Which era was the most difficult to drive?
#1
Posted 26 January 2000 - 10:01
Mine would have to be the 60's. Rear engined fraigle monsters in desperate need of the soon to be debuted areo wings.
What do you think?
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#2
Posted 26 January 2000 - 10:20
Does danger make it difficult - then the fifties. Does uncontrollability make it difficult - maybe the thirties.
What about seeking perfection and precision in comparison to your competitors? That would be the seventies.
Finding the right drive so you have a car good enough to win? The nineties.
Getting permission from you wife to do it at all? Anytime.
There must be more - I'll leave the rest to someone else.
#3
Posted 26 January 2000 - 11:27
"There were gutters you could bury a man in, hundreds of them crossing the road at right angles: it would be a trial of springs as well as motors. Ridges, too, that lent more than a suggestion of the steeplechase, reared their crests across the way. For scores of miles, particularly in the high Arlberg country, six thousand feet above sea level, the road hung on the brink of fearsome precipices. Ruts and loose stones abounded in the Austrian section of the course."
#4
Posted 26 January 2000 - 12:07
Maybe Marcel Renault and that lot...
Did they have brakes?
Mind you, there were some ten hour GPs in the twenties, and still on dirt
#5
Posted 26 January 2000 - 21:18
When cornering in these cars, Gilles Villeneuve stated that you turn the wheel, your head is snapped over such that you are unable to see the road properly and you wind off when you think it's right... Lauda said much the same thing;
You took a tight line into the corner, turned the wheel and that was it. The steering wheel was in position - for better or worse, for the duration of the corner.As soon as the car was exposed to the centrifugal forces, the steering wheel was locked in position and there was no way you could turn it. If you did manage to move it to take corrective action, the car, which was locked down as if it was in a vice, would start to bounce. Once that happened the skirts would start to leak, the aerodynamics were shot to hell and the car became completely unpredictable and the chances wereyou would end up in the shrubbery.
Apparently the cars, aside from being painful and difficult to drive, were also exhausting. Remember Nelson Piquet (admittedly, not someone remembered for his dedication to personal fitness, but still...) after the 1981 USGP or the 1982 Brazilian GP?
#6
Posted 26 January 2000 - 22:30
The point about the ground effect era is a good one - I'd forgotten just how horrible those cars were. But for me, the late 30s with the big Autounions and Mercs must have been tough. They reckon only Rosemeyer ever really master the Autounion. 500+bhp through skinny tyres and swing axle rear suspension must have been a nightmare. And the "tracks" were still often little more than ordinary roads (and remembering the original Donington with its yumps and passing through the narrow Starkey's Bridge, the circuits weren't any better).
The 50s and 60s were comparatively "easy" with well balanced cars with not too much power. Maybe in the late 60s, the new 3 litre cars with no aerodynamic aids were a bit of a handful.
My vote goes for the late 30s and then the ground effect era.
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BRG
#7
Posted 26 January 2000 - 23:31
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Regards,
Dennis David
Yahoo = dennis_a_david
Life is racing, the rest is waiting
Grand Prix History
www.ddavid.com/formula1/
[This message has been edited by Dennis David (edited 01-26-2000).]
#8
Posted 26 January 2000 - 23:54
#9
Posted 27 January 2000 - 04:23
But spare a thought for the braking contests of the present day, and perhaps since ground effect time - when braking distances are so short that it comes down to a miniscule change to make the life or death difference as you enter a corner.
Maybe that's why we don't see so much passing..
I still think those 10-hour Grands Prix would have been tough, and that the fifties bore great danger.
#10
Posted 27 January 2000 - 07:04
#11
Posted 27 January 2000 - 11:13
Clark did not like the new 3-litre Formula. He felt that it removed too much of the advantage he had over other drivers. Brabham though did not like the underpowered cars and considered the new 3 litres, proper racing cars.
Driving a W125 which could burn rubber in any gear and pretty much any speed still took a smooth style as demonstrated by Caracciola over the more "overt" style used by von Brauchitsch to achieve maximum results.
My own meager experience tells me that it is easier to be smooth with less power.
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Regards,
Dennis David
Yahoo = dennis_a_david
Life is racing, the rest is waiting
Grand Prix History
www.ddavid.com/formula1/
#12
Posted 27 January 2000 - 11:29
Courage for the teens...
And as is said above, who can compare?
Would Caracciola have done better in a Lotus 25 or 49 or 78.. when would his smoothness have paid off most?
Or was he too big to fit?
I wonder how much difference that made to Gurney and Brabham compared to Clark and Stewart in 1965? The way they talk about the effect of a couple of gallons of fuel today when they have over three times as much power, it must have meant something.
#13
Posted 27 January 2000 - 11:48
#14
Posted 27 January 2000 - 12:02
So it fell to Jack.
Then, I saw him in a fair dinkum race with F. John in more or less equal cars at Warwick Farm once. Surtees in a Lola F1 car fitted with a 2.7 Climax, Brabham in a Brabham of similar spec. John led until he spun, Jack won. Surtees lost 14 seconds in the spin, lost the race by 8 seconds. But Brabham had come from the back of the grid.
Refer to the 1963 Australian GP.
Perhaps the little cars didn't suit his style so much as the bigger ones, but he didn't give up F1 in that time, so he must have felt comfortable about being able to beat them. There were many days he was at the front of the field, it's just that he won no Grand Epreuve races. He did win a non-title race or two, from memory.
#15
Posted 27 January 2000 - 15:02
I agree those pre-war car were a handfull !
My understanding is that they typically ran humongus displacement (10+ Litre) engines at relativly low speed (600 RPM ?) and actually did better then 90 MPH on dusty cart track "roads" where you could see more than 40 feet in front of you. A common trick was to look UP at the gaps between the trees, and from that try and judge where the road should be...
#16
Posted 29 January 2000 - 19:09