Apparently some drivers wear adult diapers, but most of them just let nature take its cause. According to lifestyle website Gizmodo F1 cars are equipped with a “drinks system” – a simple bag of fluid with a pump. The “drinks” button sits on the steering wheel, with the tube feeding the driver through the helmet.
Formula 1 is fast but a Bugatti Veyron got a topspeed which is over 400 km/h.
For two main reasons; First the US in particular and North America in general has a large motor racing scene so many who are talented enough to become professional can do so in their own region without having to travel to Europe. Most F1 drivers are basically bred from a young age for that type of racing.
The top speeds reached by IndyCar machinery is approximately 235mph from twin-turbocharged 2.2-litre V6 engines whereas for an F1 car it is around 205mph from turbocharged 1.6-litre V6 hybrid engines - although in 2019 both Sebastian Vettel and Sergio Perez managed to hit 223.5mph at Monza and Mexico City respectively.
The specifications are four-stroke, turbocharged 1.6 liter, 90 degree V6 turbo engines. The maximum engine power rotational speed is 15,000 revolutions per minute (rpm). Coming to the amount of power generated, the exact numbers are highly classified in nature by the engine providers.
The total audience in 2017 was 1.755 billion and 1.758 billion in 2018. However, live race audiences dropped slightly from 2017 to 2018, the total brought down by a decline in Italy, without which numbers would have gone up year on year.
Formula One cars use highly automated semi-automatic sequential gearboxes with paddle-shifters, with regulations stating that 8 forward gears (increased from 7 from the 2014 season onwards) and 1 reverse gear must be used, with rear-wheel-drive.
Is NASCAR or F1/Indy cars more dangerous? NASCAR races almost exclusively on ovals, F1 on “road” and street circuits, whilst Indy uses all 3. Oval racing tends to be more dangerous than circuit racing, in part due to higher speeds and the close proximity of walls.
So few women enter motorsports with serious competitive aspirations that it's simply a matter of probabilities. Way more boys are interested in motorsports than girls, so all the levels of racing from the littlest karts to F1 have more boys.
The power is still brutal, but it's clean. The 1.6-liter turbocharged engines generate 800 horsepower. Charged by regenerative braking and redundant turbo energy, batteries tap an additional 160 horsepower for 33 seconds per lap. With all that engaged, the cars can hit 230 mph on the straights.
There is a titanium 'skid plate' underneath the car. When an F1 car is travelling at speed the aero pushes down harder compressing the suspension causing the skid plate to rub along the ground and producing sparks. As the 2017 cars have a lot more downforce, they produce more sparks!
Race records
| Description | Record |
|---|
| Longest race (distance) | 200 laps, 804.672 km (500 mi) |
| Longest non-Indianapolis 500 race (distance) | 77 laps, 601.832 km (373.961 mi) |
| Most times safety car deployed in single race | 6 times |
| Most red flags in qualifying | 4 |
It's the result of a bet with Lola engineers: Could you make a road-legal F1 car? The answer, with a few caveats, is yes. The biggest issue, as you'd imagine, was ride height. That's been increased to offer 1.9 inches of ground clearance, and is adjustable up to 2.9 inches.
Least Amount of Cars to Finish a RaceBut to the surprise of many, 14 cars made it to the chequered flag in Melbourne. That's 10 more than finished a dramatic 1996 Monaco Grand Prix that eventually saw Olivier Panis conquer changeable conditions to win from David Coulthard, Johnny Herbert and Heinz-Harald Frentzen.
An evolution of the M23 Hunt drove in 1976, the M26 sports a 525-horsepower 3.0-liter Cosworth DFV V-8, which revs to 10,600 rpm. That propels it to 60 mph in 3.5 seconds, and on to a top speed of 195 mph.
F1 cars can accelerate from 0-100km/h in approximately 2.6 seconds and 0-300km/h in an impressive 10.6 seconds.
It may or may not have come as a surprise to you that Tesla's flagship Model S accelerates faster than a sought-after Ferrari supercar. Get a 3 in its Performance version and you're looking at a 3.2-second zero-to-60-mph time versus the current top-of-the-line Model S Performance's unbelievable 2.3-second spec.
By 0–60 mph (0–97 km/h) time (3.0 seconds or less)
| Car | Model Year | Manufacturer claim |
|---|
| Tesla Model S Performance w/Ludicrous Mode | 2020 | 2.3 sec |
| Nissan GT-R Nismo | 2020 | 2.5 sec |
| Bugatti Veyron and Veyron Super Sport | 2005 | 2.5 sec |
| Porsche 911 Turbo S (991 and 991.2) | 2014 | 2.8 sec |
Formula 1 cars only have two pedals which are shaped to fit drivers' feet. As in a road car, the brake pedal is on the left, and the accelerator pedal is on the right. Ferrari has a third “pedal” (more like a big button as you can see in the image above) in order to activate/deactivate DRS.
They only have two pedals, but there is a clutch paddle on the back of the steering wheel along with paddle shifters, which makes up/downshifts hilariously fast. The clutch paddle is only used when moving from a stand-still (pit stops and race start). Clutch control is automated when shifting with the paddles. Yes.
A quick vehicle is one with a low 0-60 mph time, like the Tesla Model S P100D's claimed 2.5 seconds. A fast vehicle is one with a high top speed, like the 258 mph Bugatti Veyron 16.4 Super Sport. The Veyron, with a 0-60 mph time of 2.5 seconds, is also a quick car, but the two metrics don't necessarily go hand in hand.