What Was Senna’s Bizarre F1 Technique About?

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  • čas přidán 17. 05. 2024
  • Ayrton Senna had a really unusual throttle technique that simply doesn't make much sense. What is the technique, why did you do it and would it work in today's modern F1?
    You may have read online that Senna had this really unusual technique where he would stamp on and off the throttle as he was exiting a corner.
    In this video, we take a look at footage from Senna where you can clearly hear this blipping of the accelerator as is driving through the corner in his McLaren F1 car.
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    Jonathan Palmer was a test driver at McLaren Formula One team and he describes Senna’s technique while they were driving together.
    “Although I spent six years racing against Ayrton Senna in formula one, it really wasn't until I joined McLaren as a test driver in 1990 that I had the chance to see exactly how fast he was and exactly how he did it.
    Normally I do the first day or two pounding around getting down to what I thought was a very respectable time before Senna came along and within 10 laps, he would have been a second faster."
    Senna had such an unusual technique with many people saying it was because of his days driving turbo cars. The idea being that you can spool up the turbo with a flip on the accelerator pedal to reduce the turbo lag - basically when you get on the accelerator it spins the turbo up, which in turn forces air into the engine.
    This means you can add more fuel and produce more power. When you're braking and going through a corner only on part throttle the turbo won't be spinning quite as quickly and therefore you won't have as much power.
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Komentáře • 4,4K

  • @Driver61
    @Driver61  Před 4 lety +1619

    What's your take on this technique?

    • @TheRedRascal
      @TheRedRascal Před 4 lety +151

      It have a lot of sense and just by knowing how fast he was, there is no way on argue it. I just do sim-racing for now, sure I will be trying this technique later today.

    • @milkshakemuncher
      @milkshakemuncher Před 4 lety +236

      I have done it instinctively for years on the road even before I knew Senna drove that way (I always get told I drive a car like I stole it).
      It helps me balance the car better and by stabbing the throttle, you reach the limit of adhesion back under control, back over the edge and back under control, also you are on flatout throttle earlier.

    • @marfrandema1884
      @marfrandema1884 Před 4 lety +61

      NO TRACTION CONTROL. Check 93

    • @coolmus1
      @coolmus1 Před 4 lety +92

      I always raced karts this way. To me it just felt natural and more responsive. I'm no Senna though! JPs telemetry trace is telling. Senna's blippy throttle progression, if you fit a curve to it, probably exceeds JPs throttle progression and that's where he makes time. For me I think the mechanism somehow changes the hysteresis characteristic of the tire very dynamically as he maintains mid corner speed and builds it through the exit. Would be interesting to compare and contrast Schumachers technique in similar era cars!

    •  Před 4 lety +72

      As you watch documentary on Senna when he was with Williams he is talking about inconsistencies with a car, that it understeer and oversteer during a corner. Probably his technique stopped working with new cars, what do you think?

  • @deadmoroz14
    @deadmoroz14 Před 4 lety +15197

    Senna was a keyboard user at heart)

    • @Driver61
      @Driver61  Před 4 lety +1472

      Winner of the top comment!

    • @golden2420
      @golden2420 Před 4 lety +224

      Take my like

    • @pvtnewb
      @pvtnewb Před 4 lety +227

      This thought was crossing my mind as I watched the vid lol

    • @DavidAguileraMoncusi
      @DavidAguileraMoncusi Před 4 lety +95

      Best. Comment. Ever.

    • @MisoElEven
      @MisoElEven Před 4 lety +65

      Take my like and sod off somewhere far away from me...

  • @guzu334
    @guzu334 Před 4 lety +5727

    So basically the man had anti lag, abs and traction control all in his right foot.

  • @vinzegcs
    @vinzegcs Před 3 lety +849

    Senna's car dancing in the rain is something out of this world.

    • @danielfaria4949
      @danielfaria4949 Před 3 lety +23

      Cuz he practice more than any others under rain condition

    • @JTedits
      @JTedits Před 2 lety +76

      @@danielfaria4949 watch some of his interviews, a few times he is asked why he loves the rain and he said I don't, I hate it, but it is my job as a racing driver to be able to race in any condition.

    • @AppleGameification
      @AppleGameification Před rokem

      Actually very worldly

  • @paulocapelas2881
    @paulocapelas2881 Před 3 lety +725

    A constant battle for grip, always at the limit. Forever remembered as the number one. The most spectacular racing driver ever.

    • @maxpower9175
      @maxpower9175 Před 2 lety +19

      Great description of him, underrated comment.

    • @beagle7622
      @beagle7622 Před 2 lety +5

      Always remember him at Adelaide just spinning like a top.

  • @pranavps851
    @pranavps851 Před 4 lety +3569

    In summary, Senna was faster than the car itself.

    • @michalhandzus20
      @michalhandzus20 Před 4 lety +165

      In Ayrton Senna world, the car couldn´t react in time, not the driver.

    • @Tegneaufreak
      @Tegneaufreak Před 4 lety +30

      Actually, all drivers were far from the limit of the car. The cars then were very difficult to drive, very low downforce, so big differences in drivers. If Senna drove normally, he would have been quicker.

    • @sergiodifranco4380
      @sergiodifranco4380 Před 4 lety +41

      You can´t be faster than the machine that can make you move faster. You can take it to its absolute limits, wich is what senna did. The other drivers where near the 95%

    • @GetboostedUK
      @GetboostedUK Před 4 lety +15

      100% he would out shine the car just how Ken Miles would. Once in a generation of drivers.

    • @bogdan.ivan.
      @bogdan.ivan. Před 4 lety +1

      =)))))))))

  •  Před 4 lety +1878

    That reminds of a Nigel Roebuck quote: "If you see Prost driving a Formula 1 car, you'd think you could do it yourself. If you see Senna driving the same car, you'd abosolutely knew you couldn't".

    • @themagicslinky1773
      @themagicslinky1773 Před 4 lety +225

      I admire the rivalry between the two. Raw talent versus the operating mind, smooth vs strange, aggressive vs conservative. They both mastered their respective driving styles, putting them in the same car made for an unreal era of both F1 and racing altogether.

    • @fabiobalenzano6439
      @fabiobalenzano6439 Před 4 lety +26

      therein lies the reason why Senna was the faster one.......

    • @jraybay
      @jraybay Před 4 lety

      Lol yes

    • @maximum.p
      @maximum.p Před 4 lety +59

      @@fabiobalenzano6439 Prost scored more points than Senna during their common time at McLaren, you seem to ignore that.

    • @themagicslinky1773
      @themagicslinky1773 Před 4 lety +104

      @@maximum.p I beg you not to make this thread another flame war between the factions of Senna and Prost. The question of "who is the best driver" ever is already controversial enough, but I think history has told both driver's stories well enough. Prost won more through less risk, and Senna will forever be remembered for his once-in-a-century talent.

  • @lgjurich
    @lgjurich Před 3 lety +164

    This sounds almost like ABS in reverse. Rather than rapidly tapping the brakes to decrease stopping distance, he was tapping to get constant feedback from the car/tires and be on the very knife edge of traction at all times. This is why he was such a wizard in the wet, he was able to find the absolute limit of traction and keep the car right at that limit longer than most if not any driver ever.

    • @tylerdurden3722
      @tylerdurden3722 Před 2 lety +14

      Some other legendary drivers would go over the limit to intentionally make the car slide slightly to make the car turn more, so that the car is lined up with the exit earlier...meaning accelerating out of the corner earlier and more aggressively.

    • @21mrcy
      @21mrcy Před rokem

      @@tylerdurden3722 Driver*

    • @martf1061
      @martf1061 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@tylerdurden3722on dirt or gravel or snow track YES it helps.
      But on high grip surfaces, it wears out the tires too much.

    • @robertcorleone9077
      @robertcorleone9077 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I think this is what Senna was doing. Completely agree with this statement.

  • @TheThejpmshow
    @TheThejpmshow Před 3 lety +888

    Jonathan Palmer - when he said ‘I raced against Ayrton for 6 years’
    He meant ‘I followed in dust for 6 years’

    • @metube9541
      @metube9541 Před 3 lety +25

      It's incredible that they were even in the same race. Senna was worlds ahead.

    • @TheThejpmshow
      @TheThejpmshow Před 3 lety +37

      @@metube9541 there’s a lot of good drivers, some great. Only a handful in Ayrton’s vein, and he was at the top of them

    • @madsjuul1350
      @madsjuul1350 Před 3 lety +3

      Bad karma didn’t kill Palmer though

    • @parcidiooliveira9943
      @parcidiooliveira9943 Před 3 lety +1

      Senna também seguiu na poeira de muitos pilotos! E não percebia nada de afinação de chassis para a corrida. Correu muitas vezes com o carro de reserva de Alain Prost (que também aprendeu com Niki Lauda) - Que foi o piloto que melhor dava os dados aos Eng.s que construíram o MP4. Quantos anos correu o MP4? 10 anos!

    • @knightofthenine3121
      @knightofthenine3121 Před 2 lety +2

      @@parcidiooliveira9943 Senna e o Dale Earnhardt Sr da Nascar eram farinha do mesmo saco, mesma tecnica, corriam com tudo, eram mestres da Intimidação, e ainda se respeitavam mesmo sendo de categorias diferentes.
      E por pena e ironia, ambos se foram da mesma forma.
      Se o Senna tivesse vivo e seguido o que ele tinha em mente graças a politicagem maldita da F1 que tirou ate Nigel Mansell por dois anos com ele vencendo na Indy, em 96 ele estaria nos EUA correndo pela CART/Formula Mundial e Talvez a NASCAR pela Penske, Graças ao Emerson Fittipaldi e o Dale Senior que admiravam ele.

  • @eightv1982
    @eightv1982 Před 4 lety +2539

    “The normal technique on corner entry is to keep as smooth as possible,” explains Takeo Kiuchi, Senna ‘s Honda race engineer of 1990-92. “But Ayrton would use the throttle to put more torque through the tyre and change the yaw, a little bit each time. This way he could get a better trajectory before the apex without as much steering. When we did our simulations, usually the actual time a driver set was slightly slower than the simulation; with Ayrton, he was nearly always slightly quicker. That was because we couldn’t model what he was doing with the throttle and how it affected the car.” -motorsport mag 2004

    • @Sandouras
      @Sandouras Před 4 lety +32

      Didnt he DESTROY the tyres this way?

    • @johncrocock1648
      @johncrocock1648 Před 4 lety +76

      eight v I read the same and actually he could run the car faster than the engineers were modeling it under a classical driving style

    • @superheaton
      @superheaton Před 4 lety +207

      ​@@Sandouras Firstly, I'm sure Ayrton Senna was extremely experienced and understands how his car behaves in order to do this, he wasn't doing it for shits and giggles. He found a way to make it go faster that was not documented much anywhere at that time. Everyone was learning the conventional way to go smoothly on the accelerator. He was blipping that pedal like an inclining PWM function as shown in the video. It's like a smoother average of an incline in a way maybe (see average of PWM function versus average of a curve, maybe like a sine curve or something at each point in time, not the total). I would like to say it is more linear in the changes of acceleration, which is useful in a corner with the centrifugal acceleration that is happening and the rolling differences of the tires, it does need something smoother. Now, you said something about destroying tires. Senna wasn't destroying tires. If to destroy the tire, I think the wheel would be spinning as he is doing this technique wrongly, which stated in the video, it would be slower. But the fact that he was faster, he was doing this technique perfectly. So, general physics would say if he was faster then his grip was good. If we look at the signal he was giving to the accelerator, it looks like an inclining PWM function, that in itself is already hard to do by a human, in such short amount of time. There is a good portion of how much blipping is too much or too little, so I think he was doing it perfectly. I mean he was beating Alain Prost by a huge amount in those days, he must be doing it correctly and I wouldn't need to question his technique. He definitely found the solution and we are looking at it right now realizing his technique which is his approach. About the turbo car thing, I think he did learn it then, but I would argue that he did not start off his skills being in a turbo car, he most likely learned them through karting in rainy days. He was definitely not a specialist in a way, he drove every single race car fast. We always like to think that way, because ultimately human beings are really good at specializing. Senna once said this. “And so you touch this limit, something happens and you suddenly can go a little bit further. With your mind power, your determination, your instinct, and the experience as well, you can fly very high.” (Ayrton Senna, 22 years old)
      . I'm quite intrigued to his approach to constantly actively and abstractly think through racing. He used the pedals like instruments. He never settled to what was the status quo or fall trap to style. He was constantly pushing the envelope and actively thinking which makes him come up with deeper solutions. When he finished pushing that envelope and he realized it was his own ideas regressing his goals, he looked again like a feedback loop to newer approaches of what was unprecedented to achieve something nobody that could achieve. When he realized there was not one ultimate approach, and by looking at something deeper that nobody dared to try, perfecting it, then that made him the god of racing.

    • @sylentxtinction2097
      @sylentxtinction2097 Před 4 lety +83

      @@Sandouras - in short, the end defied the means. First off, he wasn't holding a drift... it was just enough slip to gain a couple degrees of rotation in the turn. I would say the difference in tire wear was not only negligible, but may have even preserved the leading edges by decreasing the sideloading on exit.

    • @Sandouras
      @Sandouras Před 4 lety +29

      @@superheaton I didnt mean to dispute a legend or his driving. I was merely wondering how this didnt ruin his tyres.

  • @sporkybutterz
    @sporkybutterz Před 4 lety +1805

    Senna traction control system. Pushing his car to the limit.

    • @juanfonseca31
      @juanfonseca31 Před 4 lety +64

      Yeah that what i think too, that that was Senna’s version of TCS. I use to do this technique in Gran Turismo when i play online and yes i can get out of a curve much faster.

    • @1clique21
      @1clique21 Před 4 lety +34

      I actually do this on a curve on dirt rally. I play on keyboard 😂😂 thats how i go tru corners without flying to gods know where

    • @darth_art2101
      @darth_art2101 Před 4 lety +4

      Same here...i do it in gt sport and f1...it just feels faster and so natural...like having more control of the car and being one with it

    • @luispenadg
      @luispenadg Před 4 lety +9

      My thought aswell, when you compare the premise of his technique and TC they are practically the same.

    • @sideshowbob5237
      @sideshowbob5237 Před 4 lety +6

      Rubber generates more net grip in stick-slip mode - well known. Senna probably heard this from someone and tried to make use of it. But I'm pretty sure the tractive force would need to change many times per wheel revolution to optimise the effect. So, theoretically, he could have been faster if the throttle had been pulsed much faster.

  • @SMlFFY85
    @SMlFFY85 Před 3 lety +261

    His speed was entirely down to his loafers.

  • @vnigallahoir3523
    @vnigallahoir3523 Před 2 lety +66

    As someone who done a similar technique my entire racing career, it's because the blips are short enough, that it enables you to feel out the limit of traction. For me this started as a karting technique for finding grip on slick racing surfaces, in the wet, and works just as well in the dry. It's not really something I have ever thought about until now, but if you do lose traction, because of the pedaling, you don't generally lose it for long, and it generally doesn't wildly affect the car other than to give you more rotation. The less responsive the motor, the longer the chops can be.
    Because if you look at the comparison of his data vs the test drivers, you can just see how much sooner he is able to find where the limit of grip is and is able to use the throttle. Just my two cents as someone who just naturally started doing this.

    • @OtesOtesOtes
      @OtesOtesOtes Před rokem +11

      Amazing how much more condensed and valuable your input is than this video. Thanks!

    • @funnygorillas
      @funnygorillas Před 6 měsíci +7

      Bro I just did this on my debut ride and race in open category rental karting race 2 days ago! I'm very glad to say that i managed to gain higher revs and exit speeds thru every mid corner while moving onto the straights... BEST PART IS I started LAST on the grid and won first place 😂🎉

    • @joaopedroestevez5452
      @joaopedroestevez5452 Před 5 měsíci +1

      well done bro senna would be proud

    • @theakyosmith
      @theakyosmith Před 2 měsíci +1

      Actually Senna said it in an interwiew. He used and adapped kart technique to his formula1. The interwiew is here in you tube.

  • @FjordTrotter
    @FjordTrotter Před 4 lety +2547

    Inventor : Let me introduce you to traction control
    Senna : Here's my foot

    • @Windof
      @Windof Před 4 lety +40

      Exactly. It's so simple.

    • @sibeksibowski2126
      @sibeksibowski2126 Před 4 lety +22

      It's his traction control

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 Před 4 lety +2

      @@sibeksibowski2126
      My 1950's sports car had that, traction control, abs, stability control, you name it. Senna is famous for overtaking 5 cars in a lap, I passed 4 in one corner in the wet. Senna is also famous for colliding with other drivers..

    • @Proudtiagoleite
      @Proudtiagoleite Před 4 lety +45

      @@barrierodliffe4155 Haters gonna hate.

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 Před 4 lety +4

      @@Proudtiagoleite
      I know these Senna fanboys really are very sad and hate the best driver of his time, the one and only Alain Prost.

  • @backroadbeetle4781
    @backroadbeetle4781 Před 4 lety +1473

    He's controlling rotation with throttle and brake, he's almost creating his own stability and traction control.

    • @andrepduarte
      @andrepduarte Před 4 lety +98

      This is the bread and butter of rally driving, not exactly a genius move

    • @NODAK9
      @NODAK9 Před 4 lety +110

      @Skylor Skipworth
      My thoughts exactly, he was doing then what is now electronically managed.

    • @tjroelsma
      @tjroelsma Před 4 lety +48

      @@andrepduarte Exactly, Audi S1 drivers like Walter Röhrl did exactly the same in order to keep their cars under control, because that Audi would break traction in almost every gear on tarmac stages (it didn't matter that much on gravel or snow, because then it was always sliding). You can see ample video's of Röhrl's feet dancing on brake and accelerator and still having to correct with the steering just to keep it going in a somewhat straight line.

    • @chiefdenis
      @chiefdenis Před 4 lety +7

      I also thought it was some form of traction control

    • @KaiSoDaM
      @KaiSoDaM Před 4 lety +13

      Senna was also a rally driver before f1

  • @drugsommelier9477
    @drugsommelier9477 Před 3 lety +934

    Died before i was born and still makes me proud of my country. What a legend :'^)

    • @sugarnads
      @sugarnads Před 3 lety +8

      You should be prouder of piquet and fittepaldi.
      They didnt deliberately crash into other drivers.

    • @kerketj
      @kerketj Před 3 lety +140

      @@sugarnads you sir have no idea what Senna represents in Brazil, he wasn't just a fantastic driver, he created charity intuitions to help poor children in Brazil out of his own pocket, which still exists today and his sister still manage, he had charisma, passion and always made sure to carry the flag when he won, that is why when he died the entire country cried. Piquet and Fittipaldi were excellent drivers but arrogant ego centrists and had done nothing to the country in terms of charity, having said that, Senna is the biggest hero in Brazil, even greater than Pele.

    • @guilhermecabral4578
      @guilhermecabral4578 Před 3 lety +50

      @@kerketj I am Brazilian,and that is all true.

    • @trinidad17
      @trinidad17 Před 3 lety +11

      I get you like the guy, but "proud of your country" for what? You didn't do anything to help the guy, don't try to steal Senna's achievements as if Brazil in general had any merit in it. It was Senna and his team, including mentors and even sponsors.

    • @CaveraPlays
      @CaveraPlays Před 3 lety +16

      @@trinidad17 Im brazillian and I completely agree with you. It's cool to have a driver or a great sportsman from your country, it may give you motivation or you can like him because you share the same culture but "being proud" doesn"t make any sense.

  • @toryrhoden4091
    @toryrhoden4091 Před 3 lety +473

    Senna and Jim Clark where just grandmaster in F1. No one could touch them. Taken from us too soon Rest In Peace you master 🙏🏽

    • @sugarnads
      @sugarnads Před 3 lety +8

      Ahh yes. And Prost beat him consistently. Even when honda were giving senna better engines.
      The only reason he won the championship in 88 was a retarded points system. Prost scored 2 more race wins and about 20 points more than him that year. But the point system handed the title to mr argybargy.
      And winning a title by deliberately taking out the only person who could beat you? Should have been banned for life. What a hero. Dangerous to everyone around him.
      Even SENNA acknowledged that Prost was a better driver than him.
      You dopes. You think driving like a lunatic is admirable. Its repulsive.
      He did shit thst anyone else would have been black flagged for. Him and that other knuckledragger villeneuve used to get away with idiotic passes.
      Jim Clarke tho. Fkn legend.

    • @josefserf1926
      @josefserf1926 Před 3 lety +16

      The most naturally talented.

    • @clintstewart5545
      @clintstewart5545 Před 3 lety +3

      @@sugarnads lol

    • @ysyear
      @ysyear Před 2 lety +25

      @@sugarnads i think you need to chill a little bit

    • @victorlaurent2978
      @victorlaurent2978 Před 2 lety +32

      @@sugarnads He just gave Prost his revenge for what he did to him the year before, on the same conditions and same track.
      It was EPIC.

  • @VideosFernandes
    @VideosFernandes Před 4 lety +1441

    25 years after his death, Senna is still a reference in terms of piloting technique

    • @danilomarvel5657
      @danilomarvel5657 Před 3 lety +18

      LOL... there is much more secrets about senna driving technique than just right foot bip...

    • @danilomarvel5657
      @danilomarvel5657 Před 3 lety +54

      @@FF-jf8yg lol what a moron hahahaha

    • @pedrotenorio5808
      @pedrotenorio5808 Před 3 lety +19

      @David Mc not only he donated a large part of his fortune... The Ayrton Senna Institute managed by his sister helps a lot of poor children until today.

    • @alejandromoore6503
      @alejandromoore6503 Před 3 lety +35

      @@FF-jf8yg You do know the Season Senna died Schumi won the World Title and he said that if Senna didnt died he would be the Champion instead of him..
      Senna was using a Worst Car, Unsafe and not even Senna was Upset about the Williams-Renault, The Boss of the Team said the same "Car is bad".
      With all those things he had a chance to win against the Cheaters Benneton team (Schumi Team).
      And that Team was almost perfect.

    • @victorfideliss
      @victorfideliss Před 3 lety +40

      @@FF-jf8yg No! Actually last week was released a study that says that Senna is the faster driver of the last 40 years! They compared the difference between the 1st and the 2nd of all races and Senna had more time between than Schumacher or hamilton or nobody else! Even Schumacher said on a video that senna is the number one f1 driver ever :)

  • @migy5031
    @migy5031 Před 4 lety +807

    The iconic loafers and white socks - the secret to Senna's speed!

    • @Driver61
      @Driver61  Před 4 lety +59

      Ha, maybe that's what we all need to try! King of style.

    • @kiranbabu3426
      @kiranbabu3426 Před 4 lety +19

      They're mocassins, you amateur.

    • @19MacRazy
      @19MacRazy Před 4 lety +17

      @@kiranbabu3426 I'm part Eskimo... those are NOT mocassins, chump(seeing as we're name calling). XD

    • @daneszhuncho
      @daneszhuncho Před 4 lety +5

      @@19MacRazy yeah, they are defo loafers. ideal for driving, flat sole

    • @19MacRazy
      @19MacRazy Před 4 lety +3

      @@daneszhuncho Right?! I rock a pair on the ol' sim rig. Great alternative when one is too cheap for proper racing boots! ;b

  • @pflaffik
    @pflaffik Před 3 lety +44

    Sennas magic was that he could take the car over its grip limit, causing wheels to slip, something that other drivers will lose a lot of time on. Senna however could dance the car through the curve with little to no time lost. His brain started forming these neuron bridges at age 7, creating a unique brain that by chance was controlling a naturally fast and agile, but also top trained, body. Unique man, he had no conscious technique, the perfect driver created by many biological coincidences. We will not see his like in our lifetime, the greatest driver and a great human being.

  • @MrSstiel
    @MrSstiel Před 4 lety +702

    Hello Driver61, here's what Honda's Takeo Kiuchi said about the Senna throttle blipping technique:
    "He had a way of jabbing the throttle that people thought was all about keeping up the boost pressure of the turbo engines. Maybe it started that way but he was still using it even with the normally aspirated engines..He would use the throttle to put more torque through the tyre and change the yaw, a little it each time before the tyre stalled and slid. This way he could get a better trajectory before the apex without as much steering. He was the only driver I ever saw doing this."

    • @bajacore
      @bajacore Před 4 lety +62

      Simon Stiel I get the feeling he turned the car with the rear tires instead of the front. Similar to the rally drivers rotate their cars. And I have a feeling his early carting days may have been where he started, as mentioned in the video.

    • @dafnik8925
      @dafnik8925 Před 4 lety +4

      aaah I think that's it! Makes total sense!!! Thanks for the quote!

    • @tommack8650
      @tommack8650 Před 4 lety +13

      A technique for racing your fastest is to rotate the car by late trail braking creating oversteer at the Apex and exiting with slight countersteer to correct trajectory under full throttle.

    • @pjtrules363
      @pjtrules363 Před 4 lety +17

      Exactly, more of a rally technique. The fellow in the video gets it wrong by saying he did this while exiting. You can hear from Monza it was only on entry.

    • @rowankannemeyer9709
      @rowankannemeyer9709 Před 4 lety +15

      Add in Keichi Tsuchiya. Same technique used in his AE86 glory days. Manual traction control on corner entry.

  • @318ci
    @318ci Před 4 lety +601

    I love reading all the comments paying respect to this unique man. Miss him so much.

  • @104thironmike4
    @104thironmike4 Před 3 lety +143

    I just came here to express my deep love and respect to Ayrton Senna. He was one of the truly illuminated ppl in this world. He will be forever missed.

    • @notundermywatch3163
      @notundermywatch3163 Před 10 měsíci

      He was my idol as a kid, his fatal crash happened when I was 10 years old. I will never forget when my father came into my bedroom to tell me the news right after he had heard on the radio that hehad passed at Imola.

  • @chuckheinze7
    @chuckheinze7 Před 3 lety +89

    Absolutely amazing. I have always been fascinated with Senna’s driving. His technique is different, and unorthodox. But, man did he make it work! When you watch him in qualifying mode, it’s like he was truly a part of the car and a man almost possessed. He could have easily won two or three more championships. For me, F1 has never been the same after we lost him. I still miss him😢

    • @M7GUASTELLA
      @M7GUASTELLA Před 2 lety

      So true about him in qualifying mode - in fact most of my super favourite memories of him come from qualifying ; sometimes I knew not even *him thought he could make it (he used to comment before) : and even though - he made it 🔥

    • @henry247
      @henry247 Před 2 lety +1

      Awesome choice of words...and "possessed" is spot on lol

    • @alessandrozitamusic
      @alessandrozitamusic Před 7 dny

      Yes, this is very true and in reality, Ayrton officially should have won the F1 World Title 4 times. In 1989 Ayrton was disqualified in the final race (Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka) because Ballestre benefited Prost, where both crashed and Ayrton went on to win that race by overtaking Nanini, in the very last corner after having been 50 seconds behind because of the crash and subsequent pit stop. He would have been champion but after getting the 1st place. he got disqualified after the race ended. So Ayrton really won 1988;89;90 and 1991. And would have surely had another 2 or 3 championships before retiring.

  • @epitosu6461
    @epitosu6461 Před 4 lety +1843

    So basically, he was using traction control before TC became a thing

    • @hughgolo8660
      @hughgolo8660 Před 4 lety +20

      My thought also.

    • @ChrisKsan
      @ChrisKsan Před 4 lety +14

      @Anthony Suarez Yes

    • @McFly2015AD
      @McFly2015AD Před 4 lety +86

      Traction control computers modulate the throttle up and down in a similar way on corner exit.

    • @duster0066
      @duster0066 Před 4 lety +56

      My thoughts also. It is very common to hear drivers drive like that on paved ovals. I did it in an over powered Mustang. However it's not smooth and rarely fast. Sena was a master.
      In SCCA drivers school they introduced us to the concept of "puller" vs "pusher." The manner in which we react to G loading while gripping the wheel. Do you push the wheel or pull it. They told us it didn't seem to matter which style was used, and most drivers don't even realize which style they use until they think about it. According to them 80% of drivers are pullers. They then added, "However Sena and Mario Andretti were both pushers." indicating there may be something to the pusher style. I payed attention on track and could immediately tell I am a puller.

    • @DragNetJoe
      @DragNetJoe Před 4 lety +21

      Yep, and if you look at the curves and his feet once he feels the traction he wants he floors it and keeps it down.

  • @patmanrick
    @patmanrick Před 4 lety +735

    Would Senna have been faster if he drove like everyone else? Michael Johnson was asked a similar question about his unconventional sprinting technique. His response? "If I ran like everyone else, I'd be back there with them".

    • @natfingerboard
      @natfingerboard Před 4 lety +88

      Right? Such a silly question, I see this all the time, someone does something different than the norm and succeed, and instead of saying he succeeded becacuse of that, they say, if he did it the normal way he would succeed even more, that's just bullshit. He succeeded because he was different.

    • @corte_s
      @corte_s Před 3 lety +3

      Nathan Carrille Music yep yep

    • @Yaro2
      @Yaro2 Před 3 lety

      Nathan Carrille Music period.

    • @ya-rx8nd
      @ya-rx8nd Před 3 lety +2

      I think the question was about driving the newer F1s when they didn't have the turbo anymore, because his technique clearly had an advantage for driving cars with turbo.

  • @josefserf1926
    @josefserf1926 Před 3 lety +92

    Instinct, talent and genius.
    All 3 beyond close analysis.

  • @DownUnder43
    @DownUnder43 Před 3 lety +31

    Man, I miss waking early in Brazil every Sunday to watch this man race as a kid he was my hero. Far out I don't think we will ever have someone on our sports like this man again. I hope his legacy is kept alive forever.

  • @thiagohumb1
    @thiagohumb1 Před 4 lety +309

    Senna feels the traction all the time, he knows the full car behavior, the tires, the engine, and himself as one piece, all together. We miss him as a hero. Regards from Brazil

    • @cosmodog6270
      @cosmodog6270 Před 4 lety +2

      Apropriately coming to the conclusion of god llike qualities....

    • @petezm
      @petezm Před 4 lety +1

      Senna è foda

    • @jorgeaugusto3702
      @jorgeaugusto3702 Před 4 lety +1

      Brazillians miss him too...

    • @01godspeed71
      @01godspeed71 Před 4 lety +1

      pure genius..

    • @joaoprezado6915
      @joaoprezado6915 Před 3 lety +1

      Man! this is exacly what i think and why i admire him. Even tho in actual days his skill is not so important and he would probably lose to some top level drivers nowadays. He was still probably the best overall and complete driver cause with this tecnique doesnt need any systems incorporated. He was also a very great tuner.
      And when you are the best without any systems and helps you can be spetacular on anything even if you are not the best on some specific cars.
      What i mean. Maybe Senna would be slightly slower in actual cars than the top drivers, but he would stomp them in old cars without driving assistances.

  • @aaronwhite2683
    @aaronwhite2683 Před 4 lety +157

    Now I understand why the modern F1 divers when asked after watching a replay of senna's car dancing around the track all say "I can't do that"

  • @sevvvich8118
    @sevvvich8118 Před 3 lety +38

    Non-car guys: Nooo, I don't want to go to Brazil!
    Cultured people:

  • @alangriffin8146
    @alangriffin8146 Před 3 lety +71

    I really wanted to be Ayrton Senna when I was a kid. He was so cool.

  • @Xpertgamingtech
    @Xpertgamingtech Před 4 lety +465

    Here is what I think he did. When you are feathering the throttle to not lose traction, you are most of the time under the threshold of spinning the tire. And in case you spin the tire you lose a lot of time regaining traction. The tires will grip more with a little speed higher compared to the tarmac. I think this way, you can be more consistent if you have a fast foot as Senna did. You don't overspin the tire a lot and hence can be faster than smoothing into the accelerator. I have never raced an F1 car and is just my theory from SIM racing so this could be as reliable as my Timmy Hilfiger watch...

    • @ThatsWhatSheSaid999
      @ThatsWhatSheSaid999 Před 3 lety +1

      Ayee love your content bro !

    • @SonicPoetryIII
      @SonicPoetryIII Před 3 lety +11

      They use this physic in motorcycle racing and engine design. Yamaha Tenere has a trick 270 deg crossplane flat 2 cylinder engine. The 450 deg crank rotation gap where there was no combustion allowed the tire to regain grip after ''slipping'' having a burst of power from the successive 270 deg combustions. Usefull especially in offroad. You could go further with this thinking in that offroad motorcycles run less cylinders for this reason, sacrificing possible power output from a 4 cylinder engine. Low end torque plays in this also.
      The strait plane twins would actually have a bigger ""no combustion gap'' of 540 deg, but I suspect the excess vibrations and balancing issues killed this engine design and rendering it obsolete.

    • @gabrielgaranas
      @gabrielgaranas Před 2 lety +6

      from a motorcycle's perspective on a slippery surface, you can squeeze the throttle on and off quickly and frequently to get a better feel of the grip on the rear tire and then to point to the direction you want to go. the same technique can be done on a cart around a corner. maybe Senna developed this technique as he progressed through different cars and race divisions and already perfected it when he got to f1.

    • @tongyang1631
      @tongyang1631 Před 2 lety

      Even the drift king uses the blipping but in an opposite way. Imo senna was using the blip to see the edge of traction and keep it there. Where DK uses it to keep the sticky tires on drift cars from locking up and getting full traction.

    • @Canalbiruta
      @Canalbiruta Před rokem +2

      So... Senna was forcing slip angle as much as he could?

  • @metaleirosincero6317
    @metaleirosincero6317 Před 4 lety +641

    Now imagine doing this during a rainy day in Monaco. Every genius is crazy and he was.

    • @sam21462
      @sam21462 Před 4 lety +7

      I wouldn't say that every genius is crazy. Take Albert Einstein, for instance. He wasn't crazy, however, his mind was at a level it redefined what it means to be sane.

    • @mzxrules
      @mzxrules Před 4 lety +35

      @@sam21462 Einstein not crazy? the dude wore shoes without socks!

    • @sam21462
      @sam21462 Před 4 lety +5

      @@mzxrules - Judging from what I see on talk shows these days that wasn't him being crazy, that was him just again being way ahead of his time. Now there is a wonderful story, almost certainly apocryphall but who knows. One day, the great man came down very late for dinner and others had already given up on him and eaten. He looked at the table with the dirty dishes and said "Oh I'm sorry, I have forgotten that I already ate". With that, he turned around and went back to his work.
      So yeah ........ 😆

    • @slothypunk
      @slothypunk Před 4 lety +3

      @@sam21462 That is a full crap of comment my dude. Crazy by in itself is a stamp that you are way out of deviation in your society standard.... as well a genious too. If back then he was not in society standard and has those euphoric and "way ahead of time" thinking, it is indeed being "special". Peasant call it crazy! Stop denying it that he is indeed "crazy" during his time! Even in today's standard he is a bit off!

    • @sam21462
      @sam21462 Před 4 lety +1

      @@slothypunk - So which "society standard" (Whatever that means as there is no "standard" in societies.)? Should we judge him by his Jewish heritage and against the other Jews around him? Should we judge him by his nationality? I mean he certainly seems pretty sane when compared to the Nazi movement all around him (before he bailed on the "society standard" of his home country). Should we use the physics community of the world as the benchmark for his "society standard"? Which "society"? What "standard"?
      In truth, there is no such thing as "society standard". Feel free to prove me wrong. Why not start with defining for us what is the "society standard" for Americans?

  • @aobrien2
    @aobrien2 Před 2 lety +10

    My theory is he was accelerating earlier and with more force but whereas a consistent application of throttle would put the car into a slide if it was too early or too forceful, a blip would only slide the car a little, giving feedback as to where the limit is but also, as a by product, helping rotation on an oversteery car which he definitely preferred.

  • @jivepatrol6833
    @jivepatrol6833 Před rokem +14

    I saw Senna drive in person several times. He was the greatest driver...ever! He would adjust very quickly to the kiddie cars in F1 they have these days and be at the top. It's misguided to say or infer otherwise. In the turbo age the fuel injectors would go to high pulsewidth to dump some fuel between shifts (200-300ms) to keep the turbocharger spinning at peak rpm. This is the backfire one sees in the old films. It was by design.

  • @strugglingathome
    @strugglingathome Před 4 lety +296

    A craftsman that mastered every aspect of his instrument.

    • @NODAK9
      @NODAK9 Před 4 lety +9

      Simplistically pure, especially considering the technology involved nowadays.

  • @duckheadgaming
    @duckheadgaming Před 4 lety +487

    Imagine being able to HEAR someones driving style.

    • @bempartington4299
      @bempartington4299 Před 4 lety

      Duckhead Gaming unlike someone talking about it?

    • @djmips
      @djmips Před 4 lety

      Today they even record the opponents sound to analyze

    • @144ADT
      @144ADT Před 4 lety

      I can't imagine not being able to......

  • @telismane745
    @telismane745 Před 3 lety +90

    God made him capable. Senna was a genius. May his soul rest in paradise.

    • @_Archambaud
      @_Archambaud Před 3 lety

      🙏❤

    • @h.cedric8157
      @h.cedric8157 Před 2 lety

      I say Senna, Mcrae, and all the departed racing drivers are just happy up there racing and talking bout cars.

  • @garinakbar1907
    @garinakbar1907 Před 3 lety +39

    Imagine how dominant he would be if he was driving the Williams for 1993, with those active suspensions, abs, TC and things

    • @ragyoo2857
      @ragyoo2857 Před 3 lety +7

      Mind that he helped develop active suspension in the lotus team in spite of his mastery of taming car reactions. Active suspension helped him win his first at Monaco 1987 without any tire change and saving his hand muscles.

    • @garinakbar1907
      @garinakbar1907 Před 3 lety +4

      @@ragyoo2857 Yeah, I do remember that...that's why he was legend, in almost any cars

    • @sennalotus12
      @sennalotus12 Před 2 lety +5

      Before the B-spec racer was released in 1994, the Williams, was undriveable and found a way to take that car to three pole positions on a trot against the traction control of Benetton that year.

    • @garinakbar1907
      @garinakbar1907 Před 2 lety

      @@sennalotus12 yeah..Ayrton's famous whopping big gap qualifying had also disappeared, this time he got pole but by just the smallest of margin

    • @garinakbar1907
      @garinakbar1907 Před 2 lety +2

      @@sennalotus12 I believe the Benetton didn't have a traction control that year, Michael Schumacher mostly uses left foot braking and cause of the light V8 Ford engine on that Benetton, the car became more nimble than the Williams

  • @SpotlightKid83
    @SpotlightKid83 Před 4 lety +264

    I've been looking at this (and listening to it) for years and I'm always amazed at how many things are missed in these analysis.
    What I see is that
    1- He releases the brake long before the apex (and switches his right foot to the throttle, he actually reaches the apex ON the throttle. Clearly seen on the NSX video)
    2- Most of the blipping happens BEFORE the apex (between the brake release and the apex)
    3- On fast corners, by the time he reaches the apex he applies full throttle (most times even before the steering wheel is straight)
    4- On short corners he is already full throttle on corner exit (as opposed to the 2nd Spoon at Suzuka, for example)
    5- He doesn't always do the blipping at the same rate/speed. He instinctively adjusts it to the amount of grip at that given moment.
    6- Seems to me he blips at a more rapid rate on fast corners, but during a shorter amount of time and he doesn't lift completely. The blip happens between 60-100% throttle.
    7- On slow corners (Check Monaco or Montreal hairpins, or La Source at Spa) he blips between 0-40% throttle and usually continues blipping well into the corner's exit depending on how tight the exit is.

    • @paulnavas3196
      @paulnavas3196 Před 4 lety +12

      Well said, thats why he is the greatest....

    • @JonhDoeexe
      @JonhDoeexe Před 4 lety +2

      .

    • @c4n15lupu5
      @c4n15lupu5 Před 4 lety

      Indeed

    • @briangeiger9307
      @briangeiger9307 Před 4 lety +6

      When I raced Mini-Z RC cars, which were basically miniature go karts, some time ago , I was with some locals that were world cup drivers. I watched them drive. They would pulse the throttle. They set their chassis to understeer so much you can't even go around the track without skidding the tail. They called it point and shoot. They pulsed and braked around the corner. Use the pulse to shift the weight back and forth and position the car towards the exit, then full throttle down the straight. Pulse turned out to be the fastest way around. I tried the smooth corner, nope, too slow.

    • @ernanipozza
      @ernanipozza Před 4 lety +4

      "He instinctively adjusts it to the amount of grip at that given moment."
      As Martin Brundlle said in the Senna Top Gear episode: "he had a God-given talent that i haven't witnessed anywhere else, a sixth sense of where the grip was before he turned into a corner."

  • @TheGameHub
    @TheGameHub Před 3 lety +36

    6:23 mans driving in loafers

    • @jej7488
      @jej7488 Před 3 lety +1

      *driving shoes

    • @kageyame
      @kageyame Před 3 lety +3

      @@jej7488 nope, those where loafers all right, that was from his test lap on a NSX, and he was in "civilian clothes" or so to speak.

  • @geemac979
    @geemac979 Před 2 lety +8

    Senna was, without doubt, a uniquely gifted driver. If I recall correctly, Alan Jones the Australian former F1 World Champion used a similar technique when cornering or through chicanes. He referred to his throttle technique as “feathering” and it obviously brought him F1 success 🏎

  • @apmm4209
    @apmm4209 Před 3 lety +184

    Senna was pure talent and my all time favourite F1 driver !

  • @TheZhock1
    @TheZhock1 Před 4 lety +87

    Senna don't react to the car, the car has to react to senna

    • @NoNameLeft1500
      @NoNameLeft1500 Před 4 lety +2

      but thats usually the case for every fast driver (and I don't mean exceptional fast like in terms of senna I mean just basically racedriver).... if you react you are not fast.. reaction is always slower then actioning (is that a word? )... otherwise you would be driven by the car... which is always a bad situation :D
      even just driving on the road... you act.. the car reacts... the thing is to do the right actions so the car react in the way you want...

  • @CammieRacing
    @CammieRacing Před 3 lety +17

    Having watched Senna so much as a child, and hearing those blips, I thought that was normal and I do it in the simulator to this day, not quite as aggressively but I definitely blip it.

  • @Cryrockracing
    @Cryrockracing Před 2 lety +9

    I use his footwork technique in my go kart racing for around 5 years and it's actually effective. Got alot of respect for his talent love from uk🇬🇧 😁

  • @d1want34
    @d1want34 Před 4 lety +157

    Omg that McLaren sound was so majesctic!!

    • @joshuapere997
      @joshuapere997 Před 3 lety +1

      Don't use God's name in vain by saying Goddamn or even Holy Cow or OMG. Ur Breaking the second commandant!!!! Repent n believe!!!! In Jesus!!! He will surely forgive you 🙏!!!!!

    • @f3p
      @f3p Před 3 lety +13

      @@joshuapere997 stfu

    • @azl5044
      @azl5044 Před 3 lety +6

      @@joshuapere997 I... Honestly don't care. Humanity is long gone.

    • @friktionrc
      @friktionrc Před 3 lety +2

      Yup....gotta love those 1.5ltr v6 turbo Honda engines 🤣👌👌

    • @THEDnARACER
      @THEDnARACER Před 3 lety +1

      @@joshuapere997 he said oh my gosh

  • @lorenzoabanes6351
    @lorenzoabanes6351 Před 4 lety +231

    Seems a bit like a human traction control system

  • @jbee9713
    @jbee9713 Před 2 lety +7

    He was simply the greatest F1 driver ever, had a sence of grip and way of handling that has never been seen before of since!

  • @joaoalbertolise1234
    @joaoalbertolise1234 Před 3 lety +9

    Imagine the engineer asking senna "so, do you want oversteer or understeer?" "YES"

  • @mylesleevy2432
    @mylesleevy2432 Před 4 lety +321

    If he’s already “pulsing” the throttle through the corner, I think he’s better prepared to let off when he’s losing traction as he feels it happening. He’s already clearly in a different league than even other F1 drivers in terms of his reflexes, so I think he’s feeling the edge of traction and that dictates what he’s doing with the throttle pulses.
    Given his unbelievable ability in the wet in F1 cars with no traction control, I don’t think he’s upsetting the car in any way with his technique. The lack of grip in the rain would expose that flaw if it were true.

    • @vincer9960
      @vincer9960 Před 4 lety +6

      You clearly know nothing of racing. Only casual fans or people who don't know anything about racing think it's cause of reaction times. It's about the feel and the technique used. Some guy who has insane reactions isn't going to be some crazy good driver, lol, this is such a myth that I cringe when people think drivers are fast because of reaction times. Reaction times are important if you suddenly get the car snap out on you or something like that but you don't need superhuman reaction times to be Senna or Schumi or Alonso or Hamilton, you need incredible feel and talent (talent comprising of many different traits but superhuman reactions is low on the list). Most drivers on the grid will have similiar reaction times. The top drivers don't have miraculous reaction times compared to the other drivers throughout the grid, they have great feel and skill and technique.

    • @Loammello2
      @Loammello2 Před 4 lety +50

      @@vincer9960 you completely lost the point of his comment, he didnt say that he was better because he had better reaction, he just said he had crazy good reaction times, go ahead and read it again before roasting someone over nothing.

    • @desire_002
      @desire_002 Před 4 lety +3

      @@Loammello2 i concur

    • @desire_002
      @desire_002 Před 4 lety +16

      @@vincer9960 You singled out the fact he mentioned reflexes lol. You then mention about technique when Myles already was talking about the technique

    • @coviantlynch6913
      @coviantlynch6913 Před 3 lety

      If I was a driver currently qualifying on pole at monaco and Hamilton was my team mate, I might use a related idea at mirabeau to make sure I didnt lock up and bring out a yellow flag.

  • @jeromepascual10
    @jeromepascual10 Před 4 lety +478

    Senna: I was no longer driving that car consciously...........

    • @markitagens
      @markitagens Před 3 lety +49

      I was about ten yo when this first happened: it was my second time trying go karting with my dad and his friends. At a certain point of the race, I lost my conscious of what I was doing, I was just racing, trying to make the best in every corner.
      Sure thing I was a kid among adults, did finish second last and there's no way I can ever compare mine skills with his. But the point of losing conscious is so real... nowadays I still go karting, and I just keep trying to beat my own lap times and overtaking drivers ahead, losing track of reality by entering that "driving frenzy". I wonder if that's more common that it seems.

    • @knut3hundra649
      @knut3hundra649 Před 3 lety +3

      @@markitagens Happens to me everytime i go karting.

    • @timjohnun4297
      @timjohnun4297 Před 3 lety +36

      An older comment now, but deserves a reply; I read an article a while back where a guy said he borrowed a cherry picker, to watch qualifying from above the fence, at 1 of the corners in Canada (From memory). He said every driver but Senna lifted for the corner, Senna took it flat out. After quali he was in the pits and Senna saw him, and recognised him, and said "Hey, you're the guy in the cherry picker". I think time really did slow down for him, when he was driving fast, somehow, in his mind

    • @jeromepascual10
      @jeromepascual10 Před 3 lety +6

      @@timjohnun4297 Always on the limit. He made the car dance as said on Top Gear.

    • @KrumpusPlunk
      @KrumpusPlunk Před 3 lety +8

      @@markitagens you can find a lot of research on this state of consciousness in the context of different sports if you search for "flow state" :)

  • @seadsejfovic9127
    @seadsejfovic9127 Před 3 lety +3

    He is basically acting as a PWM controller for the throttle, on average his throttle is open more than others, trouble is it's difficult to control and do consistently. I think you are right, the suspension dampening won't allow the springs to react to fast enough to the blip. But I also think sometime he did it to induce oversteer/understeer to put the car where he wanted. I highly doubt a driver as strong as senna wouldn't kick a habit that was holding him back.

  • @The_Joker_
    @The_Joker_ Před 3 lety +67

    Senna was the social outsider in the F1 circle. The drivers were secretly in awe of a talent they did not understand.

  • @JoshChristiane
    @JoshChristiane Před 4 lety +212

    I raced karts for about 10 years as a child into early adulthood, and I always (naturally) used the same exact technique. Nobody ever taught it to me as a kid, I just found that it worked and I was able to find traction where others weren't. Where they slid all around the track (especially on wet days) I managed to somehow make the kart stick better while quickly tapping/vibrating the throttle, and to this day I do the same thing in road cars. I've never been in a crash so I don't think it's dangerous, but I'm not really sure why it works either, I just know it does... It's a feeling, an instinct, and it's actually saved me before while aquaplaning. I'm sure Senna felt a similar way about it.

    • @MrTinykin
      @MrTinykin Před 4 lety +16

      I knew a couple of drivers who drove like that, along with short jabbing of the steering when they were driving very fast thru corners on the road in the seventies. [This was in the Caribbean where we could get away with things like that:-) ]. Anyway I always thought that it was a precaution to keep the car unsteady in the corner to be able to change direction for unexpected stuff such as, bumpy surfaces and potholes, parked vehicles etc. Sort of like split step in tennis (sort of). I now think differently after seeing this.

    • @dyr_glpsn4209
      @dyr_glpsn4209 Před 4 lety +10

      The trick to survive aquaplanning is zero inputs during aquaplanning, if you know where the puddle is, do what you need (turn, slow down, build speed) BEFORE hitting it. Blipping the throttle on a puddle is not going to help in any way, it can only start to build up yaw due to uneven water levels on both sides. And the trick to be a good driver in open roads is to NEVER get anywhere near the grip limits.

    • @jewwyjones9760
      @jewwyjones9760 Před 4 lety +2

      2nd try. It's all about settling the vehicle, keeping weight on or off the rubber that matters at the time. Idealy saving tires with smooth inputs will prepare the car for "what's coming," vs reacting to what's happening. Senna seemed to keep the difference between the two smaller than I've ever seen if that makes sense. Amazing, to pull that off in those turbo stick shift monsters back then...sometimes add rain 😲

    • @wrigman
      @wrigman Před 4 lety +1

      A big thing to do with a KT100 with a multi plate wet clutch....

    • @PopeKarul
      @PopeKarul Před 4 lety +2

      It's weird. I just learned to do it over the years of regular road driving too and found that, even on regular roads, but especially in the wet, the car felt more balanced.

  • @Lu1998Bu
    @Lu1998Bu Před 3 lety +72

    Senna: "How much air can the turbo pull in?"
    Mechanic: "Air? Ton."
    Senna: "Yes?"

    • @fortressofsoliddudes4597
      @fortressofsoliddudes4597 Před 3 lety +8

      That wasn't good at all.

    • @Tailspin80
      @Tailspin80 Před 2 lety +1

      Seriously pathetic.🙂

    • @Lu1998Bu
      @Lu1998Bu Před 2 lety +1

      @@Tailspin80 Haters gonna hate

    • @Tailspin80
      @Tailspin80 Před 2 lety

      @UCmgTkBtGt_nkcj_eUd-PZBw The humour is in how contrived it is, not how funny. IMO.

    • @Tailspin80
      @Tailspin80 Před 2 lety

      @@Lu1998Bu whatever. Can’t believe you’re getting so excited defending a crappy joke.

  • @RobertoDiAguiar
    @RobertoDiAguiar Před 3 lety +150

    Fantastic

  • @TobiasOliveira685
    @TobiasOliveira685 Před 3 lety +840

    He is actually the best driver in history of f1.

    • @adrianjabs5752
      @adrianjabs5752 Před 3 lety +15

      Have U seen the Senna movie he could have retired & still be here Senna read his Bible & said no I'm addicted and can't stop 🙏

    • @noahletwinski6955
      @noahletwinski6955 Před 3 lety +37

      *Jim clark has entered the chat*

    • @zethjugos1250
      @zethjugos1250 Před 3 lety +34

      He's the reason i got hooked on f1 as a child...

    • @Aro3o6
      @Aro3o6 Před 3 lety +2

      Lol

    • @ougal84
      @ougal84 Před 3 lety +2

      Agrees with Noah... what’s that Jimmy?

  • @Ganserndorf9411
    @Ganserndorf9411 Před 4 lety +108

    A small flaw in the descriptive in the video: most of the weight transfer is NOT the result of the car pitching or squatting from suspension movements. The majority of the weight transfer is the result of balancing forces on the free body of the car with acceleration forces acting on the center of gravity. Even with with completely stiff suspension, there is still weight transfer to the rear when accelerating.

    • @pjay3028
      @pjay3028 Před 4 lety +10

      Yes, you're absolutely correct. Also he concludes that the speed of the blipping is so fast that it wouldn't have time to create pitch (and therefore weight transfer), so didn't upset the car, but then says if Senna did it in a modern car it would cause aerodynamic problems because it WOULD create pitch and would upset the car!

    • @dunichtich100
      @dunichtich100 Před 4 lety +5

      Aahhh I see a fellow engineering collegue ;)

    • @tommack8650
      @tommack8650 Před 4 lety +1

      Correct. Simply put: Throttle increases weight at the rear and braking really increases weight to the front.

    • @jackmancrazy
      @jackmancrazy Před 4 lety +2

      Correct the only reason there is pitch change is because of the weight transfer

    • @Zbip57
      @Zbip57 Před 4 lety +2

      Exactly. The car pitches or squats BECAUSE of the weight transfer, not the other way around. Any time the car accelerates/decelerates or changes direction there will be a corresponding weight transfer regardless of whether the car has compliant suspension components or not.

  • @Roulandus-le-Fartere
    @Roulandus-le-Fartere Před rokem +2

    Frequency response is the key. You can put loads of incredible magnitude through systems and see almost no physical reaction as mass and damping effects prevent the system from responding to these impulses. You can guarantee that Senna was working with his engine and suspension development team to isolate out any negative effects of his technique on the vehicle.
    By fluttering on and off the throttle Senna was able to know where the grip limit was at all times without causing the vehicle to become unstable by exceeding the limit for any appreciable period of time. By the time traction was breaking he was already off the power, but knew that he had exceeded it at that point in the corner. It was like a primitive Stability Control where his foot, hands, and ass were the sensors detecting where the break point was. Think Stability Control, not Traction Control. Senna was that good.

  • @FRA_StarAl2015
    @FRA_StarAl2015 Před 3 lety +51

    I use the throttle like that sometimes when i play simulator.

    • @aryasenaputra3226
      @aryasenaputra3226 Před 3 lety

      I want to try this at games, did you actually notice any difference

    • @FRA_StarAl2015
      @FRA_StarAl2015 Před 3 lety +4

      @@aryasenaputra3226 depends in wich situation but yeah sonetimes i manage to get more speed through corners

    • @Acthu69
      @Acthu69 Před 3 lety +2

      I feel that too and I used this a lot on gran turismo 4, it makes corners easier to turn

    • @FRA_StarAl2015
      @FRA_StarAl2015 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Acthu69 yeah

  • @paulosentinela1
    @paulosentinela1 Před 4 lety +53

    "That reminds of a Nigel Roebuck quote: "If you see Prost driving a Formula 1 car, you'd think you could do it yourself. If you see Senna driving the same car, you'd abosolutely knew you " couldn't". POR DAVI MOURÃO

  • @baggszilla
    @baggszilla Před 4 lety +43

    Senna had a built-in human abs/traction control system!

  • @barendversteeg9966
    @barendversteeg9966 Před 2 lety +2

    Dear Driver61, you are looking for the horse while riding on it...
    The blip throttle technique in a corner allows to INcrease the AVERAGE speed midcorner WITHOUT running the risk to go over the limit with the rears for TOO LONG. The latter will end in an oversteer situation that will cost cornerspeed/laptime and could even end up in an oversteer that cannot be corrected anymore (crash). It is much harder to be ON the limit with increasing the throttle smoothly all the time throughout every corner again and again, because in XY% of the cases you will go over that fine line and face more or less oversteer. Senna's technique allowed the rears to regain full grip just in time a few times during the corner when there was no driving power on the rears at all.
    The same can be said of the frontwheels. When giving throttle intermittently, at the moment you give much throttle the rears (that do not steer and are always standing straight) want to power the car straigh ahead which pushes a car more into an understeer situation. However, when dropping off the throttle, this understeerfactor is completely gone at once, causing the frontwheels to "fully bite" again in the tarmac, causing the car to steer around with much more ease and 100% 'pure rolling' efficiency again.
    These two effects added up made Senna faster in a corner while sparing the tires because the tires were NOT driven on the limit all the time taking a corner. In the intermittent times he was off throttle he spared tyres, both front and rear.
    There was even a third factor. What Senna did can also be seen as "intermittently lifting" IN a corner instead of only lifting (and coasting) before a corner (which, as you know, saves fuel). When you are using less fuel on average than your competitors during a race, then you can start with less ofc, making you lighter and thus faster during the WHOLE race...
    To sum it all up: Senna was able to maintain a higher (or the same) corner speed as his opponents while running less risk to break out with his rears, at the same time sparing his tyres AND saving fuel.
    In his youth he found out that "it worked"... and never changed his driving style, no matter in what car/engine he was driving because the above mentioned factors work with EVERY car and EVERY engine (but when driving a turbo engine with a turbo lag, there is even that 4th advantage indeed).
    So now you've got the whole secret explained for free. What do you think it's worth?
    Kind regards,
    Barend
    PS if you want to know more, send me a private message

  • @TallSomeone
    @TallSomeone Před 2 lety +2

    Ayrton was a friend. I am technical and not a driver (although I wish and had much time on carts with big front porches, being 6'6"). I was not part of racing or the network of racing, but I will say this: AS was a student of the moment. He thought about every aspect of every car and track put beneath him. I do NOT think he would EVER have carried prior-tech (meaning cars, tires and track layouts and conditions) applications of his technique (his body movements, from head to toe) into any new scenario. He would not have ever let "habit" be a part of his day.
    You know, one of the things I get emotional about in telling folks about A is HIS STUDY ETHIC. If you told him that a soccer ball had camel leather all of a sudden, he'd study kicking it differently and new shoe possibilities. He did not carry prior technique into new paradigms of engine and tracks. He thought-out everything. Don't take my word for it. Ask Mika.
    If you want to know why he did this, put it in this paradigm: A genius doing something that you can't fathom. He would have eliminated it if it hadn't served him.

  • @scamauney
    @scamauney Před 4 lety +75

    IMO: The reason he did it as a kid was because the karts were two stroke - keeping the RPM up was same as keeping RPM up in turbo.

    • @144ADT
      @144ADT Před 4 lety +3

      Keeping it on the pipe.

    • @shooter7a
      @shooter7a Před 4 lety +1

      Hmmmm...no. Karts that Senna raced were single speed direct drive.

    • @Don-vv8ct
      @Don-vv8ct Před 4 lety

      shooter7a have you driven a kart? Keeping the RPMs up carrying corner speed is most important with something with low horsepower and single speed.

    • @marthamryglod291
      @marthamryglod291 Před 4 lety

      @@Don-vv8ct only if there was a clutch with a high lockup rpm

    • @pilotavery
      @pilotavery Před 3 lety

      Good one lol

  • @alessandrotovoli125
    @alessandrotovoli125 Před 4 lety +192

    I saw Senna many times doing telegraphy with the engine and also notice his attention to get and modify ratio transmission from throttle pedal to the butterfly valves - was nice to see and hear. I remember when he asked after a lot of telemetry analysis modification in one Monza GP. than Saturday made and incredible and best lap time with circuit still in old configuration with 2 Lesmo bends done from 6 to 7th gear. Thanks to remember this peculiarity of this grate driver for me the best one with the best F1 cars of all time up to now.

  • @Living_The_Dream
    @Living_The_Dream Před rokem +8

    Flat out or nothing. What a legend he was ❤

  • @schmiddy8433
    @schmiddy8433 Před 3 lety +3

    Something I found from trying to modulate the throttle like senna did is that it induces oversteer, he's revving the engine to pretty high RPMs and likely inducing just the right amount of wheelspin in the back wheels to push the front tires around. It's extremely difficult to do but there were a couple corners I managed to get it just right and it is definitely faster.

  • @BradsHacks
    @BradsHacks Před 3 lety +30

    5:15 Karts have weight transfer just like normal cars. Weight transfer causes suspension displacement, not the other way around.

  • @Investorpotamus
    @Investorpotamus Před 4 lety +41

    Senna, Fangio, Clark, Ascari, Shumi, Surtees, Moss, Hawthorn and others... these guys could drive anything very fast and would all be at the top in today's cars.

    • @Gazeld
      @Gazeld Před 3 lety

      Shumi ? Who is it ? A new Japanese guy ? :D

  • @guilhermeJamals
    @guilhermeJamals Před 3 lety +42

    "he was almost mystic" - o melhor de todos.

  • @ilferrari
    @ilferrari Před 2 lety +1

    According to Takeo Kiuchi (Senna's Honda engineer), Senna did this to manipulate the yaw and trajectory of the car in the corner.
    "The normal technique on corner entry is to keep as smooth as possible. But Ayrton would use the throttle to put more torque through the tyre and change the yaw, a little bit each time. This way he could get a better trajectory before the apex without as much steering. When we did our simulations, usually the actual time a driver set was slightly slower than the simulation; with Ayrton, he was nearly always slightly quicker. That was because we couldn’t model what he was doing with the throttle and how it affected the car."

  • @utkarshkks
    @utkarshkks Před 4 lety +75

    I would say, it's more of a test of the grip, every time he stomped on the throttle, he would get a feel of, if the car was having enough grip for him to floor it.

    • @ricardocgalvao
      @ricardocgalvao Před 3 lety +5

      I think you're right.

    • @Jaburu
      @Jaburu Před 3 lety +18

      best comment. and this is why he would come out faster. he wasn't "guessing" like the others

    • @chamito7499
      @chamito7499 Před 3 lety +9

      when he stomped on the throttle the car loses traction on the rear, so he basically could drift the car to a specific direction that he wanted and make the corners much, much, much faster

    • @anilmahabirsingh422
      @anilmahabirsingh422 Před 3 lety +8

      My take is that it is something rally drivers do all the time while cornering translated in Senna's F1 driving style
      1 to keep the car in its power band
      2 to break and add traction to rotate the car in the corner

    • @gradowik
      @gradowik Před 3 lety

      it looks similar to using oscilation/vibration. If properly applied this might give more power or more grip in certain conditions. Though it's mainly theorethical ... except air intakes using standing wave and Senna dtiving style. Both seem impossible science fiction and both happen on a very rare ocassions.

  • @sticky-fingers
    @sticky-fingers Před 4 lety +250

    Senna wasnt just a very fast driver, he's the fastest driver ever for me.

    • @hortaufmichzuabonnieren326
      @hortaufmichzuabonnieren326 Před 4 lety +9

      Would have loved to see him race against Schumacher . Schumacher did the same technic to get some light oversteer on his cars to get faster around the corners.

    • @royoroz
      @royoroz Před 4 lety +14

      @@hortaufmichzuabonnieren326 shummy was behind him when he crash in Imola

    • @bestopinion9257
      @bestopinion9257 Před 4 lety +2

      @@royoroz Because Senna with a better car got the pole. But in races, with a slower car, Schumacher was better.

    • @RafitoOoO
      @RafitoOoO Před 4 lety +8

      @@bestopinion9257 I mean, in 94 Senna DNF in the races. That Williams was totally unreliable after it got all its systems butchered.

    • @bestopinion9257
      @bestopinion9257 Před 4 lety +1

      @@RafitoOoO I mean Scumacher was faster. Look the races.

  • @zeus.edwards2662
    @zeus.edwards2662 Před 3 lety +4

    throttle blips work to give you more feel on the steering of the front and rear wheels so you know how much grip is there. Seeing that he was accustom to doing it from early, he knew exactly what feel he was looking for and knew the limit of the car cornering on every lap and how much grip he had left, so basically he was using the grip of the wheels to its limit.

  • @jakk222
    @jakk222 Před 3 lety +3

    I’m glad to see you said that it’s an understatement to call Senna a *very* fast driver.

  • @satanswolf
    @satanswolf Před 3 lety +22

    I have been knowing this driving style as "the telegraph". Switching between understeer to oversteer as my father taught me.

  • @aqulex84
    @aqulex84 Před 3 lety +315

    I love that decade of F1. It was all about perfection, pure driving skills, sheer power and SOUND. Today its so boring to watch..

    • @Scottdvz
      @Scottdvz Před 3 lety +7

      @SgtCrikey And making multiple adjustments of of the brake bias and other things every lap.

    • @thirdasian8541
      @thirdasian8541 Před 3 lety +18

      @SgtCrikey No shit. Do you expect 80-90's style of cars to last forever ? World usually tends to change as well as F1, so no wonder why cars look like Terminator. It's all due to technical progress.

    • @katashi862
      @katashi862 Před 3 lety +5

      @@thirdasian8541 I love the todays cars as much as every other F1 car, each has their own reason to be the best of its year. For todays car, it just amazes me how chaotic and strange the aeoro makes the cars, especially the bargeboards. I would lie if I would say I truly enjoy the current racing, without the L, V, M pair, it is alright to watch, but in general we had better years. The old cars are just maniaks and require balls of steel to drive. Driver rather would die by an impact into a tree than to burn. I also think both cars are hard and very difficult to drive in their own ways.

    • @rainbowthrustars
      @rainbowthrustars Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah, I stopped watching some yrs ago. Its absolute a bore these days.

    • @danielfaria4949
      @danielfaria4949 Před 3 lety

      I agree 100% today’s the cars are automatic don’t need a driver” at Senna age really needed a “Pilot”

  • @ezeztztz
    @ezeztztz Před 3 lety +3

    This is fascinating,I knew senna would literally throw his car around circuits whereas his fiercest rival alain prost would glide it around,hence his nickname the professor,but I had no idea just how violent senna was with his F1 car,astonishing really considering just how hard and technical they are to drive

  • @aleksandarpesic1412
    @aleksandarpesic1412 Před 3 lety

    great video and insight. Thank you and have subscribed

  • @felipemacedo2045
    @felipemacedo2045 Před 4 lety +218

    Sennas do a tcs with his feet. Gain traction with this shortly blips

    • @Godric_71
      @Godric_71 Před 4 lety +2

      Throttle blips and loafers. 👍😎🏍💨

    • @Lazlo.
      @Lazlo. Před 4 lety

      YEET

  • @Dcs-Brasil
    @Dcs-Brasil Před 4 lety +129

    Controle de tração natural meu amigo. Era talento puro. Eu tive o prazer de ver isso de perto.
    Natural traction control my friend. It was pure talent. I was pleased to see it up close.

    • @C2Ac
      @C2Ac Před 3 lety +8

      Caramba! Parabéns cara, queria ter a sua sorte 😄

    • @jucalebre7540
      @jucalebre7540 Před 3 lety +1

      Que legal cara, eu não tive essa sorte

    • @fisbiocorsini
      @fisbiocorsini Před 3 lety +1

      Isso daí deve ter vindo da época do Chevette carburado a álcool.... Kkkkk

    • @joaomelo2792
      @joaomelo2792 Před 3 lety

      Você é abençoado de ter visto ele correr de perto, eu que nasci anos depois de sua morte, só fico encantado com os vídeos de longe

    • @trinidad17
      @trinidad17 Před 3 lety

      Estava la e foi lindo.

  • @FranciscoRAmado
    @FranciscoRAmado Před 3 lety +5

    I was unaware that Senna did this! My dad always drove fast like this! And I guess I picked it up from him too. For me it always seemed to allow me to go through corners at a higher speed as long as you use really short bursts. I also feel it allows me to make better and faster corrections while I'm turning.

  • @barryross8382
    @barryross8382 Před 3 lety +14

    Never even watched f1 but was deeply affected by this great mans death, Much like when Brocky died.

  • @brenovaccarezza2892
    @brenovaccarezza2892 Před 4 lety +51

    Thank you for remember Senna legacy. He was a genius and made our Sundays mornings awesome!

  • @ren7a8ero
    @ren7a8ero Před 4 lety +91

    His brain just overlap everyone else in racing understanding.

  • @tonischjelderup8708
    @tonischjelderup8708 Před 2 lety

    I love your channel, it feels like a coup to find. So much quality content I really appreciate this one.

  • @onlygazza
    @onlygazza Před 3 lety +4

    I’ve noticed lots of top Mx riders do this on 4 strokes as well and I’m sure it’s because the blip reduces engine braking thus keeping corner speed up

  • @dzozepe
    @dzozepe Před 4 lety +36

    He was actually trying to get the most of the grip. Every driver is doing this naturally but maybe not in such way

  • @dominicsangeet7302
    @dominicsangeet7302 Před 3 lety +20

    The greatest formula one racer, period 👏

  • @Simon-Zephyr
    @Simon-Zephyr Před 3 lety +6

    I’ve noticed myself doing this while driving in simulators, more-so on rally sim’s, not an influence of Senna, as I did this before I knew about Senna’s technique.

    • @trinidad17
      @trinidad17 Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah I do that too, it's easier to keep grip in the edge and get a better exit line. The thing is in simulators you can crash until you find your tapping technique, in real life you get the chance to only test it that way only a couple of those if you are lucky hah

  • @alsetalokin88
    @alsetalokin88 Před rokem +1

    i also blip around the corner. it helps maintain revs for more aggressive exits. and more importantly it is to counter understeer and maintain better grip. blipping helps to drive the head into the direction you're turning, bit by bit you can feel it, and maintaining optimal rpm for the exit with the right timing. micro slide grip slide grip slide grip actually balances the car better around corners. i saw many japanese racers have this technique too. but f1 is a different beast.

  • @ukwan
    @ukwan Před 4 lety +62

    I don't race full sized cars, but I race high down force model cars and I've been doing this for years on corner exit, it's my way of finding the limit of the chassis, I rarely correct the car with the steering, I tend to pick a line and find the limit with the throttle pedal, the stabs at the throttle are so fast it's like ABS and once you know the chassis will hook up you just plant it, it's like a constant search and feel for the moment when traction can be fully planted, rather than smoothly applying the throttle, the car is gradually and smoothly transferring weight to the rear despite the erratic pedal inputs, because the chassis just can't react fast enough to such short transients, it's like how digital audio works, if you increase the sample rate enough it's indistinguishable from an analogue signal and it just flows. Hard to explain but I think anyone who is in the habbit of doing this understands how to extract performance from it, but probably can't explain why it works.

    • @ukwan
      @ukwan Před 4 lety +5

      czcams.com/video/RCI6IcUjSx0/video.html
      here is a video of a very famous RC racer practicing this technique on the type of car I also race, and you can clearly hear it.

    • @jonboy602
      @jonboy602 Před 4 lety +2

      @@ukwan You're right, he's the RC version of Senna!

    • @HugoStiglitz88
      @HugoStiglitz88 Před 4 lety +1

      Cool! Would you say it's easier to feel that moment where the car has full traction with this stabbing method than with progressive input?

    • @renanfilipe7459
      @renanfilipe7459 Před 4 lety +3

      always did this on videogames too, I thought everyone did it.

    • @solngv8
      @solngv8 Před 4 lety

      I do this sometimes especially on tracks with less grip. It gives me more feedback on what the car's grip is at that very moment. Maybe it helps rotate the car a little more in some cases? It also keeps my brain very active reducing brain hesitation and thus fewer mistakes.

  • @jonathanlewis7183
    @jonathanlewis7183 Před 3 lety +3

    Physics instructor and former very amateur SCCA racer many years ago. After reading all of the comments/analysis and thinking about it for a while here are my thoughts.
    1) There are two ways to turn a car, steering input and throttle steer
    2) Both of these methods will have a delay from input to desired effect that is variable depending on the corner speed and corner radius.
    3) In high speed corners the slightest steering input will have a very rapid change in set/weight transfer and rapid response time vs a throttle input will have very slow response time because the motor has no "additional" push available because it is already wound up near max output. Mashing the throttle will only change the balance of the car slightly and slowly. If you want the car to respond, use the steering wheel
    4) In low speed corners using throttle steer leads to too large a variation in arc curvature meaning very poor repeatability. You can get the car to rotate perfectly once but most of the time you either induce rear wheel spin/severe oversteer or push too wide or not enough and dont get the power down early to get out on the exit cleanly. The cyclical timing is also not likely to allow you to line up the perfect mash to match the exit max throttle point. You are effectively out of the corner before you have time to modulate multiple times to get the desired result. Steer with the steering wheel.
    5) Medium speed corners. Steering inputs take time for the car to transfer the input to weight transfer and the car is covering significant ground during the input to response time. Stabbing at the throttle gives a more rapid transfer and allows more input/weight transfer cycles in a shorter period of time/shorter distance traveled vs steering inputs. With steering input you have to enter the given input, wait for the car to respond/weight transfer, feel the new response, enter another steering input, feel/wait for the response again, but are moving at relatively higher speeds and are out of the corner with few input-adjust-feel-input-adjust-feel cycles available before exiting the corner. With the throttle stab you can get more input-feel-adjust cycles in with less drama for the arc of the car. You also develop a much better anticipatory feel for what each stab will produce in response because you are holding a very consistent track line with less variability in the surface because inputing steering adjustments moves you in/out of the ideal line with less rubber on the road or marble regions etc. Looking at the traces imagine trying to put in the same number of steering input cycles he gets in with throttle cycles. The car would be unsettled and running a very unclean line. The car is also going fast enough that the throttle stabs will not be sufficient to lead to complete rear end wheel spin/severe oversteer.
    In summary, he found a way to get the maximum number of steering input adjustments in a given curve that would allow him to keep the car on the edge while still steering a clean line. It is an optimization problem using the technique that allows the most corrections in a given corner with the least drama in line. I could be completely wrong but this is what makes sense to me both from the physics and driver perspective. Its an optimization problem.

    • @Mechaniclemaniac
      @Mechaniclemaniac Před 2 lety

      Did you drink a whole pot of coffee before you came up with that thesis?

  • @sanchitshirol4421
    @sanchitshirol4421 Před 3 lety

    excellent video ! binge watching your channels video !

  • @srtasecret2309
    @srtasecret2309 Před 3 lety +18

    Senna Lives Forever in our ♥️ 🇧🇷✨✨🇧🇷🇧🇷

  • @y_fam_goeglyd
    @y_fam_goeglyd Před 4 lety +49

    Really interesting. It was like what my dad taught me in reverse, so to speak.
    He'd been a rally driver, and while I had a driving instructor to get me through my test, he and Dad arranged that Dad would teach me how to actually _drive._ Aaand he decided that taking me on roads he rallied on was a 'good thing'. (It was terrifying. In a Datsun Laurel, 2 lt, no power steering, I was a 17 yr old girl, couldn't see over the steering wheel... It weighed 1.75 tons IIRC. Lots, anyway.)
    Because a number of those roads didn't have good traction, or any, slamming the brakes on was not recommended. So he taught me how to blip the brakes rapidly if I needed to slow in a hurry, whilst smoothly but quickly getting down the gears - he taught me to actually slow using the gears out of preference to the brakes, which is a top idea in rain and ice! I still blip the brakes rapidly if necessary - sadly I'm relegated to driving autos now. I hate them - and rarely have I ever had the back slide out (once on ice, in an auto, and once when aquaplaning at 70mph on the motorway when I was 17 - those sorts of moments you don't forget!). In fact I didn't notice that my ABS lightbulb broke between the last two MOTs because I'd seen it come on once (the ice 'moment' - it was fine, just had an interesting corner on a country road lol) in about 8-9 years.
    Not bad in over 35 years of driving ;-)
    As for Senna - well, he could do anything and make it work. Though my inclination is to say smoother is faster (Prost was as smooth as anything and let's be honest, he wasn't exactly snail-like, was he?), my experience with control in braking makes me think he might have been onto something with the engines of that time. They were more mechanical than electronic like they are now. Keeping the level of fuel burning high might well have kept the engine working at its peak? That's well past my knowledge, so that's only the slightest guess. More likely it was just a habit... Or... did he do it to see if others would copy him? Knowing he _could_ make it work because of all of those years doing it, and also knowing it would _take_ years of practise to get it right? He wasn't beyond playing head games!
    Great vid - thanks!

    • @ERChris17
      @ERChris17 Před 4 lety +2

      This is an amazing story about your dad. Mine was a mechanic on a Modified's race team in Connecticut, he had us on his lap when we were 3 on the way home from the post office. Him on the pedals, my sister or I on the wheel :) Love racing dads!

    • @ianng4633
      @ianng4633 Před 4 lety +4

      My theory is that blipping the throttle allows him to go on an off the grip limits. Most drivers driving on threshold leaves a bit of room because breaking traction cost you a lot more than leaving a bit of overhead. In the ideal world threshold driving always wins but track conditions are never ideal and feedback is limited, so it pays to go in and out of limits if you react quickly enough, particularly, Senna is even faster in poor conditions like wet tracks and street circuits (eg Monaco) so I think the method of allowing him room to recalibrate constantly gives him more feedback and closer to the limit especially in conditions that offers poor predictability and feedback.

    • @MsSkip60
      @MsSkip60 Před 4 lety +1

      I think the reason he taught you to blip brakes is because that car possibly had no ABS. Now you shouldn’t really do that with a modern car equipped with ABS as it will still let you steer.

    • @pizzaki582
      @pizzaki582 Před 4 lety

      For racing and some driving condition's, Engine Braking is good.But Brake Pad's are cheaper then a clutch. for everyday commuter driving

  • @steven4601
    @steven4601 Před 3 lety +16

    On snow and Icy roads this works great too. Works in petrol cars and EV' s, with and without tc / stability control. Kept me out of trouble for > 20 years.