Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Coronation Street and Formula One: Difference between pages

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Raikkonen is the reigning champion, and will be until the end of the year
 
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{{Redirect|F1}}
== Started this project ==
{{Infobox motorsport championship
| logo = F1 logo.svg
| current_season = 2008 Formula One season
| pixels = 180px
| caption = The Formula One logo.
| category = [[Open wheel car|Single seaters]]
| country/region = [[International]]
| inaugural2 = 1950<ref>The formula was defined in 1946; the first Formula One race was in 1947; the first World Championship season was 1950.</ref>
| folded =
| drivers = 20
| teams = 10
| engines = [[BMW]], [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]], [[Honda Racing F1|Honda]], [[Mercedes-Benz High Performance Engines|Mercedes]], [[Renault F1|Renault]], [[Toyota F1|Toyota]]
| tyres = [[Bridgestone]]
| champion driver = {{flagicon|FIN}} [[Kimi Räikkönen]]
| constructor = {{flagicon|ITA}} [[Scuderia Ferrari]]
| website = [http://www.formula1.com formula1.com]
}}


{{Formula One}}'''Formula One''', abbreviated to '''F1''', is the highest class of [[Open wheel car|open wheeled]] [[auto racing]] defined by the [[Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile]] (FIA), motorsport's world governing body. The "formula" in the name refers to a set of rules to which all participants and cars must conform. The F1 world championship season consists of a series of races, known as [[List of Formula One Grands Prix|Grands Prix]], held usually on purpose-built [[List of Formula One circuits|circuits]], and in a few cases on closed city streets, the most famous of which is the [[Monaco Grand Prix]] in [[Monte Carlo]]. The results of each race are combined to determine two annual World Championships, one for [[List of Formula One World Drivers' Champions|drivers]] and one for [[List of Formula One World Constructors' Champions|constructors]].
Ok, i've started this. Hopefully there will be some interest. The project page still needs a lot of work. Any ideas for improvement, feel free to put them here.[[User:Gungadin|<font color="FF1493">Gung</font>]][[User_talk:Gungadin|<font color="0047AB">adin</font>]][[Special:Contributions/Gungadin|<font color="8B00FF">♦</font>]] 16:51, 12 January 2008 (UTC)


The cars race at high speeds, up to 360&nbsp;km/h (225&nbsp;mph), and are capable of pulling up to [[g-force|5g]] in some corners. The performance of the cars is highly dependent on [[electronics]], [[aerodynamics]], [[suspension (vehicle)|suspension]] and [[tire|tyres]]. The formula has seen many evolutions and changes through the history of the sport.
==Changes to the WP:1.0 assessment scheme==


[[Europe]] is Formula One's traditional centre; all of the teams are based there and around half the races take place there. In particular the [[United Kingdom]] has produced the most [[List of Formula One World Drivers' Champions|Drivers' Champions]] (12), and the vast majority of [[List of Formula One World Constructors' Champions|Constructors' Champions]] (32). However, the sport's scope has expanded significantly in recent years and Grands Prix are now held all over the world. Events in Europe and the Americas have been dropped in favour of races in [[Bahrain]], [[People's Republic of China|China]], [[Malaysia]] and [[Turkey]], with [[Singapore]] having held the first night race in 2008 and [[India]] being added to the schedule starting in 2011. Of the eighteen races in 2008, nine are outside Europe.
As you [[Wikipedia:Wikipedia_Signpost/2008-06-23/Dispatches|may have heard]], we at the Wikipedia 1.0 Editorial Team recently made some changes to the assessment scale, including the addition of a new level. The new description is available at [[Wikipedia:Version_1.0_Editorial_Team/Assessment|WP:ASSESS]].
*The '''new C-Class''' represents articles that are beyond the basic Start-Class, but which need additional references or cleanup to meet the standards for B-Class.
*The criteria for B-Class have been tightened up with the addition of [[Wikipedia:Version_1.0_Editorial_Team/Assessment/B-Class_criteria|a rubric]], and are now more in line with the stricter standards already used at some projects.
*A-Class article reviews will now need more than one person, as [[Wikipedia:Version_1.0_Editorial_Team/Assessment/A-Class_criteria|described here]].


Formula One is a massive television event, with millions of people watching each race worldwide. As the world's most expensive [[sport]],{{Fact|date=April 2008}} its economic effect is significant, and its financial and political battles are widely observed. On average about 55 million people all over the world watch Formula One races live. Its high profile and popularity makes it an obvious merchandising environment, which leads to very high investments from sponsors, translating into extremely high budgets for the [[List of Formula One constructors|constructor teams]]. Several teams have gone bankrupt or been bought out by other companies since 2000. The most recent example of this was the Super Aguri team being denied entry to the Spanish Grand Prix and then folding due to lack of funds after an attempt at gaining sponsorship collapsed.
Each WikiProject should already have a new C-Class category at [[:Category:C-Class_articles]]. If your project elects not to use the new level, you can simply delete your WikiProject's C-Class category and clarify any amendments on your project's assessment/discussion pages. [[Wikipedia:Version_1.0_Editorial_Team/Index|The bot]] is already finding and listing C-Class articles.


The sport is regulated by the FIA. Formula One's commercial rights are vested in the [[Formula One Group]].
Please [[Wikipedia_talk:Version_1.0_Editorial_Team/Assessment#WikiProject_responses|leave a message]] with us if you have any queries regarding the introduction of the revised scheme. This scheme should allow the team to start producing offline selections for your project and the wider community within the next year. Thanks for using the Wikipedia 1.0 scheme! For the [[Wikipedia:Version 1.0 Editorial Team|1.0 Editorial Team]], <font color="green">[[User:ShepBot|'''§hepBot''']]</font>'''&nbsp;<small>(<font color="red">[[User talk:ShepBot|Disable]]</font>)'''</small> 22:03, 4 July 2008 (UTC)


==History==
== Proposal on changing templates ==
{{Main|History of Formula One}}
:''See [[2008 Formula One season]] for details of the 2008 season''
The Formula One series has its roots in the European [[Grand Prix Motor Racing]] (''q.v.'' for pre-1947 history) of the 1920s and 1930s. The "[[formula racing|formula]]" is a set of rules which all participants and cars must meet. Formula One was a new formula agreed after [[World War II]] in 1946, with the first non-championship races being held that year. A number of Grand Prix racing organisations had laid out rules for a World Championship before the war, but due to the suspension of racing during the conflict, the World Drivers' Championship was not formalised until 1947. The first world championship race was held at [[Silverstone Circuit|Silverstone]], United Kingdom in 1950. A championship for constructors followed in 1958. National championships existed in [[South Africa]] and the [[United Kingdom|UK]] in the 1960s and 1970s. Non-championship Formula One races were held for many years but, due to the rising cost of competition, the last of these occurred in 1983.<ref name=LastnonchampF1>{{cite web|url = http://www.forix.com/8w/roc83.html|title = The last of the non-championship races
|accessdate = 2007-11-17|publisher = www.forix.com|archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20070227105027/http://www.forix.com/8w/roc83.html|archivedate = 2007-02-27}}</ref>


The sport's title, Formula One, indicates that it is intended to be the most advanced and most competitive of the FIA's [[formula racing|racing formula]].{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
I would rather use "infobox soap character" on the articles, rather than "Coronation Street character" template, to my opinion its better.
:The generic soap opera ibox has far greater restrictions on family fields, which would result in a lost of lost info. What precisely do you think is better about it? [[User talk:Frickative|<font face="Courier New">Frickative</font>]] 17:02, 29 July 2008 (UTC)


=== The return of racing (1950–1958)===
== Now what? ==
[[Image:Alfa-Romeo-159-(1951).jpg|thumb|right|[[Juan Manuel Fangio]]'s {{F1|1951}} title-winning [[Alfa Romeo 158/159 Alfetta|Alfa Romeo 159]].]]
The first Formula One World Championship was won by [[Italy|Italian]] [[Giuseppe Farina]] in his [[Alfa Romeo (Formula One)|Alfa Romeo]] in [[1950 Formula One season|1950]], barely defeating his [[Argentina|Argentine]] teammate [[Juan Manuel Fangio]]. However Fangio won the title in [[1951 Formula One season|1951]], [[1954 Formula One season|1954]], [[1955 Formula One season|1955]], [[1956 Formula One season|1956]] & [[1957 Formula One season|1957]] (His record of five World Championship titles stood for 45 years until German driver Michael Schumacher took his sixth title in 2003), his streak interrupted after an injury by two-time champion [[Alberto Ascari]] of [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]. Although the UK's [[Stirling Moss]] was able to compete regularly, he was never able to win the World Championship, and is now widely considered to be the greatest driver never to have won the title.<ref>{{cite news |first=James|last= Lawton|title=Moss can guide Hamilton through chicane of celebrity |work=The Independent |publisher=Newspaper Publishing |date=2007-08-28 |accessdate=2007-10-30}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |first=Alan |last=Henry|title=Hamilton's chance to hit the grid running| url=http://sport.guardian.co.uk/formulaone/story/0,,2032039,00.html |work=The Guardian |date=2007-03-12 |accessdate=2007-10-30}}</ref> Fangio, however, is remembered for dominating Formula One's first decade and has long been considered the "grand master" of Formula One.{{Fact|date=October 2007}}


The period was dominated by teams run by road car manufacturers - [[Alfa Romeo]], [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]], [[Mercedes-Benz motorsport|Mercedes Benz]] and [[Maserati]] - all of whom had competed before the war. The first seasons were run using pre-war cars like Alfa's [[Alfa Romeo 158/159 Alfetta|158]]. They were [[Front-engine design|front engined]], with narrow treaded tyres and 1.5&nbsp;litre supercharged or 4.5&nbsp;litre naturally aspirated engines. The [[1952 Formula One season|1952]] and [[1953 Formula One season|1953]] world championships were run to [[Formula Two]] regulations, for smaller, less powerful cars, due to concerns over the number of Formula One cars available.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.autocoursegpa.com/season_decade~decade_id~1.htm|title = Decade seasons 1950 - 1959|accessdate = 2007-11-17|publisher = Autocourse|archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20070807233339/http://www.autocoursegpa.com/season_decade~decade_id~1.htm|archivedate = 2007-08-07}}</ref> When a new Formula One, for engines limited to 2.5&nbsp;litres, was reinstated to the world championship in 1954, Mercedes-Benz introduced the advanced [[Mercedes-Benz W196|W196]], which featured innovations such as [[desmodromic valve]]s and [[fuel injection]] as well as enclosed streamlined bodywork. Mercedes won the drivers championship for two years, before withdrawing from all motorsport in the wake of the [[1955 Le Mans disaster]].<ref>{{cite news |first=Bill |last=Tuckey |title=Moss returns to scene of GP victory |work=The Age |publisher=The Age Company|date=1994-01-28 |accessdate=2007-10-30|quote=the all-conquering Mercedes-Benz cars... When the Germans withdrew from racing after the Le Mans 24-hour tragedy}}</ref>
I have been through the Coronation Street template, and over half of those articles have not much notability at all whatsoever, even characters like [[Ken Barlow]] aren't notable, it would be a real shame is all of them got deleted, wouldn't it? Maybe the [[List of Coronation Street characters|List of characters]] article could turned into something like the [[List of recurring and minor Coronation Street characters|recurring and minor characters article]]? But then we'd need a guide for the list instead. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:I love energy drinks!|I love energy drinks!]] ([[User talk:I love energy drinks!|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/I love energy drinks!|contribs]]) 08:53, 2 August 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


=== The 'Garagistes' (1959–1980) ===
:As politely as possible, what sort of notability criteria are you applying to consider ''Ken Barlow'', one of the most iconic figures on British television, as being unnotable? [[User talk:Frickative|<font face="Courier New">Frickative</font>]] 09:12, 2 August 2008 (UTC)
[[Image:MossLotusClimax19610806.jpg|thumb|right|[[Stirling Moss]] at the [[Nürburgring]] in {{F1|1961}}.]]
:I've just noticed that in spuriously tagging all those articles as non-notable, all the ''valid'' improvment templates have been removed. I would respectfully request that you revert yourself, rather than force another editor to spend upwards of 20 minutes doing it for you. [[User talk:Frickative|<font face="Courier New">Frickative</font>]] 10:19, 2 August 2008 (UTC)
The first major technological development, [[Cooper Car Company|Cooper's]] re-introduction of mid-engined cars (following [[Ferdinand Porsche]]'s pioneering [[Auto Union]]s of the 1930s), which evolved from the company's successful [[Formula Three|Formula 3]] designs, occurred in the 1950s. Australian [[Jack Brabham]], World Champion in [[1959 Formula One season|1959]], [[1960 Formula One season|1960]] and [[1966 Formula One season|1966]], soon proved the new design's superiority. By [[1961 Formula One season|1961]], all regular competitors had switched to mid-engined cars.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.gpracing.net192.com/cars/data/186.cfm|title = Ferguson P99
|accessdate = 2007-11-17|publisher = gpracing.net|archiveurl = http://www.gpracing.net192.com/cars/data/186.cfm|archivedate = 2006-02-25}} The [[Ferguson P99]], a four-wheel drive design, was the last front-engined F1 car to enter a world championship race. It was entered in the [[1961 British Grand Prix]], the only front-engined car to compete that year.</ref>


The first [[United Kingdom|British]] World Champion was [[Mike Hawthorn]], who drove a Ferrari to the title in [[1958 Formula One season|1958]]. However, when [[Colin Chapman]] entered F1 as a chassis designer and later founder of [[Team Lotus]], [[British racing green]] came to dominate the field for the next decade. Between [[Jim Clark]], [[Jackie Stewart]], [[John Surtees]], [[Jack Brabham]], [[Graham Hill]], and [[Denny Hulme]], British teams and [[Commonwealth of Nations|Commonwealth]] drivers won twelve world championships between 1962 and 1973.


In [[1962 Formula One season|1962]], Lotus introduced a car with an aluminium sheet monocoque chassis instead of the traditional spaceframe design. This proved to be the greatest technological breakthrough since the introduction of [[Mid-engine design|mid-engined]] cars. In [[1968 Formula One season|1968]], Lotus painted [[Imperial Tobacco]] livery on their cars, thus introducing [[sponsor]]ship to the sport.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2007/SPORT/09/18/behind.sponsorship/index.html |title=Sponsorship, the big business behind F1 |accessdate=2007-11-08 |last=Bartunek |first=Robert-Jan|date=2007-09-18 |work=CNN.com |publisher=Cable News Network}}</ref>
I'm wondering what [[User:I love energy drinks!|I love energy drinks!]] is on about, [[Ken Barlow]] article could be vastly improved with stackloads of references to prove notability --[[User:Dodgechris|Dodgechris]] ([[User talk:Dodgechris|talk]]) 10:22, 2 August 2008 (UTC)


Aerodynamic [[downforce]] slowly gained importance in car design from the appearance of [[airfoil|aerofoils]] in the late 1960s. In the late 1970s Lotus introduced [[ground effect in cars|ground effect]] aerodynamics that provided enormous downforce and greatly increased cornering speeds (though the concept had previously been used on [[Jim Hall (race car driver)|Jim Hall's]] [[Chaparral Cars|Chaparral 2J]] in 1970). So great were the aerodynamic forces pressing the cars to the track, (up to 5 times the car's weight), that extremely stiff springs were needed to maintain a constant [[ride height]], leaving the suspension virtually solid, depending entirely on the tyres for any small amount of cushioning of the car and driver from irregularities in the road surface.<ref>{{cite book | last = Staniforth | first = Allan | coauthors = | title = Competition Car Suspension | publisher = Haynes |date=1994 | page=96| id = ISBN 0-85429-956-4}}</ref>
== Major clean up needed? ==


=== Big business (1981–2000)===
After all this.. . I've been trying to save some articles for corrie characters, but it takes so much time. I have only really helped John Stape, Tony Gordon and Darryl Morton (Before it was merged) those articles needed improving and notability added. I added to other articles too as I didn't think they should be deleted.
[[Image:Williams FW10 Honda Collection Hall.jpg|thumb|right|[[Nigel Mansell]]'s [[Williams FW10]] from {{F1|1985}}.]]
[[Image:1996 Williams-Renault FW18.JPG|thumb|right|[[Damon Hill]]'s [[Williams FW18]] from {{F1|1996}}. The FW18 was one of the most successful cars of the era.]]
Beginning in the 1970s, [[Bernie Ecclestone]] rearranged the management of Formula One's commercial rights; he is widely credited with transforming the sport into the billion dollar business it is today.<ref name="guardian280397">{{cite news |first=Richard |last=Williams|title=The Formula for Striking It Rich|work=The Guardian |publisher=Guardian Newspapers |date=1997-03-28|accessdate=2007-11-09}}</ref><ref name="mrformula">{{cite news |title=Face value: Mr Formula |page=72|work=The Economist |publisher=Economist Newspapers |date=1997-03-05|accessdate=2007-11-09}}</ref> When Ecclestone bought the Brabham team in 1971 he gained a seat on the [[Formula One Constructors Association|Formula One Constructors' Association]] and in 1978 became its President. Previously the circuit owners controlled the income of the teams and negotiated with each individually, however Ecclestone persuaded them to "hunt as a pack" through FOCA.<ref name="mrformula"/> He offered Formula One to circuit owners as a package which they could take or leave. In return for the package almost all are required to surrender trackside advertising.<ref name="guardian280397"/>


The formation of the [[Fédération Internationale du Sport Automobile]] (FISA) in 1979 set off the [[FISA-FOCA war]], during which FISA and its president [[Jean-Marie Balestre]] clashed repeatedly with FOCA over television revenues and technical regulations.<ref>{{cite news |first=John |last=Blunsden |title=Filling Balestre's shoes is no job for a back-seat driver |work=Financial Times|date=1986-12-20|accessdate=2007-11-09}}</ref> ''The Guardian'' said of FOCA that Ecclestone and [[Max Mosley]] "used it to wage a guerrilla war with a very long-term aim in view." FOCA threatened to set up a rival series, boycotted a Grand Prix and FISA withdrew its sanction from races.<ref name="guardian280397"/> The result was the 1981 [[Concorde Agreement]] which guaranteed technical stability, as teams were to be given reasonable notice of new regulations.<ref>Roebuck, Nigel "Power struggles and techno wars" Sunday Times 1993-03-07</ref> Although FISA asserted its right to the TV revenues, it handed the administration of those rights to FOCA.{{Fact|date=November 2007}}
The subject I want to adress now is this dodgechris, I don't know what this user's agenda was, half the time it seemed like he was helping the other creating problems and losing articles, he also edited and merged in bulk loads without discussing it. Now it turns out the user is a wiki sock puppet that has been at it for some time.


FISA imposed a ban on [[ground effect in cars|ground effect]] aerodynamics in [[1983 Formula One season|1983]].<ref>{{cite news |first=Maurice|last=Hamilton|title=Pros and cons of being just Williams; A quiet achiever keeps his head down as the new season gets under way with familiar high anxiety and a squealing over brakes |work=The Observer |publisher=Guardian Newspapers|date=1998-03-08|accessdate=2007-11-08}}</ref> By then, however, [[turbocharger|turbocharged]] engines, which [[Renault F1|Renault]] had pioneered in [[1977 Formula One season|1977]], were producing over 700 [[horsepower|bhp]] (520 [[watt|kW]]) and were essential to be competitive. By [[1986 Formula One season|1986]] a BMW turbocharged engine achieved a flash reading of 5.5&nbsp;[[Bar (unit)|bar]] pressure, estimated to be "over 1300&nbsp;bhp" (970&nbsp;kW) in qualifying for the [[1986 Italian Grand Prix|Italian Grand Prix]]. The following year power in race trim reached around 1,100&nbsp;bhp (820&nbsp;kW), with boost pressure limited to only 4.0&nbsp;bar.<ref>{{cite book | last = Bamsey| first = Ian| coauthors = Benzing, Enrico; Stanniforth, Allan; Lawrence, Mike| title = The 1000 BHP Grand Prix cars| publisher = Guild Publishing |date=1988| pages=8–9| id = ISBN 0854296174}} BMW's performance at the Italian GP is the highest qualifying figure given in Bamsey. The estimate is from Heini Mader, who maintained the engines for the [[Benetton Formula|Benetton]] team. It should be noted that maximum power figures from this period are necessarily estimates; BMW's [[dynamometer]], for example, was only capable of measuring up to 1,100&nbsp;bhp. Figures higher than this are estimated from engine plenum pressure readings. Power in race trim at that time was lower than for qualifying due to the need for greater reliability and fuel efficiency during the race.</ref> These cars were the most powerful [[open wheel car|open-wheel]] circuit racing cars ever. To reduce engine power output and thus speeds, the FIA limited fuel tank capacity in [[1984 Formula One season|1984]] and [[boost (automotive engineering)|boost]] pressures in [[1988 Formula One season|1988]] before banning turbocharged engines completely in [[1989 Formula One season|1989]].<ref>{{cite news|title=The technology behind Formula 1 racing cars |work=[[The Press]]|publisher=The Christchurch Press Company|quote=rivalling the 1200hp turbocharged monsters that eventually had to be banned in 1989|date=2005-12-26|accessdate=2007-10-30}}</ref>
What should we do now? [[User:Raintheone|Raintheone]] ([[User talk:Raintheone|talk]]) 01:04, 8 August 2008 (UTC)


The development of electronic driver aids began in the 1980s. Lotus began to develop a system of [[active suspension]] which first appeared in 1982 on the F1 [[Lotus 91]] and [[Lotus Esprit]] road car. By 1987 this system had been perfected and was driven to victory by [[Ayrton Senna]] in the [[1987 Monaco Grand Prix|Monaco Grand Prix]] that year. In the early 1990s, other teams followed suit and [[Semi-automatic transmission| semi-automatic gearboxes]] and [[traction control]] were a natural progression. The FIA, due to complaints that technology was determining the outcome of races more than driver skill, banned many such aids for [[1994 Formula One season|1994]]. This led to cars that were previously dependent on electronic aids becoming very "twitchy" and difficult to drive (notably the [[Williams FW16]]), and many observers felt that the ban on driver aids was a ban in name only as they "have proved difficult to police effectively."<ref>{{cite news |first=Alan |last=Baldwin|title=F1 Plans Return of Traction Control|work=The Independent|publisher=Newspaper Publishing|date=2001-02-17|accessdate=2007-10-30}}</ref>
:I'm very disappointed in DodgeChris, because it seems he never stopped using sockpuppets, and I stupidly helped his main account get unblocked the first time, but I will be doing no such thing again. When things didnt go his way, he'd use a sock to vandalise and make changes, then sometimes even reprimanded his own socks on his main account for the vandalism. But although he did some good edits, he caused far more harm than good and has made a lot of mess. No doubt he'll be back with his many sockpuppets, anyone with an IQ above 50 can spot them, which possibly explain why he doesnt realise how blatently obvious all his socks are! Somewhat more worringly, he uses his sockpuppets to have conversation with himself, such as in the conversation above, where out of the three users there, only Frickative is not Dodgechris!


The teams signed a second Concorde Agreement in 1992 and a third in 1997, which expired on the last day of 2007.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.grandprix.com/ft/ftjs031.html|title =
:I have to be honest that although I made this wikiproject, I dont watch many corrie articles. when I edit here (which is less and less these days) I tend to edit eastenders stuff, so I havent seen the full extent of the trouble he's caused. If he has done something that you disagree with, best thing to do is revert if it's not controversial, or bring it up here so we can decide on what to do. Of course it does take time to improve the articles, but even if you're just collecting sources, that is a help. A paragraph or two can be added daily or when you have time, and slowly they will start to improve. or storylines can always be condensed - a major problem with corrie character pages is overlong storylines.<font face="Vivaldi">[[User:Gungadin|'''<font color="#008080">GG</font>''']][[User talk:Gungadin|<sup>Moan</sup>]]</font> 12:01, 8 August 2008 (UTC)
Who owns what in F1 these days?|accessdate = 2007-11-17|publisher = Grandprix.com|archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20070312003448/http://www.grandprix.com/ft/ftjs031.html|archivedate = 2007-03-12}}</ref>


On the track, the [[McLaren]] and [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] teams dominated the 1980s and 1990s, with [[Brabham]] also being competitive in the early part of the 1980s, winning two drivers' championships with [[Nelson Piquet]]. Powered by [[Porsche]], [[Honda Racing F1|Honda]], and Mercedes-Benz, McLaren won sixteen championships (seven constructors', nine drivers') in that period, while Williams used engines from [[Ford Motor Company|Ford]], Honda, and [[Renault F1|Renault]] to also win sixteen titles (nine constructors', seven drivers'). The rivalry between racing legends [[Ayrton Senna]] and [[Alain Prost]] became F1's central focus in [[1988 Formula One season|1988]], and continued until Prost retired at the end of [[1993 Formula One season|1993]]. Senna [[Death of Ayrton Senna|died]] at the [[1994 San Marino Grand Prix]] after crashing into a wall on the exit of the notorious curve [[Tamburello (corner)|Tamburello]], having taken over Prost's lead drive at Williams that year. The FIA worked to improve the sport's safety standards since that weekend, during which [[Roland Ratzenberger]] also lost his life in an accident during Saturday qualifying. No driver has died on the track at the wheel of a Formula One car since, though two track marshals have lost their lives, one at the [[2000 Italian Grand Prix]],<ref name=MarshallDeaths2000s>{{cite web|url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/motorsport/formula_one/1203620.stm |title = F1's pressing safety question
::One of the main problems he created was deleted character articles and merging them where he pleased. The article on Daryll Morton was fine, but merged it into a article he created called The Morton Family. That Daryll article had sources, indeed the rest of the morton family did not, I don't think I can revert whats been done to those articles now. I will also try and shorten storyline sections down aswell, they are really long. [[User:Raintheone|Raintheone]] ([[User talk:Raintheone|talk]]) 10:34, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
|accessdate = 2007-12-26}}</ref> and the other at the [[2001 Australian Grand Prix]].<ref name=MarshallDeaths2000s/>


Since the deaths of [[Ayrton Senna]], [[Roland Ratzenberger]] and [[Gilles Villeneuve]], the FIA has used safety as a reason to impose rule changes which otherwise, under the Concorde Agreement, would have had to be agreed upon by all the teams - most notably the changes introduced for [[1998 Formula One season|1998]]. This so called 'narrow track' era resulted in cars with smaller rear tyres, a narrower track overall and the introduction of 'grooved' tyres to reduce mechanical grip. There would be four grooves, on the front and rear - although initially three on the front tyres in the first year - that ran through the entire circumference of the tyre. The objective was to reduce cornering speeds and to produce racing similar to rain conditions by enforcing a smaller [[contact patch]] between tyre and track. This, according to the FIA, was to promote driver skill and provide a better spectacle.{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
:::It surprises me that noone raised concerns as to this behaviour at an earlier stage, before any such destructive damage (even if in good faith) was done. What makes the matter worse, as noted above, is that any changes made by this user where outside community consensus, and thus, any records of changes for reverting or rectification would on the majority need dealing with by reading through the contribution history of this user (where it is not already obvious). The example of "The Morton Family" article is one which I have had difficulty understanding it's purpose, given the content prior was included in each of the character's own articles; although, I don't see this being too great an inconvenience to rectify.


Results have been mixed as the lack of mechanical grip has resulted in the more ingenious designers clawing back the deficit with aerodynamic grip - pushing more force onto the tyres through wings, aerodynamic devices etc - which in turn has resulted in less overtaking as these devices tend to make the wake behind the car 'dirty' preventing other cars from following closely, due to their dependence on 'clean' air to make the car stick to the track. The grooved tyres also had the unfortunate side effect of initially being of a harder compound, to be able to hold the groove tread blocks, which resulted in spectacular accidents in times of aerodynamic grip failure e.g. rear wing failures, as the harder compound could not grip the track as well.
:::Although I was involved with [[User:Gungadin|Gungadin]] when the wikiproject was formed, I regret that I have not given greater time to improve the state of the articles, and this incident (which appears on a larger scale than I had before been aware of) has indeed added a greater workload to those who take it upon themself to fix what has been done. Although the user is on another indefinate block, I would still keep an eye on things due to past behaviour of sock-puppetry, and I am sure any behaviour of this kind would not be too difficult to miss. '''[[User:Bungle|Bungle]]''' <sup>([[User talk:Bungle|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Bungle|contribs]])</sup> 10:49, 11 August 2008 (UTC)


Drivers from McLaren, Williams, Renault (formerly [[Benetton Formula|Benetton]]) and Ferrari, dubbed the "Big Four", have won every World Championship from [[1984 Formula One season|1984]] to the present day. Due to the technological advances of the 1990s, the cost of competing in Formula One rose dramatically. This increased financial burden, combined with four teams' dominance (largely funded by big car manufacturers such as [[Mercedes-Benz]]), caused the poorer independent teams to struggle not only to remain competitive, but to stay in business. Financial troubles forced several teams to withdraw. Since [[1990 Formula One season|1990]], twenty-eight teams have pulled out of Formula One. This has prompted former [[Jordan Grand Prix|Jordan]] owner [[Eddie Jordan]] to say that the days of competitive privateers are over.<ref>{{cite web | title = Jordan: Privateer era is over | work = | publisher = ITV-F1.com |date=2006-08-24 | url = http://www.itv-f1.com/News_Article.aspx?PO_ID=33854 | accessdate =2006-09-12}}</ref>
::::The Morton family article he made due to a suggestion on the list of minor charcters talk page. I dont think that was a bad idea - having a small amount of OOU info about the family, then in universe character bios on each. But they have since been re-merged into the list anyway, so that problem has been solved already. He and his socks put a lot of character pages up for deletion, then he would vote on each AFD with several socks, sometimes with different votes to keep or delete. I cant work out what he was hoping to gain by that!


=== The manufacturers' return (2000–2007)===
::::He's also made unnecessary disambiguation pages. For instance [[Ken Barlow]] is now a disambiguation page after he moved it to [[Ken Barlow (Coronation Street)]] and all the many pages that linked to Ken Barlow now need to be disambiguated to redirect to the moved page! I think that should just be moved back to Ken Barlow instead actually. The other use of the name is a basketball player, who was already disambiguated using a template on the Ken Barlow page anyway - common practice when there are only two uses and one is more notable.<font face="Vivaldi">[[User:Gungadin|'''<font color="#008080">GG</font>''']][[User talk:Gungadin|<sup>Moan</sup>]]</font> 14:32, 11 August 2008 (UTC)
[[Image:Michael Schumacher 2001 Canada.jpg|thumb|right|[[Michael Schumacher]] won five consecutive titles with Ferrari.]]
[[Michael Schumacher]] and Ferrari won an unprecedented five consecutive drivers’ championships and six consecutive constructors’ championships between 1999 and 2004. Schumacher set many new records, including those for Grand Prix wins (91), wins in a season (13 of 18), and most drivers' championships (7).<ref>{{cite web | title = Schumacher makes history | publisher = BBC Sport |date=2002-07-21 | url =http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/motorsport/formula_one/2141834.stm | format = |accessdate = 2006-09-12 }}</ref> Schumacher's championship streak ended on September 25, 2005 when Renault driver [[Fernando Alonso]] became Formula One’s youngest champion. In 2006, Renault and Alonso won both titles again. Schumacher retired at the end of 2006 after sixteen years in Formula One.


During this period the championship rules were frequently changed by the FIA with the intention of improving the on-track action and cutting costs.<ref>{{cite web | title = FIA Rules & Regulations Sporting Regulations: 2006 season changes | publisher = www.formula1.com | date = | url = http://www.formula1.com/insight/rulesandregs/13/995.html | accessdate =2006-05-11}}</ref> [[Team orders]], legal since the championship started in 1950, were banned in 2002 after several incidents in which teams openly manipulated race results, generating negative publicity, most famously by Ferrari at the [[2002 Austrian Grand Prix]]. Other changes included the qualifying format, the points scoring system, the technical regulations and rules specifying how long engines and tyres must last. A 'tyre war' between suppliers [[Michelin]] and [[Bridgestone]] saw lap times fall, although at the [[2005 United States Grand Prix]] at Indianapolis seven out of ten teams did not race when their Michelin tyres were deemed unsafe for use. During 2006, Max Mosley outlined a ‘green’ future for Formula One, in which efficient use of energy would become an important factor.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.fia.com/automotive/issue5/sport/article9.html|title = The last of the non-championship races
I thought this might prove useful... All credit for the idea goes to the EastEnders WikiProject, where I think it proved an excellent and invaluable tool in improving character articles en-masse. Hopefully it will be similarly helpful here. Wrt Dodgechris' mass merging of articles etc - while it was a PITA to keep track of what he was merging where, when and why, on the whole I think the merging of the past character articles is a good thing. Obviously any time anyone wants to re-write any one of them out-of-universe and asserting notability, it's no problem to re-instate a full article rather than a merged subsection... but for the time being, past characters had been being redirected fairly regularly to the [[List of past Coronation Street characters]] - which obviously preserved no content. As it is, most of the articles ''didn't'' assert any notability in any way deserving of a full article per [[WP:FICT]], so I think the merged articles are mostly fine until such time someone wants to improve an individual one. Especially when there are so many issues with the ''present'' character articles... [[User talk:Frickative|<font face="Courier New">Frickative</font>]] 13:07, 12 August 2008 (UTC)
|accessdate = 2007-11-17|publisher = www.forix.com|archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20061017063932/http://www.fia.com/automotive/issue5/sport/article9.html|archivedate = 2006-10-17}}</ref> And the tyre war ended, as Bridgestone became the sole tyre supplier to Formula One for the 2007 season.


Since 1983, Formula One had been dominated by specialist race teams like Williams, McLaren and Benetton, using engines supplied by large car manufacturers like [[Mercedes-Benz]], Honda, Renault and Ford. Starting in 2000 with Ford’s creation of the largely unsuccessful [[Jaguar Racing|Jaguar]] team, new manufacturer-owned teams entered Formula One for the first time since the departure of [[Alfa Romeo in Formula One|Alfa Romeo]] and Renault at the end of 1985. By 2006, the manufacturer teams – [[Renault F1|Renault]], [[BMW Sauber|BMW]], [[Toyota F1|Toyota]], [[Honda Racing F1|Honda]] and [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]] – dominated the championship, taking five of the first six places in the constructors' championship. The sole exception was McLaren, which is part-owned by Mercedes Benz. Through the [[Grand Prix Manufacturers Association]] (GPMA) they negotiated a larger share of Formula One’s commercial profit and a greater say in the running of the sport.{{Fact|date=October 2007}}
==Operation cleanup==


===Outside the World Championship===
I've been a bit bold and moved the table to a separate sub-article underneath the talk page, [[/Operation cleanup]]. A working title at the moment, and maybe the article itself could be further developed to sit properly within the wikiproject, taking an active role in the project's development. However, I simply felt that if it is to be used as intended (which is great), then having residence on the talk page isn't the best idea. '''[[User:Bungle|Bungle]]''' <sup>([[User talk:Bungle|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Bungle|contribs]])</sup> 20:40, 25 August 2008 (UTC)
Currently, the terms "Formula One race" and "World Championship race" are effectively synonymous; since 1984, every Formula One race has counted towards the World Championship, and every World Championship race has been to Formula One regulations. This has not always been the case, and in the earlier history of Formula One many races took place outside the world championship.


====European non-championship racing====
== Wikipedia 0.7 articles have been selected for Coronation Street ==
In the early years of Formula One, before the world championship was established, there were around twenty races held from late Spring to early Autumn in Europe, although not all of these were considered significant. Most competitive cars came from Italy, particularly Alfa Romeo. After the start of the world championship these non-championship races continued. In the 1950s and 1960s, there were many Formula One races which did not count for the World Championship (e.g., in 1950, a total of twenty-two Formula One races were held, of which only six counted towards the World Championship). In 1952 and 1953, when the world championship was run for [[Formula Two]] cars, a full season of non-championship Formula One racing took place. Some races, particularly in the UK, including the [[Race of Champions (Brands Hatch)|Race of Champions]], [[Oulton Park International Gold Cup]] and [[International Trophy]], were attended by the majority of the world championship contenders. These became less common through the 1970s and 1983 saw the last non-championship Formula One race: The 1983 Race of Champions at Brands Hatch, won by reigning World Champion Keke Rosberg in a Williams Cosworth in a close fight with American [[Danny Sullivan]].<ref name=LastnonchampF1 />


====South African Formula One championship====
[[Wikipedia:Release Version|Wikipedia 0.7]] is a collection of English Wikipedia articles due to be released on DVD, and available for free download, later this year. The [[Wikipedia:Version 1.0 Editorial Team]] has made an [http://toolserver.org/~cbm/release-data/2008-9-13/HTML/ automated selection of articles for Version 0.7].
{{main|South African Formula One Championship}}
South Africa's flourishing domestic Formula One championship ran from 1960 through to 1975. The frontrunning cars in the series were recently retired from the world championship although there was also a healthy selection of locally built or modified machines. Frontrunning drivers from the series usually contested their local World Championship Grand Prix, as well as occasional European events, although they had little success at that level.{{Fact|date=October 2007}}


====British Formula One Series====
We would like to ask you to review the [http://toolserver.org/~cbm/release-data/2008-9-13/HTML/Coronation_Street.s0.html articles selected from this project]. These were chosen from the articles with this project's talk page tag, based on the rated importance and quality. If there are any specific articles that should be removed, please let us know at [[Wikipedia talk:Version 0.7]]. You can also nominate additional articles for release, following the procedure at [[Wikipedia:Release Version Nominations]].
{{main|British Formula One Series}}
The old fashioned [[Cosworth DFV|DFV]] helped make the UK domestic Formula One series possible between 1978 and 1980. As in South Africa a generation before, second hand cars from manufacturers like Lotus and Fittipaldi Automotive were the order of the day, although some, such as the March 781, were built specifically for the series. In 1980 the series saw South African [[Desiré Wilson]] become the only woman to win a Formula One race when she triumphed at Brands Hatch in a [[Walter Wolf Racing|Wolf WR3]].<ref>{{cite web|url = http://f1rejects.com/drivers/wilson/biography.html|title = Desiré Wilson
|accessdate = 2007-11-17|publisher = www.f1rejects.com|archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20070605215016/http://www.f1rejects.com/drivers/wilson/biography.html|archivedate = 2007-06-05}}</ref>


==Racing and strategy==
A [http://toolserver.org/~cbm/cgi-bin/problems.cgi list of selected articles with cleanup tags], sorted by project, is available. The list is automatically updated each hour when it is loaded. Please try to fix any urgent problems in the selected articles. A team of copyeditors has agreed to help with [[Wikipedia talk:Version 1.0 Editorial Team/Copyediting|copyediting requests]], although you should try to fix simple issues on your own if possible.
{{main|Formula One racing|Formula One regulations}}
[[Image:Heidfeld and Rosberg - 2008 Melb GP.jpg|thumb|Nick Heidfeld and Nico Rosberg on the street circuit of [[Albert Park]] in the [[2008 Australian Grand Prix]].]]
A Formula One Grand Prix event spans a weekend, beginning with two free practice sessions on Friday (except in Monaco, where Friday practices are moved to Thursday), and one free practice on Saturday. Additional drivers (commonly known as [[Third driver]]s) are allowed to run on Fridays, but only two cars may be used per team, requiring a race driver to give up their seat. A Qualifying session is held after the last free practice session. This session determines the starting order for the race.<ref>{{cite web| title = Practice and qualifying | publisher = www.formula1.com |date=2008-01-29 | url=http://www.formula1.com/inside_f1/rules_and_regulations/sporting_regulations/6838/ | accessdate =2008-07-02}} </ref><ref>{{cite web| title = Driver changes and additional drivers | publisher = www.formula1.com |date=2008-02-26 | url=http://www.formula1.com/inside_f1/rules_and_regulations/sporting_regulations/6846/ | accessdate =2008-07-02}} </ref>


The format of this qualifying session has been through several iterations since the [[2003 Formula One season|2003 season]]. Attempts were made to reinvigorate interest in the qualifying session by using a "one-shot" system in which each driver would take turns on an empty track to set their one and only time.
We would also appreciate your help in identifying the version of each article that you think we should use, to help avoid vandalism or POV issues. These versions can be recorded at [[User:SelectionBot/0.7/C-9|this project's subpage]] of [[User:SelectionBot/0.7]]. We are planning to release the selection for the holiday season, so we ask you to select the revisions before October 20. At that time, we will use an automatic process to identify which version of each article to release, if no version has been manually selected. Thanks! For the Wikipedia 1.0 Editorial team, [[User:SelectionBot|SelectionBot]] 22:28, 15 September 2008 (UTC)


For the 2006 season a knockout qualifying system was introduced and remains in use, with some minor alterations, in 2008. The qualifying session is split into three phases. In the first phase, all twenty cars are permitted on the track for a twenty minute qualification session. Only their fastest time will count and drivers may complete as many laps as they wish. At the end of the first session, the slowest five cars are eliminated and will take no further part in qualifying. These cars will make up the last five grid positions in the order of their times.<ref name="Qdetail">{{cite web| title = Practice and qualifying | publisher = www.formula1.com |date=2008-02-26 | url=http://www.formula1.com/inside_f1/rules_and_regulations/sporting_regulations/6838/fia.html | accessdate =2008-07-03}} After the demise of the [[Super Aguri]] team during the 2008 season, the rules were changed slightly. See {{cite web| title =Team demise changes F1 qualifying | publisher = www.bbc.co.uk |date=2008-05-08 | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/motorsport/formula_one/7391106.stm | accessdate =2008-07-03}}</ref>
==Infoboxes==
Just thought I'd flag up the fact that [[User:Magioladitis]] is intent on unilaterally changing all the ''Coronation Street'' character infoboxes to the generic soap opera ones, despite the fact the only agreement on the matter came from our favourite user DodgeChris. Discussion is [[Template_talk:Coronation_Street_character|here]]. [[User talk:Frickative|<font face="Courier New">Frickative</font>]] 14:53, 17 September 2008 (UTC)


The times for the fifteen remaining cars are reset for the next fifteen minute session. The slowest five cars will make up the grid in positions 11 to 15 in the order of their times set in this session.<ref name="Qdetail" />
== Annoying vandal, possibly DodgeChris ==


The recorded fastest times for the ten remaining cars are then wiped in preparation for the final (ten minute) session referred to as the 'Pole Position Shootout'. At the end of this period, the cars will be arranged on the grid in positions one to ten in accordance to their fastest lap time. In the first two sessions, cars may run any fuel load and drivers knocked out after those sessions may refuel ahead of the race. However, the top-ten drivers must start the race with whatever fuel was left in the car at the end of the final qualifying session.<ref>{{cite web | title = 2008 Formula One sporting regulations | url = http://argent.fia.com/web/fia-public.nsf/475632E46002BEDAC125744F004312F4/$FILE/F1.SPORTING.REGULATIONS.19-05-2008.pdf}}</ref> For all the sessions, if a driver starts a timed lap before the chequered flag falls for the end of that session, their time will count even if they cross the finishing line well after the session has ended.<ref name="Qdetail" />
Please look out for any changes to Corrie characters' duration and first and last appearances. We have a very annoying vandal who has literally been here years, known here as [[User:WJH1992]], though he's had scores of other accounts and ips. This user has been incorrectly altering dates and durations on EastEnders characters for a very long time now, and they can never seem to get him indefinitely blocked. Interestingly, WJH1992 has been [[Wikipedia:Requests for checkuser/Case/Dodgechris|linked]] to DodgeChris! So it could well be the same person. I just undid a lot of his alterations to character durations and dates, but if you see this happening again, it's most likely this tosser trying to add false info, so revert or bring it up here so we can confirm the dates.<font face="Vivaldi">[[User:Gungadin|'''<font color="#DC143C">GunGagdin</font>''']][[User talk:Gungadin|<sup>Moan</sup>]]</font> 16:15, 18 September 2008 (UTC)


The race begins with a warm-up formation lap, after which the cars assemble on the starting grid in the order they qualified. If a driver stalls before the parade lap and the rest of the field pass him, then he must start from the back of the grid. If he manages to drive off and at least one car is behind him, he is permitted to retake his original position. A racer may also elect to start from pit-lane if he has any last minute problems with the car. If they choose to do this, they must wait for all cars to pass pit-lane before they may begin the race.<ref>{{cite web| title = Race start procedure | publisher = www.formula1.com |date=2008-02-26 | url=http://www.formula1.com/inside_f1/rules_and_regulations/sporting_regulations/6838/fia.html | accessdate =2008-07-03}} </ref>
Add [[User talk:92.235.125.183]] to the list. I just gave 5 warnings. -- [[User:Magioladitis|Magioladitis]] ([[User talk:Magioladitis|talk]]) 19:29, 18 September 2008 (UTC)


A light system above the track indicates the start of the race. The race distance is equal to the least number of complete laps which exceed a distance of {{convert|305|km|mi}} (although Monaco is {{convert|260|km|mi}}), and are limited to two hours. In practice they usually last about ninety minutes. Throughout the race, drivers may make one or more [[pit stop]]s in order to refuel and change tyres. Teams are supplied with tyres exclusively from Bridgestone. Bridgestone have developed four tyre compounds of which they then select two for the teams to use at a given race event. Drivers must use both tyre compounds during a race which is hoped will bring more excitement to the sport. The softer of the available compounds for the weekend's tyres can be seen with a white ring around one of the grooves on the tyre itself. <ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/2007/4/5862.html | title = Bridgestone revise tyre markings for Malaysia}}</ref>
:It's times like this when I wish we had an admin seeing over these soap articles. It makes getting this guy's socks blocked so much easier.<font face="Vivaldi">[[User:Gungadin|'''<font color="#DC143C">GunGagdin</font>''']][[User talk:Gungadin|<sup>Moan</sup>]]</font> 17:15, 19 September 2008 (UTC)


When a driver comes round to lap another, the latter must move out of the way within three blue flags (waved by the trackside marshals), or face a penalty from the Stewards.<ref>{{cite web| title = Flags | publisher = www.formula1.com |date=2003-06-21 | url=http://www.formula1.com/inside_f1/understanding_the_sport/5282.html | accessdate =2008-07-03}} </ref>
== Tagging Corrie talk pages with wikiproject banner ==


Various systems for awarding championship points have been used since 1950. Since 2003, at the end of the race the top eight drivers and their respective teams receive points on a 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis (the race winner receives ten points, the first runner-up eight, and so on). The winner of the two annual championships are the driver and the team who have accumulated the most points at the end of the season. In the case of a tie in points, the championship is awarded to the driver or team having the higher number of wins; if these are equal, second place finishes are considered, and so on.<ref>{{cite web| title = Points | publisher = www.formula1.com |date=2003-01-04 | url=http://www.formula1.com/inside_f1/rules_and_regulations/sporting_regulations/6833/ | accessdate =2008-07-03}} </ref>
When we first made the project, Bungle and I discussed making a Corrie wikiproject banner and tagging the talk pages of all Corrie articles. This is something that I think needs to be done, as it will draw attention to the project for new users and just make it more accessible. It was done on the EE project by a now inactive member, but I dont have any experience in doing this, so if anyone knows how, I would appreciate some help in making the template and tagging. Thanks <font face="Vivaldi">[[User:Gungadin|'''<font color="#DC143C">GunGagdin</font>''']][[User talk:Gungadin|<sup>Moan</sup>]]</font> 15:47, 27 September 2008 (UTC)
:Specifically the banner which says it is part of a wikiproject and what rating/class it has? I did this for Emmerdale and had all the articles tagged Stub, Start, B class etc (which as of a few months ago, is what was used to determine current quality). I think it would be nice to have a similar rating for corrie articles, and maybe get a few character articles up to at least GA standard. I'll have a look into it and just duplicate what I did with Emmerdale, assuming noone has any objections to that? '''[[User:Bungle|Bungle]]''' <sup>([[User talk:Bungle|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Bungle|contribs]])</sup> 17:00, 27 September 2008 (UTC)
::I was just thinking about the generic banner that linked to the wikiproject, but the class rating is probably more important, so that would be great if you could do something similar to what you did with Emmerdale. Now that character Corrie pages are starting to get a steady stream of improvment and they are not all stubs and plot summary, it would be nice to be able to rate them. I think, if we can all agree on an article, we should possibly nominate and choose one and all collaborate to make it a GA. Do you think that could work?--<font face="Vivaldi">[[User:Gungadin|'''<font color="#DC143C">GunGagdin</font>''']][[User talk:Gungadin|<sup>Moan</sup>]]</font> 18:20, 28 September 2008 (UTC)
:Is [[Template:WikiProject_Coronation_Street|this what you meant]]? It would appear, through my own bad recollection, that I actually set this up along with a WP rating system some time back, and that it wasn't fully implemented into articles. '''[[User:Bungle|Bungle]]''' <sup>([[User talk:Bungle|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Bungle|contribs]])</sup> 06:49, 29 September 2008 (UTC)


==Constructors==
::Yes that's what I meant originally, but I think a rating system like you suggested would be better. sorry for late response btw, I only just noticed this.<font face="Vivaldi">[[User:Gungadin|'''<font color="#DC143C">GunGagdin</font>''']][[User talk:Gungadin|<sup>Moan</sup>]]</font> 18:37, 5 October 2008 (UTC)
{{See also|List of Formula One constructors|List of Formula One drivers|List of Formula One people|List of Formula One World Drivers' Champions|List of Formula One World Constructors' Champions}}
[[Image:070616 Ferrari F1 2007 01.JPG|thumb|right|[[Scuderia Ferrari]] have competed in every season, and hold the record for most titles.]]
[[Image:Ayrton Senna 1988 Canada.jpg|thumb|right|The [[McLaren]] team won all but one race in {{F1|1988}} with Honda as its engine partner, and remains a championship contender in the present day.]]
Since [[1984 Formula One season|1984]] Formula One teams have been required to build the chassis in which they compete, and consequently the terms "team" and "constructor" became more or less interchangeable. This requirement distinguishes the sport from series such as the [[IndyCar Series]] which allows teams to purchase chassis, and "[[spec racing|spec series]]" such as [[GP2 Series|GP2]], which require all cars be kept to an identical specification.


The sport's [[1950 Formula One season|1950 debut season]] saw eighteen teams compete, but due to high costs many dropped out quickly. In fact, such was the scarcity of competitive cars for much of the first decade of Formula One that [[Formula Two]] cars were admitted to fill the grids. Ferrari is the only still-active team which competed in 1950.
== Coronation Street characters ==


Early manufacturer involvement came in the form of a "factory team" or "works team" (that is, one owned and staffed by a major car company), such as those of [[Alfa Romeo]], [[Ferrari]] or [[Renault]]. After having virtually disappeared by the early 1980s, factory teams made a comeback in the 1990s and 2000s and now form half the grid with [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]], [[BMW Sauber|BMW]], [[Renault F1|Renault]], [[Toyota F1|Toyota]] and [[Honda Racing F1|Honda]] either setting up their own teams or buying out existing ones. [[Mercedes-Benz]] owns 40% of the [[McLaren]] team and manufactures the team's engines. Factory teams currently make up the top competitive teams; in mid-2008 factory teams occupied the top 5 positions in the Constructors' Championship. Ferrari holds the record for having won the most Constructors' Championships (fifteen).
Does anyone have any idea what's the reason to have [[List of past recurring and minor Coronation Street characters]]? They are already
# [[List of past Coronation Street characters (2000-)]]
# [[List of past Coronation Street characters (1990-1999)]]
# [[List of past Coronation Street characters (1980-1989)]]
# [[List of past Coronation Street characters (1970-1979)]]


Companies such as [[Coventry Climax|Climax]], [[Repco]], [[Cosworth]], [[Brian Hart Ltd.|Hart]], [[Judd (engine)|Judd]] and [[Supertec]], which had no direct team affiliation, often sold engines to teams that could not afford to manufacture them. In the early years independently owned Formula One teams sometimes also built their engines, though this became less common with the increased involvement of major car manufacturers such as [[BMW]], [[Ferrari]], [[Honda]], [[Mercedes-Benz]], [[Renault]] and [[Toyota]], whose large budgets rendered privately built engines less competitive. [[Cosworth]] was the last independent engine supplier, but lost its last customers after the 2006 season. Beginning in 2007 the manufacturers' deep pockets and engineering ability took over, eliminating the last of the independent engine manufacturers. It is estimated that the big teams spend €100 to €200 million ($125-$250 million) per year per manufacturer on engines alone.<ref>[http://en.f1-live.com/f1/en/headlines/news/detail/071108095715.shtml Formula 1 : News Cosworth - F1-Live.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>http://www.speedtv.com/articles/auto/formulaone/27851/</ref>
I think we have to put the characters in the correct article and then delete the article or convert it to a disamb page. An AfD has been started here: [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/List of past recurring and minor Coronation Street characters]].


In the 2007 season, for the first time since the 1984 rule, two teams used chassis built by other teams. [[Super Aguri]] started the season using a modified [[Honda RA106|Honda Racing's RA106]] chassis (used by Honda in the 2006 season), while [[Toro Rosso|Scuderia Toro Rosso]] used a modified [[Red Bull RB3|Red Bull Racing RB3]] chassis (same as the one used by [[Red Bull Racing|Red Bull]] in the 2007 season). Such a decision did not come as a surprise because of spiraling costs and the fact that Super Aguri is partially owned by Honda and Toro Rosso is half owned by Red Bull. Formula One team [[Spyker F1|Spyker]] raised a complaint against this decision, and other teams such as McLaren and Ferrari have officially confirmed that they support the campaign. Because of this use of other teams' chassis, the 2006 season could have been the last one in which the terms "team" and "constructor" were truly interchangeable. This attracted the [[Prodrive]] team to F1 to the 2008 season, where it intended to run a customer car. After not being able to secure a package from McLaren, Prodrive's intention to enter the 2008 season was dropped after [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] threatened legal action against them. Now, it seems that customer cars concept will be formally banned in 2010.
Sorry for coming here AFTER the AfD but when I checked the Talk page of these articles, I didn't find any sign of the Coronation Street Project so I informed the Soap Opera project instead. A sock puppet of Dodgechris started the AfD. -- [[User:Magioladitis|Magioladitis]] ([[User talk:Magioladitis|talk]]) 16:00, 5 October 2008 (UTC)
<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.formula1.com/news/interviews/2008/3/7527.html|title=Formula 1 : Interview - Toro Rosso’s Gerhard Berger|accessdate=2008-05-23|date=[[23 May]], [[2008]]|publisher=Formula 1}}</ref>


As of mid 2008, ten teams are on the grid, each fielding two cars.
Check also this nomination I did: [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/List of residences in Weatherfield]]. Thanks, [[User:Magioladitis|Magioladitis]] ([[User talk:Magioladitis|talk]]) 17:38, 5 October 2008 (UTC)


Although teams rarely disclose information about their budgets, it is estimated that they range from US$66 million to US$400 million each.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.f1i.com/content/view/4377/0/|title=McLaren is F1's biggest spender|accessdate=2007-01-07|date=[[16 June]], [[2006]]|publisher=F1i}}</ref>
:I agree that the [[List of past recurring and minor Coronation Street characters]] page is unnecessary. It's arbitrary and inherently POV. It's my understanding, however, that since the AfD has been opened, rather than simply discussing it and merging as necessary, it's now necessary to wait for the deletion process to be completed before any action can be taken. That said, are nominations made by a block evading sockpuppet even valid in the first instance? [[User talk:Frickative|<font face="Courier New">Frickative</font>]] 17:30, 6 October 2008 (UTC)
::OK. Now AfD is closed for the List with no consensus. I was a bit bold and moved many characters to the appropriate list. Many of them are not recurring at all. They appeared for less than two months in the show. What's next? Should we complete the merging? -- [[User:Magioladitis|Magioladitis]] ([[User talk:Magioladitis|talk]]) 12:30, 10 October 2008 (UTC)


Entering a new team in the Formula One World Championship requires a £25 million (about US$47 million) up-front payment to the FIA, which is then repaid to the team over the course of the season. As a consequence, constructors desiring to enter Formula One often prefer to buy an existing team: [[British American Racing|B.A.R.'s]] purchase of [[Tyrrell Racing|Tyrrell]] and [[Midland F1 Racing|Midland's]] purchase of [[Jordan Grand Prix|Jordan]] allowed both of these teams to sidestep the large deposit and secure the benefits that the team already had, such as TV revenue.
:::There doesn't seem to be any sense in leaving the article populated with just a scant handful of characters, so I would say by all means go ahead and complete it. One thing to note, though - could you update the redirects pointing to the article as you go? Otherwise there's going to be a significant number of redirect pages navigating to the wrong place :) [[User talk:Frickative|<font face="Courier New">Frickative</font>]] 16:22, 10 October 2008 (UTC)


==Drivers==
Ok, I'll try to do it. After that I'll remain an empty article. Then what? -- [[User:Magioladitis|Magioladitis]] ([[User talk:Magioladitis|talk]]) 01:29, 12 October 2008 (UTC)
[[Image:Copa de campeón del mundo (Fernando Alonso).jpg|thumb|The Formula One Drivers' Trophy.]]
Each driver is assigned a number. The previous season's champion is designated number 1, with his team-mate given number 2. Numbers are then assigned in order according to each team's position in the previous season's constructors' championship. The number 13 is not used.


There have been exceptions to this rule, such as in 1993 and 1994, when the current World Drivers' Champion ([[Nigel Mansell]] and [[Alain Prost]], respectively) was no longer competing in Formula One. In this case the drivers for the team of the previous year's champion are given numbers 0 ([[Damon Hill]], on both occasions) and 2 (Prost himself and [[Ayrton Senna]] – replaced after his death by [[David Coulthard]] and occasionally [[Nigel Mansell]] – respectively). The number [[13 (number)|13]] has not been used since [[1976 Formula One season|1976]], before which it was occasionally assigned at the discretion of individual race organisers. Before [[1996 Formula One season|1996]] only the world championship winning driver and his team generally swapped numbers with the previous champion – the remainder held their numbers from prior years, as they had been originally set at the start of the 1974 season. For many years, for example, Ferrari held numbers 27 and 28, regardless of their finishing position in the world championship.
Article is not orphan (almost) an empty. -- [[User:Magioladitis|Magioladitis]] ([[User talk:Magioladitis|talk]]) 01:58, 12 October 2008 (UTC)


Michael Schumacher holds the record for having won the most Drivers' Championships, with seven. [[Jochen Rindt]] became the only posthumous World Champion after a fatal accident at the 1970 Italian Grand Prix.
:The only info in the article now is copied&pasted straight from the lead of [[List of recurring and minor Coronation Street characters]], so there's no value in retaining that twice over. Can it be removed and speedy deleted for no content? I can't see that it would be of any use as a redirect. [[User talk:Frickative|<font face="Courier New">Frickative</font>]] 02:13, 12 October 2008 (UTC)

===Feeder series===
[[Image:Jerome d'Ambrosio 2008 GP2 Turkey.jpg|thumb|right|[[GP2]] is the current main feeder series for F1 - every GP2 champion has gone on to race in F1.]]
For the most part F1 drivers start in [[Karting]] and then come up through traditional European single seater series like [[Formula Ford]], [[Formula Renault]], [[Formula 3]], and finally [[GP2 Series|GP2]]. The GP2 series started in 2005 and all three champions have gone on to race in F1. Before GP2, [[Formula Two]] and then [[Formula 3000]] had filled the role of the last major "stepping stone" into F1. No F2, F3000 or GP2 champion has yet won the Formula One championship, however.<ref>Jack Brabham, F1 champion in 1959, 1960 and 1966, won the French Formula Two championship in 1966, but there was no international F2 championship that year.</ref> Drivers are not required to have competed at this level before entering Formula One. [[British F3]] has long been considered one of the best places to spot F1 talent, with champions including [[Nigel Mansell]], [[Ayrton Senna]] and [[Mika Häkkinen]] having moved straight from that series to Formula One. Again, though, it is possible to be picked earlier, as was the case with [[Kimi Räikkönen]], who went straight from Formula Renault to an F1 drive.

[[American Championship Car Racing]] has also contributed to the Formula One grid. Champions [[Mario Andretti]] and [[Jacques Villeneuve]], as well as [[Michael Andretti]], [[Juan Pablo Montoya]], [[Cristiano da Matta]] and [[Sébastien Bourdais]] have all moved to F1 from America, with varying degrees of success.
Other drivers have taken different paths to F1; [[Damon Hill]] raced motorbikes, and [[Michael Schumacher]] raced in [[sports car racing|sports cars]], albeit after climbing through the junior single seater ranks. To race, however, the driver must hold an [[FIA Super Licence]] – ensuring that the driver has the requisite skills, and will not therefore be a danger to others. Some drivers haven't had the license when first signed to a F1 team. [[Kimi Räikkönen]] received the license despite having only 23 car races to his credit.

===Beyond F1===
[[Image:Bernd Schneider DTM 2006.jpg|thumb|right|The [[Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters|DTM]] has become a popular destination for retired F1 drivers.]]
Most F1 drivers retire before their mid-30s; however, many keep racing in disciplines which are less physically demanding. The German touring car championship, the [[Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters|DTM]], is a popular category involving ex-drivers such as two-times F1 champion [[Mika Häkkinen]] and [[Jean Alesi]], and some F1 drivers have left to race in America – [[Nigel Mansell]] and [[Emerson Fittipaldi]] duelled for the 1993 [[Champ Car|IndyCar]] title, and [[Juan Pablo Montoya]], [[Scott Speed]] and [[Jacques Villeneuve]] have moved to [[NASCAR]]. Some drivers have gone to [[A1GP]] ([[Narain Karthikeyan]]), and some, such as [[Gerhard Berger]] and [[Alain Prost]], returned to F1 as team owners. A series for former Formula One drivers, called [[Grand Prix Masters]], ran briefly in 2005 and 2006.<ref>{{cite web|title=Masters series officially wound up|url=http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/64156|accessdate=2008-07-04|publisher=[[Autosport]]}}</ref> Others have become pundits for TV coverage such as [[Martin Brundle]] for [[ITV]] and [[Jean Alesi]] for Italian national network [[RAI]]. Others, such as [[Damon Hill]] and [[Jackie Stewart]] take active roles in motorsport in their own countries.

==Grands Prix==
{{See also|List of Formula One Grands Prix}}
[[Image:Formula one.jpg|thumb|Cars wind through the [[infield]] section of the [[Indianapolis Motor Speedway]] at the [[2003 United States Grand Prix|2003]] [[United States Grand Prix]].]]
The number of Grands Prix held in a season has varied over the years. Only seven races comprised the inaugural {{F1|1950}} world championship season; over the years the calendar has almost tripled in size. Though the number of races had stayed at sixteen or seventeen since the 1980s, it reached nineteen in {{F1|2005}}.

Six of the original seven races took place in [[Europe]]; the only non-European race that counted towards the World Championship in 1950 was the [[Indianapolis 500]], which, due to lack of participation by F1 teams, since it required cars with different specifications from the other races, was later replaced by the [[United States Grand Prix]]. The F1 championship gradually expanded to other non-European countries as well. Argentina hosted the first [[South America]]n grand prix in [[1953 Formula One season|1953]], and [[Morocco]] hosted the first [[Africa]]n World Championship race in {{F1|1958}}. [[Asia]] ([[Japan]] in {{F1|1976}}) and [[Oceania]] ([[Australia]] in {{F1|1985}}) followed. The current eighteen races are spread over the continents of Europe, Asia, Oceania, North America and South America.

Traditionally each nation has hosted a single Grand Prix, which carries the name of the country. If a single country hosts multiple Grands Prix in a year they receive different names. For instance, a European country (such as Britain, Germany or Spain) which has hosted two Grands Prix has the second one known as the [[European Grand Prix]], while Italy's second [[San Marino Grand Prix|grand prix]] was named after nearby republic of [[San Marino]]. Similarly, as two races were scheduled in Japan in {{F1|1994}}/{{F1|1995|95}}, the second event was known as the [[Pacific Grand Prix]]. In {{F1|1982}} the [[United States]] hosted three Grands Prix.

The Grands Prix, some of which have a history that pre-dates the Formula One World Championship, are not always held on the same circuit every year. The [[British Grand Prix]], for example, though held every year since 1950, alternated between [[Brands Hatch]] and [[Silverstone Circuit|Silverstone]] from 1963 to 1986. The only other race to have been included in every season is the [[Italian Grand Prix]]. The World Championship event has taken place exclusively at [[Autodromo Nazionale Monza|Monza]] with just one exception: in [[1980 Italian Grand Prix|1980]], it was held at [[Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari|Imola]], host to the [[San Marino Grand Prix]] until {{F1|2006}}.

One of the newest races on the Grand Prix calendar, held in [[Bahrain]], represents Formula One's first foray into the Middle East with a high-tech purpose-built desert track. The [[Bahrain Grand Prix]], and other new races in [[China]] and [[Turkey]], present new opportunities for the growth and evolution of the Formula One Grand Prix franchise while new facilities also raise the bar for other Formula One racing venues around the world. In order to make room on the schedule for the newer races, older or less successful events in Europe and the Americas have been dropped from the calendar, such as these in Argentina, Austria, Mexico, San Marino, and the United States.

In 2007 it was confirmed that new Grands Prix would be added to the calendar. The first was the [[Singapore Grand Prix]] in September 2008, which had the honour of the first night race ever held in Formula One.<ref>[http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/2007/5/6063.html The Official Formula 1 Website<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The second was the [[Indian Grand Prix]] which will be held in [[Delhi]], [[India]].<ref>[http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/2007/11/7095.html The Official Formula 1 Website<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Other changes included the removal of the [[United States Grand Prix]] from the calendar,<ref>[http://www.indianapolismotorspeedway.com/news/story.php?story_id=9451 Indianapolis Motor Speedway<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> and the move of the [[European Grand Prix]] to [[Valencia, Spain]].<ref name = "iyjwql">[http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/2007/5/6058.html The Official Formula 1 Website<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

==Circuits==
{{See also|List of Formula One circuits}}
[[Image:Interlagos 2006 aerial.jpg|thumb|right|240px|[[Autódromo José Carlos Pace]] in [[São Paulo]] hosts the [[Brazilian Grand Prix]].]]
[[Image:Monza aerial photo.jpg|thumb|right|The [[Autodromo Nazionale Monza]], home to the [[Italian Grand Prix]], is one of the oldest circuits still in use in Formula One.]][[Image:Formula 1 all over the world.svg|thumb|right|A map showing countries which have and/or will host Formula One Grands Prix.]]
A typical circuit usually features a stretch of straight road on which the starting grid is situated. The ''[[Pit stop|pit lane]]'', where the drivers stop for fuel and tyres during the race, and where the teams work on the cars before the race, is normally located next to the starting grid. The layout of the rest of the circuit varies widely, although in most cases the circuit runs in a clockwise direction. Those few circuits that run anticlockwise (and therefore have predominantly left-handed corners) can cause drivers neck problems due to the enormous lateral forces generated by F1 cars pulling their heads in the opposite direction to normal.

Most of the circuits currently in use are specially constructed for competition. The current street circuits are [[Circuit de Monaco|Monaco]], [[Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit|Melbourne]], [[Valencia Street Circuit|Valencia]], and [[Singapore Grand Prix|Singapore]], although races in other urban locations come and go ([[Las Vegas metropolitan area|Las Vegas]] and [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]], for example) and proposals for such races are often discussed – most recently [[London]] and [[Paris]]. Several other circuits are also completely or partially laid out on public roads, such as [[Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps|Spa-Francorchamps]]. The glamour and history of the Monaco race are the primary reasons why the circuit is still in use, since it is thought not to meet the strict safety requirements imposed on other tracks. Three-time World champion [[Nelson Piquet]] famously described racing in Monaco as "like riding a bicycle around your living room".

Circuit design to protect the safety of drivers is becoming increasingly sophisticated, as exemplified by the new [[Bahrain International Circuit]], added in {{F1|2004}} and designed – like most of F1's new circuits – by [[Hermann Tilke]]. Several of the new circuits in F1, especially those designed by Tilke, have been criticised as lacking the "flow" of such classics as Spa-Francorchamps and Imola. His redesign of the [[Hockenheimring|Hockenheim]] circuit in Germany for example, while providing more capacity for grandstands and eliminating extremely long and dangerous straights, has been frowned upon by many who argue that part of the character of the Hockenheim circuits was the long and blinding straights into dark forest sections. These newer circuits, however, are generally agreed to meet the safety standards of modern Formula One better than the older ones.

The most recent addition to the F1 calendar is [[Valencia Street Circuit|Valencia]]<ref name = "iyjwql"/> and [[Singapore Grand Prix|Singapore]] (which hosted the first night race in F1 history).<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/feedarticle/7835429 Singapore the big winner in first night Grand Prix]:Guardian.co.uk</ref> Also Abu Dhabi has been confirmed as the last race for the 2009 season<ref>[http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/2008/6/7994.html The Official Formula 1 Website]: FIA announces provisional 2009 Formula One calendar</ref> and a Formula 1 Grand Prix will be held in India for the first time in {{F1|2010}}.<ref>[http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/2007/11/7095.html The Official Formula 1 Website]: India to host first Grand Prix in New Delhi in 2011</ref>

==Cars and technology==
{{main|Formula One car}}
[[Image:McLaren MP4-21 rear.jpg|thumb|right|A birdseye rear view of the {{F1|2006}} [[McLaren MP4-21]].]]
Modern Formula One cars are [[mid-engine design|mid-engined]] open cockpit, open wheel single-seaters. The [[chassis]] is made largely of [[carbon fibre reinforced plastic|carbon fibre composites]], rendering it light but extremely stiff and strong. The whole car, including engine, fluids and driver, weighs only 600kg - the minimum weight set by the regulations. The construction of the cars is typically lighter than the minimum and so they are ballasted up to the minimum weight. The race teams take advantage of this by placing this ballast at the extreme bottom of the chassis, thereby locating the centre of gravity as low as possible in order to improve handling and weight transfer.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.formula1.com/inside_f1/rules_and_regulations/sporting_regulations/6840/|title= FIA Sporting Regulations - Scrutineering and weighing|accessdate=2008-05-23|publisher=Formula 1}}</ref>

The cornering speed of Formula One cars is largely determined by the aerodynamic [[downforce]] that they generate, which pushes the car down onto the track. This is provided by 'wings' mounted at the front and rear of the vehicle, and by [[ground effect in cars|ground effect]] created by low pressure air under the flat bottom of the car. The aerodynamic design of the cars is very heavily constrained to limit performance and the current generation of cars sport a large number of small winglets, 'barge boards' and turning vanes designed to closely control the flow of the air over, under and around the car.

The other major factor controlling the cornering speed of the cars is the design of the [[tire|tyres]]. Since {{F1|1998}}, tyres in Formula One have not been '[[slick tyre|slicks]]' (tyres with no tread pattern) as in most other circuit racing series. Instead, each tyre has four large circumferential grooves on its surface designed to limit the cornering speed of the cars.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.formula1.com/inside_f1/understanding_the_sport/5283.html|title= Tyres|accessdate=2008-07-04|publisher=www.formula1.com}}</ref> Slick tyres will return to Formula One in the {{F1|2009}} season. Suspension is [[Double wishbone suspension|double wishbone]] or [[multilink suspension|multilink]] all round with pushrod operated springs and [[shock absorber|dampers]] on the chassis. [[Reinforced carbon-carbon|Carbon-Carbon]] [[disc brakes]] are used for reduced weight and increased frictional performance. These provide a very high level of braking performance and are usually the element which provokes the greatest reaction from drivers new to the formula.

Engines must be 2.4&nbsp;litre naturally aspirated [[V8]]s, with many other constraints on their design and the materials that may be used. Engines run on unleaded fuel closely resembling publicly available petrol. <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.formula1.com/inside_f1/rules_and_regulations/technical_regulations/6852/default.html|title= FIA Sporting Regulations - Fuel|accessdate=2008-05-23|publisher=Formula 1}}</ref> The oil which lubricates and protects the engine from overheating is very similar in viscosity to water. The 2006 generation of engines spun up to 20,000&nbsp;[[rpm]] and produced up to 780&nbsp;[[brake horsepower|bhp]] (582&nbsp;kW).<ref>Renault F1 engine listing [http://www.allf1.info/engines/renault.php], Retrieved 1 June 2007</ref>. For {{F1|2007}} engines are restricted to 19,000&nbsp;rpm with limited development areas allowed, following the engine specification freeze from the end of {{F1|2006}}. <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.formula1.com/inside_f1/rules_and_regulations/technical_regulations/6851/|title= FIA Sporting Regulations - Engine|accessdate=2008-05-23|publisher=Formula 1}}</ref>

A wide variety of technologies – including [[active suspension]], [[ground effect in cars|ground effect]] and [[turbocharger]]s – are banned under the current regulations. Despite this the current generation of cars can reach speeds of up to 350&nbsp;km/h (around 220&nbsp;mph) at some circuits.<ref>Grand Prix of Italy [http://www.fia.com/sport/Championships/F1/F1_Circuits/2006/Italy/circuit.html www.fia.com]Retrieved 12 October 2006</ref> A Honda Formula One car, running with minimum downforce on a runway in the [[Mojave desert]] achieved a top speed of 415&nbsp;km/h (258&nbsp;mph) in 2006. According to Honda the car fully met the FIA Formula One regulations.<ref>Challenge Alan [http://www.bonneville400.com/launchingalan/challenge.aspx?challenge=4], Retrieved 20 January 2007</ref> Even with the limitations on aerodynamics, at 160&nbsp;km/h aerodynamically generated downforce is equal to the weight of the car and the often repeated claim that Formula One cars create enough downforce to 'drive on the ceiling' remains true in principle, although it has never been put to the test. At full speed, downforce of two and a half times the car's weight can be achieved. The downforce means that the cars can achieve a lateral force of up to five times the force of gravity (5g) in cornering – a high-performance road car like the [[Enzo Ferrari (car)|Ferrari Enzo]] only achieves around 1g.<ref>Ferrari Enzo [http://www.fast-autos.net/vehicles/Ferrari/2003/Enzo/ www.fast-autos.net] Retrieved 15 March 2007</ref> Consequently in corners the driver's head is pulled sideways with a force equivalent to 20kg. Such high lateral forces are enough to make breathing difficult and the drivers need supreme concentration and fitness to maintain their focus for the one to two hours that it takes to complete the race.

==Revenue and Profits==
[[Image:F1 team budget split.svg|thumb|right|Estimated budget split of an F1 team based on the {{F1|2006}} season.]]
Formula 1 is a profitable exercise for most parties involved. The TV channels make profits from broadcasting the races. The teams get a slice of the money raised from the sale of broadcasting rights as well as from the sponsor's logos on their cars.

The cost of building a brand new permanent circuit like in Shanghai can be up to hundreds of millions of dollars, but the cost of converting a public road such as [[Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit|Albert Park]] into a temporary circuit is much less. However permanent circuits can generate revenue all year round from leasing the track for private races and also other races such as [[MotoGP]]. The Shanghai circuit cost over $300 million.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/motorsport/formula_one/3692888.stm BBC SPORT | Motorsport | Formula One | High price takes shine off F1<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The owners are hoping to break-even by 2014. The [[Istanbul Park]] circuit cost $150 million to build.<ref>[http://www.pioneer-investors.com/news2.asp?newsid=2785 ::Pioneer Investors<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

Not all circuits make profits – for example, Albert Park made a loss of $32 million in 2007.<ref>[http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/03/06/sports/AS-SPT-CAR-F1-Australian-GP.php F1 Preview: Australian organizers confident of GP future, but rule out night racing - International Herald Tribune<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

In March 2007 ''[[F1 Racing]]'' published its annual estimates of spending by Formula One teams. The total spending of all eleven teams in 2006 was estimated at $2.9&nbsp;billion. This was broken down as follows; [[Toyota F1|Toyota]] $418.5&nbsp;million, [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]] $406.5&nbsp;m, [[McLaren]] $402&nbsp;m, [[Honda F1|Honda]] $380.5&nbsp;m, [[BMW Sauber]] $355&nbsp;m, [[Renault F1|Renault]] $324&nbsp;m, [[Red Bull Racing|Red Bull]] $252&nbsp;m, [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] $195.5&nbsp;m, [[Midland F1 Racing|Midland F1/Spyker-MF1]] $120&nbsp;m, [[Toro Rosso]] $75&nbsp;m, and [[Super Aguri]] $57&nbsp;million.

Costs vary greatly from team to team; in 2006 teams such as Honda, Toyota, McLaren-Mercedes and Ferrari are estimated to have spent approximately $200&nbsp;million on engines, Renault spent approximately $125&nbsp;million and Cosworth's 2006 V8 was developed for $15&nbsp;million.<ref>"The real cost of F1" ''F1 Racing'' (March 2007) Haymarket Publishing</ref> In contrast to the 2006 season on which these figures are based, the 2007 sporting regulations ban all performance related engine development.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mclaren.com/f1season/regulations.php|title= 2007 FIA Regulations|accessdate=2007-05-23|work=www.mclaren.com|publisher=Vodafone McLaren Mercedes}}</ref>

==Future==
{{Unreferenced|date=November 2007}}
{{Main|Future of Formula One}}
{{Seealso|2009 Formula One season|2010 Formula One season|2011 Formula One season}}
Formula One went through a difficult period in the early 2000s. Viewing figures dropped, and fans expressed their loss of interest due to the dominance of [[Michael Schumacher]] and [[Scuderia Ferrari]].{{Fact|date=July 2008}} Viewing figures are seeing some signs of recovery due to the varied seasons since {{F1|2005}}. Ferrari's and Schumacher's 5 year domination ended in 2005 as Renault became the top team in Formula One, with [[Fernando Alonso]] becoming the new (and youngest ever) World Champion. There has since been a resurgence of interest in the sport, especially in Alonso's home country of [[Spain]], and [[Lewis Hamilton]]'s home country of [[United Kingdom|Britain]]. In 2006, twenty-two teams applied for the final twelfth team spot available for the [[2008 Formula One season|2008 season]]. The spot was eventually awarded to former [[British American Racing|B.A.R.]] and [[Benetton Formula|Benetton]] team principal [[David Richards (racing)|David Richards]]' [[Prodrive]] organization, but the team pulled out of the 2008 season in November 2007.

[[Image:F1 yellow flag and SC sign.jpg|thumb|A sign displaying that the [[safety car]] (SC) is deployed. Safety is of paramount concern in contemporary F1.]]
The [[FIA]] is responsible for making rules to combat the spiralling costs of Formula One racing (which affects the smaller teams the most) and for ensuring the sport remains as safe as possible, especially in the wake of the deaths of [[Ayrton Senna]] and [[Roland Ratzenberger]] in {{F1|1994}}. To this end the FIA have instituted a number of rule changes, including new tyre restrictions, multi-race engines and reductions on downforce. Safety and cost have traditionally been paramount in all rule-change discussions. More recently the FIA has added efficiency to its priorities. Currently the FIA and manufacturers are discussing adding [[bio-fuel]] engines and [[regenerative braking]] for the 2011 season. FIA President [[Max Mosley]] believes F1 must focus on efficiency to stay technologically relevant in the automotive industry as well as keep the public excited about F1 technology.

After being banned since [[1998 Formula One season|1998]], [[slick tire|slick tyre]]s will return to Formula One racing in 2009.<ref name="slickf12009">{{cite news | first = | last = | author = | coauthors =| url =http://en.f1-live.com/f1/en/headlines/news/detail/071121092728.shtml| title =F1 teams to test slick tires at Jerez | work = | publisher =Formule 1 Race Report via Racing-Live| pages = | page = | date =2007-11-21 | accessdate =2007-11-25 | language = }}</ref>

In the interest of making the sport truer to its role as a World Championship, [[Formula One Management|FOM]] president [[Bernie Ecclestone]] has initiated and organised a number of Grands Prix in new countries and continues to discuss new future races. The sport's rapid expansion into new areas of the globe also leaves some question as to which races will be cut.

==Television==
{{seealso|List of Formula One broadcasters}}
Formula One can be seen live or tape delayed in almost every country and territory around the world and attracts one of the largest global television audiences. The [[2006 Brazilian Grand Prix]] attracted an average live global TV audience of eighty-three million viewers, with a total of 154 million viewers tuning in to watch at least some part of the event.<ref>{{cite news | title = F1 World’s most watched TV sports events: 2006 Rank & Trends report| publisher = Initiative |date=2007-01-19 | url = http://initiative.com/static/prDec2006.html|accessdate = 2007-01-30}} </ref> Official figures from [[FOM]] for 2006 that state Formula One television broadcasts were witnessed by 580 million unique viewers during the 2005 season<ref>{{cite web | title = Official: F1 needs more tits!| publisher = Pitpass|date=2006-10-03 | url =http://www.pitpass.com/fes_php/pitpass_news_item.php?fes_art_id=29548| format = |accessdate = 2007-06-26 }}</ref> and average viewing figures for 1995–1999 were 50 billion.<ref>{{cite web | title = FIA Summary of Television Statistics| publisher = FIA|date=2000-02-22 | url =http://www.fia.com/resources/documents/887837386__22_02_2000_F1_TV_Figures.pdf | access date = 2007-06-26 }}</ref> It is a massive television event; the cumulative television audience was calculated to be 54 billion for 2001 season, broadcast to two hundred countries.<ref>BBC Sports, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/motorsport/formula_one/1842217.stm F1 viewing figures drop], [[26 February]] [[2002]]. Retrieved on [[10 March]] [[2007]]. The cumulative figure, which exceeds the total population of the planet by many times, counts all viewers who watch F1 on any programme at any time during the year.</ref>

In 2005 the [[Canadian Grand Prix]] in Montréal was the most watched of the races, and the third most watched sporting event in the world.<ref>[http://www.exchange4media.com/e4m/media_matter/matter_010406.asp Most watched TV sporting events of 2005] - A special report from Initiative</ref>

During the early 2000s [[Formula One Administration]] created a number of trademarks, an official logo, and an official website for the sport in an attempt to give it a corporate identity. Ecclestone experimented with a digital television package (known colloquially as [[Bernievision]]), which was launched at the [[1996 German Grand Prix]] in cooperation with German digital television service "DF1", thirty years after the first GP colour TV broadcast, the [[1967 German Grand Prix]]. This service offered the viewer several simultaneous feeds (such as super signal, onboard, top of field, backfield, highlights, pit lane, timing), which were produced with cameras, technical equipment and staff different from those used for the conventional coverage. It was introduced in many countries over the years, but was shut down after the [[2002 Formula One season|2002 season]] for financial reasons.

TV stations all take what is known as the 'World Feed', either produced by the FOM (Formula One Management) or the 'host broadcaster'. The only station that has any difference is 'Premiere' – a German channel that offers all sessions live and interactive, with features such as the onboard channel. This service was more widely available around Europe until the end of 2002, when the cost of a whole different feed for the digital interactive services was thought too much. This was in large part because of the failure of the '[[F1 Digital +]]' Channel launched through [[Sky Digital (UK & Ireland)|Sky Digital]] in the United Kingdom. Prices were too high for viewers, considering they could watch both the qualifying and the races themselves for free on [[ITV]].

Bernie Ecclestone has announced that F1 will adopt the [[High-definition television|HD]] format near the end of the 2007 season. However, details of the races to be covered and the means of showing the content have yet to be announced. Also it was announced early in 2008 that the BBC would be broadcasting the F1 for the next five years, instead of ITV who have been broadcasting Formula one seasons since 1997 after the BBC lost the broadcasting rights. this will allow F1 fans to view the F1 in HD resoulutions which was not possible on ITV. <ref>{{cite web | title = F1 to offer High Definition TV Coverage| publisher = Autosport|date=2007-05-13 | url =http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/58776| format = |accessdate = 2007-06-25 }}</ref>

==Distinction between Formula One and World Championship races==
<!-- Note: numerous pages link to this subsection. So give due consideration before changing the section title. -->
Currently the terms "Formula One race" and "World Championship race" are effectively synonymous; since 1984, every Formula One race has counted towards the World Championship, and every World Championship race has been to Formula One regulations. But the two terms are not interchangeable. Consider that:
* the first Formula One race was held in 1947, whereas the World Championship did not start until 1950.
* in the 1950s and 1960s there were many Formula One races which did not count for the World Championship (e.g., in 1950, a total of twenty-two Formula One races were held, of which only six counted towards the World Championship). The number of non-championship Formula One events decreased throughout the 1970s and 1980s, to the point where the last non-championship Formula One race was held in 1983.
* the World Championship was not always exclusively composed of Formula One events:
** The World Championship was originally established as the "World Championship for Drivers", i.e., without the term "Formula One" in the title. It only officially became the '''''Formula One World Championship''''' in 1981.
** From 1950 to 1960, the [[Indianapolis 500]] counted towards the World Championship. This race was run to [[American Automobile Association|AAA]]/[[United States Automobile Club|USAC]] regulations, rather than to Formula One regulations.
** From 1952 to 1953, all races counting towards the World Championship (except the Indianapolis 500) were run to [[Formula Two]] regulations. Note that Formula One was not "changed to Formula Two" during this period; the Formula One regulations remained the same, and numerous Formula One races were staged during this time.
The distinction is most relevant when considering career summaries and "all time lists". For example, in the [[List of Formula One drivers]], [[Clemente Biondetti]] is shown with 1 race against his name. Biondetti actually competed in ''four'' Formula One races in 1950, but only one of these counted for the World Championship. Similarly, several Indy 500 winners technically won their first world championship race, though most record books choose to ignore this and instead only record regular participants.

==See also==
{{portal}}
* [[2008 Formula One season]]
* [[GP2 Series|GP2]] (F1's feeder series)
* [[A1 Grand Prix]]
* [[F1 Racing]] (magazine)
* [[Fantasy F1]]
* [[Formula Two]]
* [[List of Formula One circuits]]
* [[Regenerative brake]]

==Notes==
{{reflist|2}}

==References==
{{refbegin|2}}
*Arron, Simon & Hughes, Mark (2003). ''The Complete Book of Formula One''. Motorbooks International. ISBN 0-7603-1688-0.
* "FIA Archive". (2004). [http://www.fia.com/archive/index_1024.html Federation Internationale de l'Automobile]. Retrieved [[25 October]] [[2004]].
* "Formula One Regulations". (2004). [http://www.fia.com/sport/Regulations/f1regs.html Federation Internationale de l'Automobile]. Retrieved [[23 October]] [[2004]].
* Gross, Nigel et al (1999). "Grand Prix Motor Racing". In, ''100 Years of Change: Speed and Power'' (pp. 55–84). Parragon.
* Hayhoe, David & Holland, David (2006). ''Grand Prix Data Book (4th edition)''. Haynes, Sparkford, UK. ISBN 1-84425-223-X.
* Higham, Peter (2003). ''The international motor racing guide''. David Bull, Phoenix, AZ, USA. ISBN 1-893618-20-X.
* "Insight". (2004). [http://www.formula1.com/insight/ The Official Formula 1 Website]. Retrieved [[25 October]] [[2004]].
* Jones, Bruce (1997). ''The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Formula One''. Hodder & Stoughton.
* Jones, Bruce (1998). ''Formula One: The Complete Stats and Records of Grand Prix Racing''. Parragon.
* Jones, Bruce (2003). ''The Official ITV Sport Guide: Formula One Grand Prix 2003''. Carlton. Includes foreword by Martin Brundle. ISBN 1-84222-813-7.
* Jones, Bruce (2005). ''The Guide to 2005 FIA Formula One World Championship : The World's Bestselling Grand Prix Guide]''. Carlton. ISBN 1-84442-508-8.
* Lang, Mike (1981–1992). ''Grand Prix! volumes 1–4''. Haynes, Sparkford, UK.
* Menard, Pierre (2006). ''The Great Encyclopedia of Formula 1, 5th edition''. Chronosport, Switzerland. ISBN 2847070516
* Miltner, Harry (2007). ''Race Travel Guide 2007''. egoth: Vienna, Austria. ISBN 978-3-902480-34-7
* Small, Steve (2000). ''Grand Prix Who's Who (3rd edition)''. Travel Publishing, UK. ISBN 1-902007-46-8.
* Tremayne, David & Hughes, Mark (1999). ''The Concise Encyclopedia of Formula One''. Parragon
{{refend}}

==External links==
{{commons|Formula One}}
; Official sites
* [http://www.formula1.com Formula1.com] &mdash; The official site of [[Formula One Management]]; contains schedules, race results, live timing during each race, the official F1 shop, and some news
* [http://www.fia.com/sport/Regulations/f1regs.html Current regulations] — from the [http://www.fia.com/ FIA website]
* [http://www.formula1.com/teams_and_drivers/hall_of_fame/ Drivers Hall of Fame] &mdash; A list of World Champions with links to short biographies from the [http://www.formula1.com/ official Formula 1 website].
<!-- Please discuss the proposed addition of any new links to this section on the discussion page first -->

; News and reference
* [http://www.autosport.com autosport.com] — Motorsport news, articles and analysis. Formerly known as [[AtlasF1]]
* [http://www.totalf1.com TotalF1.com] — Formula 1 news portal
* [http://www.grandprix.com/ GrandPrix.com] — F1 news and a Grand Prix encyclopedia
* [http://www.itv.com/f1 F1] at [[itv.com]] — News, pictures, and commentary from [[ITV]], F1's British broadcasters; also from [[Matt Bishop]] and [[F1 Racing]] magazine
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/motorsport/formula_one/car_guide/default.stm Animated F1 Car Guide]
* [http://www.spotterguides.com/ 2008 F1 Spotters Guide] — free download PDF
<!-- Please discuss the proposed addition of any new links to this section on the discussion page first -->

; History
* [http://www.autocoursegpa.com/ AutocourseGPA.com] — historical results and statistics and images since 1950
* [http://www.f1db.com/ F1DB] — Results, statistics
* [http://www.4mula1.ro/ 4mula1] — Results and statistics since 1950

<!-- Please discuss the proposed addition of any new links to this section on the discussion page first -->

{{Formula One teams}}
{{Formula One Championship}}

[[Category:Formula One| ]]
[[Category:Formula racing series|1]]
[[Category:Racing formulas|1]]

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Revision as of 18:58, 12 October 2008

Formula One
The Formula One logo.
CategorySingle seaters
CountryInternational
Inaugural season1950[1]
Drivers20
Teams10
Engine suppliersBMW, Ferrari, Honda, Mercedes, Renault, Toyota
Tyre suppliersBridgestone
Drivers' championFinland Kimi Räikkönen
Constructors' championItaly Scuderia Ferrari
Official websiteformula1.com
Current season

Formula One, abbreviated to F1, is the highest class of open wheeled auto racing defined by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), motorsport's world governing body. The "formula" in the name refers to a set of rules to which all participants and cars must conform. The F1 world championship season consists of a series of races, known as Grands Prix, held usually on purpose-built circuits, and in a few cases on closed city streets, the most famous of which is the Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo. The results of each race are combined to determine two annual World Championships, one for drivers and one for constructors.

The cars race at high speeds, up to 360 km/h (225 mph), and are capable of pulling up to 5g in some corners. The performance of the cars is highly dependent on electronics, aerodynamics, suspension and tyres. The formula has seen many evolutions and changes through the history of the sport.

Europe is Formula One's traditional centre; all of the teams are based there and around half the races take place there. In particular the United Kingdom has produced the most Drivers' Champions (12), and the vast majority of Constructors' Champions (32). However, the sport's scope has expanded significantly in recent years and Grands Prix are now held all over the world. Events in Europe and the Americas have been dropped in favour of races in Bahrain, China, Malaysia and Turkey, with Singapore having held the first night race in 2008 and India being added to the schedule starting in 2011. Of the eighteen races in 2008, nine are outside Europe.

Formula One is a massive television event, with millions of people watching each race worldwide. As the world's most expensive sport,[citation needed] its economic effect is significant, and its financial and political battles are widely observed. On average about 55 million people all over the world watch Formula One races live. Its high profile and popularity makes it an obvious merchandising environment, which leads to very high investments from sponsors, translating into extremely high budgets for the constructor teams. Several teams have gone bankrupt or been bought out by other companies since 2000. The most recent example of this was the Super Aguri team being denied entry to the Spanish Grand Prix and then folding due to lack of funds after an attempt at gaining sponsorship collapsed.

The sport is regulated by the FIA. Formula One's commercial rights are vested in the Formula One Group.

History

See 2008 Formula One season for details of the 2008 season

The Formula One series has its roots in the European Grand Prix Motor Racing (q.v. for pre-1947 history) of the 1920s and 1930s. The "formula" is a set of rules which all participants and cars must meet. Formula One was a new formula agreed after World War II in 1946, with the first non-championship races being held that year. A number of Grand Prix racing organisations had laid out rules for a World Championship before the war, but due to the suspension of racing during the conflict, the World Drivers' Championship was not formalised until 1947. The first world championship race was held at Silverstone, United Kingdom in 1950. A championship for constructors followed in 1958. National championships existed in South Africa and the UK in the 1960s and 1970s. Non-championship Formula One races were held for many years but, due to the rising cost of competition, the last of these occurred in 1983.[2]

The sport's title, Formula One, indicates that it is intended to be the most advanced and most competitive of the FIA's racing formula.[citation needed]

The return of racing (1950–1958)

Juan Manuel Fangio's 1951 title-winning Alfa Romeo 159.

The first Formula One World Championship was won by Italian Giuseppe Farina in his Alfa Romeo in 1950, barely defeating his Argentine teammate Juan Manuel Fangio. However Fangio won the title in 1951, 1954, 1955, 1956 & 1957 (His record of five World Championship titles stood for 45 years until German driver Michael Schumacher took his sixth title in 2003), his streak interrupted after an injury by two-time champion Alberto Ascari of Ferrari. Although the UK's Stirling Moss was able to compete regularly, he was never able to win the World Championship, and is now widely considered to be the greatest driver never to have won the title.[3][4] Fangio, however, is remembered for dominating Formula One's first decade and has long been considered the "grand master" of Formula One.[citation needed]

The period was dominated by teams run by road car manufacturers - Alfa Romeo, Ferrari, Mercedes Benz and Maserati - all of whom had competed before the war. The first seasons were run using pre-war cars like Alfa's 158. They were front engined, with narrow treaded tyres and 1.5 litre supercharged or 4.5 litre naturally aspirated engines. The 1952 and 1953 world championships were run to Formula Two regulations, for smaller, less powerful cars, due to concerns over the number of Formula One cars available.[5] When a new Formula One, for engines limited to 2.5 litres, was reinstated to the world championship in 1954, Mercedes-Benz introduced the advanced W196, which featured innovations such as desmodromic valves and fuel injection as well as enclosed streamlined bodywork. Mercedes won the drivers championship for two years, before withdrawing from all motorsport in the wake of the 1955 Le Mans disaster.[6]

The 'Garagistes' (1959–1980)

Stirling Moss at the Nürburgring in 1961.

The first major technological development, Cooper's re-introduction of mid-engined cars (following Ferdinand Porsche's pioneering Auto Unions of the 1930s), which evolved from the company's successful Formula 3 designs, occurred in the 1950s. Australian Jack Brabham, World Champion in 1959, 1960 and 1966, soon proved the new design's superiority. By 1961, all regular competitors had switched to mid-engined cars.[7]

The first British World Champion was Mike Hawthorn, who drove a Ferrari to the title in 1958. However, when Colin Chapman entered F1 as a chassis designer and later founder of Team Lotus, British racing green came to dominate the field for the next decade. Between Jim Clark, Jackie Stewart, John Surtees, Jack Brabham, Graham Hill, and Denny Hulme, British teams and Commonwealth drivers won twelve world championships between 1962 and 1973.

In 1962, Lotus introduced a car with an aluminium sheet monocoque chassis instead of the traditional spaceframe design. This proved to be the greatest technological breakthrough since the introduction of mid-engined cars. In 1968, Lotus painted Imperial Tobacco livery on their cars, thus introducing sponsorship to the sport.[8]

Aerodynamic downforce slowly gained importance in car design from the appearance of aerofoils in the late 1960s. In the late 1970s Lotus introduced ground effect aerodynamics that provided enormous downforce and greatly increased cornering speeds (though the concept had previously been used on Jim Hall's Chaparral 2J in 1970). So great were the aerodynamic forces pressing the cars to the track, (up to 5 times the car's weight), that extremely stiff springs were needed to maintain a constant ride height, leaving the suspension virtually solid, depending entirely on the tyres for any small amount of cushioning of the car and driver from irregularities in the road surface.[9]

Big business (1981–2000)

Nigel Mansell's Williams FW10 from 1985.
Damon Hill's Williams FW18 from 1996. The FW18 was one of the most successful cars of the era.

Beginning in the 1970s, Bernie Ecclestone rearranged the management of Formula One's commercial rights; he is widely credited with transforming the sport into the billion dollar business it is today.[10][11] When Ecclestone bought the Brabham team in 1971 he gained a seat on the Formula One Constructors' Association and in 1978 became its President. Previously the circuit owners controlled the income of the teams and negotiated with each individually, however Ecclestone persuaded them to "hunt as a pack" through FOCA.[11] He offered Formula One to circuit owners as a package which they could take or leave. In return for the package almost all are required to surrender trackside advertising.[10]

The formation of the Fédération Internationale du Sport Automobile (FISA) in 1979 set off the FISA-FOCA war, during which FISA and its president Jean-Marie Balestre clashed repeatedly with FOCA over television revenues and technical regulations.[12] The Guardian said of FOCA that Ecclestone and Max Mosley "used it to wage a guerrilla war with a very long-term aim in view." FOCA threatened to set up a rival series, boycotted a Grand Prix and FISA withdrew its sanction from races.[10] The result was the 1981 Concorde Agreement which guaranteed technical stability, as teams were to be given reasonable notice of new regulations.[13] Although FISA asserted its right to the TV revenues, it handed the administration of those rights to FOCA.[citation needed]

FISA imposed a ban on ground effect aerodynamics in 1983.[14] By then, however, turbocharged engines, which Renault had pioneered in 1977, were producing over 700 bhp (520 kW) and were essential to be competitive. By 1986 a BMW turbocharged engine achieved a flash reading of 5.5 bar pressure, estimated to be "over 1300 bhp" (970 kW) in qualifying for the Italian Grand Prix. The following year power in race trim reached around 1,100 bhp (820 kW), with boost pressure limited to only 4.0 bar.[15] These cars were the most powerful open-wheel circuit racing cars ever. To reduce engine power output and thus speeds, the FIA limited fuel tank capacity in 1984 and boost pressures in 1988 before banning turbocharged engines completely in 1989.[16]

The development of electronic driver aids began in the 1980s. Lotus began to develop a system of active suspension which first appeared in 1982 on the F1 Lotus 91 and Lotus Esprit road car. By 1987 this system had been perfected and was driven to victory by Ayrton Senna in the Monaco Grand Prix that year. In the early 1990s, other teams followed suit and semi-automatic gearboxes and traction control were a natural progression. The FIA, due to complaints that technology was determining the outcome of races more than driver skill, banned many such aids for 1994. This led to cars that were previously dependent on electronic aids becoming very "twitchy" and difficult to drive (notably the Williams FW16), and many observers felt that the ban on driver aids was a ban in name only as they "have proved difficult to police effectively."[17]

The teams signed a second Concorde Agreement in 1992 and a third in 1997, which expired on the last day of 2007.[18]

On the track, the McLaren and Williams teams dominated the 1980s and 1990s, with Brabham also being competitive in the early part of the 1980s, winning two drivers' championships with Nelson Piquet. Powered by Porsche, Honda, and Mercedes-Benz, McLaren won sixteen championships (seven constructors', nine drivers') in that period, while Williams used engines from Ford, Honda, and Renault to also win sixteen titles (nine constructors', seven drivers'). The rivalry between racing legends Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost became F1's central focus in 1988, and continued until Prost retired at the end of 1993. Senna died at the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix after crashing into a wall on the exit of the notorious curve Tamburello, having taken over Prost's lead drive at Williams that year. The FIA worked to improve the sport's safety standards since that weekend, during which Roland Ratzenberger also lost his life in an accident during Saturday qualifying. No driver has died on the track at the wheel of a Formula One car since, though two track marshals have lost their lives, one at the 2000 Italian Grand Prix,[19] and the other at the 2001 Australian Grand Prix.[19]

Since the deaths of Ayrton Senna, Roland Ratzenberger and Gilles Villeneuve, the FIA has used safety as a reason to impose rule changes which otherwise, under the Concorde Agreement, would have had to be agreed upon by all the teams - most notably the changes introduced for 1998. This so called 'narrow track' era resulted in cars with smaller rear tyres, a narrower track overall and the introduction of 'grooved' tyres to reduce mechanical grip. There would be four grooves, on the front and rear - although initially three on the front tyres in the first year - that ran through the entire circumference of the tyre. The objective was to reduce cornering speeds and to produce racing similar to rain conditions by enforcing a smaller contact patch between tyre and track. This, according to the FIA, was to promote driver skill and provide a better spectacle.[citation needed]

Results have been mixed as the lack of mechanical grip has resulted in the more ingenious designers clawing back the deficit with aerodynamic grip - pushing more force onto the tyres through wings, aerodynamic devices etc - which in turn has resulted in less overtaking as these devices tend to make the wake behind the car 'dirty' preventing other cars from following closely, due to their dependence on 'clean' air to make the car stick to the track. The grooved tyres also had the unfortunate side effect of initially being of a harder compound, to be able to hold the groove tread blocks, which resulted in spectacular accidents in times of aerodynamic grip failure e.g. rear wing failures, as the harder compound could not grip the track as well.

Drivers from McLaren, Williams, Renault (formerly Benetton) and Ferrari, dubbed the "Big Four", have won every World Championship from 1984 to the present day. Due to the technological advances of the 1990s, the cost of competing in Formula One rose dramatically. This increased financial burden, combined with four teams' dominance (largely funded by big car manufacturers such as Mercedes-Benz), caused the poorer independent teams to struggle not only to remain competitive, but to stay in business. Financial troubles forced several teams to withdraw. Since 1990, twenty-eight teams have pulled out of Formula One. This has prompted former Jordan owner Eddie Jordan to say that the days of competitive privateers are over.[20]

The manufacturers' return (2000–2007)

Michael Schumacher won five consecutive titles with Ferrari.

Michael Schumacher and Ferrari won an unprecedented five consecutive drivers’ championships and six consecutive constructors’ championships between 1999 and 2004. Schumacher set many new records, including those for Grand Prix wins (91), wins in a season (13 of 18), and most drivers' championships (7).[21] Schumacher's championship streak ended on September 25, 2005 when Renault driver Fernando Alonso became Formula One’s youngest champion. In 2006, Renault and Alonso won both titles again. Schumacher retired at the end of 2006 after sixteen years in Formula One.

During this period the championship rules were frequently changed by the FIA with the intention of improving the on-track action and cutting costs.[22] Team orders, legal since the championship started in 1950, were banned in 2002 after several incidents in which teams openly manipulated race results, generating negative publicity, most famously by Ferrari at the 2002 Austrian Grand Prix. Other changes included the qualifying format, the points scoring system, the technical regulations and rules specifying how long engines and tyres must last. A 'tyre war' between suppliers Michelin and Bridgestone saw lap times fall, although at the 2005 United States Grand Prix at Indianapolis seven out of ten teams did not race when their Michelin tyres were deemed unsafe for use. During 2006, Max Mosley outlined a ‘green’ future for Formula One, in which efficient use of energy would become an important factor.[23] And the tyre war ended, as Bridgestone became the sole tyre supplier to Formula One for the 2007 season.

Since 1983, Formula One had been dominated by specialist race teams like Williams, McLaren and Benetton, using engines supplied by large car manufacturers like Mercedes-Benz, Honda, Renault and Ford. Starting in 2000 with Ford’s creation of the largely unsuccessful Jaguar team, new manufacturer-owned teams entered Formula One for the first time since the departure of Alfa Romeo and Renault at the end of 1985. By 2006, the manufacturer teams – Renault, BMW, Toyota, Honda and Ferrari – dominated the championship, taking five of the first six places in the constructors' championship. The sole exception was McLaren, which is part-owned by Mercedes Benz. Through the Grand Prix Manufacturers Association (GPMA) they negotiated a larger share of Formula One’s commercial profit and a greater say in the running of the sport.[citation needed]

Outside the World Championship

Currently, the terms "Formula One race" and "World Championship race" are effectively synonymous; since 1984, every Formula One race has counted towards the World Championship, and every World Championship race has been to Formula One regulations. This has not always been the case, and in the earlier history of Formula One many races took place outside the world championship.

European non-championship racing

In the early years of Formula One, before the world championship was established, there were around twenty races held from late Spring to early Autumn in Europe, although not all of these were considered significant. Most competitive cars came from Italy, particularly Alfa Romeo. After the start of the world championship these non-championship races continued. In the 1950s and 1960s, there were many Formula One races which did not count for the World Championship (e.g., in 1950, a total of twenty-two Formula One races were held, of which only six counted towards the World Championship). In 1952 and 1953, when the world championship was run for Formula Two cars, a full season of non-championship Formula One racing took place. Some races, particularly in the UK, including the Race of Champions, Oulton Park International Gold Cup and International Trophy, were attended by the majority of the world championship contenders. These became less common through the 1970s and 1983 saw the last non-championship Formula One race: The 1983 Race of Champions at Brands Hatch, won by reigning World Champion Keke Rosberg in a Williams Cosworth in a close fight with American Danny Sullivan.[2]

South African Formula One championship

South Africa's flourishing domestic Formula One championship ran from 1960 through to 1975. The frontrunning cars in the series were recently retired from the world championship although there was also a healthy selection of locally built or modified machines. Frontrunning drivers from the series usually contested their local World Championship Grand Prix, as well as occasional European events, although they had little success at that level.[citation needed]

British Formula One Series

The old fashioned DFV helped make the UK domestic Formula One series possible between 1978 and 1980. As in South Africa a generation before, second hand cars from manufacturers like Lotus and Fittipaldi Automotive were the order of the day, although some, such as the March 781, were built specifically for the series. In 1980 the series saw South African Desiré Wilson become the only woman to win a Formula One race when she triumphed at Brands Hatch in a Wolf WR3.[24]

Racing and strategy

Nick Heidfeld and Nico Rosberg on the street circuit of Albert Park in the 2008 Australian Grand Prix.

A Formula One Grand Prix event spans a weekend, beginning with two free practice sessions on Friday (except in Monaco, where Friday practices are moved to Thursday), and one free practice on Saturday. Additional drivers (commonly known as Third drivers) are allowed to run on Fridays, but only two cars may be used per team, requiring a race driver to give up their seat. A Qualifying session is held after the last free practice session. This session determines the starting order for the race.[25][26]

The format of this qualifying session has been through several iterations since the 2003 season. Attempts were made to reinvigorate interest in the qualifying session by using a "one-shot" system in which each driver would take turns on an empty track to set their one and only time.

For the 2006 season a knockout qualifying system was introduced and remains in use, with some minor alterations, in 2008. The qualifying session is split into three phases. In the first phase, all twenty cars are permitted on the track for a twenty minute qualification session. Only their fastest time will count and drivers may complete as many laps as they wish. At the end of the first session, the slowest five cars are eliminated and will take no further part in qualifying. These cars will make up the last five grid positions in the order of their times.[27]

The times for the fifteen remaining cars are reset for the next fifteen minute session. The slowest five cars will make up the grid in positions 11 to 15 in the order of their times set in this session.[27]

The recorded fastest times for the ten remaining cars are then wiped in preparation for the final (ten minute) session referred to as the 'Pole Position Shootout'. At the end of this period, the cars will be arranged on the grid in positions one to ten in accordance to their fastest lap time. In the first two sessions, cars may run any fuel load and drivers knocked out after those sessions may refuel ahead of the race. However, the top-ten drivers must start the race with whatever fuel was left in the car at the end of the final qualifying session.[28] For all the sessions, if a driver starts a timed lap before the chequered flag falls for the end of that session, their time will count even if they cross the finishing line well after the session has ended.[27]

The race begins with a warm-up formation lap, after which the cars assemble on the starting grid in the order they qualified. If a driver stalls before the parade lap and the rest of the field pass him, then he must start from the back of the grid. If he manages to drive off and at least one car is behind him, he is permitted to retake his original position. A racer may also elect to start from pit-lane if he has any last minute problems with the car. If they choose to do this, they must wait for all cars to pass pit-lane before they may begin the race.[29]

A light system above the track indicates the start of the race. The race distance is equal to the least number of complete laps which exceed a distance of 305 kilometres (190 mi) (although Monaco is 260 kilometres (160 mi)), and are limited to two hours. In practice they usually last about ninety minutes. Throughout the race, drivers may make one or more pit stops in order to refuel and change tyres. Teams are supplied with tyres exclusively from Bridgestone. Bridgestone have developed four tyre compounds of which they then select two for the teams to use at a given race event. Drivers must use both tyre compounds during a race which is hoped will bring more excitement to the sport. The softer of the available compounds for the weekend's tyres can be seen with a white ring around one of the grooves on the tyre itself. [30]

When a driver comes round to lap another, the latter must move out of the way within three blue flags (waved by the trackside marshals), or face a penalty from the Stewards.[31]

Various systems for awarding championship points have been used since 1950. Since 2003, at the end of the race the top eight drivers and their respective teams receive points on a 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis (the race winner receives ten points, the first runner-up eight, and so on). The winner of the two annual championships are the driver and the team who have accumulated the most points at the end of the season. In the case of a tie in points, the championship is awarded to the driver or team having the higher number of wins; if these are equal, second place finishes are considered, and so on.[32]

Constructors

Scuderia Ferrari have competed in every season, and hold the record for most titles.
The McLaren team won all but one race in 1988 with Honda as its engine partner, and remains a championship contender in the present day.

Since 1984 Formula One teams have been required to build the chassis in which they compete, and consequently the terms "team" and "constructor" became more or less interchangeable. This requirement distinguishes the sport from series such as the IndyCar Series which allows teams to purchase chassis, and "spec series" such as GP2, which require all cars be kept to an identical specification.

The sport's 1950 debut season saw eighteen teams compete, but due to high costs many dropped out quickly. In fact, such was the scarcity of competitive cars for much of the first decade of Formula One that Formula Two cars were admitted to fill the grids. Ferrari is the only still-active team which competed in 1950.

Early manufacturer involvement came in the form of a "factory team" or "works team" (that is, one owned and staffed by a major car company), such as those of Alfa Romeo, Ferrari or Renault. After having virtually disappeared by the early 1980s, factory teams made a comeback in the 1990s and 2000s and now form half the grid with Ferrari, BMW, Renault, Toyota and Honda either setting up their own teams or buying out existing ones. Mercedes-Benz owns 40% of the McLaren team and manufactures the team's engines. Factory teams currently make up the top competitive teams; in mid-2008 factory teams occupied the top 5 positions in the Constructors' Championship. Ferrari holds the record for having won the most Constructors' Championships (fifteen).

Companies such as Climax, Repco, Cosworth, Hart, Judd and Supertec, which had no direct team affiliation, often sold engines to teams that could not afford to manufacture them. In the early years independently owned Formula One teams sometimes also built their engines, though this became less common with the increased involvement of major car manufacturers such as BMW, Ferrari, Honda, Mercedes-Benz, Renault and Toyota, whose large budgets rendered privately built engines less competitive. Cosworth was the last independent engine supplier, but lost its last customers after the 2006 season. Beginning in 2007 the manufacturers' deep pockets and engineering ability took over, eliminating the last of the independent engine manufacturers. It is estimated that the big teams spend €100 to €200 million ($125-$250 million) per year per manufacturer on engines alone.[33][34]

In the 2007 season, for the first time since the 1984 rule, two teams used chassis built by other teams. Super Aguri started the season using a modified Honda Racing's RA106 chassis (used by Honda in the 2006 season), while Scuderia Toro Rosso used a modified Red Bull Racing RB3 chassis (same as the one used by Red Bull in the 2007 season). Such a decision did not come as a surprise because of spiraling costs and the fact that Super Aguri is partially owned by Honda and Toro Rosso is half owned by Red Bull. Formula One team Spyker raised a complaint against this decision, and other teams such as McLaren and Ferrari have officially confirmed that they support the campaign. Because of this use of other teams' chassis, the 2006 season could have been the last one in which the terms "team" and "constructor" were truly interchangeable. This attracted the Prodrive team to F1 to the 2008 season, where it intended to run a customer car. After not being able to secure a package from McLaren, Prodrive's intention to enter the 2008 season was dropped after Williams threatened legal action against them. Now, it seems that customer cars concept will be formally banned in 2010. [35]

As of mid 2008, ten teams are on the grid, each fielding two cars.

Although teams rarely disclose information about their budgets, it is estimated that they range from US$66 million to US$400 million each.[36]

Entering a new team in the Formula One World Championship requires a £25 million (about US$47 million) up-front payment to the FIA, which is then repaid to the team over the course of the season. As a consequence, constructors desiring to enter Formula One often prefer to buy an existing team: B.A.R.'s purchase of Tyrrell and Midland's purchase of Jordan allowed both of these teams to sidestep the large deposit and secure the benefits that the team already had, such as TV revenue.

Drivers

File:Copa de campeón del mundo (Fernando Alonso).jpg
The Formula One Drivers' Trophy.

Each driver is assigned a number. The previous season's champion is designated number 1, with his team-mate given number 2. Numbers are then assigned in order according to each team's position in the previous season's constructors' championship. The number 13 is not used.

There have been exceptions to this rule, such as in 1993 and 1994, when the current World Drivers' Champion (Nigel Mansell and Alain Prost, respectively) was no longer competing in Formula One. In this case the drivers for the team of the previous year's champion are given numbers 0 (Damon Hill, on both occasions) and 2 (Prost himself and Ayrton Senna – replaced after his death by David Coulthard and occasionally Nigel Mansell – respectively). The number 13 has not been used since 1976, before which it was occasionally assigned at the discretion of individual race organisers. Before 1996 only the world championship winning driver and his team generally swapped numbers with the previous champion – the remainder held their numbers from prior years, as they had been originally set at the start of the 1974 season. For many years, for example, Ferrari held numbers 27 and 28, regardless of their finishing position in the world championship.

Michael Schumacher holds the record for having won the most Drivers' Championships, with seven. Jochen Rindt became the only posthumous World Champion after a fatal accident at the 1970 Italian Grand Prix.

Feeder series

GP2 is the current main feeder series for F1 - every GP2 champion has gone on to race in F1.

For the most part F1 drivers start in Karting and then come up through traditional European single seater series like Formula Ford, Formula Renault, Formula 3, and finally GP2. The GP2 series started in 2005 and all three champions have gone on to race in F1. Before GP2, Formula Two and then Formula 3000 had filled the role of the last major "stepping stone" into F1. No F2, F3000 or GP2 champion has yet won the Formula One championship, however.[37] Drivers are not required to have competed at this level before entering Formula One. British F3 has long been considered one of the best places to spot F1 talent, with champions including Nigel Mansell, Ayrton Senna and Mika Häkkinen having moved straight from that series to Formula One. Again, though, it is possible to be picked earlier, as was the case with Kimi Räikkönen, who went straight from Formula Renault to an F1 drive.

American Championship Car Racing has also contributed to the Formula One grid. Champions Mario Andretti and Jacques Villeneuve, as well as Michael Andretti, Juan Pablo Montoya, Cristiano da Matta and Sébastien Bourdais have all moved to F1 from America, with varying degrees of success.

Other drivers have taken different paths to F1; Damon Hill raced motorbikes, and Michael Schumacher raced in sports cars, albeit after climbing through the junior single seater ranks. To race, however, the driver must hold an FIA Super Licence – ensuring that the driver has the requisite skills, and will not therefore be a danger to others. Some drivers haven't had the license when first signed to a F1 team. Kimi Räikkönen received the license despite having only 23 car races to his credit.

Beyond F1

The DTM has become a popular destination for retired F1 drivers.

Most F1 drivers retire before their mid-30s; however, many keep racing in disciplines which are less physically demanding. The German touring car championship, the DTM, is a popular category involving ex-drivers such as two-times F1 champion Mika Häkkinen and Jean Alesi, and some F1 drivers have left to race in America – Nigel Mansell and Emerson Fittipaldi duelled for the 1993 IndyCar title, and Juan Pablo Montoya, Scott Speed and Jacques Villeneuve have moved to NASCAR. Some drivers have gone to A1GP (Narain Karthikeyan), and some, such as Gerhard Berger and Alain Prost, returned to F1 as team owners. A series for former Formula One drivers, called Grand Prix Masters, ran briefly in 2005 and 2006.[38] Others have become pundits for TV coverage such as Martin Brundle for ITV and Jean Alesi for Italian national network RAI. Others, such as Damon Hill and Jackie Stewart take active roles in motorsport in their own countries.

Grands Prix

Cars wind through the infield section of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway at the 2003 United States Grand Prix.

The number of Grands Prix held in a season has varied over the years. Only seven races comprised the inaugural 1950 world championship season; over the years the calendar has almost tripled in size. Though the number of races had stayed at sixteen or seventeen since the 1980s, it reached nineteen in 2005.

Six of the original seven races took place in Europe; the only non-European race that counted towards the World Championship in 1950 was the Indianapolis 500, which, due to lack of participation by F1 teams, since it required cars with different specifications from the other races, was later replaced by the United States Grand Prix. The F1 championship gradually expanded to other non-European countries as well. Argentina hosted the first South American grand prix in 1953, and Morocco hosted the first African World Championship race in 1958. Asia (Japan in 1976) and Oceania (Australia in 1985) followed. The current eighteen races are spread over the continents of Europe, Asia, Oceania, North America and South America.

Traditionally each nation has hosted a single Grand Prix, which carries the name of the country. If a single country hosts multiple Grands Prix in a year they receive different names. For instance, a European country (such as Britain, Germany or Spain) which has hosted two Grands Prix has the second one known as the European Grand Prix, while Italy's second grand prix was named after nearby republic of San Marino. Similarly, as two races were scheduled in Japan in 1994/1995, the second event was known as the Pacific Grand Prix. In 1982 the United States hosted three Grands Prix.

The Grands Prix, some of which have a history that pre-dates the Formula One World Championship, are not always held on the same circuit every year. The British Grand Prix, for example, though held every year since 1950, alternated between Brands Hatch and Silverstone from 1963 to 1986. The only other race to have been included in every season is the Italian Grand Prix. The World Championship event has taken place exclusively at Monza with just one exception: in 1980, it was held at Imola, host to the San Marino Grand Prix until 2006.

One of the newest races on the Grand Prix calendar, held in Bahrain, represents Formula One's first foray into the Middle East with a high-tech purpose-built desert track. The Bahrain Grand Prix, and other new races in China and Turkey, present new opportunities for the growth and evolution of the Formula One Grand Prix franchise while new facilities also raise the bar for other Formula One racing venues around the world. In order to make room on the schedule for the newer races, older or less successful events in Europe and the Americas have been dropped from the calendar, such as these in Argentina, Austria, Mexico, San Marino, and the United States.

In 2007 it was confirmed that new Grands Prix would be added to the calendar. The first was the Singapore Grand Prix in September 2008, which had the honour of the first night race ever held in Formula One.[39] The second was the Indian Grand Prix which will be held in Delhi, India.[40] Other changes included the removal of the United States Grand Prix from the calendar,[41] and the move of the European Grand Prix to Valencia, Spain.[42]

Circuits

Autódromo José Carlos Pace in São Paulo hosts the Brazilian Grand Prix.
The Autodromo Nazionale Monza, home to the Italian Grand Prix, is one of the oldest circuits still in use in Formula One.
A map showing countries which have and/or will host Formula One Grands Prix.

A typical circuit usually features a stretch of straight road on which the starting grid is situated. The pit lane, where the drivers stop for fuel and tyres during the race, and where the teams work on the cars before the race, is normally located next to the starting grid. The layout of the rest of the circuit varies widely, although in most cases the circuit runs in a clockwise direction. Those few circuits that run anticlockwise (and therefore have predominantly left-handed corners) can cause drivers neck problems due to the enormous lateral forces generated by F1 cars pulling their heads in the opposite direction to normal.

Most of the circuits currently in use are specially constructed for competition. The current street circuits are Monaco, Melbourne, Valencia, and Singapore, although races in other urban locations come and go (Las Vegas and Detroit, for example) and proposals for such races are often discussed – most recently London and Paris. Several other circuits are also completely or partially laid out on public roads, such as Spa-Francorchamps. The glamour and history of the Monaco race are the primary reasons why the circuit is still in use, since it is thought not to meet the strict safety requirements imposed on other tracks. Three-time World champion Nelson Piquet famously described racing in Monaco as "like riding a bicycle around your living room".

Circuit design to protect the safety of drivers is becoming increasingly sophisticated, as exemplified by the new Bahrain International Circuit, added in 2004 and designed – like most of F1's new circuits – by Hermann Tilke. Several of the new circuits in F1, especially those designed by Tilke, have been criticised as lacking the "flow" of such classics as Spa-Francorchamps and Imola. His redesign of the Hockenheim circuit in Germany for example, while providing more capacity for grandstands and eliminating extremely long and dangerous straights, has been frowned upon by many who argue that part of the character of the Hockenheim circuits was the long and blinding straights into dark forest sections. These newer circuits, however, are generally agreed to meet the safety standards of modern Formula One better than the older ones.

The most recent addition to the F1 calendar is Valencia[42] and Singapore (which hosted the first night race in F1 history).[43] Also Abu Dhabi has been confirmed as the last race for the 2009 season[44] and a Formula 1 Grand Prix will be held in India for the first time in 2010.[45]

Cars and technology

A birdseye rear view of the 2006 McLaren MP4-21.

Modern Formula One cars are mid-engined open cockpit, open wheel single-seaters. The chassis is made largely of carbon fibre composites, rendering it light but extremely stiff and strong. The whole car, including engine, fluids and driver, weighs only 600kg - the minimum weight set by the regulations. The construction of the cars is typically lighter than the minimum and so they are ballasted up to the minimum weight. The race teams take advantage of this by placing this ballast at the extreme bottom of the chassis, thereby locating the centre of gravity as low as possible in order to improve handling and weight transfer.[46]

The cornering speed of Formula One cars is largely determined by the aerodynamic downforce that they generate, which pushes the car down onto the track. This is provided by 'wings' mounted at the front and rear of the vehicle, and by ground effect created by low pressure air under the flat bottom of the car. The aerodynamic design of the cars is very heavily constrained to limit performance and the current generation of cars sport a large number of small winglets, 'barge boards' and turning vanes designed to closely control the flow of the air over, under and around the car.

The other major factor controlling the cornering speed of the cars is the design of the tyres. Since 1998, tyres in Formula One have not been 'slicks' (tyres with no tread pattern) as in most other circuit racing series. Instead, each tyre has four large circumferential grooves on its surface designed to limit the cornering speed of the cars.[47] Slick tyres will return to Formula One in the 2009 season. Suspension is double wishbone or multilink all round with pushrod operated springs and dampers on the chassis. Carbon-Carbon disc brakes are used for reduced weight and increased frictional performance. These provide a very high level of braking performance and are usually the element which provokes the greatest reaction from drivers new to the formula.

Engines must be 2.4 litre naturally aspirated V8s, with many other constraints on their design and the materials that may be used. Engines run on unleaded fuel closely resembling publicly available petrol. [48] The oil which lubricates and protects the engine from overheating is very similar in viscosity to water. The 2006 generation of engines spun up to 20,000 rpm and produced up to 780 bhp (582 kW).[49]. For 2007 engines are restricted to 19,000 rpm with limited development areas allowed, following the engine specification freeze from the end of 2006. [50]

A wide variety of technologies – including active suspension, ground effect and turbochargers – are banned under the current regulations. Despite this the current generation of cars can reach speeds of up to 350 km/h (around 220 mph) at some circuits.[51] A Honda Formula One car, running with minimum downforce on a runway in the Mojave desert achieved a top speed of 415 km/h (258 mph) in 2006. According to Honda the car fully met the FIA Formula One regulations.[52] Even with the limitations on aerodynamics, at 160 km/h aerodynamically generated downforce is equal to the weight of the car and the often repeated claim that Formula One cars create enough downforce to 'drive on the ceiling' remains true in principle, although it has never been put to the test. At full speed, downforce of two and a half times the car's weight can be achieved. The downforce means that the cars can achieve a lateral force of up to five times the force of gravity (5g) in cornering – a high-performance road car like the Ferrari Enzo only achieves around 1g.[53] Consequently in corners the driver's head is pulled sideways with a force equivalent to 20kg. Such high lateral forces are enough to make breathing difficult and the drivers need supreme concentration and fitness to maintain their focus for the one to two hours that it takes to complete the race.

Revenue and Profits

Estimated budget split of an F1 team based on the 2006 season.

Formula 1 is a profitable exercise for most parties involved. The TV channels make profits from broadcasting the races. The teams get a slice of the money raised from the sale of broadcasting rights as well as from the sponsor's logos on their cars.

The cost of building a brand new permanent circuit like in Shanghai can be up to hundreds of millions of dollars, but the cost of converting a public road such as Albert Park into a temporary circuit is much less. However permanent circuits can generate revenue all year round from leasing the track for private races and also other races such as MotoGP. The Shanghai circuit cost over $300 million.[54] The owners are hoping to break-even by 2014. The Istanbul Park circuit cost $150 million to build.[55]

Not all circuits make profits – for example, Albert Park made a loss of $32 million in 2007.[56]

In March 2007 F1 Racing published its annual estimates of spending by Formula One teams. The total spending of all eleven teams in 2006 was estimated at $2.9 billion. This was broken down as follows; Toyota $418.5 million, Ferrari $406.5 m, McLaren $402 m, Honda $380.5 m, BMW Sauber $355 m, Renault $324 m, Red Bull $252 m, Williams $195.5 m, Midland F1/Spyker-MF1 $120 m, Toro Rosso $75 m, and Super Aguri $57 million.

Costs vary greatly from team to team; in 2006 teams such as Honda, Toyota, McLaren-Mercedes and Ferrari are estimated to have spent approximately $200 million on engines, Renault spent approximately $125 million and Cosworth's 2006 V8 was developed for $15 million.[57] In contrast to the 2006 season on which these figures are based, the 2007 sporting regulations ban all performance related engine development.[58]

Future

Formula One went through a difficult period in the early 2000s. Viewing figures dropped, and fans expressed their loss of interest due to the dominance of Michael Schumacher and Scuderia Ferrari.[citation needed] Viewing figures are seeing some signs of recovery due to the varied seasons since 2005. Ferrari's and Schumacher's 5 year domination ended in 2005 as Renault became the top team in Formula One, with Fernando Alonso becoming the new (and youngest ever) World Champion. There has since been a resurgence of interest in the sport, especially in Alonso's home country of Spain, and Lewis Hamilton's home country of Britain. In 2006, twenty-two teams applied for the final twelfth team spot available for the 2008 season. The spot was eventually awarded to former B.A.R. and Benetton team principal David Richards' Prodrive organization, but the team pulled out of the 2008 season in November 2007.

A sign displaying that the safety car (SC) is deployed. Safety is of paramount concern in contemporary F1.

The FIA is responsible for making rules to combat the spiralling costs of Formula One racing (which affects the smaller teams the most) and for ensuring the sport remains as safe as possible, especially in the wake of the deaths of Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger in 1994. To this end the FIA have instituted a number of rule changes, including new tyre restrictions, multi-race engines and reductions on downforce. Safety and cost have traditionally been paramount in all rule-change discussions. More recently the FIA has added efficiency to its priorities. Currently the FIA and manufacturers are discussing adding bio-fuel engines and regenerative braking for the 2011 season. FIA President Max Mosley believes F1 must focus on efficiency to stay technologically relevant in the automotive industry as well as keep the public excited about F1 technology.

After being banned since 1998, slick tyres will return to Formula One racing in 2009.[59]

In the interest of making the sport truer to its role as a World Championship, FOM president Bernie Ecclestone has initiated and organised a number of Grands Prix in new countries and continues to discuss new future races. The sport's rapid expansion into new areas of the globe also leaves some question as to which races will be cut.

Television

Formula One can be seen live or tape delayed in almost every country and territory around the world and attracts one of the largest global television audiences. The 2006 Brazilian Grand Prix attracted an average live global TV audience of eighty-three million viewers, with a total of 154 million viewers tuning in to watch at least some part of the event.[60] Official figures from FOM for 2006 that state Formula One television broadcasts were witnessed by 580 million unique viewers during the 2005 season[61] and average viewing figures for 1995–1999 were 50 billion.[62] It is a massive television event; the cumulative television audience was calculated to be 54 billion for 2001 season, broadcast to two hundred countries.[63]

In 2005 the Canadian Grand Prix in Montréal was the most watched of the races, and the third most watched sporting event in the world.[64]

During the early 2000s Formula One Administration created a number of trademarks, an official logo, and an official website for the sport in an attempt to give it a corporate identity. Ecclestone experimented with a digital television package (known colloquially as Bernievision), which was launched at the 1996 German Grand Prix in cooperation with German digital television service "DF1", thirty years after the first GP colour TV broadcast, the 1967 German Grand Prix. This service offered the viewer several simultaneous feeds (such as super signal, onboard, top of field, backfield, highlights, pit lane, timing), which were produced with cameras, technical equipment and staff different from those used for the conventional coverage. It was introduced in many countries over the years, but was shut down after the 2002 season for financial reasons.

TV stations all take what is known as the 'World Feed', either produced by the FOM (Formula One Management) or the 'host broadcaster'. The only station that has any difference is 'Premiere' – a German channel that offers all sessions live and interactive, with features such as the onboard channel. This service was more widely available around Europe until the end of 2002, when the cost of a whole different feed for the digital interactive services was thought too much. This was in large part because of the failure of the 'F1 Digital +' Channel launched through Sky Digital in the United Kingdom. Prices were too high for viewers, considering they could watch both the qualifying and the races themselves for free on ITV.

Bernie Ecclestone has announced that F1 will adopt the HD format near the end of the 2007 season. However, details of the races to be covered and the means of showing the content have yet to be announced. Also it was announced early in 2008 that the BBC would be broadcasting the F1 for the next five years, instead of ITV who have been broadcasting Formula one seasons since 1997 after the BBC lost the broadcasting rights. this will allow F1 fans to view the F1 in HD resoulutions which was not possible on ITV. [65]

Distinction between Formula One and World Championship races

Currently the terms "Formula One race" and "World Championship race" are effectively synonymous; since 1984, every Formula One race has counted towards the World Championship, and every World Championship race has been to Formula One regulations. But the two terms are not interchangeable. Consider that:

  • the first Formula One race was held in 1947, whereas the World Championship did not start until 1950.
  • in the 1950s and 1960s there were many Formula One races which did not count for the World Championship (e.g., in 1950, a total of twenty-two Formula One races were held, of which only six counted towards the World Championship). The number of non-championship Formula One events decreased throughout the 1970s and 1980s, to the point where the last non-championship Formula One race was held in 1983.
  • the World Championship was not always exclusively composed of Formula One events:
    • The World Championship was originally established as the "World Championship for Drivers", i.e., without the term "Formula One" in the title. It only officially became the Formula One World Championship in 1981.
    • From 1950 to 1960, the Indianapolis 500 counted towards the World Championship. This race was run to AAA/USAC regulations, rather than to Formula One regulations.
    • From 1952 to 1953, all races counting towards the World Championship (except the Indianapolis 500) were run to Formula Two regulations. Note that Formula One was not "changed to Formula Two" during this period; the Formula One regulations remained the same, and numerous Formula One races were staged during this time.

The distinction is most relevant when considering career summaries and "all time lists". For example, in the List of Formula One drivers, Clemente Biondetti is shown with 1 race against his name. Biondetti actually competed in four Formula One races in 1950, but only one of these counted for the World Championship. Similarly, several Indy 500 winners technically won their first world championship race, though most record books choose to ignore this and instead only record regular participants.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The formula was defined in 1946; the first Formula One race was in 1947; the first World Championship season was 1950.
  2. ^ a b "The last of the non-championship races". www.forix.com. Archived from the original on 2007-02-27. Retrieved 2007-11-17.
  3. ^ Lawton, James (2007-08-28). "Moss can guide Hamilton through chicane of celebrity". The Independent. Newspaper Publishing. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  4. ^ Henry, Alan (2007-03-12). "Hamilton's chance to hit the grid running". The Guardian. Retrieved 2007-10-30.
  5. ^ "Decade seasons 1950 - 1959". Autocourse. Archived from the original on 2007-08-07. Retrieved 2007-11-17.
  6. ^ Tuckey, Bill (1994-01-28). "Moss returns to scene of GP victory". The Age. The Age Company. the all-conquering Mercedes-Benz cars... When the Germans withdrew from racing after the Le Mans 24-hour tragedy {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  7. ^ "Ferguson P99". gpracing.net. Retrieved 2007-11-17. {{cite web}}: Check |archiveurl= value (help) The Ferguson P99, a four-wheel drive design, was the last front-engined F1 car to enter a world championship race. It was entered in the 1961 British Grand Prix, the only front-engined car to compete that year.
  8. ^ Bartunek, Robert-Jan (2007-09-18). "Sponsorship, the big business behind F1". CNN.com. Cable News Network. Retrieved 2007-11-08.
  9. ^ Staniforth, Allan (1994). Competition Car Suspension. Haynes. p. 96. ISBN 0-85429-956-4. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  10. ^ a b c Williams, Richard (1997-03-28). "The Formula for Striking It Rich". The Guardian. Guardian Newspapers. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  11. ^ a b "Face value: Mr Formula". The Economist. Economist Newspapers. 1997-03-05. p. 72. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  12. ^ Blunsden, John (1986-12-20). "Filling Balestre's shoes is no job for a back-seat driver". Financial Times. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  13. ^ Roebuck, Nigel "Power struggles and techno wars" Sunday Times 1993-03-07
  14. ^ Hamilton, Maurice (1998-03-08). "Pros and cons of being just Williams; A quiet achiever keeps his head down as the new season gets under way with familiar high anxiety and a squealing over brakes". The Observer. Guardian Newspapers. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  15. ^ Bamsey, Ian (1988). The 1000 BHP Grand Prix cars. Guild Publishing. pp. 8–9. ISBN 0854296174. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help) BMW's performance at the Italian GP is the highest qualifying figure given in Bamsey. The estimate is from Heini Mader, who maintained the engines for the Benetton team. It should be noted that maximum power figures from this period are necessarily estimates; BMW's dynamometer, for example, was only capable of measuring up to 1,100 bhp. Figures higher than this are estimated from engine plenum pressure readings. Power in race trim at that time was lower than for qualifying due to the need for greater reliability and fuel efficiency during the race.
  16. ^ "The technology behind Formula 1 racing cars". The Press. The Christchurch Press Company. 2005-12-26. rivalling the 1200hp turbocharged monsters that eventually had to be banned in 1989 {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  17. ^ Baldwin, Alan (2001-02-17). "F1 Plans Return of Traction Control". The Independent. Newspaper Publishing. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  18. ^ "Who owns what in F1 these days?". Grandprix.com. Archived from the original on 2007-03-12. Retrieved 2007-11-17.
  19. ^ a b "F1's pressing safety question". Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  20. ^ "Jordan: Privateer era is over". ITV-F1.com. 2006-08-24. Retrieved 2006-09-12.
  21. ^ "Schumacher makes history". BBC Sport. 2002-07-21. Retrieved 2006-09-12.
  22. ^ "FIA Rules & Regulations Sporting Regulations: 2006 season changes". www.formula1.com. Retrieved 2006-05-11.
  23. ^ "The last of the non-championship races". www.forix.com. Archived from the original on 2006-10-17. Retrieved 2007-11-17.
  24. ^ "Desiré Wilson". www.f1rejects.com. Archived from the original on 2007-06-05. Retrieved 2007-11-17.
  25. ^ "Practice and qualifying". www.formula1.com. 2008-01-29. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
  26. ^ "Driver changes and additional drivers". www.formula1.com. 2008-02-26. Retrieved 2008-07-02.
  27. ^ a b c "Practice and qualifying". www.formula1.com. 2008-02-26. Retrieved 2008-07-03. After the demise of the Super Aguri team during the 2008 season, the rules were changed slightly. See "Team demise changes F1 qualifying". www.bbc.co.uk. 2008-05-08. Retrieved 2008-07-03.
  28. ^ "2008 Formula One sporting regulations" (PDF).
  29. ^ "Race start procedure". www.formula1.com. 2008-02-26. Retrieved 2008-07-03.
  30. ^ "Bridgestone revise tyre markings for Malaysia".
  31. ^ "Flags". www.formula1.com. 2003-06-21. Retrieved 2008-07-03.
  32. ^ "Points". www.formula1.com. 2003-01-04. Retrieved 2008-07-03.
  33. ^ Formula 1 : News Cosworth - F1-Live.com
  34. ^ http://www.speedtv.com/articles/auto/formulaone/27851/
  35. ^ "Formula 1 : Interview - Toro Rosso's Gerhard Berger". Formula 1. 23 May, 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-23. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  36. ^ "McLaren is F1's biggest spender". F1i. 16 June, 2006. Retrieved 2007-01-07. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  37. ^ Jack Brabham, F1 champion in 1959, 1960 and 1966, won the French Formula Two championship in 1966, but there was no international F2 championship that year.
  38. ^ "Masters series officially wound up". Autosport. Retrieved 2008-07-04.
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  41. ^ Indianapolis Motor Speedway
  42. ^ a b The Official Formula 1 Website
  43. ^ Singapore the big winner in first night Grand Prix:Guardian.co.uk
  44. ^ The Official Formula 1 Website: FIA announces provisional 2009 Formula One calendar
  45. ^ The Official Formula 1 Website: India to host first Grand Prix in New Delhi in 2011
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  52. ^ Challenge Alan [2], Retrieved 20 January 2007
  53. ^ Ferrari Enzo www.fast-autos.net Retrieved 15 March 2007
  54. ^ BBC SPORT | Motorsport | Formula One | High price takes shine off F1
  55. ^ ::Pioneer Investors
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  60. ^ "F1 World's most watched TV sports events: 2006 Rank & Trends report". Initiative. 2007-01-19. Retrieved 2007-01-30.
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  63. ^ BBC Sports, F1 viewing figures drop, 26 February 2002. Retrieved on 10 March 2007. The cumulative figure, which exceeds the total population of the planet by many times, counts all viewers who watch F1 on any programme at any time during the year.
  64. ^ Most watched TV sporting events of 2005 - A special report from Initiative
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References

  • Arron, Simon & Hughes, Mark (2003). The Complete Book of Formula One. Motorbooks International. ISBN 0-7603-1688-0.
  • "FIA Archive". (2004). Federation Internationale de l'Automobile. Retrieved 25 October 2004.
  • "Formula One Regulations". (2004). Federation Internationale de l'Automobile. Retrieved 23 October 2004.
  • Gross, Nigel et al (1999). "Grand Prix Motor Racing". In, 100 Years of Change: Speed and Power (pp. 55–84). Parragon.
  • Hayhoe, David & Holland, David (2006). Grand Prix Data Book (4th edition). Haynes, Sparkford, UK. ISBN 1-84425-223-X.
  • Higham, Peter (2003). The international motor racing guide. David Bull, Phoenix, AZ, USA. ISBN 1-893618-20-X.
  • "Insight". (2004). The Official Formula 1 Website. Retrieved 25 October 2004.
  • Jones, Bruce (1997). The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Formula One. Hodder & Stoughton.
  • Jones, Bruce (1998). Formula One: The Complete Stats and Records of Grand Prix Racing. Parragon.
  • Jones, Bruce (2003). The Official ITV Sport Guide: Formula One Grand Prix 2003. Carlton. Includes foreword by Martin Brundle. ISBN 1-84222-813-7.
  • Jones, Bruce (2005). The Guide to 2005 FIA Formula One World Championship : The World's Bestselling Grand Prix Guide]. Carlton. ISBN 1-84442-508-8.
  • Lang, Mike (1981–1992). Grand Prix! volumes 1–4. Haynes, Sparkford, UK.
  • Menard, Pierre (2006). The Great Encyclopedia of Formula 1, 5th edition. Chronosport, Switzerland. ISBN 2847070516
  • Miltner, Harry (2007). Race Travel Guide 2007. egoth: Vienna, Austria. ISBN 978-3-902480-34-7
  • Small, Steve (2000). Grand Prix Who's Who (3rd edition). Travel Publishing, UK. ISBN 1-902007-46-8.
  • Tremayne, David & Hughes, Mark (1999). The Concise Encyclopedia of Formula One. Parragon

External links

Official sites
News and reference
History
  • AutocourseGPA.com — historical results and statistics and images since 1950
  • F1DB — Results, statistics
  • 4mula1 — Results and statistics since 1950


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