I love what he says at 1:40 "When a car runs well, and the engine sounds harmoniously. The noise transforms into music. The driver is like an orchestra conductor."
Diego Zavala a good engine must have a perfect harmonic resonance for it not to shake like a crazy mofo..and th car mus have the same resonance as the engine t make it perfect...lik an orchestra.
Fangio was a mechanic, and if memory serves me, didn't start racing F1 until he was 38 years old. That's ancient by todays standards. And another feat was he survived to tell the tale, and passed away at the age of 84. He was a driver's driver and a wonderful man.
you are correct, fangio started working with cars at the age of 12!, but he did a lot of racing in his 20s 30s competing against some very talented argentinian drivers (Hermanos Galvez for example) Another fun fact is that he served as ceo of mercedes benz in Argentina until his death..!! A true argentine pride (Gracias maestro, descanse)
5 times F1 World Champion with 4 different brands: Alfa Romeo, Maserati, Ferrari and Mercedes-Benz. Still today the highest winning percentage in F1: 46.15% And most important: a true gentleman respected by all his colleagues.
One of my heroes, he’s the most badass that’s for sure. Driving a death trap with a helmet, goggles, t-shirt and gloves. What a brave man, he had big balls.
The cinematography is awesome, all the angles they got without a go pro and that shot at 30 seconds in where he passes by a fancy building and you see him through the window, just stunning! The camera work on this is amazing!
There is just one problem here, there are no cameras on the car.How was that shot taken inside the cockpit through the steering wheel.What is a go pro.
I still can not figure out how those many shots were taken.If each one taken from a camera mounted on the car was done separately,then he must have made the run about 10 times.As an example,the one taken from high behind the car looking forward moving with the car, there is no camera visible that took the shots looking backward from beyond the front of the car.
Cómo me emociona ver a un argentino manejando un Ferrari encima salió campeón con ese auto, Qué grande Fangio que bien nos representaste en el mundo , QUE DIOS TE TENGA EN LA GLORIA CHUECO QUERIDO
Not even a plastic helmet..they were made from layers of cloth soaked in shellac (French Polish)...hence that natural dark brown colour. Cork lined with canvas webbing shock isolation and a leather chin strap.. only marginally more protection than a linen "flying helmet".
John . . .Made from layers of cloth soaked in shellac (French Polish)? Not even plastic? Then the pilots could have put on a cap, there wasn't so much difference.
EL MEJOR PILOTO DE LA HISTORIA DE LA F1!! 51 CARRERAS, 24 VICTORIAS, 35 PODIOS, 29 POLES, 23 VUELTAS RÁPIDAS, Y LO MEJOR, 5 VECES CAMPEÓN MUNDIAL DE F1 CON 4 MARCAS DIFERENTES, EL PILOTO O LA MÁQUINA? EL PILOTO SEÑORES!! EL MEJOR!! FANGIO!
@Sebastian Giraldo Schumacher estubo en el circuito por 17 años entrando a la edad de 22 años hermano, mientras que Fangio solo estubo 8 años recién entrando con 38 años!
He looks like my grandfather, who would have been around the same age at the same time. It brings tears to my eyes, especially with the music. Men as great as this should never have to die.
There's something about these drivers and cars from the past, something that transcends greatness, Fangio especially. Words can't describe it, you have to feel it emotionally.
Yeah, such pussies! Imagine - wanting to return home to their children, instead of being the sacrificial gladiators of the pre-90's! BTW - how would you fare in one of these old death traps?
Y quien te ha decido que Schumacher era mejor que FANGIO? O Jim Clark o Senna? Schumacher hás tenido suerte que por mucho tiempo no habia nadie que le tocaba. Era un gran piloto pero no es el mejor. Si no fuera por lá gran mierda que le han hecho, Hamilton tendria mas títulos ahora.
Nunca existirá un piloto como Juan Manuel Fangio, rey y maestro en cada curva. Gracias chueco por llevar la bandera Argentina a lo más alto del mundo 🇦🇷🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆
Self taught, no simulators, no fitness programs, no live on-board instructor training and no Stewart to instruct. Still he went through Mirabeau looking like Senna... or vice versa. He retired six years before I began following F1. Truly brilliant.
Fantastic! I've never seen this footage before. Watching Fangio drift that Lancia/Ferrari through the streets of Monaco is amazing. One statistic that is often overlooked when comparing drivers is frequency of wins per start. On that record, Fangio is still king, having won just shy of half the races he started.
Good observation! Fangio made his reputation as one of the best rally/off-road racers in South America before his career in Grand Prix racing. He had sublime car control skills.
I can't believe how everything was so simple back in those days and everything worked, somehow. No sponsors, no fences, no mass media, no vivid colors everywhere, nothing compared to nowadays, everything was so minimalistic,...and because of that the Cars and the Drivers were in the middle of attention, literally.
En 2016 se batió el record de mayor velocidad punta. Lo hizo Valteri Bottas en Mexico. Alcanzó los 372 km/h. Desde 2017 los coches tienen menos velocidad punta porque son más anchos, y las grandes ruedas generan más drag, y lo mismo con los alerones, pero son mucho más rapidos en general.
@@rutar2008 me hubiera gustado que siguieran los v10,en 2022 los v6 llegaran a las 15.000 rpm,los v10 de los 90 estaban entre lo mismo y eran mas ligeros comparados a los motores de ahora,ademas el mgu h es un poco de desperdicio al existir el antilag del wrc
¡FELIZ DIA DEL PILOTO DE AUTOMOVILISMO! A los buenos, a los malos, a los mancos y a los super talentosos, a los que corren de verdad sean amateurs que lo hacen a pulmón o son profesionales , a los que también lo disfrutamos en los simuladores aunque sea con teclado, a los que lo soñamos de chico con serlo y no lo pudimos cumplir pero lo llevamos en el corazón, a los que lo pueden cumplir todos los fines de semana. A todos un muy Feliz Dia recordando al mas grande de todos los tiempos el "Chueco" Juan Manuel Fangio en el aniversario de su nacimiento el 24 de Junio de 1911.
Cuando el coche anda bien, y el motor suena armoniosamente, el ruido se transforma en musica, y el piloto es como un director de orquesta. Fangio//Que pena me da ver la "F1" ( si se le puede llamar asi) actual.
@@heltonbrum Não tem "pouco" de Fangio na F1. Ele sempre foi o melhor em qualquer carro que o colocaram. Aqui não dá pra contar. Melhor você usar o Google...
The music, along with the great camera work, and ofcourse the best of the best, Juan Manuel Fangios driving just gave me chills. Amazing video thanks for sharing it.
Great video of the Virtuoso in action! He always seemed to come across as a nice guy and real a sportsman too (things I could never say about Senna or Schumacher). It looks like this was filmed in the 1960's by the look of the cars parked on the street. Amazing he was allowed to race that old 1950's F1 Ferrari with all those cars there and no other protection!
+mikogregorov: that is a 1956 Ferrari D-50 V-8, but in the hands of Fangio it really doesn't matter. he could be driving a ox cart and still slide it through the corners and not touch a hair on a sleeping dog.
TRANSLATIONS [fadedsideways maybe you'd like to add this to your video description]: "We had everything here, everything here inside. All of our [racing] kit was here [opening zipper]. Look - inside this women’s hat box was everything: Goggles, leather gloves, 'remera' [undershirt], and helmet - all here. You see?” [cuts to driving...] “Ferrari '2500' - powered by a motor from rival Lancia: eight cylinders, 8000rpm…it’s the same as the one with which I won the 1956 World Championship." "In that time, already there were many new technical developments: motor mounts inside the chassis, lateral tanks, shift lever very close to the steering wheel, optimized driving position…but this car had another important history: it was the same type of car that, in 1955, here in Monte Carlo, Ascari finished with in the sea!” [lots of driving...] “When a car goes well, and the engine note is harmonious, the noise makes a form of music; the pilot [driver] is like a [musical] conductor [director de orquesta]…” [music...and slow-mo cuts interspersed w/ Fangio hand movements at table...] Apparently it’s extracted from a pseudo-documentary film: ‘Fangio - A Life at 300km Per Hour’ (IMDb: www.imdb.com/title/tt1052346/ billed as “A documentary of Fangio’s life with his own testimony.”) The executive producer and director was Hugh Hudson of ‘Chariots of Fire’ fame, and, according to Sports Car Digest, this scene and others were shot “in the late ‘60s or early ‘70s, making Fangio approximately 60 years old during filming”. A reader offers that filming specifically took place during the summer of 1971 on location in Monaco, Monza, Reims, Silverstone and at the Nurburgring, but I’m not sure what accounts for the 10 year difference b/w shooting scenes like this Monte Carlo one, and the IMDb release date of 1981.
Both are correct. The documentary is from 1981. The on board footage is from the 70's. Later o the movie he comments the differencez between "modern" cars of the 80's and the ones he drove and we see some footage of the new cars and drivers. I remember to particularly like the explanation he gave on the braking systems of the 50's compare to modern disc brakes. The movie itself is really a long interview with fangio about his carreer and F1 cars in general. Btw he still drove until his death in his late 80s. I saw him drive an F1 ferrari in the 90's. Don't remember the exact date. It was in an Argentina grand prix. He was still FAST. It was raining and he lost the car a little so he drifted a little to control it. The crowd went WILD
I have, of course as an F1 fan, heard of the great Fangio, but this is the first time I've watched any footage of him. His rep as a gentleman comes across. In the slo-mo portion especially, you can see the soul of the man. He now ties with Senna as my favorite all-time drivers!
***** TifosoPatF1 josj15 guys, this clip is from a pseudo-documentary film: ‘Fangio - A Life at 300km Per Hour’ (IMDb: www.imdb.com/title/tt1052346/ billed as “A documentary of Fangio’s life with his own testimony.”) The executive producer and director was Hugh Hudson of ‘Chariots of Fire’ fame, and, according to Sports Car Digest, this scene and others were shot “in the late ‘60s or early ‘70s, making Fangio approximately 60 years old during filming”. A reader offers that filming specifically took place during the summer of 1971 on location in Monaco, Monza, Reims, Silverstone and at the Nurburgring, but I’m not sure what accounts for the 10 year difference b/w shooting scenes like this Monte Carlo one we’re presently discussing, and the IMDb release date of 1981.
If you like cars running minutes apart. And the 3rd place car finishing 3 laps down! But the raw excitement and lethal danger was amazing. In the 70's, I went to 2 GP's. A driver died at each one! I don't want to see those days again.
Fangio...és grandioso...pois sempre amou o que fez...se impôs...sem perder a ternura...ano após ano...desfilou um repertório de records e de vitórias incontestáveis...um excelente exemplo pra todas as gerações do automobilismo...um mito que iniciou a fórmula um...com sua coragem...escreveu um nome que jamais esqueceremos...afinal a história não some nunca...assim ele sempre será reverenciado...
Genio Maestro!!! Cuánto nos enorgullece a los argentinos!!! Con esos autos poderosos pero inseguros donde el piloto era el que llevaba la máquina y no la máquina al piloto como hoy con tantas asistencias para estabilizar el auto, es sin lugar a dudas aún hoy el Mas Grande corredor de F1 de todos los tiempos. Ni Schumacher ni Hamilton le llegan a hacer sombra. Y de caballerosidad, ni hablar.....
Racing in an F1 car in a T-shirt, absolutely no grip whatsoever, manual transmission, no power steering, even cars parked on the track.... Jesus christ man...
I'm a huge Senna fan, but maybe Fangio was the goat, the man became champion with 4 different teams, plus driving these electric chairs, and managed to survive all that.
Fangio driving a V8 Lancia Ferrari(1956) on the circuit of Monaco, in the second part of the 1960s (see parked cars dating from the 60s, and a Peugeot J7 van), on open road (in open streets !), probably early in the morning . Who can say when exactly was this document shot?
LMAO, this is a real race car driver. if you watch his hands, he knows just when to release the wheel and when to grab it and apply power to the car. when to turn into a corner and when to brake before it, and all this without power steering or computer aided shifting. what blew me away was the lack of safety, what with the cars parked along the raceway by the curb, from a corner that had a right hand turn and the cars on the left. amazing!
My favorite was Nuvolari, and Enzo Ferrari said the Ascaris were the absolute best. It always makes a fun discussion, because it can never be decided absolutely. too many variables.
it's true Kevin.very different times, difficult to choose the best but it is sometimes emotional the way that you put orders.competition, acceptance, conditions, influence and personality are the most important factors to give the best according to my experience.
Thank you for your comments Dimitris. This is my second year not driving. I'm adjusting to being a know-it-all spectator. When I was a kid I remember praying for Stirling Moss to recover from his 1962 crash at Goodwood.My mom had seen him race at Riverside, and she thought he threw away the race by not backing off and saving his car. (Fangio was her ideal because he was only as fast as he needed to be, and had some sympathy for his car.) My brother and I were Moss fans because of his legendary come from behind feats of skill and bravery. I also had great respect for the earlier drivers like Caracciola. I even won a speech competition describing him as a great example of a hero. I won a bet with a school chum when Jimmy Clark won the Indy 500. Along the way I met a few drivers most people will never recognize the names of. Bobby Naylor was faster than Mario Andretti on a circle track, but he died young. Harold Ellis beat Stirling in a sportscar race at the Nurburgring, but was fired by Colin Chapman for not following team orders...etc. I guess it's a bit like fighter pilots. Skill, determination, effort, equipment, and just a bit of luck. I got to see Fangio the year he was honored at the Monterey Historics. To do the memory justice would require a rather lengthy post, but Ill say that at over 80 years old, he was very fast, and very precise. Nice to remember greatness.
Nope, Michael Schumacher is the greatest F1 driver of all-time, no matter what you people say. After Schumacher is a long gap and then comes maybe Senna and Fangio, but Schumacher was simply the boss.
Gracias por compartir esas imágenes y esa frase de Fangio tan diciente para los que nos apasiona este deporte: "Cuando un coche anda bien y el motor suena armoniosamente, el ruido se transforma en música y el piloto es como un director de orquesta"
I love what he says at 1:40 "When a car runs well, and the engine sounds harmoniously. The noise transforms into music. The driver is like an orchestra conductor."
music pls??
Jose Morales The music is Darude - Piston Sandstorm :v
Diego Zavala a good engine must have a perfect harmonic resonance for it not to shake like a crazy mofo..and th car mus have the same resonance as the engine t make it perfect...lik an orchestra.
@@rinaldyzulfikhar7312 i'm argentinian and I don't even know, maybe something from Astor Piazzolla
There were cars parked there?? Wow
Forget Maradona or Messi, Fangio is the real Argentina majestro.
+Kristjan Birnir Maradona is shit as a person, fuck him.
Is Piazzolla.
ASI SE MANEJA CARAJOOO VAMOOOOOSSS ARGENTINAAAAAAA CARAJOOOOOOOOOOOOO
yeas football soccer is overrated
Sip, te lo digo yo jeje
Fangio was a mechanic, and if memory serves me, didn't start racing F1 until he was 38 years old. That's ancient by todays standards. And another feat was he survived to tell the tale, and passed away at the age of 84. He was a driver's driver and a wonderful man.
you are correct, fangio started working with cars at the age of 12!, but he did a lot of racing in his 20s 30s competing against some very talented argentinian drivers (Hermanos Galvez for example)
Another fun fact is that he served as ceo of mercedes benz in Argentina until his death..!! A true argentine pride (Gracias maestro, descanse)
WTF! Did he start to race in F1 at 38 years old? And won 4 championsips! 😲
@@ros22ta05gno87 he won 5 championships with 4 different teams, F1 record.
@@DiegoMontemayor34 thanks man, i was remembering wrong
Start at 38 years old in that time was old too
He's driving a car with VW tires, bombs strapped on each side. No helmet no seatbelt 150mph. The greatest of all time.
It's really badass
Esos autos en ésa época pasaban los 300 kilómetros ya en ése entonces
5 times F1 World Champion with 4 different brands: Alfa Romeo, Maserati, Ferrari and Mercedes-Benz.
Still today the highest winning percentage in F1: 46.15%
And most important: a true gentleman respected by all his colleagues.
I feel like u r just going around and saying this message every single vid of fangios
@@alanthomas1785I posted this in just 2 videos, are you counting my comments? Thanks man, i feel flattered.🤪
@@alanthomas1785 it's an important message: it's good posting it everywhere
En la era amateur
@@Rooftoop1amateur decís no tenes idea de lo que hablas pancho
One of my heroes, he’s the most badass that’s for sure. Driving a death trap with a helmet, goggles, t-shirt and gloves. What a brave man, he had big balls.
The cinematography is awesome, all the angles they got without a go pro and that shot at 30 seconds in where he passes by a fancy building and you see him through the window, just stunning! The camera work on this is amazing!
Absolutely! This is art.
Double Guitars Whoever directed this short was as good with a camera as Fangio was behind the wheel.
There is only one problem here. Where are the cameras on the car? How was that shot tacken
There is just one problem here, there are no cameras on the car.How was that shot taken inside the cockpit through the steering wheel.What is a go pro.
I still can not figure out how those many shots were taken.If each one taken from a camera mounted on the car was done separately,then he must have made the run about 10 times.As an example,the one taken from high behind the car looking forward moving with the car, there is no camera visible that took the shots looking backward from beyond the front of the car.
Cómo me emociona ver a un argentino manejando un Ferrari encima salió campeón con ese auto, Qué grande Fangio que bien nos representaste en el mundo , QUE DIOS TE TENGA EN LA GLORIA CHUECO QUERIDO
Un grande y a pesar de todo sencillo y humilde. Un orgullo para Argentina y también para Hispano América.
how is this man or any racer from that era even alive...my god.... hes a legend
Stirling Moss was until a couple of weeks ago. Rest in peace champion.
driving a Formula 1 car wearing a tshirt.. oh, old days
alex ruan The fans knew a closeness to the drivers one doesn't feel today. Today, the sport looks like high-tech "bumper cars".
And not only that, there are parked cars on the side of the street for heaven's sake. It is just insane.
Adrian Haskins it's not a sport any more it's a business
this chap and many others were doing it at its best time
Malc180s 0 to 60/100 in 3.8 seconds
if you crash in that thing you're almost sure to die, why bother :D
Fangio, Clark and Senna, the magic trio.
No seat belts, plastic helmet, no grip, unruly car, what a driver.
Let alone being in his 40s ...
Not even a plastic helmet..they were made from layers of cloth soaked in shellac (French Polish)...hence that natural dark brown colour. Cork lined with canvas webbing shock isolation and a leather chin strap.. only marginally more protection than a linen "flying helmet".
you'd be surprised how low the forces are that a modern day motor helmet can take and how little they protect from TBIs whence struck.
John . . .Made from layers of cloth soaked in shellac (French Polish)? Not even plastic? Then the pilots could have put on a cap, there wasn't so much difference.
Wow. Just wow. The way he’s absolutely flying past random parked cars along the rivieras most famous road in one of the most beautiful cars ever made
"once you are driving the engine turns into music and the driver becomes a maestro" (Fangio)
EL MEJOR PILOTO DE LA HISTORIA DE LA F1!! 51 CARRERAS, 24 VICTORIAS, 35 PODIOS, 29 POLES, 23 VUELTAS RÁPIDAS, Y LO MEJOR, 5 VECES CAMPEÓN MUNDIAL DE F1 CON 4 MARCAS DIFERENTES, EL PILOTO O LA MÁQUINA? EL PILOTO SEÑORES!! EL MEJOR!! FANGIO!
Eso si que no amigo... Senna...
@Sebastian Giraldo que es un schumacher?
@@julesbelth7831 el que ganaba porq Barrichelo taponaba al tercero o bien lo dejaba pasar en punta porq no habia podido ser puntero por las suyas.
@Sebastian Giraldo Schumacher estubo en el circuito por 17 años entrando a la edad de 22 años hermano, mientras que Fangio solo estubo 8 años recién entrando con 38 años!
Pero ni Schumacher ni senna tienen que ver con fangio, cambian las épocas, por lo tanto tambíen los autos y el estilo de conducción.
Fangio era la inspiración de Senna.
si es verdad pero senna en esa época no creo que aguantaba un año vivo
Dario es verdad, senna hubiera aguantado toda esa decada vivo.
@@joaquinalvarez2209 Si se mato con muchísimas mas medidas de seguridad que en ese tiempo, payaso.
Yo veo esto despues de ver lo que fue el GP de Brasil '93.solo por volverlos a ver es suficiente.
@@brunospagnuolo2153 "Si se mato"????
He looks like my grandfather, who would have been around the same age at the same time. It brings tears to my eyes, especially with the music. Men as great as this should never have to die.
There's something about these drivers and cars from the past, something that transcends greatness, Fangio especially. Words can't describe it, you have to feel it emotionally.
ballsy!
a crappy helmet
some googles
no fire proof shirts
no seatbelt
exposed body
a ticking time bomb car
respect
+Venom F1 vintage racing... same thing with motorcycles...
+Venom F1
no barriers near the trees.
cars parked on the street!
can't get insurance to save my life (literally).
+Venom F1 Oh, and I forgot, the added safety feature of being protected on each side by the giant exposed fuel tanks!!!!
and no stupid halo, modern drivers are a bunch of slow pussies
Yeah, such pussies! Imagine - wanting to return home to their children, instead of being the sacrificial gladiators of the pre-90's! BTW - how would you fare in one of these old death traps?
2:50 one handed, no power steering, no traction control, no seat belt, no fire suit, no stability control... like a boss.
today's f1 car wouldn't even fit his balls
Parveen Mahaputra 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@amy bastian Dangerous times to be a racing car driver
Grande Fangio , gênio do Automobilismo . Saudacoes aos Hermanos Argentinos .
Saludos irmao!! Salve Ayrton Senna!
Saludo afectuoso a su talentoso y querido pueblo
Fangio y Senna los mejores de la historia, por mucho que lloren los europeos...
I read about his last victory in F1. French Grand Prix, i think, and It's astounding. Fangio was a driving genius. The best.
Fangio is artistic in driving that Ferrari as he is masterful in quickly driving it all over the track! Love it!
Aca si que tenias que tenian que tener huevos para correr, 0 seguridad, y ni hablar si iban al limite como lo hacia el chueco!!! El mas grande!!!
justamente fueron los accidentes automovilísticos los que reforzaron y perfeccionaron la seguridad en las carreras
La carrera de Fangio en la F1 fue de 8 años y gano 5 campeonatos mundiales, Schumacher gano 7, pero el estuvo 18 años en la F1.
Y quien te ha decido que Schumacher era mejor que FANGIO? O Jim Clark o Senna? Schumacher hás tenido suerte que por mucho tiempo no habia nadie que le tocaba. Era un gran piloto pero no es el mejor. Si no fuera por lá gran mierda que le han hecho, Hamilton tendria mas títulos ahora.
Y no gano mas porque en una ocasión lo secuestraron
Y Fangio empezo muy tarde.
Nunca existirá un piloto como Juan Manuel Fangio, rey y maestro en cada curva. Gracias chueco por llevar la bandera Argentina a lo más alto del mundo 🇦🇷🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆
Fangio el piloto más sublime que dio el planeta Tierra
Es una delicia escucharlo
Es como Gardel....cada día corre mejor
Fangio still has the highest *percentage* of wins and pole positions over his F1 career. That says it all.
Just simply the greatest race car driver EVER 💪
This video captures the pure essence of the pleasure that driving is. Along with the soundtrack, it made me cry of joy lol
Self taught,
no simulators,
no fitness programs,
no live on-board instructor training
and no Stewart to instruct.
Still he went through Mirabeau looking like Senna...
or vice versa.
He retired six years before I began following F1.
Truly brilliant.
Ah yes! The good old fireproof tee-shirt,those were the days.
+andy elliott Not to mention the feel of rich Corinthian leather on my head protecting me from any 'fender bender' I might incur.
Fantastic! I've never seen this footage before. Watching Fangio drift that Lancia/Ferrari through the streets of Monaco is amazing. One statistic that is often overlooked when comparing drivers is frequency of wins per start. On that record, Fangio is still king, having won just shy of half the races he started.
Thank you for sharing this gem, a wonder to see the best of all time driving his F1.
Good observation! Fangio made his reputation as one of the best rally/off-road racers in South America before his career in Grand Prix racing. He had sublime car control skills.
Fangio leyenda eterna de F1.Conducía con talento y coraje de campeón.Genio inolvidable.
I can't believe how everything was so simple back in those days and everything worked,
somehow. No sponsors, no fences, no mass media, no vivid colors everywhere,
nothing compared to nowadays, everything was so minimalistic,...and because of that the
Cars and the Drivers were in the middle of attention, literally.
If by "everything worked" you mean that both drivers and spectators were frequently killed, then yes, everything worked.
ahora hay buenos coches antes buenos pilotos,fangio es el mejor
Santi Gallardo nel en los 2000' iban a 360km/h ahora con DRS van a 330 con toda la furia
En 2016 se batió el record de mayor velocidad punta. Lo hizo Valteri Bottas en Mexico. Alcanzó los 372 km/h. Desde 2017 los coches tienen menos velocidad punta porque son más anchos, y las grandes ruedas generan más drag, y lo mismo con los alerones, pero son mucho más rapidos en general.
@@rutar2008 me hubiera gustado que siguieran los v10,en 2022 los v6 llegaran a las 15.000 rpm,los v10 de los 90 estaban entre lo mismo y eran mas ligeros comparados a los motores de ahora,ademas el mgu h es un poco de desperdicio al existir el antilag del wrc
¡FELIZ DIA DEL PILOTO DE AUTOMOVILISMO!
A los buenos, a los malos, a los mancos y a los super talentosos, a los que corren de verdad sean amateurs que lo hacen a pulmón o son profesionales , a los que también lo disfrutamos en los simuladores aunque sea con teclado, a los que lo soñamos de chico con serlo y no lo pudimos cumplir pero lo llevamos en el corazón, a los que lo pueden cumplir todos los fines de semana. A todos un muy Feliz Dia recordando al mas grande de todos los tiempos el "Chueco" Juan Manuel Fangio en el aniversario de su nacimiento el 24 de Junio de 1911.
This is beautiful, in so many ways, including the music toward the end. Very good!
Fangio was my racing driver idol. I had a picture of him over my bed when I was a boy
cada vez q miro y escucho a fangio se me caen las lagrimas q humildad q pasion unico el mas grande
comparto el mismo sentimiento...
0:29 still in love with that shot
5 Times World Championship in F1 still respect for the old timer. We salute you.
the legend that legendary f1 drivers talk about..
Três lendas da F1, Fangio, Ferrari e Monaco!
ah ferrari usou motor lancia não é 100 por cento quem diria Ferrari suja
Cuando el coche anda bien, y el motor suena armoniosamente, el ruido se transforma en musica, y el piloto es como un director de orquesta. Fangio//Que pena me da ver la "F1" ( si se le puede llamar asi) actual.
O melhor piloto que já existiu!
Porque , conta um pouco por favor,porque eu não conhecia.
@@heltonbrum Não tem "pouco" de Fangio na F1. Ele sempre foi o melhor em qualquer carro que o colocaram. Aqui não dá pra contar. Melhor você usar o Google...
Senna tmb hermano
@@deividdeltablon14 Senna era bom!
The music, along with the great camera work, and ofcourse the best of the best, Juan Manuel Fangios driving just gave me chills. Amazing video thanks for sharing it.
termino el video me pare y me puse a aplaudir
Tal cual comparto 100% tu opinión
Medio ridiculo parado solo aplaudiendo jajaja
Beautiful car, driven by the greatest driver ever.
1:39 When a car works well and the engine sounds harmoniously, the noise becomes music and the pilot is an orchestra director
Grande maestro!!!!!!una clase magistral....si lo tuviéramos hoy no tendría rival con su talento hoy también sería invencible
Lleguemos al millón cómo se lo merece!!!
5 times world champ. No ABS, no DRS..., only was a great pilot
Modern Formula One cars don't have ABS.
DRS isn't something that makes the car easier to drive. It only helps make the car faster in a straight line. And ABS isn't on modern f1 cars.
and a good car lol. Nobody can won the title with bad car.
@@hunterwithashblossom2131 True, but Fangio do the same with 4 differents cars..... That tell us some
Alexis Migueles 4 different good car. But yes, Fangio and Clark were awesome drivers
the Master.He wins hundreds of race and remain alive,Respect,alwais
I don't think he won *hundreds* of races, though.
jockejocke1 i said hundreds of races,not Grand Prix.Btw,he won 24 of 51 GP run
Definetely GOAT
I think Fangio is a forgotten hero
He will never be forgotten.
Great video of the Virtuoso in action! He always seemed to come across as a nice guy and real a sportsman too (things I could never say about Senna or Schumacher). It looks like this was filmed in the 1960's by the look of the cars parked on the street. Amazing he was allowed to race that old 1950's F1 Ferrari with all those cars there and no other protection!
+mikogregorov: that is a 1956 Ferrari D-50 V-8, but in the hands of Fangio it really doesn't matter. he could be driving a ox cart and still slide it through the corners and not touch a hair on a sleeping dog.
A gentleman and modest - not like the two publicity loving prima donnas you mention
Excelente video, toda una joya, una maravilla ver conducir al mejor de todos, saludos desde Lima Perú.
Qué hermosa frase; "...es cuando uno se vuelve director de orquesta..." 👏👏👏
TRANSLATIONS [fadedsideways maybe you'd like to add this to your video description]:
"We had everything here, everything here inside.
All of our [racing] kit was here [opening zipper].
Look - inside this women’s hat box was everything:
Goggles, leather gloves, 'remera' [undershirt], and helmet - all here. You see?”
[cuts to driving...]
“Ferrari '2500' - powered by a motor from rival Lancia: eight cylinders, 8000rpm…it’s the same as the one with which I won the 1956 World Championship."
"In that time, already there were many new technical developments: motor mounts inside the chassis, lateral tanks, shift lever very close to the steering wheel, optimized driving position…but this car had another important history: it was the same type of car that, in 1955, here in Monte Carlo, Ascari finished with in the sea!”
[lots of driving...]
“When a car goes well, and the engine note is harmonious, the noise makes a form of music; the pilot [driver] is like a [musical] conductor [director de orquesta]…”
[music...and slow-mo cuts interspersed w/ Fangio hand movements at table...]
Apparently it’s extracted from a pseudo-documentary film: ‘Fangio - A Life at 300km Per Hour’ (IMDb: www.imdb.com/title/tt1052346/ billed as “A documentary of Fangio’s life with his own testimony.”)
The executive producer and director was Hugh Hudson of ‘Chariots of Fire’ fame, and, according to Sports Car Digest, this scene and others were shot “in the late ‘60s or early ‘70s, making Fangio approximately 60 years old during filming”. A reader offers that filming specifically took place during the summer of 1971 on location in Monaco, Monza, Reims, Silverstone and at the Nurburgring, but I’m not sure what accounts for the 10 year difference b/w shooting scenes like this Monte Carlo one, and the IMDb release date of 1981.
Both are correct. The documentary is from 1981. The on board footage is from the 70's. Later o the movie he comments the differencez between "modern" cars of the 80's and the ones he drove and we see some footage of the new cars and drivers. I remember to particularly like the explanation he gave on the braking systems of the 50's compare to modern disc brakes.
The movie itself is really a long interview with fangio about his carreer and F1 cars in general.
Btw he still drove until his death in his late 80s. I saw him drive an F1 ferrari in the 90's. Don't remember the exact date. It was in an Argentina grand prix. He was still FAST. It was raining and he lost the car a little so he drifted a little to control it. The crowd went WILD
Es un Orgullo que haya nacido en nuestro país, un grande Juanma, numero 1 indiscutido con Ayrton.
I have, of course as an F1 fan, heard of the great Fangio, but this is the first time I've watched any footage of him. His rep as a gentleman comes across. In the slo-mo portion especially, you can see the soul of the man. He now ties with Senna as my favorite all-time drivers!
the first time I hear his voice.WONDERFUL
Unbelievable understeering yet amazing speed & control...only legends can do...
What an awesome footage! Fantastic takes, editing… And what a driver Fangio was!
Wow... Pure Driving... Fangio será EL Maestro Forever
Fantastico! Grazie.
This is not a car... This is a wheel bomb!
The real mens balls!
Fangio's forever!
1:38 cars very literally parked on the circuit...
sign of the times in so many way, gotta love that...
I think the circuit isn't set up here, it's just a demonstration with closed streets for the documentary
***** TifosoPatF1 josj15 guys, this clip is from a pseudo-documentary film: ‘Fangio - A Life at 300km Per Hour’ (IMDb: www.imdb.com/title/tt1052346/ billed as “A documentary of Fangio’s life with his own testimony.”)
The executive producer and director was Hugh Hudson of ‘Chariots of Fire’ fame, and, according to Sports Car Digest, this scene and others were shot “in the late ‘60s or early ‘70s, making Fangio approximately 60 years old during filming”.
A reader offers that filming specifically took place during the summer of 1971 on location in Monaco, Monza, Reims, Silverstone and at the Nurburgring, but I’m not sure what accounts for the 10 year difference b/w shooting scenes like this Monte Carlo one we’re presently discussing, and the IMDb release date of 1981.
I just realized: The older F1 is more exciting!
Heartily agree!
Better late than never! =)
If you like cars running minutes apart. And the 3rd place car finishing 3 laps down! But the raw excitement and lethal danger was amazing. In the 70's, I went to 2 GP's. A driver died at each one! I don't want to see those days again.
Fangio. One of the Gods of F1.
Fangio...és grandioso...pois sempre amou o que fez...se impôs...sem perder a ternura...ano após ano...desfilou um repertório de records e de vitórias incontestáveis...um excelente exemplo pra todas as gerações do automobilismo...um mito que iniciou a fórmula um...com sua coragem...escreveu um nome que jamais esqueceremos...afinal a história não some nunca...assim ele sempre será reverenciado...
Tail-out drift, power slide, opposite lock steer, throttle steer,...........Fangio
Fangio was such a legendary chad. Un saludo a los hermanos hispano hablantes presentes!
Love that shot of him speeding by outside the hotel windows...
QUIEN NO SE EMOCIONA CON ESAS MANOS EXQUISITAS AL VOLANTE Y AL LIMITE EN MONACO GRANDE MAESTRO FANGIO FOREVER....
orgulloso que haya sido NUESTRO
Genio Maestro!!! Cuánto nos enorgullece a los argentinos!!! Con esos autos poderosos pero inseguros donde el piloto era el que llevaba la máquina y no la máquina al piloto como hoy con tantas asistencias para estabilizar el auto, es sin lugar a dudas aún hoy el Mas Grande corredor de F1 de todos los tiempos. Ni Schumacher ni Hamilton le llegan a hacer sombra. Y de caballerosidad, ni hablar.....
Spectacular. A run time in F1 was really something to real men!!!
Also, I love how at high speed (really noticeable during slow motion) he remains calm. Just look at how relaxed his face is.
Que genialidad escucharlo al MAESTRO!!!🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻
The Best of the Best Ever
The best ever by far
El Maestro! This is priceless footage. Mille Grazi!
Racing in an F1 car in a T-shirt, absolutely no grip whatsoever, manual transmission, no power steering, even cars parked on the track.... Jesus christ man...
This is life
Wow didn't even know this video existed, excellent insight into f1 and it's early days, and watching the legendary Fangio in action is special.
"El piloto era como un director de una orquesta"
I'm a huge Senna fan, but maybe Fangio was the goat, the man became champion with 4 different teams, plus driving these electric chairs, and managed to survive all that.
Fangio driving a V8 Lancia Ferrari(1956) on the circuit of Monaco, in the second part of the 1960s (see parked cars dating from the 60s, and a Peugeot J7 van), on open road (in open streets !), probably early in the morning . Who can say when exactly was this document shot?
heart stopping stuff..and the guy looks like hes out on a sunday cruise
que grande fangio
Jolie !
Fangio est parmi les plus Grands dans l'Histoire de la F1 et il a marqué son époque !
Bruno
France/Europe
LMAO, this is a real race car driver. if you watch his hands, he knows just when to release the wheel and when to grab it and apply power to the car. when to turn into a corner and when to brake before it, and all this without power steering or computer aided shifting. what blew me away was the lack of safety, what with the cars parked along the raceway by the curb, from a corner that had a right hand turn and the cars on the left. amazing!
+belknapdlg26 Old school "let me do the driving" shit.
Awesome. What a driver. What a car. What a sound!
1. Juan Fangio 2. Ayrton Senna 3. Jimmy Clark
My favorite was Nuvolari, and Enzo Ferrari said the Ascaris were the absolute best. It always makes a fun discussion, because it can never be decided absolutely. too many variables.
it's true Kevin.very different times, difficult to choose the best but it is sometimes emotional the way that you put orders.competition, acceptance, conditions, influence and personality are the most important factors to give the best according to my experience.
Thank you for your comments Dimitris. This is my second year not driving. I'm adjusting to being a know-it-all spectator. When I was a kid I remember praying for Stirling Moss to recover from his 1962 crash at Goodwood.My mom had seen him race at Riverside, and she thought he threw away the race by not backing off and saving his car. (Fangio was her ideal because he was only as fast as he needed to be, and had some sympathy for his car.) My brother and I were Moss fans because of his legendary come from behind feats of skill and bravery. I also had great respect for the earlier drivers like Caracciola. I even won a speech competition describing him as a great example of a hero. I won a bet with a school chum when Jimmy Clark won the Indy 500. Along the way I met a few drivers most people will never recognize the names of. Bobby Naylor was faster than Mario Andretti on a circle track, but he died young. Harold Ellis beat Stirling in a sportscar race at the Nurburgring, but was fired by Colin Chapman for not following team orders...etc. I guess it's a bit like fighter pilots. Skill, determination, effort, equipment, and just a bit of luck. I got to see Fangio the year he was honored at the Monterey Historics. To do the memory justice would require a rather lengthy post, but Ill say that at over 80 years old, he was very fast, and very precise. Nice to remember greatness.
I would rate Clark above Senna. No teammate ever pressed him.
Nope, Michael Schumacher is the greatest F1 driver of all-time, no matter what you people say. After Schumacher is a long gap and then comes maybe Senna and Fangio, but Schumacher was simply the boss.
Fangio dances his car around Monaco. Nice.
Thank you for this great video!!!
Gracias por compartir esas imágenes y esa frase de Fangio tan diciente para los que nos apasiona este deporte:
"Cuando un coche anda bien y el motor suena armoniosamente,
el ruido se transforma en música
y el piloto es como un director de orquesta"