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What It’s Like Driving F1’s Safety Car

by multimill
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Bernd Mayländer has been driving Formula 1’s safety car for nearly a quarter century but, a couple hours before this year’s United States Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas, in mid-October, Mayländer was a little antsy. At that point in the season, the safety car hadn’t been deployed for nine straight grands prix, the longest such run since 2003.

“It’s strange because already there are some people, they are saying, are you still there?” Mayländer said about an hour before the race. He needn’t have worried: by the third lap, Lewis Hamilton spun out and Mayländer and the Aston Martin Vantage safety car he drives were back on the track, nine-race streak broken. The safety car was deployed the following week in Mexico City, too, in the first lap of the race after Yuki Tsunoda crashed.

Mayländer is the most experienced Formula 1 safety car driver ever, having been in the seat since 2000, though that is also because for much of its history Formula 1 didn’t use a safety car. The first was deployed in Montreal in 1973 but not again until Monaco in 1976, and then not again until Monaco in 1981. That year, it was a Lamborghini Countach, which returned in 1982 and in 1983 at Monaco before the safety car again disappeared from F1 until 1993.

Initially, F1 simply said that every track must supply its own safety car for each race, which, as Formula1.com reports, resulted in a strange collection, including a “FIAT Tempra at the 1993 Brazilian Grand Prix, a Ford Escort Cosworth at the 1993 British Grand Prix, a Honda Prelude in Japan in 1994, [and] a Renault Clio at the 1996 Argentine Grand Prix.”

But since the 1996 season every Formula 1 safety car has been supplied by Mercedes, and, since 2021, Aston Martin sharing the responsibility as well, the former supplying an GT Black Series and the latter a Vantage.



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