F1
Origins
The Early Years
The
British Era
Wings,
Shunts & Ground Effects
The
Turbo Era
With
the benefit of hindsight, one can now say confidently
that ground effects were less important to the
long-run development of F1 technology than turbocharging
although both were introduced initially
in the 1977 season, and both eventually banned.
While Lotus were developing the ground-effect
principle, Renault re-entered Formula One
with the turbo RS01, driven
by Jean-Pierre Jabouille. The first turbo
was remarkably quick, although suffering from
"turbo lag" under acceleration, but
very unreliable, and it would be a year before
the Renault finished a Grand Prix. (The 1977 season
also saw the introduction of radial tires, first
by Michelin, then followed by Goodyear
and Pirelli.)
Turbo
development was slow, however, and after the Lotus
onslaught of 1978, the normally-aspirated Ferrari
312T4, driven by South African Jody Scheckter,
captured the F1 title in 1979. Gilles Villeneuve
described as "perhaps the most tenacious
fighter seen in racing for years"
took 2nd place in the World Championship by a
slim four points. Renault won the '79 French Grand
Prix with Jabouille, while Villeneuve and René
Arnoux waged a fantastic duel behind, with
Villeneuve crossing the line 0.3 seconds ahead.
The
turning point came in 1980, a season in which
Alan Jones and Team Williams achieved
almost complete domination. While Ferrari had
a terrible year, the Scuderia introduced their
own turbocharged car at Imola, and Renault
won at Interlagos, Kyalami and the Österreichring.
(Another highlight of 1980 was the power struggle
between FISA and FOCA, which came
to a head with a boycott of the Spanish GP and
was resolved only with the first
Concorde Agreement in 1981.) Although Cosworth-powered
teams would win the championship in 1981 and 1982,
Grand Prix was increasingly dominated by the turbos
from 1981 onwards.
Still,
in 1982 there were 11 teams using the Cosworth
engine, including (for several races) Brabham,
for whom Nelson Piquet had won the 1981
championship by one point with a victory at the
U.S Grand Prix, held in the parking lot of Caesars
Palace in Las Vegas. And while the turbos
continued to improve, with wins in one-half of
14 races, the 1982 season was dominated by a rift
between Villeneuve and Didier Pironi at
Ferrari that would lead to tragedy for both men.
After the San Marino Grand Prix, in which
Pironi passed Villeneuve, against team orders,
while the Ferraris were easily running 1-2 under
turbo power, Gilles vowed he would never again
speak to his team mate.
Gilles
has gone, and with him the light of genius in
Grand Prix racing. In time, of course, another
star will emerge, but it will never twinkle with
the same intensity again. We are back to normality
once more. The impossible cannot happen.
Autocourse
1982-83 - Nigel Roebuck
He
never did, as two weeks later Villeneuve
affectionately called the "Prince of Destruction"
by the commendatore Enzo Ferrari
was killed while trying to improve his grid position
late in qualifying for the Dutch GP at Zolder,
in a severe accident in which the Ferrari cartwheeled
across the track, nose in the sand, flinging the
driver out of the cockpit. Four weeks later Ricardo
Paletti was killed in his Osala at
the start of the Canadian GP at Montréal
(now named Circuit Gilles Villeneuve),
and Pironi himself suffered terrible leg injuries
in practice for the German GP at Hockenheim two
months after that, never to race in F1 again.
The
turbo era really began to flower in 1983, when
Piquet won his second World Championship by two
points this time using a turbocharged BMW
powerplant and McLaren introduced the TAG-Porsche
engine, driven to four checkered flags by runner-up
Prost. (Lotus as well brought out a turbo Renault,
piloted by 4th-year driver Nigel Mansell
to his first podium
finish at Brands Hatch.) In the 1984 season,
with a new MP4/2 car designed by John Barnard,
McLaren and the TAG turbo won 12 of 16 races and
took the constructors' championship with record
points. Niki Lauda won five of those to seven
for Prost, and won the F1 drivers' title by 1/2
point the strange total arising because
the Monaco GP was halted in a thunderstorm after
31 laps and only half points awarded. (This was
also the race, by now legendary, in which Ayrton
Senna, driving for Toleman in his first
F1 season, passed Prost on the last lap in the
rain, and forever accused the Formula One establishment
of stealing the win.)
While
many observers felt McLaren's dominance was a
one-time fluke, in reality it was a harbinger
of things to come. Whether with the TAG or, in
1988, Honda turbos, Ron Dennis'
team dominated the late 1980s like no team before
or since. Prost won the World Championship
in 1985 and 1986 (the latter after Nigel Mansell,
now with Williams, suffered a dramatic rear tire
explosion at 180 mph at Adelaide in the
season's last race). Senna, who joined McLaren
after several seasons with Lotus, won the F1 title
in 1988, taking the championship deciding race
in Japan at Suzuka, after stalling on the
grid, with an inspired drive to catch and pass
Prost and then draw away in the rain.
With
some irony, Senna pointed to the sky each time
he passed the line, reminding officials, and anybody
else, that in Monaco in 1984 when the situation
was the other way round, they had stopped the
race. He won it the hard way, juggling his fuel
consumption, his lead and the weather perfectly.
Ayrton Senna, the boy from Brazil, was World Champion,
and he had done it in some style.
Ayrton
Senna: A Tribute - Ivan Rendell
Each
of Prost and Senna was eventually to win three
drivers' titles with Dennis
and Team McLaren. And as a season, 1988 was like
no other, with Senna and Prost finishing 1-2,
combining for 167 points while winning 15 of the
16 GPs, and McLaren cruising to the constructors'
title (shattering 1984's total). Yet it was also
the swan song for both the turbo era, as
normally aspirated engines were mandated beginning
in the 1989 season, and for cooperation between
Prost and Senna, as their rivalry would boil over
into thinly disguised disdain and dramatic on-track
clashes in the coming seasons. But while things
would be very different within Team McLaren
and in its Barnard-designed cars as F1 moved toward
the 1990s, their almost complete dominance of
the series judged by many fans as boring
to watch would continue into Formula One's
5th decade.
The
Active Cars
After Tamburello
Grooves
& The New Legends
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