Haha, guess we can call these adian-isims or Millward-isms.....take your pick I guess Dude where's my Roberto Romeno, Romano or however you spell it (I know, I know it'll come out when the play button arrives, just being a.... thing lol)
Those cars looked like drag-racers with the whole rear-front difference in tyre size!! Imagine the delegation of pit crew if used today “Right short-fry, you take the front! Muscles, you take the rear!”
There's no way you could justifiably claim that the P34 is not one of the coolest F1 cars ever. It is a legend, regardless of the success or later lack of success.
I was lucky enough to whiteness one doing a few laps round brands the day I took my racing licence. The guy taking the class took us all outside to see it being piloted by Martin Brundle. Personally he would be amongst the last on my list but I guess it was for Sky or something 🤷♀
But the even later success? (it won the FIA Thoroughbred Grand Prix championship - now FIA Masters - when everyone had Avon tyres which equalised the performances somewhat. Martin Stretton and Mauro Pane took the title twice with the P34, in 2000 and 2008 respectively.
My takeaway from this, is that Scheckter's relationship with the P34 is like one of those grumpy old men who insists he doesn't want a dog, is given a dog, and inevitably falls in love with it
It was a crazy era with open rules where engineers had a chance to try new ideas, as opposed to today when the rules have forced the cars to be too "cookie cutter" in my eyes anyhow. One thing often the cars would back then have aluminium chassis (like you said) but teams often would use plywood and even balsa wood to locally reinforce and stiffen areas
It's a cool car no doubt. I remember as a kid thinking it was awesome, and so did my mates. We didn't call it a Tyrell though, we referred to it as the Elf.
I was 9 and 10 in 76 / 77. I thought this thing was the coolest car on the planet. Every kid I knew had the matchbox sized version. (Well it was Tomica, but we still called them matchbox). The one to one version wasnt much bigger. Lol.
"The proliferation of resources to be assigned to the design confines of the car's technical parameters are such as to extract too many financial efficiencies from the budgetary departments to warrant a full development of the concept, and so expedites the exclusion of the concept from the spirit of the technical regulations governing the constructors." - Ron Dennis, probably. Anyway, it's got six wheels, not four! What madness is this? Indeed, this is the one we all go to for clicks, the best way to get newbies to do a double take and shout 'wait, what?!'
Aidan- One of my favorites of all time. I currently have the 1/20 Tamiya kit under construction and the 1/12 in the queue. Iʻm enjoying your channel tremendously. "Success baggage". Hah! Tim
I remember the claims the brakes were bad and I always assumed it was because of the limited space in the small wheels, never heard it was a problem of balance adjustments. I learned something new!
Specifically, Drag Strip was modeled on the 1976 racing season trim P34A, with the simpler front wing, large top side mirror fairings, and exposed motor. Likely it was supposed to reflect Scheckter's winning #3 car as seen after his victory in Sweden in 1976 JUN. Photos from the race itself show that the #3 car used an A-frame air box over the intake runners, but the post-race pics show the air box removed. The early 1976 testing prototype had a more complex front wing and a giant air scoop. And the 1977 models replaced the big mirror fairings with small mirror stalks and hid the engine under an aero shroud.
Very informative once again, I had no idea the braking was so bad but it makes sense. Also, this car is very popular in Japan among car/racing Otaku. There is a racing Anime from the late-1970s that features a car heavily inspired by it (Arrow Emblem: Hawk of the Grand Prix) and it also appears in a Dreamcast game called Super Runabout.
Awesome vid, and a late congrats on 100k, the Top Gear esque segment is awesome, although I feel you can still improve it by including a picture in picture view of you in the rig and turn up the FFB, so we really get a feel for what the car is doing based on your inputs, and see the struggle to keep one of these beasts on the road!
I remember the first time I saw this car as a kid, me and a school friend were looking through a formula 1 book and we were just flabbergasted that this was a real thing as up until then we were used to the early 2000s cars. it's a car that's always stuck in my mind when anyone mentions f1 to me
There's a video series called "Lap Of the Gods" which is in car videos of various F1 cars at various tracks. Among them is Patrick Depailler at Monaco in the 6 wheeler. Pretty freaky watching those front wheels.
Yes Aidan. I did learn new stuff today. I'm 61 and have probably seen every YT doc ever made about them and have raced one in rf2. But you did a great job of explaining the peculiarities and challenges of brake balance across 6 wheels and gave me a much better overall understanding of what the P34 was as a race car. Well done.
I’m a fan; I always loved the DFV soundtrack and I built the Matchbox plastic kit as a kid (which then went onto a shelf in the hall alongside the Bentley, MG and Bugatti T35 racing cars I also built. My folks are great). Seeing one attack the hillclimb at FoS was a proper “no, it’s just ‘cos of the pollen, honest” moment. Thanks for the nostalgia trip 🙂
One of the greatest F1 interviews of all time was about air boxes: Stirling Moss: "So James, they've changed the regulations concerning the air boxes and the wings and yet you're still extremely fast. How do you do it?" James Hunt: "Big balls."
@@CyanRooper Indeed. The reason why the P34 made me recall my interest in airboxes is because in its prototype stages it had a tall one, then a split intake like the McLaren only more phallic looking, and then come race day they went a bugger it, take it off entirely. At the same time Ferrari were doing some fighter jet style shenanigans trying to get more air into the engine
@@CyanRooper Certainly the most aesthetically pleasing. But I firmly believe they had no other option. You see whilst the rest of the field used DFVs which had the throttle bodies on the very top of the engine and thus somewhat into the airflow, Ferrari’s flat 12 throttle bodies were actually on the level if now lower than the radiators in the side pods which I suspect would have pretty much starved the engine for air had they decided to run without them, as opposed to the other teams which could afford naked engines whilst losing relatively small amount of performance.
Yep I agree it's a cool car. I always liked people who tried radical ideas to improve things. This was the only F1 car from the Tamiya collection that I ever got to build, although dreaming about building many from that era. I don't know if I have that model hidden in a box somewhere, probably not. Beautiful kits.
I built the Tamiya 1/10 scale r/c car back in the day. Intricate only begins to describe that steering mechanism. I discovered that the more parts, the more points of failure. At least in a scale model.
A TH-camr called slap shoes does mainly NASCAR content once showed some smaller race systems on dirt tracks, special modified i think, the rule state there has to be 4 wheels on the car but not where so cos they're running short oval dirt tracks most have a 3 wheels one side 1 other configuration
From what ive read it was not a bad concept and was really only held back by the lack of purpose built tires for the front. They had to use tires meant for one of the junior leagues not meant for F1 speeds.
Not so. The tires were built specifically for the P34. The problem was that Goodyear weren't willing to update the compound. This meant that whenever the tire compound was changed for the rest of the field, Tyrrell were stuck with either increasingly out of date tires if they stayed with the old compound on the rears, or an increasingly out of balance car if they changed the rears alongside the rest of the field. Apparently Goodyear were happy to come up with the initial tire design as an experiment, just to see if they could build a working F1 tire in an unusual size, but having done so, weren't willing to spend the money and time needed to update the tires to keep them current with the rest of the field. With the pace of development during the mid-70's, this was the death knell of the P34.
@@gchampi2 Goodyear did fine in 1976 as they were the only tire supplier. There is little need to spend money on development with no competition, so they didn't. The P34 and its drivers finished ahead of everyone except Lauda and Hunt, disproving any claims it was a bad design (You were not making this claim, but that is the most frequent comments on the car.) In 1977 Michelin entered F1, a tire war broke out ,and Goodyear was no longer able/willing take the time for them.
@@tomhiett3970 Yep, Goodyear was struggling to keep pace with Michelin's radial development - a new concept in F1 at the time - and could not commit the resources to manufacturing, let alone developing new 10" fronts. Some of the physical tyres Tyrrell were running by late '77 had been made at the tail end of 1976, they weren't just technologically out of step but in some instances literally out of date.
Makes me wonder how it would have worked with a walking beam style front suspension. Steering would get complicated, but it would help keep the weight on the tires more even and less likely to lock up just 1 or 2 tires under braking.
Excellent and informative video. Thank you for making this production. What gaming system are you using on this video when you show the P-34 racing. I am looking for a nice game in which I can race vintage sports and F1/Grand Prix cars. Thank you.
Might I suggest the March 840? If you though the Tyrrell P34 was crazy, March were even experimenting with an EIGHT wheel car. Even Williams I think were trying an EIGHT Wheel set-up before the FIA set the 4 wheel limit.
They were both 6. The March was a 2-4-0 and the Williams was the FW08B, each with 4 rear wheels across two axles ( to assist with drag, unlike the Tyrrell solution which was about grip, not aero, per Derek Gardner). Ferrari also developed their 312-T6 which had two fronts paired on a single rear axle - so they stuck out like truck tyres!
Go on bro, Interesting in the world of motorsport, O love it because it is innovation and thinking from outside the box, I wonder if Reiza could bring a DLC pack with all the unusual racing cars, I just recently tried VR with the Sim Racing thing, And damn AMS 2 is amazing in VR, Oh and Beam NG is since the latest update I find the VR to be a tiny bit better, But AMS 2 holds the top spot for Sim Racing in VR, In fact I have noticed a lot more people using VR than screens, As soon as you done VR though you won't be going back to a flat or curved or even triples, VR puts you inside the game, That will always beat watching a game while you play the game, VR is giving the gaming and Sim Racing world a whole new lease of life, lol... This is interesting not going to lie, I bet it felt safe to drive this 6 wheeled F1 car, Probably a bit of fun lol.....
Hello Aidan: On TH-cam there is a video called "Legends of F1- Ken Tyrrell". In one part, Ken and Jackie have a "frank exchange of views". I can thoroughly recommend the video. Have a lovely day.
Obviously this has similarities to one of the futuristic Gerry Anderson TV Series wonder which came first because I'm sure one of those had multiple wheels wheels
After that Top Gear style clip, you should’ve taken the parody further and do a spinning camera still shot of the car while narrating normally. “Some say he’s more Hungary than Zsolt Baumgartner…..and that if HE was directing the 2021 F1 finale, he would’ve let every lapped car unlap themselves properly instead of thinking about ‘the show’……All we know is, he’s the Taller Hammond!”
I dunno why I said the wheels were ten inches tall. I guess they are if you measure 'em from the bottom.
Haha, guess we can call these adian-isims or Millward-isms.....take your pick I guess
Dude where's my Roberto Romeno, Romano or however you spell it
(I know, I know it'll come out when the play button arrives, just being a.... thing lol)
Those cars looked like drag-racers with the whole rear-front difference in tyre size!! Imagine the delegation of pit crew if used today “Right short-fry, you take the front! Muscles, you take the rear!”
There's no way you could justifiably claim that the P34 is not one of the coolest F1 cars ever. It is a legend, regardless of the success or later lack of success.
I was lucky enough to whiteness one doing a few laps round brands the day I took my racing licence. The guy taking the class took us all outside to see it being piloted by Martin Brundle. Personally he would be amongst the last on my list but I guess it was for Sky or something 🤷♀
But the even later success? (it won the FIA Thoroughbred Grand Prix championship - now FIA Masters - when everyone had Avon tyres which equalised the performances somewhat. Martin Stretton and Mauro Pane took the title twice with the P34, in 2000 and 2008 respectively.
@@OsellaSquadraCorse I mean in 1977.
I liked the "Top Gear" section of the video. Wouldn't want entire videos in that format personally, but a minute or two in length felt just right.
My takeaway from this, is that Scheckter's relationship with the P34 is like one of those grumpy old men who insists he doesn't want a dog, is given a dog, and inevitably falls in love with it
Outstanding example. 👌🏽
The success ballast was mandated because of your recent success of obtaining 100K (very well deserved) subscribers. Congratulations!
I liked the Top Gear voice over, keep it up.
It's the most successful 6 wheeled car............................
In the world!
Tremendously entertaining
It was a crazy era with open rules where engineers had a chance to try new ideas, as opposed to today when the rules have forced the cars to be too "cookie cutter" in my eyes anyhow. One thing often the cars would back then have aluminium chassis (like you said) but teams often would use plywood and even balsa wood to locally reinforce and stiffen areas
I was a kid in the 70's, these 6 wheelers were models, slot cars, hot wheels, matchbox and any other kind of toy car you could imagine.
It's a cool car no doubt. I remember as a kid thinking it was awesome, and so did my mates. We didn't call it a Tyrell though, we referred to it as the Elf.
I love 1970's and 1980's F1! All of it! Especially things like the 6 wheeled Car, the Fan Car, lead shot in the Tyrrells etc......
I must admit that I really, *really* love this sort of innovation. The crazier the better!
I was 9 and 10 in 76 / 77.
I thought this thing was the coolest car on the planet.
Every kid I knew had the matchbox sized version. (Well it was Tomica, but we still called them matchbox).
The one to one version wasnt much bigger. Lol.
"The proliferation of resources to be assigned to the design confines of the car's technical parameters are such as to extract too many financial efficiencies from the budgetary departments to warrant a full development of the concept, and so expedites the exclusion of the concept from the spirit of the technical regulations governing the constructors." - Ron Dennis, probably.
Anyway, it's got six wheels, not four! What madness is this? Indeed, this is the one we all go to for clicks, the best way to get newbies to do a double take and shout 'wait, what?!'
@AidanMillward that success ballast joke genuinely just made my day 😂
Aidan-
One of my favorites of all time. I currently have the 1/20 Tamiya kit under construction and the 1/12 in the queue. Iʻm enjoying your channel tremendously. "Success baggage". Hah!
Tim
I don’t think your live commentary was terrible - I liked it!
I remember the claims the brakes were bad and I always assumed it was because of the limited space in the small wheels, never heard it was a problem of balance adjustments. I learned something new!
The p34 is what got me into F1
My favorite car _ever._ Especially the '76 season version.
It's just iconic 70s mayhem, very cool car ❤
When I see the p34 I think of the Transformers character Dragstrip as this was his alt mode (in yellow!)
Indeed. Was going to post something along these lines, but saw yours. Mirage, on the other hand, was based on a Ligier of around the same time.
Specifically, Drag Strip was modeled on the 1976 racing season trim P34A, with the simpler front wing, large top side mirror fairings, and exposed motor. Likely it was supposed to reflect Scheckter's winning #3 car as seen after his victory in Sweden in 1976 JUN. Photos from the race itself show that the #3 car used an A-frame air box over the intake runners, but the post-race pics show the air box removed.
The early 1976 testing prototype had a more complex front wing and a giant air scoop.
And the 1977 models replaced the big mirror fairings with small mirror stalks and hid the engine under an aero shroud.
So this is what you meant by making it "more Top Gear-y". I like this style. I'd keep this up going forward.
I loved watching this car race in 1976, at 7 GPs. My favourite was the Canadian GP where Depaillier was burning up the track.
This is what F1 should be about. Experiment and crazy solutions.
I remember seeing pictures of this as a kid in the mid-80s thinking it was an April fool.
Nice to see Larry Perkins in the drivers results from Spain
Refreshed the page and this was freshly posted. Time to turn my thinking brain off and just relax.
Exactly what I did after work. Perfect timing.
Memories, memories, memories of youth. The good old days, don't really want them back but would love cars with much smaller dimensions.
Very informative once again, I had no idea the braking was so bad but it makes sense.
Also, this car is very popular in Japan among car/racing Otaku.
There is a racing Anime from the late-1970s that features a car heavily inspired by it (Arrow Emblem: Hawk of the Grand Prix) and it also appears in a Dreamcast game called Super Runabout.
Awesome vid, and a late congrats on 100k, the Top Gear esque segment is awesome, although I feel you can still improve it by including a picture in picture view of you in the rig and turn up the FFB, so we really get a feel for what the car is doing based on your inputs, and see the struggle to keep one of these beasts on the road!
I really liked that Top Gear inspired Segment
I've played r-factor 2 with this car, and it was fun. This is my favorite F1 car, The Lotus 78, Lotus 49, and Williams FW15C.
I remember the first time I saw this car as a kid, me and a school friend were looking through a formula 1 book and we were just flabbergasted that this was a real thing as up until then we were used to the early 2000s cars. it's a car that's always stuck in my mind when anyone mentions f1 to me
There's a video series called "Lap Of the Gods" which is in car videos of various F1 cars at various tracks. Among them is Patrick Depailler at Monaco in the 6 wheeler. Pretty freaky watching those front wheels.
Yes Aidan. I did learn new stuff today. I'm 61 and have probably seen every YT doc ever made about them and have raced one in rf2. But you did a great job of explaining the peculiarities and challenges of brake balance across 6 wheels and gave me a much better overall understanding of what the P34 was as a race car. Well done.
My favorite of the experimental cars, always a treat seeing it rip around Goodwood.
It’s a really cool car. These guys (Tyrrell) really knew how to build cool looking cars
I’m a fan; I always loved the DFV soundtrack and I built the Matchbox plastic kit as a kid (which then went onto a shelf in the hall alongside the Bentley, MG and Bugatti T35 racing cars I also built. My folks are great). Seeing one attack the hillclimb at FoS was a proper “no, it’s just ‘cos of the pollen, honest” moment. Thanks for the nostalgia trip 🙂
I may be in a minority but that TopGear-style voiceover while driving is kind of fun. Maybe you should give it a try again in future videos
Top Gear bit was mega!!!
Next time some talks about my tummy i am calling it "success ballast" 😂😂
Wow that 1976 rF1 mod is a throwback. The Top Gear-esque bit was a nice touch though.
Quite liked the "top gear" segment. It gave a new depth to understanding how the car worked
Come on Aidan, Roberto Moreno, while we're young 🤣🤣
Every time the video is mentioned in the comments, it will be postponed a month
@@matzemunz2827 This alleged video, yes!
@@matzemunz2827 He didn't say that, surely?
Looking at the Tyrrell and the 1976 season in particular...mind doing a video on airboxes? Their birth, death and rebirth.
One of the greatest F1 interviews of all time was about air boxes:
Stirling Moss: "So James, they've changed the regulations concerning the air boxes and the wings and yet you're still extremely fast. How do you do it?"
James Hunt: "Big balls."
@@CyanRooper Indeed. The reason why the P34 made me recall my interest in airboxes is because in its prototype stages it had a tall one, then a split intake like the McLaren only more phallic looking, and then come race day they went a bugger it, take it off entirely. At the same time Ferrari were doing some fighter jet style shenanigans trying to get more air into the engine
@@NazarovVv I loved the NACA ducts on the Ferrari 312T2, I thought it was the best interpretation of the rules.
@@CyanRooper Certainly the most aesthetically pleasing. But I firmly believe they had no other option. You see whilst the rest of the field used DFVs which had the throttle bodies on the very top of the engine and thus somewhat into the airflow, Ferrari’s flat 12 throttle bodies were actually on the level if now lower than the radiators in the side pods which I suspect would have pretty much starved the engine for air had they decided to run without them, as opposed to the other teams which could afford naked engines whilst losing relatively small amount of performance.
Nice vid, I was always curious about the history of this car :) thank you!
Yep I agree it's a cool car. I always liked people who tried radical ideas to improve things. This was the only F1 car from the Tamiya collection that I ever got to build, although dreaming about building many from that era. I don't know if I have that model hidden in a box somewhere, probably not. Beautiful kits.
I built the Tamiya 1/10 scale r/c car back in the day. Intricate only begins to describe that steering mechanism. I discovered that the more parts, the more points of failure. At least in a scale model.
That’s just how things work.
Excelent video, one of the coolest cars ever and it's a shame that we will almost certainly never see another six wheel F1 car
I've always loved this monster since I first saw it when I was a kid in the 80's. Thanks for the great story!
I have always loved the P34. I am waiting for the slot car version at the moment. Looking forward to finally seeing one in person, LOL!
6 wheeled Tyrrell looked good!
Just perfectly done.
The live com top-gear like bit is a great addition!
I don’t know what you’re on about.. the Top gear esque segment was brilliant! You should consider doing it more in future videos as well.
The fact that the audio of Aidan driving this thing literally sounds like the driver/pit radio we have all come to appreciate is pretty wild.
A TH-camr called slap shoes does mainly NASCAR content once showed some smaller race systems on dirt tracks, special modified i think, the rule state there has to be 4 wheels on the car but not where so cos they're running short oval dirt tracks most have a 3 wheels one side 1 other configuration
He has some nice videos
Congratulations on the 100k!! FINALLY!
The fact you still make experiment in you video its really fun it's keep its more natural and less routine
elf oils was probably the biggest winner, as this car was so iconic…and their brand was plastered all over it.
Even to this day, it’s well remembered.
My dad used second hand front tyres from this car on his mini hot rod for 1/4 mile oval racing. Think we still have one in the garage.
i like the gameplay portions. good video as usual
Faster than this Alpine
Success ballast? More like BoP!
From what ive read it was not a bad concept and was really only held back by the lack of purpose built tires for the front. They had to use tires meant for one of the junior leagues not meant for F1 speeds.
Not so. The tires were built specifically for the P34. The problem was that Goodyear weren't willing to update the compound. This meant that whenever the tire compound was changed for the rest of the field, Tyrrell were stuck with either increasingly out of date tires if they stayed with the old compound on the rears, or an increasingly out of balance car if they changed the rears alongside the rest of the field. Apparently Goodyear were happy to come up with the initial tire design as an experiment, just to see if they could build a working F1 tire in an unusual size, but having done so, weren't willing to spend the money and time needed to update the tires to keep them current with the rest of the field. With the pace of development during the mid-70's, this was the death knell of the P34.
@@gchampi2 Goodyear did fine in 1976 as they were the only tire supplier. There is little need to spend money on development with no competition, so they didn't. The P34 and its drivers finished ahead of everyone except Lauda and Hunt, disproving any claims it was a bad design (You were not making this claim, but that is the most frequent comments on the car.)
In 1977 Michelin entered F1, a tire war broke out ,and Goodyear was no longer able/willing take the time for them.
@@tomhiett3970 Yep, Goodyear was struggling to keep pace with Michelin's radial development - a new concept in F1 at the time - and could not commit the resources to manufacturing, let alone developing new 10" fronts. Some of the physical tyres Tyrrell were running by late '77 had been made at the tail end of 1976, they weren't just technologically out of step but in some instances literally out of date.
To me, these cars always looked like something out of "Thunderbirds" or "The Wacky Races". Futuristic and cartoonish at the same time.
Makes me wonder how it would have worked with a walking beam style front suspension. Steering would get complicated, but it would help keep the weight on the tires more even and less likely to lock up just 1 or 2 tires under braking.
Honestly the Top Gear portion is great
thanks Aidan.
Man, those rear tires are huuuge.
Acid trip is the perfect way to describe this masterpiece 😅 my favourite design ever (not because it was good tho)
Excellent and informative video. Thank you for making this production. What gaming system are you using on this video when you show the P-34 racing. I am looking for a nice game in which I can race vintage sports and F1/Grand Prix cars. Thank you.
Still the best looking car of the era
Anyone remember ‘Whacky Races’? Professor Pat Pending designed this car - sorry Aidan.
That’s a FACT!
In my brain… 😂😂🤣
Soooo cool dude! ✌️
Might I suggest the March 840? If you though the Tyrrell P34 was crazy, March were even experimenting with an EIGHT wheel car. Even Williams I think were trying an EIGHT Wheel set-up before the FIA set the 4 wheel limit.
They were both 6. The March was a 2-4-0 and the Williams was the FW08B, each with 4 rear wheels across two axles ( to assist with drag, unlike the Tyrrell solution which was about grip, not aero, per Derek Gardner). Ferrari also developed their 312-T6 which had two fronts paired on a single rear axle - so they stuck out like truck tyres!
Success ballast!!! 🤣😂🤣😂
Great video! 2020 was when Hamilton won Silverstone on three wheels
Great voice over piece 👌
Ben Collins recently drove it, if you wanted to see it in action but had, for no reason at all, an aversion to Martin Brundle.
Ah, good old success ballast, we all have a bit, I don't have much myself
Go on bro, Interesting in the world of motorsport, O love it because it is innovation and thinking from outside the box, I wonder if Reiza could bring a DLC pack with all the unusual racing cars, I just recently tried VR with the Sim Racing thing, And damn AMS 2 is amazing in VR, Oh and Beam NG is since the latest update I find the VR to be a tiny bit better, But AMS 2 holds the top spot for Sim Racing in VR, In fact I have noticed a lot more people using VR than screens, As soon as you done VR though you won't be going back to a flat or curved or even triples, VR puts you inside the game, That will always beat watching a game while you play the game, VR is giving the gaming and Sim Racing world a whole new lease of life, lol...
This is interesting not going to lie, I bet it felt safe to drive this 6 wheeled F1 car, Probably a bit of fun lol.....
well done mate 😀
Keep the " top gear" segments. Very entertaining 👍
Hello Aidan: On TH-cam there is a video called "Legends of F1- Ken Tyrrell". In one part, Ken and Jackie have a "frank exchange of views". I can thoroughly recommend the video. Have a lovely day.
LOVE THIS
Good stuff thank you
How is this not the very first video created for any Formula 1 history channel? Well OK, I guess I'm from your dad's era.
1st time I saw it at Kyalami, I thought I'd had too many bubbly brown bottles to drink
This is a wheely good video
You forgot to mention that the Williams had the four wheels in the back from what i can recall.
Aiden Millward, the new Jezza Clarkson, keep it up.
The only madness is that innovation like this can't be sustained.
Great vid!
John Ficarra also has a good video on this car on the Vinwiki channel.
Just found this 👍 ❤
Job well done 👏 ❤
Obviously this has similarities to one of the futuristic Gerry Anderson TV Series wonder which came first because I'm sure one of those had multiple wheels wheels
Lady Penelope's Rolls came first, being broadcast from 1964-1966.
After that Top Gear style clip, you should’ve taken the parody further and do a spinning camera still shot of the car while narrating normally. “Some say he’s more Hungary than Zsolt Baumgartner…..and that if HE was directing the 2021 F1 finale, he would’ve let every lapped car unlap themselves properly instead of thinking about ‘the show’……All we know is, he’s the Taller Hammond!”
You should do a video on Scheckter and/or the 1979 season.
It's like that amplifier that goes to 11.