The FAQ is divided into several sections.
Introduction (Part 1)
1. Rules, regulations and governing body (Part 1)
2. The teams and cars (Part 1)
3. The drivers (Part 2)
4. The races (Part 2)
5. The circuits (Part 2)
6. Television (Part 2)
7. Sponsors (Part 2)
8. Manufacturers (Part 2)
9. Technical stuff (Part 2)
10. Miscellaneous (Part 2)
Corrections and additions to mjac...@alumni.caltech.edu.
3. The drivers
==============
Q: Who is driving for whom in 2009?
A. Vodafone McLaren Mercedes
1. Lewis Hamilton (GB)
2. Heikki Kovalainen (FIN)
T. Pedro de la Rosa (E)
T. Gary Paffett (GB)
Scuderia Ferrari Marlboro
3. Felipe Massa (BR) [AUS-H]
3. Luca Badoer (I) [Eur-B]
3. Giancarlo Fisichella (I) [from I]
4. Kimi R�ikk�nen (FIN)
T. Luca Badoer (I) [AUS-H]
T. Marc Gen� (E)
BMW Sauber F1 Team
5. Robert Kubica(PL)
6. Nick Heidfeld (D)
T. Christian Klien (A)
ING Renault F1 Team
7. Fernando Alonso (E)
8. Nelsinho Piquet (BR) [AUS-H]
8. Romain Grosjean (F) [from Eur]
T. Romain Grosjean (F) [AUS-H]
Panasonic Toyota Racing
9. Jarno Trulli (I)
10. Timo Glock (D) [AUS-J]
10. Kamui Kobayashi (J) [BR]
T. Kamui Kobayashi (J)
Scuderia Toro Rosso
11. S�bastien Bourdais (F) [AUS-D]
11. Jaime Alguersuari (E) [from H]
12. S�bastien Buemi (CH)
T. Brendon Hartley (NZ) [E-GB]
T. Jaime Alguersuari (E) [D]
Red Bull Racing
14. Mark Webber (AUS)
15. Sebastian Vettel (D)
T. David Coulthard (GB) [AUS-BRN]
T. Brendon Hartley (NZ) [E-GB]
T. Jaime Alguersuari (E) [D]
AT&T Williams
16. Nico Rosberg (D)
17. Kazuki Nakajima (J)
T. Nico Hulkenberg (D)
Force India F1 Team
20. Adrian Sutil (D)
21. Giancarlo Fisichella (I) [AUS-B]
21. Vitantonio Liuzzi (I) [from I]
T. Vitantonio Liuzzi (I) [AUS-B]
Brawn GP Formula One Team
22. Jenson Button (GB)
23. Rubens Barrichello (BR)
T. Anthony Davidson (GB)
T = Test driver. Given the current ban on in-season testing
this is primarily a reserve and marketing role.
Q: Who will be driving for whom in 2010?
A: Officially announced or [credibly reported]:
Brawn - [Button], [Rosberg]
Campos -
Ferrari - Massa, Alonso; Fisichella test
Force India -
Lotus -
Manor -
McLaren - Hamilton
Red Bull Racing - Vettel, Webber
Renault - Kubica
Scuderia Toro Rosso - Buemi, Alguersuari
Toyota -
US F1 -
Williams - [Barrichello], [Hulkenberg]
Between delays in finalizing the 2010 entry list, the raft of
new teams, and uncertainty whether Alonso would actually move to
Ferrari the driver market has developed unusually slowly. The
official announcement of the last should speed things up.
Q: How much does driver x make?
A: According to /F1 Magazine/, August 2005 (with previous estimates
from April 2005):
M Schumacher $70m ($42m) half from personal sponsorship, etc.
R Schumacher $25m ($18m)
K R�ikk�nen $22m ($19m)
JP Montoya $15m ($12m)
J Trulli $10m ($7m)
R Barrichello $10m ($9m)
G Fisichella $9m ($4m)
F Alonso $9m ($7m)
J Button $8m ($7m)
M Webber $4m ($6m)
F Massa $2.5m ($1m)
A Wurz $2.5m (-)
T Sato $2m ($1m)
J Villeneuve $2m ($3m)
D Coulthard $1.5m (-)
N Heidfeld $1m ($2m)
P de la Rosa $500k (-)
C Klien $350k (-)
T Liuzzi $350k (-)
A Davidson $250k (-)
T Monteiro $250k (-)
C Albers $250k (-)
N Karthikeyan $250k (-)
P Friesacher nil (-)
Q: Who won the drivers championship in the year ....?
A:
2008 Lewis Hamilton (GB)
2007 Kimi R�ikk�nen (FIN)
2006 Fernando Alonso (E)
2005 Fernando Alonso (E)
2004 Michael Schumacher (D)
2003 Michael Schumacher (D)
2002 Michael Schumacher (D)
2001 Michael Schumacher (D)
2000 Michael Schumacher (D)
1999 Mika H�kkinen (FIN)
1998 Mika H�kkinen (FIN)
1997 Jacques Villeneuve (CDN)
1996 Damon Hill (GB)
1995 Michael Schumacher (D)
1994 Michael Schumacher (D)
1993 Alain Prost (F)
1992 Nigel Mansell (GB)
1991 Ayrton Senna (BR)
1990 Ayrton Senna (BR)
1989 Alain Prost (F)
1988 Ayrton Senna (BR)
1987 Nelson Piquet (BR)
1986 Alain Prost (F)
1985 Alain Prost (F)
1984 Niki Lauda (A)
1983 Nelson Piquet (BR)
1982 Keke Rosberg (FIN)
1981 Nelson Piquet (BR)
1980 Alan Jones (AUS)
1979 Jody Scheckter (ZA)
1978 Mario Andretti (USA)
1977 Niki Lauda (A)
1976 James Hunt (GB)
1975 Niki Lauda (A)
1974 Emerson Fittipaldi (BR)
1973 Jackie Stewart (GB)
1972 Emerson Fittipaldi BR
1971 Jackie Stewart (GB)
1970 Jochen Rindt (A)
1969 Jackie Stewart (GB)
1968 Graham Hill (GB)
1967 Denny Hulme (NZ)
1966 Jack Brabham (AUS)
1965 Jim Clark (GB)
1964 John Surtees (GB)
1963 Jim Clark (GB)
1962 Graham Hill (GB)
1961 Phil Hill (USA)
1960 Jack Brabham (AUS)
1959 Jack Brabham (AUS)
1958 Mike Hawthorn (GB)
1957 Juan Manuel Fangio (RA)
1956 Juan Manuel Fangio (RA)
1955 Juan Manuel Fangio (RA)
1954 Juan Manuel Fangio (RA)
1953 Alberto Ascari (I)
1952 Alberto Ascari (I)
1951 Juan Manuel Fangio (RA)
1950 Giuseppe Farina (I)
Q: How many races has y won?
A: See the next answer.
4. The races
============
Q: Who won x race? Who raced car y in z?
A: The best source for this is Forix at http://www.forix.com -
it has comprehensive results for championship and non-championship
races extending back before 1950. Unfortunately in early 2003 they
converted to a subscription service. Free sources of some of this
information are out there, including
http://www.grandprix.com/gpemain.html and http://www.f1db.com; other
recommendations are welcome.
Q: What is the calendar for 2009?
A: Amended by the FIA 5 November 2008:
29 Mar Australia (Melbourne)
05 Apr Malaysia (Sepang)
19 Apr China (Shanghai)
26 Apr Bahrain (Sakhir)
10 May Spain (Barcelona)
24 May Monaco (Monte Carlo)
07 Jun Turkey (Istanbul)
21 Jun Britain (Silverstone)
12 Jul Germany (N�rburgring)
26 Jul Hungary (Budapest)
23 Aug Europe (Valencia)
30 Aug Belgium (Spa Francorchamps)
13 Sep Italy (Monza)
27 Sep Singapore (Marina Bay)
04 Oct Japan (Suzuka)
18 Oct Brazil (S�o Paulo)
01 Nov Abu Dhabi (Yas Marina)
Canada, on the provisional calendar for 7 June, was dropped
over financial issues. France, on the official calendar for
28 June, was subsequently cancelled by the French motorsports
authority due to projected financial losses.
Q: What is the calendar for 2010?
A: Preliminary calendar announced by the FIA 21 September 2009
(to which teams have already voiced objection because
the Monaco-Turkey-Canada schedule creates serious logistical
problems):
14 Mar Bahrain (Sakhir)
28 Mar Australia (Melbourne)
04 Apr Malaysia (Sepang)
18 Apr China (Shanghai)
09 May Spain (Barcelona)
23 May Monaco (Monte Carlo)
30 May Turkey (Istanbul)
13 Jun Canada (Montr�al)*
27 Jun Europe (Valencia)
11 Jul Britain (Donington Park) [1]
25 Jul Germany (Hockenheim)
01 Aug Hungary (Budapest)
29 Aug Belgium (Spa Francorchamps)
12 Sep Italy (Monza)
26 Sep Singapore (Marina Bay)
03 Oct Japan (Suzuka)
17 Oct Korea (Yeongam)
31 Oct Abu Dhabi (Yas Marina)
14 Nov Brazil (S�o Paulo)
*Subject to the completion of contract negotiations with
Formula One Management. If these are not completed then the
Turkish Grand Prix will be moved to 6 June.
Note that the race in Australia will start at 1700 local time,
in Malaysia at 1600 local time, in Singapore at 2000 local time,
and in Abu Dhabi at 1700 local time.
[1] but see below
Q: Why does the Monaco Grand Prix move around in the calendar?
A: Bernie moves many of them around these days as commercial
considerations dictate. Monaco used to be a special case, in
that the Thursday of the meeting had traditionally been
Ascension Day, therefore moving with Easter. This tradition
was violated in 1957, 2002, 2005, 2007, and 2008, returned for
2009, but is violated again in 2010.
Q: What time is practice, qualifying, and the race?
A: The official weekend schedule is practice from 10 to 11:30
AM and 2 to 3:30 PM on Friday, and 11 AM to noon on Saturday,
with qualifying 2 to 3 PM on Saturday. The nominal race time
is 2 PM on Sunday, but there are many exceptions: Great
Britain (1 PM); China, Bahrain, and Turkey (3 PM); Abu Dhabi,
Australia, and Malaysia (5 PM); Singapore (8 PM). Some Friday
and Saturday schedules vary as well.
Remember that at Monaco the "Friday" program takes place on
Thursday. permitting the streets to be reopened on Friday for
normal (i.e. expensive) commerce.
Q: Where can I get lap charts for races on the web?
A: Graphical depictions and tables of running order lap-by-lap
are fairly common (e.g. through www.fia.com). All lap
times for each driver for any race can be found on Forix
(http://www.forix.com), and complete charts through the F1
yearly overview pages at Autosport (e.g.
http://www.autosport.com/f1/2006.html) - both however
available only to subscribers. The F1 Media Centre on the
FIA's website has complete data for the current GP, but
as the next event approaches this is moved into their
password-protected archive!
5. The circuits
===============
Q: What circuits are known or rumoured to be getting races?
A: A new track being built on Yas Island in Abu Dhabi is on
the official 2009 calendar as the final race. Suzuka, which lost
the Japanese GP in 2007 to Fuji, gets it back in 2009 for at
least 3 years.
The 2010 calendar published by the FIA in September shows 19 races,
including a South Korean GP at a new track being built in Yeongam.
Montr�al would return after a one-year break (assuming settlement of
remaining financial issues) and the British GP would move to
Donington Park on a 17-year contract (but see below).
Plans for a race in India, although delayed from 2010 to 2011,
continue to move ahead - but opposition has arisen within the
national government. Plans have been announced for a track at
Flins-Les Mureaux, northwest of Paris, in hopes of a return of the
French GP in 2012; the Paul Ricard circuit has recently indicated
interest in hosting the event also.
The Losail circuit in Qatar has announced plans to upgrade from
MotoGP to F1 standards. Construction has begun in Volokolamskoe,
outside of Moscow, on a track with F1 aspirations. The Mayor of
Rome has proposed a $200M project for a street race in the suburban
EUR complex.
At various times there have also been proposals for races in or
near Panama, Bulgaria, Niagara Falls (Canada), Rome, Kyalami
(South Africa), Palm Springs or Las Vegas (USA), St. Petersburg
(Russia), Algarve and Portimao (Portugal), Greece, Iran, Libya,
Egypt, Toronto (Canada), Rio de Janeiro (a bid to get the Brazilian
race back from S�o Paulo), and Cancun (where a contract for a
Mexican GP was actually announced before insurmountable
environmental and legal problems arose). Clearly a Grand Prix
is widely viewed as a very desirable property - at least where
there's a government willing to cover the inevitable financial
loss. The current sporting regulations permit up to 20 events
per season, but the teams are believed to be entitled to more
revenue from Bernie if the calendar has more than 17 events -
coincidentally, the number left for 2009 after recent
cancellations.
Q: What circuits are known or rumoured to be losing races?
A: Generally, those without the robust financial support of a
national government. Montr�al was dropped in 2009 over a financial
dispute. The French GP was briefly off the calendar for 2008
because of poor attendance at Magny-Cours; the organizers cancelled
the 2009 event due to almost certain financial losses and the GP
seems unlikely to return there. Fuji, which hosted the Japanese GP
in 2007 and 2008, had planned to alternate with Suzuka but abandoned
F1 after owner Toyota pulled its subsidy. Silverstone lost the
contract for the British GP to Donington Park after 2009, but
after numerous extensions Donington was declared to be in breach
of contract in mid-October and given two weeks to show compliance.
While Silverstone has said they don't want to hold a one-off
event in 2010 Bernie may be willing to negotiate a longer deal
at this point.
Hockenheim's debt was such that organizers agreed to alternate their
German GP with the N�rburgring; poor attendance in 2008 and the
loss of a local government subsidy left the race in doubt until
Bernie stepped in and agreed to share in the promotion. Shanghai is
considering whether to continue after 2010 because of large
financial losses. Istanbul looks rocky as well (poor attendance
again), and pressure on other circuits is likely to increase
due to the miserable economic climate.
Q: Where can I find maps of the circuits used in F1 racing?
A: Try http://www.etracksonline.co.uk/ (although it hasn't been
updated since February 2007, and some functions don't seem to be
working). There's also a fascinating repository of files at
http://www.geocities.com/ciroalbertopabon/Circuitos_eng.htm that,
with the Google Earth application, lets one take virtual tours of
present and past F1 (and other) tracks using real images.
Most of the big F1 sites have current track maps. Singapore
organizers have made revisions to address issues from the
inaugural event in 2008, including moving the pit entry and
exit, tightening turns 10, 13, and 14, and some curb modifications.
6. Television
=============
Q: I've heard about digital or pay-per-view F1. How did that work?
A: From a commercial point of view, not well enough. Bernie
Ecclestone's Formula One Management, which had sent crew and
equipment to each GP to provide seven channels of custom
programming to pay-per-view subscribers in several European
countries, pulled the plug after 2002 due to lower than
expected subscriptions. It was then promised that the
digital resouces would be focussed "on providing the best
live feed to our free-to-air broadcasters." This apparently
proved unworkable, and the operation was mostly mothballed
- until 2009, when the BBC announced it would include some
interactive and web-based features in its coverage.
Most broadcasts are now produced by FOM, although a few are
handled by local TV operations. There's a push from the
various national TV systems that contract to broadcast F1
to get HD-quality feeds, but apparently FOM is not yet
equipped to do this.
Q: How come the television viewing figures for F1 are bigger than
the world population?
A: It is a figure used for comparison by the advertising industry
and has no value as an absolute. That's the way the Olympic
Games is counted and it's the way the Football World Cup is
counted, so it's the way F1 is counted. Every "viewing" is
counted separately, so an individual watching practice,
qualifying, the race, and repeats / highlights is multiple
"viewers."
Q: I'm visiting the United States. Is there TV coverage of F1
events there?
A: In 2009 most events will be carried live on the Speed Channel
(http://www.speedtv.com), a cable and satellite service that is
widely available - but often not found on, for example, hotel
systems. Speed's package includes live coverage of second
Friday practice, Saturday qualifying, and all but 4 races.
Those four races will be carried by Fox, a broadcast network of
the same ownership with near-universal availability. In 2009
these will be Turkey, Great Britain, Germany and Hungary - all
tape delayed. The usual Speed broadcast team (Bob Varsha,
ex-driver David Hobbs, ex-mechanic and author Steve Matchett)
works the Fox events as well; Speed's TV contract includes GP2
events and is in its final year.
7. Sponsors
===========
Q: When did the FIA first allow outside sponsorship for F1 cars?
A: For the 1968 season.
Q: Which team first had a sponsor, the first race with sponsor,
and the sponsor's name?
A: At the 1968 Spanish GP Lotus appeared in the red and gold
livery of Gold Leaf Cigarettes. If privateers are considered
then one must credit John Love and Sam Tingle, whose "Team
Gunston" Brabham-Repco and LDS-Repco ran in the colors of that
cigarette brand at the season-opening South African event.
Q: What team brought Marlboro into F1 and when?
A: Marlboro came into F1 as teams sponsor in 1972 with the BRM team.
They 'eased' their way in with a low-key personal contract for
Jo Siffert in 1970. Seppi carried logos on helmet and overalls
for two seasons, as did his STP March in '70 and his Yardley
BRM in '71. This may well have been the genesis of Marlboro's
'World Championship Team' concept, the umbrella name for
individual driver sponsorships which were additional to team
contracts.
Q: What is the longest running team/sponsor connection (current
and all-time)?
A: In 2009 the Marlboro/Ferrari partnership marks its 26th season
(sponsor since 1984, title sponsor since 1997). This leads the
23 seasons of Marlboro and McLaren (1974-1996) for the all-time
title. Due to a 2001 marketing agreement among tobacco companies
(and to EU and other anti-tobacco legislation) it was indicated
that Marlboro branding would not actually appear on the cars
themselves from 2007. This was not fully implemented until 2008,
and their paint scheme - and the use of a "bar code" graphic where
the word "Marlboro" previously appeared - remains evocative.
Q. Who are the major sponsors for each F1 team in 2009?
A.
BMW: Petronas (petroleum)
Brawn: Virgin (lifestyle holding company)
Ferrari: Marlboro (cigarettes) [1]
McLaren: Vodafone (telecommunications)
Red Bull: Red Bull (energy drink)
Renault: ING (financial services) [2]
STR: Red Bull (energy drink)
Force India: Kingfisher (airline and beer)
Toyota: Panasonic (electronics)
Williams: AT&T (telecommunications)
[1] See "longest running team/sponsor connection" above
[2] Logos removed from Singapore onward at the sponsor's request
8. Manufacturers
================
Q: Had Jaguar ever been in F1 before buying Stewart?
A: Clemente Biondetti drove a Jaguar-engined Ferrari 166 in the
1950 Italian GP. He qualified it 32 seconds (27%) behind
Fangio, and retired from the race on lap 17 with a blown
engine.
When Moss, Dean Delamont and John "Autocar, not Cooper"
Cooper were casting about for bits for a new F2 car for him
(the project that eventually became the first of the two
Cooper-Altas) there was apparently an attempt to secure an
experimental 2.0l 4-cyl Jaguar engine for that.
Paul Emery fitted a 2.4 Jag engine with fuel injection to his
Emeryson special, and did one F1 clubbie in '57. (The car had
started life with a linered-down Aston Martin engine for 2.0l
F2, then acquired a bored-out Alta for 2.5l F1...)
Q: Who owns Ilmor?
A: DaimlerChrysler completed its buyout of the original
Illien-Morgan engine business in 2005; it's now known as
Mercedes-Benz High Performance Engines. The company currently
known as Ilmor Engineering is a subsequent startup by Mario
Illien, involved in the American IRL and NASCAR series (and an
apparently abortive foray into MotoGP); it has nothing to do
with F1.
Q: Who owns Cosworth?
A: Kevin Kalkhoven and Gerald Forsythe, co-owners of the US-based
Champ Car series. Cosworth engines were last used in F1 in
2006, however they won the tender for the "standard" F1 engine
the FIA had proposed be available to independent teams for 2010.
Although that particular initiative is dead the four new
entrants (at least) plan to use the Cosworth engine in 2010.
9. Technical Stuff
==================
Q: What is a desmodromic valve?
A: Conventional poppet valves are opened by the direct or indirect
mechanical action of a cam and are closed by the action of a
spring, the latter being a coil or hairpin of metal or (in
recent F1 engines) a chamber of compressed gas. Desmodromic
valves are both opened and closed by mechanical action, for
example by an additional cam lobe on the camshaft acting
through fingers or other structures.
Although desmodromic valves were used in Grand Prix racing as
early as 1914 and sporadically thereafter, significant success
was not achieved before the Mercedes Benz W196 of 1954-55.
Q: What is the fuel made of?
A: Essentially the fuel must be made from the same components as
pump fuels and with limits on the proportions of individual
components which are currently more stringent than those
applied to pump fuels in Europe.
Within those strict parameters, the fuel companies can - and
do - tailor the fuels to specific engines, engine maps and
circuit configurations. There is constant research and as many
as three or four different blends may used throughout a
season, in line with engine developments and circuit
requirements.
A sample of each new batch of fuel is sent to the FIA to be
tested to ensure that it complies with the rules and is then
'fingerprinted'. Samples are taken at the circuits to ensure
that the fuel being used in the cars matches this
'fingerprint'.
10. Miscellaneous
=================
Q: What colour is British Racing Green?
A: There isn't just one colour. See David Betts' photos at
http://www.kodakgallery.com/I.jsp?c=8hdb40f.p96dman&x=1&y=y0tki9
for many examples (free registration required).
Q: What are the national racing colours?
A: Country; car colour; number colour:
Egypt; light-lilac; red on white
Argentina; car:blue/bonnet: black; red on white
Belgium; yellow; black
Brazil; light-yellow/green; black
Bulgaria; car: green/bonnet: white; red on white
Chile; car: red/bonnet: blue/rear end: white; half blue and
half red on white or entirely red
Germany; white (yes, white was indeed Germany's official
colour); red
Finland; black; blue on white
France; blue; white
Great Britain; green; white
Ireland; green (horizontal orange stripe); white
Italy; red; white
Luxemburg; grey; white on red
Monaco; white (horizontal red stripe); black on white
Netherlands; orange; white
Poland; white/rear end: white; red
Romania; navy blue/rear end: red; yellow
Sweden; lower part: blue/upper part: yellow/3 yellow stripes
on the bonnet; white
Switzerland; car: red/bonnet: white; black
Spain; car: red/bonnet: yellow; black on yellow/white on red
Thailand; car: light-blue/wheels: light-yellow/horizontal yellow
stripe; white on blue
Czechoslovakia; car: white/bonnet: blue and white/rear end: red;
blue
Hungary; car: white/bonnet: red/ rear end: green; black
USA; car: white/rear end: blue; blue on white
Q: What about drug testing in F1?
A: From an FIA statement on 1/10/99 "For several years, the FIA and
the FIM have strictly applied the regulations of the
International Olympic Committee, with numerous and repeated
controls. Both federations are fully prepared to intensify
checks should the need arise."
Q: What are those strips sticking out of the ground in the pit lane?
A: They are there to ground the static electricity that builds up
in the car during a race, and try and prevent a pit lane fire.
Q: Who is Nazir Hoosein?
A: An (in)famous movie theater owner from Mumbai, India, who
currently represents China on the WMSC. Hoosein was Chief
Steward in Brazil in 1998, when the decision was taken to
disallow McLaren's braking system.
Hoosein was also Chief Steward in Brazil in 1997, when the
drivers had problems with a white line on the pit entry (they
were told at first to not cross it, but they managed to convince
the stewards that it was more dangerous to avoid it). You might
have noticed that the pit entry since 98 was much longer and the
reason is probably to avoid that "problem," which seemed to exist
only on Hoosein's head.
After the administrative mistake at the British GP in 98, he
voluntarilty gave up his Steward licence. He has since had it
given back. He resurfaced as Chief Steward at the 2002 Malaysian
GP, where Juan Pablo Montoya was given a controversial
"drive-through" penalty, and was also one of the Stewards at the
2003 German GP, where Ralf Schumacher was penalized for causing a
first-corner accident. It must be sheer coincidence that he was
also Chief Steward for the USGP of 2005.
Hoosein heads the Motorsports Association of India, which
displaced, under somewhat murky circumstances, the older
Federation of Motor Sport Clubs of India as India's National
Sporting Authority (ASN) as recognized by the FIA.
Q: What was the music the BBC used for the Grand Prix?
A: "The Chain", by Fleetwood Mac, on the album "Rumo(u)rs."
They've brought it back for 2009.
Q: Are there any novels based on Formula 1?
A: Alistair Maclean's "The Way to Dusty Death" is one of the better
known ones.
Bob Judd wrote a series of "throbbing groin and motor racing"
novels called "Formula 1", "Phoenix", "Indy", "Monza",
"Silverstone" and "Juice" in the UK, but they have slightly
different names in the US (Silverstone is known as Spin in the
states, and "Phoenix" as "Burn" for example).
Sally Armstrong wrote a novel called "Racers" which it claims was
researched with help of Williams Grand Prix Engineering. It is
very much a throbbing groins novel, and does beg the question
exactly what was going on at Williams in the early 90s...
Another few are "Eye of the Cobra" by Christopher Sherlock and
"White Death" by Andrew Neilsen, "The Last Open Road" by B.S.
Levy, and "Oversteer" & "Dead Pedal" by Ken Vose, plus "Fine
Tune" by Gerald Hammond.
Douglas Rutherford wrote a whole series of books in the 1950s,
including "Grand Prix Murder", "The Gilt-Edged Cockpit" and "The
Chequered Flag".
S. Thomas' "Miracle at Monaco" is a vanity press product, but
worth mention for the sheer weirdness of the concept: a
50-year-old monk races a one-off Morgan F1 car at Monaco with the
help of God.
Q: What is a "Jordan Stopwatch" and a "Ferrari Ruler"?
A: The first of these terms refers to the old practice of Jordan
having stunning testing times, only to falter during the season.
It is sometimes used as a ruse to increase sponsorship in a team,
as a fast car is easier to sell to corporate bods.
A Ferrari Ruler, on the other hand, is the idea that if you
measure something in a specific way then it is legal. It comes
about from the 1999 Malaysian Grand Prix, where if you measured
the bargeboards in a specific way, then they were legal.
Q: What is "Remus?"
A: Remus is an ERA (English Racing Automobiles) - specifically, ERA
R6B. One of the three raced by Prince Bira before the war, the
others being Romulus and Hanuman.
Raced as a GP car post-war, being driven by John Bolster amongst
others. It was then owned and raced by Bill Moss for many years
in UK club motorsport and then historic events before passing to
Patrick Lindsay and, after his death, his son Ludovic.
Probably the most raced car ever.
For more information, see
http://www.brooklandstrack.co.uk/Carslist/biraera.htm
--
Mark Jackson - http://www.alumni.caltech.edu/~mjackson