That race car is probably not a Ferrari despite somebody putting a Ferrari sticker or decal on its nose. It probably dates back to the 1989-90 season when he (Andrea de Chesaris was racing for the Dallara, BMS Scuderia Italia race team. The engines used in those cars were Ford DFR engines, so I suspect that the vehicle you found has one of those engines. De Cesaris was known to be a crazy driver who actually never won a single Grand Prix despite starting in 208 of them. The car you found is one of the cars he was involved in a crash with that season (most probably in the year 1990) or at the very least, his test car that he eventually damaged in yet another accident. He never drove for Ferrari. Hope that helps?
Yeah. I couldn't find where he drove for Ferrari. Renault Alfa Mercedes and Ford as you said. I reckon you'll find a Ford v8 in there if there is an engine . Would love to see more !
He actually drove for BMS Scuderia Italia in 89 and 90. They used a Cosworth engine that was owned by Ford. In 1992 Scuderia did switch over to Ferrari engines for a couple years but De Cesaris had already left the team. SO hard to tell how it got the Ferrari badge on it. The chassis were made by Dallara and if this was made during De Cesaris time with the team it is a f189 or f190 chassis. Interesting bit of history there. Wonder how it got there and what the story is behind that car.
I see a mix of information on this car... For example, the Dallara-BMS Scuderia Italia used Pirelli tires only (no goodyear), the sponsors correspond, but I did not find similarities in some points of the car. If we ignore De Cesari and sponsorships we would have a ferrari similar to that of Alesi and Capeli.
That's a show car Colin. I work for a company who make show cars for several F1 teams (we also make the Alfa Romeo F1 car sold in Selfridges) and to the untrained eye you'd think they are the real thing because the cars are made from the same materials as the real thing. Some show cars also have mock-up engines. But certain things give it away such as the rear brake discs and lack of callipers on the car in this video. Still a cracking find though, nice one!
i had to rewatch to check for the lack of calipers. well spotted.... still, as a mock-up, it's still essentially a real car minus then engine right? It's still got to be worth a serious amount surely? Also.... why is it not on slicks? that confused me.
@@craig79819 Thank you. It depends on how it has been built. If it was built as a show car from the start then it can't be called a real car because it would have been built to a much lower spec than a proper race chassis and would fail miserably in a crash test. Also on a proper car the bodywork is built to a 1mm tolerance whereas a show car is built to a 5cm tolerance. If the car used a proper chassis and had race spec parts added it could be called a rolling chassis if it was lacking the running gear. I'm not sure why it is on wet tyres, maybe they were cheaper than slicks, but really I have no idea. Yes it would be worth several £k, say around £20k/£30k, but that is a fraction of the value if it was a real race car, then it would be several hundred thousand £k and may be more depending on its history.
I think the race car is a Dallara-Ford which de Cesesaris drove in the 90s. He was driving for the Scurderia Italia which was basically the Ferrari Academy hence the paint scheme and badging
There was no such thing resembling a "Ferrari Academy" in 1990. And Andrea De Cesaris had been in F1 for 10 years by then, anyway. Scuderia Italia used to be a sports car team named Brixia Motor Sport, they entered sports-prototypes in the Italian championship for Group 6 cars and Alfa Romeos in both national and international touring car races before they joined F1. The team was founded by Beppe Lucchini, a steel magnate from Brescia who had also been an amateur racer in his youth. His only involvement with Ferrari was securing a batch of year-old Ferrari engines for the F1 team in 1992. The deal was brokered by shared sponsor Marlboro.
This is actually a really interesting place. Most of the cars (for example the white wagon, which is a Trabant), trucks or machinery are actually form Eastern Germany, back when it existed of course haha. What's interesting about this, is that the Nürburgring Area isn't actually old East German territory at all, so I wonder how all those ended up there!
Maybe cheap fire equipment for the track when it was used as a racing circuit as opposed to its uses these days . De Cesaris died aged 55 riding a Suzuki motorcycle in Rome in 2014 in a single vehicle incident on a freeway involving a barrier . Still seeking those thrills .
Hi Colin. First Merry Christmas to the Bearded Explorer. Unfortunatley it's not a reall Ferrari F1. Andrea De Cesaris never drove for Ferrari. I think the car is based on an old F3000 car and been made to look like an F1 Ferrari. Cool find though.
The car I believe is a Dallara BMS F192 from 1992 that had a Ferrari 3.5 V12 engine (or a hybrid of an 1990 car made to look like one). Here is a video I took of one being run up a few years ago GO TO 0:41 s to see it th-cam.com/video/QqBwUqm4i8U/w-d-xo.html
Andrea de Cesaris, F1 driver early 90's. He never won an F1 race, bit of a wild driver also never drove for Ferrari as I remember. Correct me if I'm wrong. Also his race number was 22 and not 1 as on the rear. Maybe a mock up car?
I believe this chassis is a Dallara F191 raced by Scuderia Italia in the 1991 season. Hard to know if it was ever used in race or not, and the livery is missing some sponsors but as it was a small team that went bust fairly quickly, that might explain why it ended up in the hands of a private collector.
Andrea de Cesaris was a f1 driver between 1980 to 1994, sadly he died in 2014 of a motorcycle accident, he had a reputation of being a fast and wild driver, one of f1’s great unheard of hero’s ❤
De Cesaris died in 2014 in a bike crash, he started 208 F1 races and never won one, 1989 he drove a red car for Dallara sponsored by Marlboro, he never drove for ferrari, but did he ever do testing on prototypes for them?
Hiya Colin, just thought I'd pipe in my twe pence worth. No idea about the Ferrari or really most of the other vehicles and machinery. What I can make a good guess at though & some observations is about the farm. It goes without saying the farmer had a very obsessive hobby with all things mechanical & likely lead to the farms downfall?. The barn though too dark & quick spotlightis to be certain but most likely dairy cows. Pigs in Germany are kept in pens in barns. I saw no pens. Also most of the trees growing up through vehicles etc looked like mostly ash and they grow very quickly. So do brambles. Most of it no more than 5 to 10 years old. The ash tree in front of the Ferrari trailer is likely only about 6or 7 years old. My best guess is the T4 and the caddy were likely drivable when the farm was abandoned no more than 10 years ago. It's not uncommon for farms to get abandoned these days. Children & grandchildren don't want to be farmers. They go off to the cities looking for excitement and easier work in a clean office with pubs & nightclubs around the corner. Farming is hard graft. I know because I'm a 61 year old farmer in Herefordshire & half my life is devoted to keeping old knackered farm machinery working. It's not an easy life, but I want no other. My daughter and my two grandsons though?. This is not the life they want & I don't blame them. I grew up in an age when something breaks you fix it. They've grown up in an age when something breaks you replace it.
Although I do really like your channel, as your early videos are Uber relaxing with the chilled music, it’s now starting to feel a little staged. Mock and exaggerated surprise and OMG’s aplenty 😂 Sometimes, less is more. For example, the ‘Ferrari’ clearly wasn’t real (a promotional mock up?) and had what looked like road-going brake discs fitted. Who in their right mind would leave a £10m F1 car out in a deserted farm! Anyway, thanks for trudging out in the muddy weather for us, have a great Christmas 🎅🏼
Yes I've noticed this too. Very entertaining still, but I'd personally appreciate it if it stayed 'real'. The recent 'ghost' videos were an example of obvious clickbait for me.
Sorry if I didn't see it mentioned here before: At 14:27 it says "lola" on the frame of the trailer, pointing to the car. So maybe it was just a a Lola chassis
601s is a trabant, trucks I think are Robor. Looks like the hoarder loved Iron curtain stuff. I doubt that’s a Ferrari, no.1 wasn’t on a Ferrari of that late 80’s era. Whatever it is they’ll be no engine. It’s a Coloni, ADC never drove for Ferrari
"LOLA" is written on the trailer at 14:27 near the bottom-middle of the screen. Car does not look like a real F1 car and the trailer looks too clean to have sat around, although I don't see evidence of it being moved into place recently.
"The Trabi" Trabant 601 is a 594cc 2 stroke engine car . I bet thats the same type of car you mentioned in your town. They were originally produced in Saxony. Sweet finds man!
Not a Ferrari sadly. De Cesaris never drove for them. It's a Dallara F189, seems someone just stuck a Ferrari badge on it knowing most people won't be able to tell the difference. Red car with Marlboro and black wings, everyone thinks Ferrari. Still would be worth a bit though.
Great Video- ‘jeeps’ are Auto Union ‘Munga’ used in large numbers by the West German military post war also by the West German border forces. Three cylinder two stroke engine and four wheel drive. Used to see loads of these when stationed in Germany in the 60’s also the Trabant correctly identified by many. Auto Union became Audi of course.
The Ferrari is a Dallara from late 80's, or a mock up F3000 car. The proportions are not F1 and I am not sure, but I don't think De Cesaris drove for Ferrari. It has the looks of a demo car, especially with the wet tyres fitted, but they doesn't mean too much. Also the trailer is fairly low budget for a Ferrari team , with sponsors other than Ferrari on the sides. It is probably a aftermarket F1 lookalike built from lower formula parts. But still quite a funky cool find. I always wonder what the back story is on these locations. Happy days to you and everyone for Xmas.
The XC90 is a fantastic vehicle…. It’s just the tires on it are made more for on road civility and would be the issue, not the car’s capability. As for the Ferrari, I was gonna say the same thing, that it looks like a test car or for a feeder series (definitely not F1), but the answers above look spot on. Either way, it’s a unique piece and hope someone can track down the owner and purchase it and use it properly.
It's not a Ferrari F1, it's a Dallara, more or less of the 90's. I can recognize the pull rod system on the front wheels. Ferrari didn't use that kind of system in the 90's.
Hi Colin , merry Xmas . this is in fact a real car . its is a 1989 dallara f189 . the original number of Andrea de cesaris was always 22 but in 1989 for 1 race he used 21 and this is in fact the spare car . Google it and it will make sense to you . hope this info helps you . I'm an f1 fanatic so I know a lot regarding the sport
How could this be real? There's not a single leaf inside this soft- sided trailer? There's no staining, mildew, etc on the trailer? If it's real it hasn't been there long.
The Ferrari I think is a display car for shows etc , these used to be loaned out for openings of shops , garages and large shows . From the outside they look good , often they're not actual full size , just about three quarter size
Like others have said Andrea never drove for Ferrari. The car is based on a 1985 f1 car, but it doesn’t look quite right so I think it’s a replica but it’s still cool!
Looks pretty set up and staged to me. Everything else on that farm is dusty, rusty, dirty, and looking like it has seen better days. This particular trailer looks so white, sparkling, and clean as a whistle with zero rust. 😑
It's definitely not an F1 car but it could be a F3000 car. Which would still be incredibly cool.I wish he looked closer and showed us the engine and stuff.
Andrea de Cesaris was born (31 May 1959 - and died 5 October 2014) he was an Italian racing driver. He started 208 Formula One Grands Prix but never won. As a result, he holds the record for the most races started without a race victory.[1] A string of accidents early in his career earned him a reputation for being a fast but wild driver.[2]
@@andreisarpe4506 Nope... it was Duroplast. The Trabant body is thus built from cotton mixed with phenolic resin, which is then baked for six minutes under pressure in heat presses.
Andrea De Cesaris f1 career. 59 points in 208 race starts. 1 pole position, 1 fastest lap, 153 retirements, 5 podiums, 0 race wins, best result 2 second places. Died in 2014 aged 55 while riding his suzuki.
Ok so a bit of context here. Yes this car does say Ferrari on it and YES there is a Ferrari badge on the nose but this is not a Ferrari at all, the engine in the back of this particular car is actually a Ford Cosworth DFR engine. The chassis and everything else was actually designed by Dallara and ran by the team BMS Scuderia Italia. Now Andrea de Cesaris drove this very same Dallara back in 1989 and scored only one points finish in that year with this car and that was a third place at the Canadian Grand Prix, his teammate fared a little better in the other car. Alex Caffi managed to finish 4th at Monaco and 6th in Canada. I hope this clears up some of the confusion. Thanks
9:59 its a generator thats why it has a plug and everything, it has a petrol motor with a belt making the dc motor or alternator at the top making it spin which is producing power
Colin ,the 601-s car ,I think that it is a trabant made in east of germany , produced from 1957 to 1991 and it is motorized by a two stroke engine.thank you and merry christmas from canada.
Andrea de Cesaris (31 May 1959 - 5 October 2014) was an Italian racing driver. He started 208 Formula One Grands Prix but never won. As a result, he holds the record for the most races started without a race victory.[1] A string of accidents early in his career earned him a reputation for being a fast but wild driver.[2] In 2005 and 2006 he competed in the Grand Prix Masters formula for retired F1 drivers. De Cesaris died on 5 October 2014 after losing control of his motorcycle on Rome's Grande Raccordo Anulare motorway.
Great find, but not a Ferrari F1 car. Andrea De Cesaris raced for many teams, never Ferrari. This is a Scuderia sponsored 'Dallara' F1 car from 1989/1990. I think it is actually a show car too. Still a great find!
Andrea de Cesaris (31 May 1959 - 5 October 2014) was an Italian racing driver. He started 208 Formula One Grands Prix but never won. As a result, he holds the record for the most races started without a race victory.[1] A string of accidents early in his career earned him a reputation for being a fast but wild driver.[2] In 2005 and 2006 he competed in the Grand Prix Masters formula for retired F1 drivers. De Cesaris died on 5 October 2014 after losing control of his motorcycle on Rome's Grande Raccordo Anulare motorway.
Good video , I didn’t notice any steering nor steering shafts on the F1 car? Is it a copy/ repro maybe? Surely Ferrari wouldn’t allow it to be sat in an abandoned farm.
Merry Christmas 🎄🦌☃️🌟and a happy, healthy and peaceful New Year 🎉🕊️to you and your family Colin and to everyone reading this message ❤ thanks for all the hard work, effort and dedication in bringing us fantastic videos this year…looking forward to watching in 2023 👍
This is a bit on the guy who’s name is on the car near where the seat would be I found the below on Wikipedia. Andrea de Cesaris (31 May 1959 - 5 October 2014) was an Italian racing driver. He started 208 Formula One Grands Prix but never won. As a result, he holds the record for the most races started without a race victory.[1] A string of accidents early in his career earned him a reputation for being a fast but wild driver.[2] In 2005 and 2006 he competed in the Grand Prix Masters formula for retired F1 drivers. De Cesaris died on 5 October 2014 after losing control of his motorcycle on Rome's Grande Raccordo Anulare motorway.
The "patrol car" is a 1977-1979 Chevrolet Caprice. Obviously not a real police car (actual Chevrolet cop cars of that era were usually based on Impalas, which had the same body but in a lower trim level), but likely painted up by a private owner for show purposes or possibly for a TV or movie production.
I do a lot of rural exploring in southern England, I generally just wander around farmyards and old buildings. I’ve found many an old racing car, Ferraris, Bugattis, Lamborghinis, GT40s, Lotus, Maserati etc. these old race / sports cars are unloved and are generally only good for scrap or arts projects. I normally offer the farmer £30 which they are glad to accept. Then I scrap them.
The elf comes into shot at 16:58 in e tree behind you as you're walking down the trail while you're talking about Andreus probably not spelt correctly but heho any great video once again hope you're enjoying Christmas and here's wishing you a very blessed New Year
This is in East Germany. You can see several IFA W50 trucks, T174/2 excavators, Robur, Trabant, and Belrus tractors (in the background). Appears to be an ex LPG. According to the number plate on the low-loader, it should be in the Saale-Orla district. May I ask where exactly?
That race car is probably not a Ferrari despite somebody putting a Ferrari sticker or decal on its nose. It probably dates back to the 1989-90 season when he (Andrea de Chesaris was racing for the Dallara, BMS Scuderia Italia race team. The engines used in those cars were Ford DFR engines, so I suspect that the vehicle you found has one of those engines. De Cesaris was known to be a crazy driver who actually never won a single Grand Prix despite starting in 208 of them. The car you found is one of the cars he was involved in a crash with that season (most probably in the year 1990) or at the very least, his test car that he eventually damaged in yet another accident. He never drove for Ferrari. Hope that helps?
Yeah. I couldn't find where he drove for Ferrari. Renault Alfa Mercedes and Ford as you said. I reckon you'll find a Ford v8 in there if there is an engine . Would love to see more !
He actually drove for BMS Scuderia Italia in 89 and 90. They used a Cosworth engine that was owned by Ford. In 1992 Scuderia did switch over to Ferrari engines for a couple years but De Cesaris had already left the team. SO hard to tell how it got the Ferrari badge on it. The chassis were made by Dallara and if this was made during De Cesaris time with the team it is a f189 or f190 chassis. Interesting bit of history there. Wonder how it got there and what the story is behind that car.
@@christopherjaentsch3456 That guy's name and the Ferrari badge. exactly. what's the story there.
I see a mix of information on this car...
For example, the Dallara-BMS Scuderia Italia used Pirelli tires only (no goodyear), the sponsors correspond, but I did not find similarities in some points of the car.
If we ignore De Cesari and sponsorships we would have a ferrari similar to that of Alesi and Capeli.
Also known as Andrea de Crasharis!
That's a show car Colin. I work for a company who make show cars for several F1 teams (we also make the Alfa Romeo F1 car sold in Selfridges) and to the untrained eye you'd think they are the real thing because the cars are made from the same materials as the real thing. Some show cars also have mock-up engines. But certain things give it away such as the rear brake discs and lack of callipers on the car in this video. Still a cracking find though, nice one!
i had to rewatch to check for the lack of calipers. well spotted.... still, as a mock-up, it's still essentially a real car minus then engine right? It's still got to be worth a serious amount surely?
Also.... why is it not on slicks? that confused me.
I noticed straight away that there's nothing in the cockpit, not one thing
@@craig79819 Thank you. It depends on how it has been built. If it was built as a show car from the start then it can't be called a real car because it would have been built to a much lower spec than a proper race chassis and would fail miserably in a crash test. Also on a proper car the bodywork is built to a 1mm tolerance whereas a show car is built to a 5cm tolerance. If the car used a proper chassis and had race spec parts added it could be called a rolling chassis if it was lacking the running gear.
I'm not sure why it is on wet tyres, maybe they were cheaper than slicks, but really I have no idea.
Yes it would be worth several £k, say around £20k/£30k, but that is a fraction of the value if it was a real race car, then it would be several hundred thousand £k and may be more depending on its history.
@@phil7301 Yeah that's a big give away as well haha.
Yes i dont think those wheel nuts are correct either lol!
I think the race car is a Dallara-Ford which de Cesesaris drove in the 90s. He was driving for the Scurderia Italia which was basically the Ferrari Academy hence the paint scheme and badging
Correct
@@longsleevethong1457 It is probably a presentation or PR car.
@@sdm197 if you google de ceseris cars then you'll see him in a dalara. Looks to me to be this car.
Bingo.
There was no such thing resembling a "Ferrari Academy" in 1990. And Andrea De Cesaris had been in F1 for 10 years by then, anyway. Scuderia Italia used to be a sports car team named Brixia Motor Sport, they entered sports-prototypes in the Italian championship for Group 6 cars and Alfa Romeos in both national and international touring car races before they joined F1. The team was founded by Beppe Lucchini, a steel magnate from Brescia who had also been an amateur racer in his youth. His only involvement with Ferrari was securing a batch of year-old Ferrari engines for the F1 team in 1992. The deal was brokered by shared sponsor Marlboro.
This is actually a really interesting place. Most of the cars (for example the white wagon, which is a Trabant), trucks or machinery are actually form Eastern Germany, back when it existed of course haha. What's interesting about this, is that the Nürburgring Area isn't actually old East German territory at all, so I wonder how all those ended up there!
Maybe cheap fire equipment for the track when it was used as a racing circuit as opposed to its uses these days . De Cesaris died aged 55 riding a Suzuki motorcycle in Rome in 2014 in a single vehicle incident on a freeway involving a barrier . Still seeking those thrills .
Don't mind firetruck...trabant is a gold in that place 👍
Hi Colin. First Merry Christmas to the Bearded Explorer. Unfortunatley it's not a reall Ferrari F1. Andrea De Cesaris never drove for Ferrari. I think the car is based on an old F3000 car and been made to look like an F1 Ferrari. Cool find though.
I’d also say based on a old f3 car 👍
He did drive for Scuderia Italia squad in a very similar looking car but with the number 23
Either a GP2 car or Formula 3000 definately not F1 .
It’s just a model, not even an engine in it is there?!
It is a Dallara from around 1989
The car I believe is a Dallara BMS F192 from 1992 that had a Ferrari 3.5 V12 engine (or a hybrid of an 1990 car made to look like one). Here is a video I took of one being run up a few years ago GO TO 0:41 s to see it th-cam.com/video/QqBwUqm4i8U/w-d-xo.html
Andrea de Cesaris, F1 driver early 90's. He never won an F1 race, bit of a wild driver also never drove for Ferrari as I remember. Correct me if I'm wrong. Also his race number was 22 and not 1 as on the rear. Maybe a mock up car?
Beatiful. The car is a Dallara F189, an F1 car of season 1989 of Scuderia Italia.
I believe this chassis is a Dallara F191 raced by Scuderia Italia in the 1991 season. Hard to know if it was ever used in race or not, and the livery is missing some sponsors but as it was a small team that went bust fairly quickly, that might explain why it ended up in the hands of a private collector.
Andrea de Cesaris was a f1 driver between 1980 to 1994, sadly he died in 2014 of a motorcycle accident, he had a reputation of being a fast and wild driver, one of f1’s great unheard of hero’s ❤
That name rang a bell with me too
Thank you for letting me know what happened to him ..Sad News of his passing...⭐🙏
De Cesaris died in 2014 in a bike crash, he started 208 F1 races and never won one, 1989 he drove a red car for Dallara sponsored by Marlboro, he never drove for ferrari, but did he ever do testing on prototypes for them?
He didn't. He did drive the Ferrari powered Lancia LC2 in the World Sportscar Championship in the mid 80s.
Hiya Colin, just thought I'd pipe in my twe pence worth. No idea about the Ferrari or really most of the other vehicles and machinery. What I can make a good guess at though & some observations is about the farm.
It goes without saying the farmer had a very obsessive hobby with all things mechanical & likely lead to the farms downfall?. The barn though too dark & quick spotlightis to be certain but most likely dairy cows. Pigs in Germany are kept in pens in barns. I saw no pens. Also most of the trees growing up through vehicles etc looked like mostly ash and they grow very quickly. So do brambles. Most of it no more than 5 to 10 years old. The ash tree in front of the Ferrari trailer is likely only about 6or 7 years old.
My best guess is the T4 and the caddy were likely drivable when the farm was abandoned no more than 10 years ago.
It's not uncommon for farms to get abandoned these days. Children & grandchildren don't want to be farmers. They go off to the cities looking for excitement and easier work in a clean office with pubs & nightclubs around the corner. Farming is hard graft. I know because I'm a 61 year old farmer in Herefordshire & half my life is devoted to keeping old knackered farm machinery working. It's not an easy life, but I want no other. My daughter and my two grandsons though?. This is not the life they want & I don't blame them. I grew up in an age when something breaks you fix it. They've grown up in an age when something breaks you replace it.
De Cesaris, who died in an accident in Rome in 2014, never raced for Ferrari. The car is a Dallara.
Although I do really like your channel, as your early videos are Uber relaxing with the chilled music, it’s now starting to feel a little staged. Mock and exaggerated surprise and OMG’s aplenty 😂 Sometimes, less is more. For example, the ‘Ferrari’ clearly wasn’t real (a promotional mock up?) and had what looked like road-going brake discs fitted. Who in their right mind would leave a £10m F1 car out in a deserted farm!
Anyway, thanks for trudging out in the muddy weather for us, have a great Christmas 🎅🏼
Yes I've noticed this too. Very entertaining still, but I'd personally appreciate it if it stayed 'real'.
The recent 'ghost' videos were an example of obvious clickbait for me.
If I had a quid for every time he said "cool" ..... but entertaining vids nonetheless :)
Its the absolutely incredibles for me lmaoo 🤦♂️🤣
5:23 Its called a Trabant.
I was thinking same a trabant in excellent condition
1990 Dallara, BMS Scuderia Italia driven by andrea de cesaris who died in a motor cycle accident,, if its real
wheel nuts look 2 small
Sorry if I didn't see it mentioned here before: At 14:27 it says "lola" on the frame of the trailer, pointing to the car. So maybe it was just a a Lola chassis
Merry Christmas 🎉 that’s a really video
601s is a trabant, trucks I think are Robor. Looks like the hoarder loved Iron curtain stuff. I doubt that’s a Ferrari, no.1 wasn’t on a Ferrari of that late 80’s era. Whatever it is they’ll be no engine. It’s a Coloni, ADC never drove for Ferrari
It is a Dallara which he drove in 1989-1990.
I thought that was a Trabant. My parents had Trabant's when I was growing up in UK.
"LOLA" is written on the trailer at 14:27 near the bottom-middle of the screen. Car does not look like a real F1 car and the trailer looks too clean to have sat around, although I don't see evidence of it being moved into place recently.
"The Trabi" Trabant 601 is a 594cc 2 stroke engine car . I bet thats the same type of car you mentioned in your town. They were originally produced in Saxony. Sweet finds man!
Thanks another great video merry Christmas and a prosperous new year thanks
Look at that, that abandoned Dallara F1 is timeless race car, that’s great, now, it never gets old.
Not a Ferrari sadly. De Cesaris never drove for them. It's a Dallara F189, seems someone just stuck a Ferrari badge on it knowing most people won't be able to tell the difference. Red car with Marlboro and black wings, everyone thinks Ferrari. Still would be worth a bit though.
Spot ON
Elves are watching, always watching.
It's not a Ferrari, it's a Dallara F1, they used earlier Ferrari engines and drivetrains.
Great vlog mate have a great xmas
Great Video- ‘jeeps’ are Auto Union ‘Munga’ used in large numbers by the West German military post war also by the West German border forces. Three cylinder two stroke engine and four wheel drive. Used to see loads of these when stationed in Germany in the 60’s also the Trabant correctly identified by many. Auto Union became Audi of course.
My daughter spotted elf towards the end. I won't ruin it for others by putting a time stamp. Great video as always. Merry Xmas 👍
it looked like a small Santa it was red & white.?
and Christmas just went 💥 , NICE XMAS PRESANT , cheers Colin all to best to you and your loved ones
The Ferrari is a Dallara from late 80's, or a mock up F3000 car. The proportions are not F1 and I am not sure, but I don't think De Cesaris drove for Ferrari.
It has the looks of a demo car, especially with the wet tyres fitted, but they doesn't mean too much. Also the trailer is fairly low budget for a Ferrari team , with sponsors other than Ferrari on the sides. It is probably a aftermarket F1 lookalike built from lower formula parts.
But still quite a funky cool find. I always wonder what the back story is on these locations.
Happy days to you and everyone for Xmas.
The trailer looked to be in good shape, compared to other stuff on the property
Not a good advert for the XC90 if it wouldn’t go through that mud puddle. Great video and finds.
I wasn’t prepared to take a risk almost 1500 miles away from home 😅😂
@@TheBeardedExplorer Fair do mate. Happy Christmas 🎅🏼
@@TheBeardedExplorer兄弟13:27那辆F1去你应该把它拖回去修理一下作收藏之用
The XC90 is a fantastic vehicle…. It’s just the tires on it are made more for on road civility and would be the issue, not the car’s capability.
As for the Ferrari, I was gonna say the same thing, that it looks like a test car or for a feeder series (definitely not F1), but the answers above look spot on. Either way, it’s a unique piece and hope someone can track down the owner and purchase it and use it properly.
I reckon the blue cab white body truck is a merc pal 👌
that "601S" is a ex-GDR Trabant Universal
it has a 2 stroke 600cc engine
It's not a Ferrari F1, it's a Dallara, more or less of the 90's. I can recognize the pull rod system on the front wheels. Ferrari didn't use that kind of system in the 90's.
I think this Is the best found i EVER seen in my own life
Happy Christmas Colin watch all your videos keep up the good work
Hi Colin , merry Xmas . this is in fact a real car . its is a 1989 dallara f189 . the original number of Andrea de cesaris was always 22 but in 1989 for 1 race he used 21 and this is in fact the spare car . Google it and it will make sense to you . hope this info helps you . I'm an f1 fanatic so I know a lot regarding the sport
Not that much because that's no Dallara F189! As others have said, it's not even a 'proper' car and just a show mock up.
I was going to say the exact same as you
It's build like the original for show.
It will get STOLEN soon. That’s what happened in Suffolk,UK.
@@andysnelling4573 it wont, because it is no where near suffolk, or the uk for that matter,
Merry Christmas to you and your family
How could this be real? There's not a single leaf inside this soft- sided trailer? There's no staining, mildew, etc on the trailer? If it's real it hasn't been there long.
This video was Insane loved it, and a merry Christmas too you and family 🎄🙏
Merry Christmas and a happy new year
Great video again enjoyed the xma s element an d found the elf in the tree at the end. Nice one. Keep making these entertaining videos. Happy Xmas.
The Ferrari I think is a display car for shows etc , these used to be loaned out for openings of shops , garages and large shows . From the outside they look good , often they're not actual full size , just about three quarter size
The drivers name Andrea de Cesuras drove in F1 Grands Prix but never won. Born 31st May1959.died October 5th 2014
Some of trucks should be saved and put into museum
16min 56sec into video the Xmas elf is sitting in the tree on the left of screen. A Merry Xmas to all from Cape Town South Africa.
Like others have said Andrea never drove for Ferrari. The car is based on a 1985 f1 car, but it doesn’t look quite right so I think it’s a replica but it’s still cool!
Looks pretty set up and staged to me. Everything else on that farm is dusty, rusty, dirty, and looking like it has seen better days. This particular trailer looks so white, sparkling, and clean as a whistle with zero rust. 😑
Amazing places bud hope you having good crismas and wish you great new year 👍
In 1989, de Cesaris moved to the Marlboro-sponsored Scuderia Italia squad.
Fantastic Car Find! Happy Holidays.
Merry xmas!
It's definitely not an F1 car but it could be a F3000 car. Which would still be incredibly cool.I wish he looked closer and showed us the engine and stuff.
Andrea de Cesaris was born (31 May 1959 - and died 5 October 2014) he was an Italian racing driver. He started 208 Formula One Grands Prix but never won. As a result, he holds the record for the most races started without a race victory.[1] A string of accidents early in his career earned him a reputation for being a fast but wild driver.[2]
Hi Colin happy Christmas 🎄
Hi Colin, I think the estate car is a Trabant. Happy Christmas.
P.s. The Trabant body panels were made out of compressed cardboard, hence they did not rust at all !
@@andreisarpe4506 Nope... it was Duroplast. The Trabant body is thus built from cotton mixed with phenolic resin, which is then baked for six minutes under pressure in heat presses.
He's in the tree behind you at the end..Excellent
Merry Christmas pal
Wow what an amazing video thank you so so much for that pal Happy Christmas to you and your family 🎉
That is a cool find! Long live de Crasheris!
Hi Colin great explore mate hope you have a great Christmas and New year
Andrea De Cesaris f1 career. 59 points in 208 race starts. 1 pole position, 1 fastest lap, 153 retirements, 5 podiums, 0 race wins, best result 2 second places. Died in 2014 aged 55 while riding his suzuki.
How come you didn't look in the cockpit ?? You'd probably then see nothing in there, no seat no dash, probably just a pro mo car
Yeah ... and I'm really buying this
Holy potatoes you drove right past the entrance to The Ring that's such a dream
Great video. Pretty easy to see it's a mock-up though.
Merry Christmas m8
Ok so a bit of context here. Yes this car does say Ferrari on it and YES there is a Ferrari badge on the nose but this is not a Ferrari at all, the engine in the back of this particular car is actually a Ford Cosworth DFR engine. The chassis and everything else was actually designed by Dallara and ran by the team BMS Scuderia Italia. Now Andrea de Cesaris drove this very same Dallara back in 1989 and scored only one points finish in that year with this car and that was a third place at the Canadian Grand Prix, his teammate fared a little better in the other car. Alex Caffi managed to finish 4th at Monaco and 6th in Canada. I hope this clears up some of the confusion. Thanks
It's a prop model ( fiber glass replica ) based on De Cesari's F1 model from Dallara Team for the 1989 championship.
9:59 its a generator thats why it has a plug and everything, it has a petrol motor with a belt making the dc motor or alternator at the top making it spin which is producing power
Colin ,the 601-s car ,I think that it is a trabant made in east of germany , produced from 1957 to 1991 and it is motorized by a two stroke engine.thank you and merry christmas from canada.
You're right. It's a IFA/Sachsenring 601 s - Trabant, aka Trabbi build in the GDR from 1964 to 1990. It has a 600 ccm two-stroke engine.
5:16 Trabant ;) Cool find, cool car made from papier-mâché lol.. :p
Happy Xmas Colin. And a happy new year, I have enjoyed watching your videos brilliant.
Andrea de Cesaris (31 May 1959 - 5 October 2014) was an Italian racing driver. He started 208 Formula One Grands Prix but never won. As a result, he holds the record for the most races started without a race victory.[1] A string of accidents early in his career earned him a reputation for being a fast but wild driver.[2]
In 2005 and 2006 he competed in the Grand Prix Masters formula for retired F1 drivers.
De Cesaris died on 5 October 2014 after losing control of his motorcycle on Rome's Grande Raccordo Anulare motorway.
Andrea “Crasheris”. I remember him from his 80’s Zandvoort GP. Legit Lunatic.😂🤙🏼 Great content.💎
Show car... just a static display not meant for driving. COOL!
No freakin' way! :)
Loved 2022 Hope 2023 For You And Yours is a Good One 😃
1:32 That‘s German on that sign
That‘s in germany ok wow
Great find, but not a Ferrari F1 car. Andrea De Cesaris raced for many teams, never Ferrari. This is a Scuderia sponsored 'Dallara' F1 car from 1989/1990. I think it is actually a show car too. Still a great find!
Ah in the tree 😀🎄
Hi Colin. One very cool video.
Merry xmas to you and your family be safe pal
Andrea de Cesaris (31 May 1959 - 5 October 2014) was an Italian racing driver. He started 208 Formula One Grands Prix but never won. As a result, he holds the record for the most races started without a race victory.[1] A string of accidents early in his career earned him a reputation for being a fast but wild driver.[2]
In 2005 and 2006 he competed in the Grand Prix Masters formula for retired F1 drivers.
De Cesaris died on 5 October 2014 after losing control of his motorcycle on Rome's Grande Raccordo Anulare motorway.
Another great explore Colin merry Christmas see you in the new year 👍
Some of those other cars & trucks are worth a few quid. Some amazing restoration projects there.
That old little hatchback style car is actually a trabant, tiny little cars from east Germany I think, not very good cars though if I remember rightly
Good video , I didn’t notice any steering nor steering shafts on the F1 car? Is it a copy/ repro maybe? Surely Ferrari wouldn’t allow it to be sat in an abandoned farm.
It looks genuine..Jesus, it sounds brutal funny😂😂😂!
Whatever you have found. Still very cool in my opinion.
Merry Christmas 🎄🦌☃️🌟and a happy, healthy and peaceful New Year 🎉🕊️to you and your family Colin and to everyone reading this message ❤ thanks for all the hard work, effort and dedication in bringing us fantastic videos this year…looking forward to watching in 2023 👍
This is a bit on the guy who’s name is on the car near where the seat would be I found the below on Wikipedia.
Andrea de Cesaris (31 May 1959 - 5 October 2014) was an Italian racing driver. He started 208 Formula One Grands Prix but never won. As a result, he holds the record for the most races started without a race victory.[1] A string of accidents early in his career earned him a reputation for being a fast but wild driver.[2]
In 2005 and 2006 he competed in the Grand Prix Masters formula for retired F1 drivers.
De Cesaris died on 5 October 2014 after losing control of his motorcycle on Rome's Grande Raccordo Anulare motorway.
The "patrol car" is a 1977-1979 Chevrolet Caprice. Obviously not a real police car (actual Chevrolet cop cars of that era were usually based on Impalas, which had the same body but in a lower trim level), but likely painted up by a private owner for show purposes or possibly for a TV or movie production.
🏎🏎🏎🏎🏎🏎that is definatly a f1 car ferrari
I do a lot of rural exploring in southern England, I generally just wander around farmyards and old buildings. I’ve found many an old racing car, Ferraris, Bugattis, Lamborghinis, GT40s, Lotus, Maserati etc. these old race / sports cars are unloved and are generally only good for scrap or arts projects. I normally offer the farmer £30 which they are glad to accept.
Then I scrap them.
merry Christmas to you all and hope you all have a happy new year 🎉
The elf comes into shot at 16:58 in e tree behind you as you're walking down the trail while you're talking about Andreus probably not spelt correctly but heho any great video once again hope you're enjoying Christmas and here's wishing you a very blessed New Year
If I could I'd buy the whole lot, land, buildings, the cars,trucks etc and retire.
This is in East Germany. You can see several IFA W50 trucks, T174/2 excavators, Robur, Trabant, and Belrus tractors (in the background).
Appears to be an ex LPG.
According to the number plate on the low-loader, it should be in the Saale-Orla district. May I ask where exactly?