speed. Paletti died on the spot, with Pironi and the
marshals desperately trying to get him out of his burning wreck, but Pironi, to all
accounts, took this too pretty much in stride: Odd, for a man who had been
intimately confronted by two deaths in a few months, and whose marriage had just
broken down. By the time Hockenheim came around, the title was really only his to
lose. On a wet track, in a meaningless practice session, Pironi went out to stamp his
authority on the field: In the spray, Pironi failed to see Alain Prost’s Renault, and in a
terrible accident that was almost the carbon-copy of Gilles’s accident that May,
Pironi’s Ferrari was thrown into the air before smashing down to earth and crushing
the Frenchman’s legs. Ironically, it would be Alain Prost who would go on to become
France’s first world-champion. Pironi, almost dead on the side of the wet track,
begged Prof. Watkins not to amputate his legs (Pironi would swear that he had
heard Watkins say that he was about to do just this, though Watkins has always
denied this version of events) before he was flown to hospital, critically injured.
Pironi vowed to return to Formula 1, and, with gritty determination, endured over 30
operations to his shattered legs until—as he had vowed to do—he managed to
return to Formula 1, testing for the AGS team in 1986, four long and painful years
after his accident. He was still fast, but, unable to find a top-level team for 1987,
Pironi turned his attention to power boat racing where he lost his life after hitting
the wake of a tanker. His lover would deliver his twin sons after his death—she called
them Gilles and Didier.
Tyrrell
Like compatriots Colin Chapman and John Cooper, Ken Tyrrell was a product of
the fertile post-war racing scene in the U.K. Tyrrell started off as a driver, but
soon realized he wasn’t up to the task—in so doing, he would take the first
decision for which he would later become famous—judging driver ability. By
1959, he had set up his racing team, operating out of his family business in a
shed (which would remain the team’s headquarters throughout its three
decades in Formula 1), and the 1960s were spent competing successfully in the
lower formulas. From the outset, Ken Tyrrell’s eye was well-tuned to spotting
talent, and he gave both Surtees and Ickx their single-seater debuts, along with a
young Scotsman by the name of Jackie Stewart who, like Clark would do for
Colin Chapman, would inaugurate Tyrrell’s glory-years. In 1968, with help from
Ford and Elf, Tyrrell finally entered Formula 1 running a chassis designed by the
French company Matra (indeed, the team was ostensibly known as Matra
International, with Tyrrell acting as Team-Boss). It was a phenomenal debut year
for Matra, Tyrrell, and the young Stewart who would win races and finish runner-
up in the championship to Lotus’ Graham Hill. Indeed, so successful was Tyrrell’s
running of the team that, for 1969, Matra would cease their works team and
focus all their energy on supplying Tyrrell and Stewart with a world
championship winning car: It proved a brilliant partnership, with Stewart
winning the championship in only Tyrrell’s second year in Formula 1. Stewart
would repeat the feat in 1971, but this time the team was called Tyrrell (Matra
having been ditched for 1971), and he would clinch his hat-trick in 1973, the year
that saw Stewart retire, and the man who was meant to assume his mantle,
Cevert, die a most gruesome death at Watkins Glen. Tyrrell would never recover:
Even though the team would keep winning races throughout the 1970s, as well
as introducing to the world the one and only and unmistakable six-wheeler P34,
Tyrrell’s best days were already behind them, five short years after entering the
top echelons of motor-racing. 1978 gave them their final win of the decade, as
the ground-effects revolution left them struggling, and it was only in the early
1980s with Alboreto that they tasted one final win. Alesi came close a few times
in the early 1990s, but by then Tyrrell’s team was nothing but a nostalgic name
with little chance of success, and they were finally bought out by what is now
Honda in 1997. Ken Tyrrell died in 2001, and left behind him a rich legacy in
Formula 1: Championships aside, perhaps ‘Uncle’ Ken’s greatest contribution to
the sport was to have been a talent-spotter for many of the best drivers and,
until the final years, one thing was always expected from a car bearing the Tyrrell
name: The driver would be a world-class talent.
Drivers
28. Gianclaudio ‘Clay’ Regazzoni
September 5th, 1939—December 15th, 2006
Wins: 5
The epitome of the 1970’s racing driver, Magnum-moustached, Swiss-Sicilian
‘Clay’ Regazzoni began his career in Formula 1 with Ferrari in 1970, scoring an
unlikely win in his very first season—at the Italian Grand Prix, no less. The win
assured him a place in the hearts of the tifosi who could not but love this open-
hearted man who knew but one way to go racing—flat-out. Sadly for Regazzoni,
his generous nature would be all that stood between him and what should have
been the reward for his prodigious talent—a world championship. Instead, he
suffered the indignity of being fired by Ferrari, not once, but twice in his career.
He remained with Ferrari through 1972, as number 2 to Jackie Ickx but, in the
winter of that year, he was mysteriously sacked from Maranello. He was quickly
snapped up by BRM, though, where he lined up alongside a young Niki Lauda.
One year on, Ferrari—having re-structured after an epically bad season (hiring
Luca De Montezemolo, who re-hired the out-of-favour Forghieri)—Clay found
himself back at Ferrari, this time with his BRM team-mate, Niki Lauda. 1974
would see Clay outpace the future triple world champion, and it would prove to
be his most competitive year, narrowly losing out (by three points) to Emerson
Fittipaldi. The year signaled Ferrari’s return to form: But for Clay, the next two
years would see him play the dutiful number two to Niki Lauda who went on to
win his first championship in 1975. At the end of the 1976 season, Regazzoni
would again fall victim to the Machiavellian politics that have always been a part
of Ferrari: With the Old Man convinced that Lauda’s 1976 shunt had made the
Austrian no longer a title contender, but with Lauda’s contract running until the
end of 1977, Ferrari decided to draft in the man he thought would challenge for
the title: Carlos Reutemann. Regazzoni was summarily let go to make way.
Regazzoni’s career would never recover, and it was unfortunate, because he had
been offered a ride with top-teams for 1977, rides that he had turned down in
good faith. Clay managed to secure a last-minute drive with Ensign (not much
money, but the good-looking Regazzoni had a vast array of private sponsors),
but this was an under-funded team, and Clay would move on to Shadow for one
more sad and unproductive year. But just as it appeared as if his top-level career
was now over, he was offered a seat at Williams for the 1979 season. He went on
to score Williams’ maiden win in the all-conquering FW07—in Britain no less—
but, sadly, come 1980, Williams decided they wanted a top-level driver to
challenge for the title. So they let Regazzoni go in favour of … Carlos
Reutemann, who’d spent 1977, and 1978 at Ferrari, and 1979 at Lotus, producing
very little in the way of results. Clay joined Ensign for the 1980 season: Ensign
had just come into some money with Unipart sponsorship, and Regazzoni
started the season brightly with a ninth in Kyalami before the circus went to the
U.S. for the Long Beach Grand Prix. Regazzoni’s career would come to an end
that weekend: A stuck throttle along Shoreline Drive left Clay with very little
AUTOSIMSPORT Special—February 2007
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GP79 Car-Owner’s Manual—The Cars and Drivers of 1979
option but to veer into an escape road where he smashed into Zunino’s stricken
Brabham before the Ensign flew into the concrete wall. Regazzoni was left
paralysed from the waist down. He continued racing, however, in rally cars
specially designed for him, and entered the Paris-Dakar rally, and other high-
profile motor-sports events (the Sebring 12-hours amongst them) until his sad
death in December last year when, after attending the auto show in Bologna, he
was involved in a head-on collision. Sadly missed, and another man whose soul
was too good and kind for the vulture-like spirit that is Formula 1.
27. Alan Jones
October 2nd 1946
Wins: 12
Alan Jones has racing in his blood, his father, Stan, having been a local Australian
Touring Car star. But Alan Jones did not have much family money to assure
himself a place in racing and, with his stated ambition, from when he was a
toddler, of being world champion, it would be a hard road for the young Jones
as he traveled to Europe in the late 1960s, and began hunting for sponsorships
and rides. It would take four long years in the lower formulas before he was
spotted by Harry Stiller, a racing enthusiast and, as concerned Jones, a
millionaire. He funded Jones to run Formula Atlantic in 1974, and with Jones
winning, decided to buy a 1974 Hesketh to enter Jones for the 1975 Formula 1
season. Jones enjoyed for a handful of races, before Stiller’s money ran out, at
which point Jones took over at Graham Hill’s Embassy team (who’d lost
Stommelen to injury) where success prompted his move to the Surtees team for
1976. 1977 saw him gain his maiden win for Shadow, and secured him a move to
Williams where he would go on to win the world championship in 1980. Indeed,
were it not for the late arrival of the FW07 in 1979, and the unreliability of the
1981 Williams, Jones could easily have been a triple world champion. As it is, he
retired at the end of 1981, returned for a swan song in 1983 for Arrows, before
retiring again … and then returning for Haas Lola for two seasons between 1985
and 1986. He finished off his racing career in Australian Touring Cars, bringing
his family’s racing legacy full-circle.
Williams
Frank Williams has been around Formula 1 since the late 1960s … in fact, until
Regazzoni’s win at Silverstone in 1979, Williams had been the team owner who
had suffered the longest non-winning streak in Formula 1 history. Williams’s
triumph in 1979 would have been on a par with Minardi winning a race in 2003!
Frank Williams started off running his close friend Piers Courage in 1969, in a
paid-for Brabham chassis, before securing a car from De Tomaso (a Dallara
design) for 1970. Sadly, Courage would lose his life that year, and Williams was
on the brink of quitting the sport altogether. He chose to continue, though,
running pay-for drivers for five years until the mid-1970s saw him teamed-up
with Canadian millionaire Walter Wolf, as a Team-Boss for the oil-tycoon’s first
foray into Formula 1. But that deal turned sour in early 1977, when the team
informed Williams his services as Team-Boss were not required at the season
opener in Argentina (which was promptly won by the Wolf), forcing Williams—
along with designer-extraordinaire Patrick Head—to found ‘Williams Grand Prix
Engineering’ with backing from Saudi Arabian airline Saudia. 1977 was merely a
practice run for 1978, when Head designed the FW06 which gave Jones a fine
car to put in some decent results. But it was the FW07 of 1979 that would give
Williams its first taste of success that would culminate in the 1980 world
championship. Incidentally, the 1979 Williams would carry the now infamous Bin
Laden logo from Hockenheim until the end of the year and, rumour has it,
Regazzoni had to forsake his champagne at Silverstone in favour of something
non-alcoholic for his Saudi backers … all the same, the champagne would flow
readily as Williams went from strength-to-strength throughout the 1980s and
1990s, winning 9 Constructors and 7 Drivers Championship to this day, soured
only by Williams’s paralysis due to a motor-accident in 1986. His passenger on
that ill-fated trip from testing at Paul Ricard, Peter Windsor (who U.S. Formula 1
fans will recognize as the man-on-the-spot for the SPEED TV coverage), would
walk away with nothing more than bruises.
Drivers
20. James Hunt
August 29th 1947—June 6th 1993
Wins: 10
James ‘the Shunt’ Hunt (or something similar to those tifosi who watched him
clinch the 1976 title after Lauda’s accident) was risk personified throughout his
career, which was something of a mystery to those who knew him, for rarely has
Formula 1 seen a driver who would climb aboard his car with so much
trepidation and nerves. Indeed, his early career was punctuated by an aggressive
oversteering style, and an equally aggressive manner outside the cockpit
(having decked a few fellow racers in his time): All the same, when he managed
to avoid the shunt, Hunt was blisteringly quick and, with his 1970s rock-star
good-looks and unabashed style, he was a natural for Formula 1, debuting for
the equally brash Lord Hesketh’s team in a specially prepared March in 1973.
Hunt was in the points in only his second race, and ended the season with a
barn-storming second place in the U.S. East GP. Indeed, Hunt and Lord Hesketh’s
Formula 1 debut season made the perfect vehicle for a burgeoning sport:
Hesketh, with his yacht in Monte Carlo, and his personal helicopter, enjoyed an
entourage of the rich and beautiful, and his team was seen as little more than a
bunch of rich kids having some fun, while Hunt—with his long hair and always
accompanied by a beautiful model—made the team, and Formula 1, into a sport
that was featured in not only the back pages of the world’s newspapers. 1975
saw Hunt clinch his first win—and along with it the front pages of Britain’s
tabloids for his off-the-track exploits. Sadly, Lord Hesketh ran out of money for
1976, the team having no sponsors (they ran a teddy-bear instead in 1975!), and
Hunt found himself without a drive. As luck would have it, though, McLaren had
just lost their number one driver, Fittipaldi, who’d gone off to join his brother’s
ill-advised (ad)venture, and Hunt was given the drive almost at the last minute.
One of Hunt’s first moves was to have his contract stipulate that he would not
wear a suit—ever—for any reason, leaving a perplexed McLaren management
enduring the sight of their number 1 driver attending sponsor-functions in his
usual attire of an open shirt, old jeans, and barefeet. Despite that, McLaren had
little to complain about as, by the end of the 1976 season, they—along with
Hunt—were world champions, after Niki Lauda’s shunt at the ‘Ring had seen the
Austrian’s challenge end in a blazing inferno from which he was fortunate to
escape (Lauda had, in fact, shared an apartment with Hunt earlier in their
careers, and the two men were good friends). Hunt’s lust for life was perhaps
encapsulated by his motto—Sex, Breakfast of Champions—emblazoned on his
overalls (both parts of the statement now being true) and, were he around in
today’s circus, his blood-test results would no doubt show-up traces of
marijuana, along with copious quantities of alcohol, and nicotine. His lifestyle in
Marbella was a parade of women, night-clubs, and drunken all-night parties, but
still, he managed to remain a top-level driver throughout the mid 1970s at
McLaren, for whom he raced until 1978. For 1979, he joined Wolf, but became
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Wolf
Walter Wolf, an Austrian-born Canadian who made his not-insignificant fortune
in the oil business, began appearing in the Formula 1 paddock in 1975: By
season end, he’d bought out a 60 per cent stake in Williams’s floundering team
(which was in debt to the tune of £140,000), and the assets of Hesketh’s equally
bankrupt team. With Frank Williams installed as Team-Boss, and Jackie Ickx
driving, the Harvey Postlethwaite designed Hesketh 308C debuted for the 1976
season (albeit rebadged as the Wolf-Williams FW05). The car proved to be a
disappointment, and come the end of the season, Wolf decided to shift Frank
Williams from Team-Boss into a more administrative role, assigning Peter Warr
(who would later be the man who brought Senna to Lotus) as Team-Boss, while
retaining Postlethwaite to design the 1977 Wolf WR1. The car’s debut was
Argentina, the car’s driver was Jody Scheckter, and Wolf made history by
winning its first Grand Prix. Some said it was just luck, a win inherited by Hunt’s
misfortune, and that may have been, but the end of the season saw Scheckter as
runner-up in the world championship, with Wolf fourth in the Constructors’
Championship (this achieved despite running only one car, instead of the
customary two). 1978, then, came along with great hopes for the team, but the
WR5 proved not as competitive. Scheckter, ever-ambitious, saw which way the
wind was blowing (Maranello), and went off to win the championship for Ferrari
leaving Wolf with 1976 world champion James Hunt for the 1979 season. The
WR7 was Postlethwaite’s ground-effects car, and while it certainly looked the
part, it never really did the job. Hunt became fed-up with risking his life for one
or two points a race, and called it quits mid-way through the season, to be
replaced by Keke Rosberg, but not even the speed-demon Rosberg, in his
absolute prime, could wrestle anything out of the WR7, and Walter Wolf—
accustomed to success in every facet of his life—folded up the team for good at
the end of the season, selling out to Fittipaldi’s ailing concern.
Interlagos
Track Designer: Unknown/Private Developers
Pole: J. Lafitte 2:23.07
Fastest Lap: 2: 28.76
All-Time Track Record: 2:21.40 (1980) J.P. Jabouille/Renault RE20 1.5146
V6T
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Kyalami
Track Designer: Edgar Hoal
Pole: G. Villeneuve 1:18.825
Fastest Lap: G. Villeneuve 1:21.200
All-Time Track Record: 1:02.366 (1985) N. Mansell/Williams Honda 1.5 V6T
Long Beach
Track Designer: City Streers
Pole: G. Villeneuve 1:18.825
Fastest Lap: G. Villeneuve 1:21.200
All-Time Track Record: 1:17.694 (1980) N. Piquet/Brabham Ford BT49 Cosworth DFV V8
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Jarama
Track Designer: John Hugenholz
Pole: J. Lafitte 1:14.50
Fastest Lap: G. Villeneuve 1:16.44
All-Time Track Record: 1:14.50 (1979) J. Lafitte/Ligier Ford
Zolder
Track Designer: Bolderberg Auto-Moto-Club
Pole: Lafitte: 1:21.13
Fastest Lap: Villeneuve: 1: 23.09
All-Time Track Record: 1:14.846 (1984) M. Alboreto/Ferrari 1.5 V6 T
Monte Carlo
Track Designer: City Streets
Pole: J. Scheckter 1:26.45
Fastest Lap: P. Depailler 1: 28.82
All-Time Track Record: 1:20.450 (1985) A. Senna/Lotus Renault Lotus 97T
Dijon-Prenois
Track Designer: Unknown
Pole: J-P. Jabouille 1.07.19
Fastest Lap: Rene Arnoux 1.09.16
All-Time Track Record: 1:01.380 (1982) A. Prost/Renault RE30B
Silverstone
Track Designer: Former Airfield
Pole: Jones 1:11.88
Fastest Lap: Regazzoni 1:14.40
All-Time Track Record: 1:05.591 (1985) K. Rosberg/Williams Honda FW10
Bosch
Kurve
Texaco
Schikane
Rindt
Kurve
Hella-Licht
Österreichring
Track Designer: Uknown
Pole: R. Arnoux 1:34.07
Fastest Lap: R. Arnoux 1:35.77
All-Time Track Record: 1:23.357 (1987) N. Piquet/Williams Honda
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Monza
Track Designer: Milan Automobile Club
Pole: J-P. Jabouille 1:34.580
Fastest Lap: Clay Regazzoni 1:33.600
All-Time Track Record: 1:21.114 (1991) A. Senna/McLaren Honda MP4/6
Watkins Glen
Track Designer: Bill Milliken/Cornell University
Pole: A. Jones 1:36.615
Fastest Lap: N. Piquet 1:40.054
All-Time Track Record: 1:33.29 (1980) B. Giacomelli/Alfa Romeo 179
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