Hot Wheels reveals pocket-size F1 models — and they're not just for kids
Is there any limit to the Netflix effect? Hot Wheels says that the surge in F1's popularity is behind its new range of models
First turbo-powered Formula 1 victory marked with Nelson Piquet’s Williams leading the display
Race Retro, powered by Motor Sport, is marking the 40th anniversary of the first turbocharged Formula 1 win with a range of machinery on display at the event.
Renault was the first to enter a turbocharged car in F1 in the 1977 British Grand Prix, with the RS01 in the hands of driver Jean-Pierre Jabouille.
Less than two years later Jabouille claimed the first ever turbo F1 race win at the 1979 French Grand Prix in the RS10, finishing ahead of a storied fight for second between Gilles Villeneuve’s Ferrari and René Arnoux.
More: Legends – Dijon 1979
The RS10’s V6 engine produced around 1400bhp, and soon all the major teams followed Renault’s lead by campaigning turbocharged engines of their own. By mid-1985 the entire F1 field was turbo powered. The technology was phased out of F1 from 1987 to be banned outright for 1989, though turbocharging returned to F1 in 2014.
Fans attending Race Retro at Stoneleigh Park, Warwickshire, on February 22-24 next year will get to see a host of turbocharged car examples in the 2019 Motor Sport Hall of Fame Live display. This will include the Williams FW11 actually driven by Nelson Piquet in 1986, powered by a 1.5-litre Honda, in which he took four race wins and helped Williams to that season’s constructors’ title.
The display will not be restricted to F1, as fans will also get to view in the display the fearsome Vasek Polak Porsche 917/10, which was driven by 1973 American Can-Am championship driver and later Formula 1 world champion Jody Scheckter – powered by a 5.0-litre flat-12 engine.
“The turbo era was an amazing time for race fans,” says show director Lee Masters. “We are thrilled to be able to celebrate it at [2019’s] Race Retro 40 years on from that first win in Formula 1.
“We can promise visitors a very special display in celebration.”
More: The notorious Nelson Piquet
Is there any limit to the Netflix effect? Hot Wheels says that the surge in F1's popularity is behind its new range of models
Netflix's massively successful F1 series Drive to Survive has transformed the grand prix world – one of its stars, Will Buxton, talks about being witness to the revolution
F1 drivers face a month-long ban if they swear too many times during a press conference. Has the FIA gone too far this time? asks Mark Hughes. And what will the crafty grid do about it?
New penalties for swearing are the latest controversy from FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem who has enraged drivers and rowed with F1. We explore his tumultuous four-year reign