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Traction Control

FEATURE BY MAX NOBLE
20/01/2025

The last Ferrari design signed off by Enzo was the F40. Now considered the last of the great pre-software supercars it is a beast.

So "someone" smacked one into the Armco above Monaco recently. The car having been purchased by Lando Norris late last year, it's all a bit vague as to who was behind the wheel at the time. Go search for the video, for some curious reason a following car has lovely high-definition dash-cam footage.

It's cold and wet, not ideal for a "no-software-here" supercar with as much power per ounce as an Elon Musk Starship. You can see the driver goes to accelerate down a short straight... only problem being his right rear tyre is on a dotted white line at the time he elects to "give it some". Oh dear. Manic spinning, with no software control from said rear right wheel, which then slips off the slippery white line, finds traction on cold tarmac, and promptly spins that lovey F40 directly into the barriers.

Your scribe did exactly the same thing back in the early 1980's in a BMW 323i Alpina. Cold morning, light drizzle, bloody white delivery van in front of me as I needed to make good time down a Southern English coast road. Short straight presented itself. Your scribe dropped back to second, booted it, and pulled out... hitting the wet and slimy white line and promptly doing two complete 360 degree spins to arrive still behind the white van thankfully having hit nothing. White van driver braked, paused, looked out his window... shrugged and drove off. I pulled over, worked on getting my heart rate down to 200 bpm, and got out the car to check what had broken... Nothing. Tyres, wheels, suspension... everything was fine. Refusing to blame myself I looked under the car, opened the boot (trunk), and could find nothing wrong. That's when, looking back down the road, I saw how thick and juicy the white lines looked... I walked out into the middle of the road and slid my foot along the white line... more slippery than a real estate agent, seeking local government election, while denying a previous affair...! Good lord! I've been on ice rinks with more friction!

Humbled, I continued on my way.

So regardless of who was actually driving the F40, they had no idea how slippery white lines are, and no idea what it is like to drive a seriously powerful car with zero software on it. No traction control, no electronically controlled limited rear differential, no stability control. Heck, no nothing!

One has a brake pedal and an accelerator for traction control and a clutch pedal to allow for the selection of gears. That's it. Ask James Hunt, Niki Lauda, Gilles, Sir Stirling, Fangio... all the great drivers prior, for want of a better date, to 1995. If you misjudged it, that was your problem.

Today's youngest F1 drivers have never lived in a universe without ABS and electronic traction control! Adrian Newey and older people in the pit lane continue to race vintage race cars. They know what it means to balance the throttle, trail-brake into a corner or use an early down-shift for compression braking. They would not have spun that F40 in those conditions. Lando? Not sure if it is him behind the wheel, but unless he has spent considerable time driving 1980's or earlier cars on the limit he'd make the same rookie mistake of planting it... and hitting the white line.

Which brings us to modern F1 cars. No manual gearbox plus clutch. Lots of software, most of it mandated these days (refer Schumacher era...). Immense down force, tyres which could Hoover-up small children. One of the key reasons one cannot compare Fangio, Nuvolari or all those really great heroes of the past with the pilots of today is that the hardware has changed so much! So much. Not just the safety standards, but the actual cars were utterly different to drive back then. Dear Lord, early F1 cars had drum brakes! Oh, and no seatbelts...

So no wonder some young gun, who might, or might not be Lando, stuffed it under full acceleration in a 100% mechanical F40 where one is expected to handle all the incoming problems for oneself. Just watch those white lines... they are not your friend.

Max Noble

Learn more about Max and check out his previous features, here

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READERS COMMENTS

 

1. Posted by ARL, 06/02/2025 22:08

"Slippy road lines? Have a word with N Mansell esq, just don't mention Monaco '84.....

The race is for ever entwined in the Prost/Senna rivalry legend, but the driver who overtook Prost to be leading the race on Lap 11 was our Nige in a Lotus. Lap 15 found Nige spinning after a slippery road line assisted the Lotus in losing traction. Another fly in the ointment of the Senna/Prost legend was the third placed driver, Stefan Bellof, coming up on them at speed in the Tyrrell. A legend lost before his time to shine.

Teams for whom Nigel drove seemed to keep their enthusiasm for him under control, but he was always great with kids asking for autographs. On one occasion he wrote a page sized dedication in a book for my then young son when he heard that it was his birthday."

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2. Posted by Apexing, 05/02/2025 16:51

"I drove to Philadelphia this past Saturday, and it made me think of this article. After passing innumerable white lines on the roads, it made me wonder why they're so slippery? Who spec'd out the paint? A local body shop? That would be a great way to generate income...
It's been years, but I do remember some of them having a gritty substance in them. Not sure why they wouldn't go back to that? Unless it's more fun to watch the cars spin!"

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3. Posted by Max Noble, 02/02/2025 6:38

"@Spindoctor - quite so! Not sure how many F1 young guns have driven pre-software cars with a touch of grunt. Only Lotus I’ve driven is the Excel… which I found to be a wonderfully balanced car with finger light handling, and “just enough” power. But then here in wonderful Oz I’ve also spun a Mazda MX-5 three times in twenty minutes while travelling down red-dust dirt roads. All safely survived and no paint or rim damage… but my ego took a time to recover. Good job I wasn’t in an F40 that day!
"

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4. Posted by Spindoctor, 31/01/2025 12:42

"Bloody stupid bit of driving (says he whose sportiest drive was a 150BHP Lotus Elise!), but nonetheless I'd expect even the young bloods, to have some insight into driving stupidly light & powerful old cars, or at least to treat them with a bit of respect!

Anyone whose explored some of the Car-related YouTube channels will know that all eras & types of super & hyper car are regularly trashed by trust-fund kiddies, particularly in USA. Indeed I'm pretty convinced that Ferrari, McLaren et al actually depend on the stupidity of 20-year old rich kids to sell as many cars (& spares) as they do.

I think some of us oldies who may have experienced "old-fashioned" cars & enjoyed their handling foibles, are both poorer and also more cautious. I was raised during post-war rationing & "wasting" expensive things by crashing them just goes against the grain.

As a completely unconnected aside, I think people electrifying beautiful old cars is sacrilege (except when there's no alternative)."

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5. Posted by kenji, 26/01/2025 1:26

"@Max Noble.. Well spotted...they are very expensive [ within the cost cap] but cannabis oil infused scented candles have been known to
'enhance' one's outlook on the universe! Whether or not they have been spotted at the back of the garage has yet to be established with visual evidence but drivers that are not showing signs of elevated stress before a race would be a dead giveaway!! Haha"

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6. Posted by Max Noble, 25/01/2025 11:00

"@Kenji - dang but I so love those scented candles at the back of the garage…! :-)
"

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7. Posted by kenji, 24/01/2025 6:27

"@ Max...Hahaha...you missed the butcher, the baker and the guy who makes scented candles for the woke pseudo shaman who is related by marriage to the Norwegian royal family!!!"

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8. Posted by Superbird70, 23/01/2025 12:27

"I don't maybe he loaned it another F1 driver that was over so they could pick up a take out order."

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9. Posted by Max Noble, 23/01/2025 6:44

"@Kenji - Quite… I buy $2M collectable super cars all the time and loan them to the milkman, postman, paperboy… Guy walking past in hoodie…"

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10. Posted by kenji, 22/01/2025 12:13

"What I would like to know is just who was driving when they binned it? I'm sure if it was 'you know who' the identity will get buried......"

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11. Posted by Max Noble, 21/01/2025 4:00

"@habentsen - very good point. I feel all EVs should be four wheel drive to avoid that very problem.

@Superbird70 - For me the very early film of motor racing, car like the Mercedes W25, flying over bumps and sliding around corners… utterly classic, and fearless drivers!
"

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12. Posted by Superbird70, 20/01/2025 16:53

"@Max Noble, very nice article. Looks like it is time for me to dust of my copy of '50 Years of Formula 1 on Board' and revisit some truly skilled drivers. The early steering wheels, marvels of complex engineering. A circle with four spokes."

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13. Posted by habentsen, 20/01/2025 15:43

"Up here in the cold north you can see the same effect with modern electric cars every winter. They have a lot of torque compared to your regular family car, drivers pull out to do a fast pass and end up in a spin. To me it looks ilke the cars recovery systems ain't fast enough to deal with all that power and ice. Luckily most of them are saved in the end by the cars systems, but they can get quite a ride before the car is able to recover."

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