Martin Brundle - F1 Driving Styles (2006)

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  • Опубликовано: 4 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 532

  • @sammerry7706
    @sammerry7706 3 года назад +1655

    Brundel giving live commentary while driving that monster in the rain, what a legend.

    • @C42ST3N
      @C42ST3N 2 года назад +15

      It is, but because the track is wet, it is also useless because driving in the wet is completely different to driving on a warm dry race track.

    • @ReedReed999
      @ReedReed999 2 года назад +120

      Mate, thats a Red Bull, not a Monster

    • @ThisIsMyRodrick
      @ThisIsMyRodrick 2 года назад +30

      @@ReedReed999 Bad Dum Tsk.

    • @supawonk
      @supawonk 2 года назад +10

      @@C42ST3N yes but he isnt driving anywhere near the limit and so the effects of the rain wont make a difference

    • @HeavyMetalGamingHD
      @HeavyMetalGamingHD 2 года назад +4

      Those cars had TC and less initial torque. They are not nearly as snappy as the modern cars are in the rain

  • @TheRomanRuler
    @TheRomanRuler 8 лет назад +1328

    After this video it is easy to understand how Raikkonen managed to win his first race for Ferrari. It was Schumacher`s car last years, and they had similar driving style, making it relatively easy to adopt to his style. And that is why he struggled so horribly when Alonso was his team mate. Ferrari always has been clear that they are team and work towards what is best as team, often supporting 1 driver at cost of another. I fully approve of that, but it did mean that car was built to fit Alonso, making it horrible for Kimi.

    • @teddypuccini9824
      @teddypuccini9824 5 лет назад +155

      Exactly the same thing happened with Lewis Hamilton the same year. He declared recently that when he started in 2007 in the McLaren he was given Kimi's suspension and settings and he loved it cause they have very similar styles and that partially explains why Hamilton was so strong from the beginning.

    • @tanoooo
      @tanoooo 4 года назад +8

      Kimi Minkionen ye and the guy had very frightening pace for a rookie equally with a championship worthy car underneath him

    • @magicalrobster
      @magicalrobster 4 года назад +9

      Fascinating thanks, it's fitting as he said he used to play as kimi when he played the game as a teenager

    • @ciaronsmith4995
      @ciaronsmith4995 4 года назад +25

      Honestly man, it's more because Ferrari had such a car advantage in Melbourne. Kimi hated the 2007 and 2008 cars (especially over one lap, in the races it was better). Near the end of 2007 they made some steps forward in the setup, but in 2008 it was difficult again. They had too much understeer and crucially the Bridgestone tyres were VERY different from the Michelins he had used at McLaren.

    • @TheRomanRuler
      @TheRomanRuler 4 года назад +4

      @@ciaronsmith4995 That is possibly true as well, though i don't think it negates my point.

  • @danieldibenedetto1267
    @danieldibenedetto1267 12 лет назад +237

    Alonso has one of the most unique driving styles. The way that he purposely generates understeer to aid him in cornering is something that not many people do.

    • @mawwalmazie
      @mawwalmazie 2 года назад +38

      He knew that he needed to extract every bit of potential that the Renault car (R25 and R26 in particular) had with the unique characteristic of rear-biased weight distribution (almost 40/60). So while the front is more loose than the rear, he forced the tire wall to bounce around by intentionally under-steering the car and hit the apex early, because he knows that the rear is planted really well that he only needs to worry about the front side, which also aided by "tuned mass damper" that he perfected the technique and won both championship in '05 and '06.

    • @imissvine6737
      @imissvine6737 2 года назад +15

      Alonso is truly the greatest driver of all time (in terms of pure talent and pace)

    • @oscardom__
      @oscardom__ 2 года назад +9

      @@imissvine6737 tf 😂😂😂😂

    • @sumanthreddy3490
      @sumanthreddy3490 2 года назад +1

      @@oscardom__ He is
      Wtf are you smoking 🤣🤣🤣

    • @Loki-sk7bi
      @Loki-sk7bi 2 года назад +6

      @@imissvine6737 He is not the best qualifier. He’s ok on Saturdays but great on Sundays. The whole Alonso worship is bizarre.

  • @Desdirodeabike
    @Desdirodeabike 13 лет назад +471

    Using the rear to get around a turn is arguably the fastest way to do it. Like Raikkonen and Schumacher does it. But it demands incredible car feel and reflexes. Perhaps that is why Schumacher is struggling a bit now. Because of his age that little extra edge got lost down the line. Just a guess.

    • @sulrac1830
      @sulrac1830 6 лет назад +49

      Desdirodeabike Schumacher was struggling because the Mercedes was very understeary

    • @shadowx7461
      @shadowx7461 3 года назад +8

      Tyre management

    • @Jejking
      @Jejking 3 года назад +8

      Or D. All of the above

    • @tahmidw9921
      @tahmidw9921 3 года назад +9

      you guess is absolutely spot on, as confirmed by guys in mercedes. Raikkonen however doesnt drive like that. He needs a planted rear.

    • @PROTLxONgame
      @PROTLxONgame 2 года назад +47

      reading this in 2022 almost thought mick is using his dad's setup

  • @mikelewis495
    @mikelewis495 5 лет назад +570

    Need an update showing Lewis, Seb, Max, Danny Ric, etc.

    • @colejones6312
      @colejones6312 5 лет назад +70

      Seb is just like Button while Max, Lewis and Leclerc all drive like Schumacher and Raikkonen and Ricciardo is similar to Alonso but slightly different. He makes the car slide a little more on exit in order to build greater momentum.

    • @blackflagqwerty
      @blackflagqwerty 5 лет назад +161

      Martin: Kvyat likes to slow the car by dissipating his cars energy in to the sidepod of another car.

    • @JT-ko2ib
      @JT-ko2ib 5 лет назад +2

      @@blackflagqwerty lol!

    • @aspectic6227
      @aspectic6227 5 лет назад +6

      @@colejones6312 I thought Lewis liked a car that is more rear heavy?

    • @chanchaniceman
      @chanchaniceman 4 года назад +56

      Seb is more known to prefer cars that are heavily planted on the rear and often likes to get on the gas early when exiting which somehow explains on some of his spins given how powerful the current hybrid V6 are

  • @tonydykes8694
    @tonydykes8694 8 лет назад +443

    And of course Brundle repeats each at full pace in the rain.

    • @RB747domme
      @RB747domme 6 лет назад +94

      Anthony Dykes What do you expect? He's a Formula 1 driver. And a class act.
      Now he's a top communicator, and a brilliant commentator.

    • @EAGYSL
      @EAGYSL 3 года назад +6

      @@RB747domme Nah he is way to biased

    • @benl1799
      @benl1799 3 года назад +23

      @@EAGYSL Murray Walker was massively biased towards Damon Hill, but I dont see you complaining against him

    • @tegandavis3293
      @tegandavis3293 3 года назад +19

      @@benl1799 because this comment chain isn't about Murray...

    • @williamstrachan
      @williamstrachan 2 года назад +3

      @@RB747domme the thing that really amazes me is that not only is he driving an F1 car (which is, well, expected of an F1 driver but not necessarily easy) and commentating, but he's also driving it in different styles that don't necessarily come naturally to him. He's a super sharp driver to do that, whew.

  • @NOLISTENTOME
    @NOLISTENTOME 4 года назад +87

    Can't imagine the crew's reaction to it raining on their day of shooting for this video. Lucky for them they had Brundle who is just a top notch professional all around, bet he didn't even bat an eye.

  • @CharlieSnowball25
    @CharlieSnowball25 11 лет назад +190

    Interesting driver choice.
    2 current champions- Schumi and Alonso
    And 2 future champions- Kimi and Button

    • @ciaronsmith4995
      @ciaronsmith4995 4 года назад +40

      It was more because Alonso, Schumi and Kimi were the 3 best drivers in F1 and Jenson was British.

    • @imissvine6737
      @imissvine6737 2 года назад +7

      @@ciaronsmith4995 they litterally fucking said why they picked jenson its not because he's british its because he uses the textbook driving style A.K.A the racing line in the f1 games

    • @ciaronsmith4995
      @ciaronsmith4995 2 года назад +4

      @@imissvine6737 Yes the british tend to do that. Justify shady things in a nice way.

    • @imissvine6737
      @imissvine6737 2 года назад +3

      @@ciaronsmith4995 nah mane button at that time was already a racewinner and was a prominent name in f1 as one of the best in the sport and also correlation is not causation back in the grooved tires pretty much noone else who is actually fast and in contention used the same style textbook style of Jenson alonso had different steering kimi and schumi used the rear of the car to get around corners

    • @ciaronsmith4995
      @ciaronsmith4995 2 года назад +1

      @@imissvine6737 No he wasn't. The big 3 were Kimi, Fernando and Michael. By far. He won a single race and was lucky to win that race. He wasn't considered elite at all. If you actually watched F1 back then you would know that, but you're clearly a relatively new fan or didn't watch live, in the tyre war. Cheers.

  • @gulinotm
    @gulinotm 10 лет назад +159

    thats why i love alonso, so damn aggresive

    • @SIXITHS
      @SIXITHS 3 года назад +1

      Excited for this season?

    • @gulinotm
      @gulinotm 3 года назад +3

      @@SIXITHS man honestly i havent watcfhed in a couple years, it just got to be the same story every year lol

    • @np2155
      @np2155 3 года назад +1

      @@gulinotm last race was pretty good, this season seems to be a good one

    • @SriyanGaming
      @SriyanGaming 3 года назад +8

      @@gulinotm trust me 2021 is a season worth to witness

  • @taveeeee
    @taveeeee 10 лет назад +211

    Very good video. What a team would had Räikkönen and Schumi made.

    • @AnarchistMetalhead
      @AnarchistMetalhead 10 лет назад +32

      one with schumacher winning half or the races and raikkonen having to help out as number 2
      schumacher, until his first retirement, made sure to have the entire team centered around him and that noone within the team could be a danger to him
      there is a reason why raikkonen came to ferrari after schumacher had stopped driving for them, and why montoya was not considered and alonso not until multiple years later

    • @taveeeee
      @taveeeee 10 лет назад +1

      AnarchistMetalhead You might be right (or a troll), but I meant more like car development wise.

    • @AnarchistMetalhead
      @AnarchistMetalhead 10 лет назад +5

      taveeeee ferrari already had brilliant engineers like brawn and an experienced number 2 driver giving feedback as well, so i"d guess there would not have been a development advantage with raikkonen instead of barichello
      but it could have been an advantage compared to choosing massa

    • @taveeeee
      @taveeeee 10 лет назад

      AnarchistMetalhead Yes it't true and Kimi wouldn't had agreed to be number 2 in the team. It was all built around Schumacher and the other driver was basically driving for max second place. But what I meant in the first place was that with Kimi+Schumi they didn't have (but they wouldn't had needed to since we can assume here that Schumi was all that mattered) to develop two different cars as they pretty much had to do (but they can't) now sice Alonso and Räikkönen prefer so different cars. PS. My head hurts for my grammar errors.

    • @AnarchistMetalhead
      @AnarchistMetalhead 8 лет назад

      Ben Dover hey Kenneth

  • @dimsas26
    @dimsas26 9 лет назад +426

    Now explain Montoya's and Maldonado's driving style.

    • @azynkron
      @azynkron 9 лет назад +14

      They drive like shit? Is that enough for you?

    • @teddypuccini9824
      @teddypuccini9824 9 лет назад +108

      azynkron please don't compare the worst f1 driver ever to Montoya :) JPM was agressive but very talented. Maldonado should be banned for life, it's maybe 2 years or more he didn't have a single CLEAN race

    • @ciaronsmith4995
      @ciaronsmith4995 9 лет назад +55

      Dimas Wira JPM was good.

    • @Saturn185
      @Saturn185 9 лет назад +5

      Ciaron Smith ..but not consistent enough....like sato now that i think of it...

    • @ciaronsmith4995
      @ciaronsmith4995 9 лет назад +50

      JPM fought for a world title in 2003......way better than Sato in that regard. In a Williams he was one of the fastest and most consistent. from 2001-2004 he was extremely good. Made mistakes but we all do.

  • @svennieboy8827
    @svennieboy8827 2 года назад +11

    Martin Brundle just casually controlling every racing style is something else... underrated af

  • @fastguy907
    @fastguy907 4 года назад +31

    1:14 dammn brundle, drifting it out of the garage like a boss

  • @hmdwgf
    @hmdwgf 3 года назад +41

    There are 3 driving styles here: what I call the Prost style (likes understeer, as few hand movements as possible; Button and currently Vettel are like that); the Senna style (very aggressive, throws car into the corner, moves the car around; Alonso and Hamilton are both like that); and then the Schumacher style (very pointy front end and loose back end, likes the back end to steer the car; micro-corrections through fast corners, you can keep the car at 100 percent grip for longer through fast corners; Raikonnen is also like that)

    • @Crbn46
      @Crbn46 2 года назад +2

      good analogy, i think Max Verstappen falls into the Schumacher style aswell, since its told thats not just how he races in F1, but also how he sets his car up in sims. But in which of these 3 does leclerc fall?

    • @cet_fil
      @cet_fil 2 года назад +1

      @@Crbn46 same as max i would say, strong front end

    • @realdaddydagoth69
      @realdaddydagoth69 2 года назад

      prost drove with oversteer, one can be very smooth and still drive without understeer

    • @george._mavDB
      @george._mavDB Год назад +3

      neutral setups: button, russell, rosberg
      understeer: prost, alonso, senna, hamilton
      oversteer: kimi, msc, verstappen, leclerc

  • @ElementsMMA
    @ElementsMMA 2 года назад +4

    Brundle: And Lance Stroll likes to evaluate the durability of the tyre walls at relatively low speeds in order to benefit from the turbulence caused by the waving of red flags

  • @bossnian5615
    @bossnian5615 5 лет назад +6

    What a golden video i’ve found here. Would be cool to have more of these insights

  • @refsbr
    @refsbr 12 лет назад +14

    Extremely interesting choice of drivers.
    Two of the chosen drivers were already champions (Alonso and Schumacher) and two of them became champions later (Button and Raikkonen).

  • @josecamacho5522
    @josecamacho5522 2 года назад +4

    Martín Brundle imitating different driving styles while commenting ir in the rain
    And we struggle tonput a decent lap un our simrig

  • @canucks7777
    @canucks7777 12 лет назад +34

    "im going to imitate jenson's smooth style" *1:14 comes out with opposite lock*

  • @george._mav
    @george._mav 3 года назад +9

    Button: smooth and precise through the corners
    Alonso: fuck it! I'll break the steering wheel off for maximum speed

  • @MIK_edits
    @MIK_edits 10 лет назад +180

    I think this is the main reason for Kimi's problems this year. Alonso and Räikkönen have drastically different driving styles and this year's car just won't cooperate with Räikkönen. He has said himself that he needs something specific with the car and that ain't just happening right now.

    • @NFreund
      @NFreund 10 лет назад +7

      It's the same with Vettel

    • @NFreund
      @NFreund 10 лет назад

      Turrican4D Yeah, and that's why Kimi also isn't a very good driver in an F1 Car. It looks totally different in a WRC-Car...

    • @ciaronsmith4995
      @ciaronsmith4995 9 лет назад +22

      NFreund Kimi is the fastest. Unfortunately his operating window is smaller with these cars.

    • @magicalrobster
      @magicalrobster 8 лет назад +3

      +Ciaron Smith also remember the tyres and aero are completely different since 2009. all the drivers have changed their styles since Martin did this video

    • @supercooled
      @supercooled 7 лет назад +15

      Kimi is overrated. I think a great driver needs to learn to adapt.

  • @MrZattack101
    @MrZattack101 6 лет назад +160

    Yea this is back in 2006, when they could just slam the throttle and not lose traction

    • @initialdfan8352
      @initialdfan8352 3 года назад +7

      Mmmm yes, traction control

    • @initialdfan8352
      @initialdfan8352 3 года назад +3

      And everyone had a good start because launch control

    • @fam.hunger5244
      @fam.hunger5244 2 года назад +8

      You could do that with TC, yes. But thats also was not fast. Not at all. Back in these days you did not loose traction. But still you could not just go full throttle and let traction control do everything. Thats slow. You need a some wheel spin to accelerate best. So a driver could still make a huge difference how he used and set-up TC and the good ones prefered less TC.

  • @marcosformentoinaustralia6585
    @marcosformentoinaustralia6585 6 лет назад +143

    12 years from now , and all the drivers are retiring...

    • @simon199418
      @simon199418 5 лет назад +22

      kimi is still around which is the only thing that matters atm.

    • @Orcawhale1
      @Orcawhale1 5 лет назад +1

      Well yeah, as with any other sport your only good for a few years, then your out.
      Especially nowadays, given the cars are so much faster in the corners, nowadays.

    • @Jimmy-lm2eg
      @Jimmy-lm2eg 5 лет назад

      Just Minus 1 and There will be still a lot of driver here.

    • @ams_arroyo8621
      @ams_arroyo8621 4 года назад +11

      Alonso is coming back, and Kimi is still here, but yeah the majority of veterans have retired...

  • @Khazar01
    @Khazar01 12 лет назад +14

    I envy you :)
    I was a Prost fan myself due to his calculated and non-risk taking way of driving (as he himself once stated "I try to win by driving the slowest as possible"), but I did respect Senna for his sheer speed and his gift to drive fast. It was like he was the exact opposite of Prost :)

  • @RightLadd
    @RightLadd 2 года назад +1

    It’s funny how loud he’s shouting while driving around, shows you how much work these things involve

  • @ciaronsmith4995
    @ciaronsmith4995 8 лет назад +117

    Raikkonen is just a freak of nature. I finally understand this guys talent. He needs a car that has literally no under steer, to get it to the apex unhindered, and then relies on his reactions to catch and re catch an errant rear end. No wonder he hates this current era of understeering heavy, annoyingly slow cars with concrete tyres - harder to rotate the car and make it bite. The complete OPPOSITE of Fernando Alonso. Amazing!

    • @magicalrobster
      @magicalrobster 8 лет назад +23

      Raikkonen actually prefers oversteer to understeer. I think he just misses the downforce of the old rear wings

    • @alexanderwingeskog758
      @alexanderwingeskog758 7 лет назад +17

      You are probably spot on, Karting and (even though I never heard of him do Rally) Rally style. I don't agree with Brundle about Schumacher though... when he did drive like shown by Brundle he's car was not setup right for him. Schumacher did do a Jenson style driving but actually left of throttle and pushed throttle slowly around the corners while a lot of other F1 drivers just released the throttle and pushed hard when leaving the corner.. and that is why he was a king when wet and did really good overall...

    • @xrhadamanthxx2170
      @xrhadamanthxx2170 6 лет назад

      It is a bit frustrating to watch him driving even a good ferrari nowadays

    • @magicalrobster
      @magicalrobster 5 лет назад

      @TheEqualTester you're right, I can't remember what I meant. Must have been having a moment 😊

    • @magicalrobster
      @magicalrobster 5 лет назад +1

      @TheEqualTester ok I think I remember what I meant and I put it quite badly. Kimi likes a good front end on his car. However current cars Have a lot of torque and probably too little rear downforce. Also being heavy theyre very snappy on the rear end. A larger rear wing would give him more rear grip out of the corners. But again I'm contradicting myself because the Ferrari he drives is front limited and suffers more from understeer. Maybe that's the problem for him.

  • @jgbalves
    @jgbalves 2 года назад +2

    Sad part about UK car shows is the best episodes are spoiled by the rain.

  • @stephenhowlett6345
    @stephenhowlett6345 10 лет назад +89

    I wish we could all take a few laps in an f1 car just to see what all the fuss is about.

    • @adampetten5349
      @adampetten5349 6 лет назад +1

      Nigel Mansell Well for you Sir Nigel it is.

    • @andyelliott8027
      @andyelliott8027 4 года назад +1

      You have to left foot brake, notice it's not possible for Martin to get his right foot across to the brake pedal.

    • @andyelliott8027
      @andyelliott8027 2 года назад

      @@le-coup-détat What I mean is that the car he's driving here has a metal side-guard on the brake pedal preventing his left foot from moving sideways, also of course blocking the access to the brake pedal for his right foot.

    • @kerimca98
      @kerimca98 2 года назад +1

      Assuming people's usual car is 100 hp 1500 kg, F1 cars have 10 times that engine and 2/3 times less of a car (weight)

  • @mundee95
    @mundee95 2 года назад +26

    I wonder how Senna's driving style would have evolved/adapted if he still raced in the 2000s

    • @sarang99monu
      @sarang99monu 2 года назад +1

      Stop this Senna overhype

    • @mundee95
      @mundee95 2 года назад +11

      @@sarang99monu How exactly am I overhyping?

  • @eggybrain2896
    @eggybrain2896 7 лет назад +23

    button and damon hill fangio, and senna, wurz all drove perfectly smoothly to the ideal line. schumacher, coulthard, hamilton, raikkonen turn in on the brakes.. hakkinen, pryce, (Gilles) villeneuve, (keke) rosberg, petersen, frentzen, herbert, montoya, alonso, turn in on the throttle and 'drift' the car.

    • @TOFKAS01
      @TOFKAS01 7 лет назад +15

      Not to forget Jim Clark, the master of smooth driving.

  • @MarcinHopa8
    @MarcinHopa8 2 года назад +1

    Mmmmm, lovely insight ❤️❤️❤️

  • @Stiv797
    @Stiv797 11 лет назад +20

    Raikkonen and Schumacher style are the most spectacular.

  • @philipbyrnes7501
    @philipbyrnes7501 2 года назад

    Wow, at 3m52s when they cut away the cockpit and you can see right down the drivers legs as he screams around is spectacular and not something I’ve ever seen done before, brilliant work folks, thank you, simple, elegant, exceptional, thank you 😎👍

  • @jackmiller-johnston8689
    @jackmiller-johnston8689 Год назад +1

    Tyres that didn't fade, and the R25 and R26 which both loved to get roughed about and ragged to death, were perfect combos for Nando to win 2 world titles

  • @F-Man
    @F-Man 12 лет назад +45

    Except for when Alonso had some sort of electronics glitch in Malaysia 2010. He was rev-matching on the downshifts! In a Formula 1 car!
    Awesome!

  • @bazil83
    @bazil83  13 лет назад +6

    @FranklinMarshalSpain His style we saw in the old generation Renaults came about because of their huge rear weight bias and how the car was built around the tyres. He employed his massively aggressive style back then because that was the fastest way (at least for him) to drive the car. He doesn't drive that way anymore because the cars are no longer designed that way, as well as (correct me if I'm wrong here) weight bias having been standardised by the FIA.

  • @noobpyxl
    @noobpyxl 2 года назад +3

    Let me tell you my favourate styles
    5. Fucking up the corner
    4. Angle albon (hitting almost every barrier around monaco)
    3. The verstappen ( max max super max max divebomb)
    2. The checo ooooooooo (how the fucc is that car so thicc)
    1. The mick shumacher system operator (penetrating the barrier at almost every track)

  • @mpa1931
    @mpa1931 3 года назад +1

    Alonso with the blue Renault is my favorite style. Just gotta love how throws the car into the corners.

  • @Orcawhale1
    @Orcawhale1 5 лет назад +1

    Whoever was responsible for the music, is certainly a huge Wipeout fan!
    Not that im complaining!

  • @QurttoRco
    @QurttoRco 2 года назад +7

    Alonso adapted to that style because that was needed for those Michelins, hes a very smooth driver and has proved to have talent to adapt

  • @wastefellow2569
    @wastefellow2569 2 года назад +2

    0:13-the dude was wearing a shirt! 1950s F1 drivers had balls!

  • @ACxii
    @ACxii 12 лет назад

    This is was an amazing short, they need to do more of this kind of stuff on the preview shows.

  • @monkeyboy85
    @monkeyboy85 12 лет назад

    People critisized ITV's coverage of F1 for the adverts but no other broadcaster has given us such fascinating insights.

  • @TheJGJR9
    @TheJGJR9 3 года назад +1

    watching this in 2020 i wish we had a camera angle like in this where u can see the pedal work

  • @prypiatshadow
    @prypiatshadow 2 года назад +3

    So what I learnt is that Jenson Button has the same driving style as Charles Leclerc.
    Fernando Alonso has the similar driving style to Max Verstappen.

  • @peachulemon
    @peachulemon 2 года назад +1

    I would love another one of these for the current cars 😂 brundle behind the wheel as well

  • @cmccarthy
    @cmccarthy 12 лет назад +1

    That "x-ray" camera showing his pedal work fuckin' awesome!

  • @NavF1
    @NavF1 2 года назад +10

    Driver61's video on Alonso's driving style complements this well, he's got one of the most aggressive driving styles in recent history, which contrasts with his mostly fair racing ironically

  • @benjameshodges
    @benjameshodges 12 лет назад +2

    I like how they're all current F1 drivers who have won world championships. Their styles have all worked for them.

  • @chris-hayes
    @chris-hayes 2 года назад +1

    Naturally it's raining at Silverstone

  • @fungboy3
    @fungboy3 13 лет назад

    thanks been looking for this

  • @Khazar01
    @Khazar01 12 лет назад +2

    Great video, I'd also would like to see mr.Brundle explain Prost's and Senna's driving styles

  • @robjohnston
    @robjohnston 12 лет назад

    excellent video, thank you for posting

  • @DaniMacYo
    @DaniMacYo 3 года назад +19

    After watching this in F1 games I’m more like Schumacher and Kimi. Alonso’s is quite impressive considering he’s less tidy but does not lose the car it’s incredible. Button is impressive to because he’s so smooth at 200 MPH. Michael and Kimi are also incredible because they’ve got more oversteer and work to do but handle the cars beautifully. Man these F1 drivers are something.

    • @abyss18
      @abyss18 2 года назад +2

      F1 games 😂😂

    • @sergeantsupreme4395
      @sergeantsupreme4395 2 года назад +1

      @@abyss18 what

    • @abyss18
      @abyss18 2 года назад +1

      @@sergeantsupreme4395 ok “sergeant supreme”.

    • @sergeantsupreme4395
      @sergeantsupreme4395 2 года назад +1

      @@abyss18 you got me there abyss

    • @abyss18
      @abyss18 2 года назад

      @@sergeantsupreme4395 i know i did

  • @Khazar01
    @Khazar01 12 лет назад +1

    Thanks, you gave a very nice and detailed explanation and I agree with you in everything you said. Cheers

  • @solngv8
    @solngv8 12 лет назад +2

    Awesome video!! Interesting how a given year on a particular set of regulations favors a certain type of driving style. This year seems to favor Button's style over Hamilton's because of Pirelli's quick tire wear. Schumacher's style is favored now probably because of less downforce from banned blown diffusers. Alonso is a great suprise, he adapted and it's paying off for him. I've always wondered how Senna would do in today's cars. My guess is he would still be great whatever he drives.

  • @caseycolgan8321
    @caseycolgan8321 7 лет назад +4

    It's funny I used to prefer my setup similar to Schumacher but a couple years later I have been more similar to fernando. I actually like the car to understeer a bit coming off the apex, and use the throttle to increase the car to slight oversteer while excelleratinf away from the apex. I found I get better launch out of corners this way, as opposed to the way Schumacher does it

    • @monsieurboks
      @monsieurboks 6 лет назад

      I look forward to rooting for COL in future years :)
      The more aggressive drivers, the better

  • @AlonsoRules
    @AlonsoRules 8 лет назад +4

    Alonso's driving style with that big sharp turn was weird to watch but got good traction

  • @nanderlizernanderlizer684
    @nanderlizernanderlizer684 5 лет назад +6

    2006 alonso drives it like a rental kart.

  • @2jzandys444
    @2jzandys444 2 года назад

    It is strange how driving styles can differ between drivers. It helps me understand why I’m slow in certain cars and fast in others on the sim.

  • @marcelf0252
    @marcelf0252 2 года назад +1

    Looks like everybody gets this recommended now xD

  • @ParadoMsk1
    @ParadoMsk1 12 лет назад +2

    Would be interesting to see such an video with the driving styles of Vettel and Hamilton, too.

  • @srinitaaigaura
    @srinitaaigaura 8 лет назад +22

    How do Hamilton, Vettel, Max Verstappen and Riccardio drive?

    • @AshTheMohican
      @AshTheMohican 8 лет назад

      I would love to see that.

    • @martinschmiedt3075
      @martinschmiedt3075 7 лет назад +5

      Vettel at least nowadays has a more Button kind of style as i see,when he was the champion,he sort-of had a different approach

    • @chanchaniceman
      @chanchaniceman 7 лет назад +4

      I would say Verstappen is more like Alonso.. Likes to have an aggressive approach to the turns and turns a lot earlier.

    • @sulrac1830
      @sulrac1830 6 лет назад

      Hamilton is very smooth with the car like button, vettel is aggressive with the car but not as much as Alonso but for verstappen and ricciardo I don’t know

    • @monsieurboks
      @monsieurboks 6 лет назад +1

      Gee Gee Maldonado is a bit like Alonso in his driving, except he doesn't seem to know when to tone down the aggression, so he tended to bin it an awful lot.

  • @jamesfleming4919
    @jamesfleming4919 2 года назад +1

    This guy commentates while driving an f1 car at good pace in the rain…

  • @nachokiller666
    @nachokiller666 13 лет назад +3

    Martin could do again this video, by including Hamilton and Kubica; and comparing old styles as Clark, Fangio, Senna, Prost, Stewart or Villeneuve

  • @yasinaygun4251
    @yasinaygun4251 2 года назад

    Gotta love it when half the video is the intro lmao

  • @jamiroquai01fan
    @jamiroquai01fan 13 лет назад

    @david40686 I think he meant that they like to get on the power early before they are fully out of the corner, letting the back end step out to help them get the car pointing in the right direction. A smooth driver like Jenson will not "floor the throttle", they will gradually ease the power on to get a smooth and tidy exit from the corner.

  • @haggidubious
    @haggidubious 13 лет назад

    Great stuff!

  • @KayoMichiels
    @KayoMichiels 11 лет назад +4

    First debut was at Spa-Francorchamps driving for the Jordan team although he set a good qualifying but ended shortly in the race after 700 m with a blown clutch, a year later he had his revenge and won his first grand prix at Spa-Francorchamps in a Benetton-Ford.

  • @XcopeS
    @XcopeS 12 лет назад +1

    You don't need to be in F1 to have a driving style that is similar to F1 drivers, you can understeer like Alonso with any car, overtsteer on exits like Schumacher with any RWD car and so on. After all, F1 cars have 4 wheels and an engine like the rest.

  • @zynex9250
    @zynex9250 2 года назад +1

    So cool

  • @speedmann194
    @speedmann194 2 года назад +3

    Brundle was actually Schumacher's strongest team mate. I don't count Schumacher's comeback he was to old muscles to weak. But even at 43 Rosberg only beat him due to multiple mechenical failures,
    Brundle deserves a lot of respect as a driver

  • @PatHelmsleyisback
    @PatHelmsleyisback 12 лет назад +6

    well Schumacher's style is the most effective but the most dangerous

  • @turtlehater2
    @turtlehater2 12 лет назад

    This is very true. In fact, I would go all out in saying he would not be able to keep up even when he was at his best in today's cars.

  • @AlonsoElNano
    @AlonsoElNano 5 лет назад +4

    Reading all the Kimi fanboys trying to use this video as a scapegoat of his performance against Alonso. This video was a few years pre Alonso/Ferrari time. Back then Alonso adapted this understeer technique especially for the Mildseven Renault because it was the fastest way to drive.
    In the Ferrari days and after he never applied the technique.
    Understeer or Oversteer, Alonso is the master of adaption and an all around talent unlike Kimi and many others who struggle more.

    • @mpa1931
      @mpa1931 4 года назад +1

      Once he switched to Mclaren and to Ferrari his style was smoothed out compared to his Renault days. Still was just as successful which is a testament to his ability to adapt.

    • @s4mm4st3r5
      @s4mm4st3r5 4 года назад

      Ok Fernando

  • @Ellis01234567890
    @Ellis01234567890 12 лет назад

    that guy actually has a very good idea... I would love to see that.

  • @oaz8
    @oaz8 2 года назад

    1:14 one hand driving and sliding epic

  • @JBuckman10
    @JBuckman10 2 года назад

    They need to incorporate that “ghost” nose that shows the foot cam in the broadcasts. Thats cool!!

  • @mendozeros
    @mendozeros 5 лет назад +1

    The music is so 2006!

  • @nunslittletoy
    @nunslittletoy 12 лет назад

    yeh I've various things for almost 20 years now (and I'm not even 27 lol). I did ten days testing recently out in India for a new series called MRF. The tracks out there are so incredibly bumpy and have very little grip. The tyres also have very stiff sidewalls so it makes them incredibly difficult to drive fast as the tyres give you no warning. The only way to get round it is to brake all the way into practically every corner, totally different to the fast sweeping bends of the UK!

  • @Maft3i
    @Maft3i 12 лет назад +1

    dude i swear theres 2 nascar fans that dislike every obscure f1 video! This is the 2nd f1 clip i find 2day with hundrets of likes, that has 2 dislikes. on both ocassions i couldnt find any faults to them.

  • @paulwulf7629
    @paulwulf7629 12 лет назад +1

    Schumacher didn't race with a turbo car. Turbos were banned in 1989 and Schumacher started in F1 in 1992.

  • @derbyjr
    @derbyjr 3 года назад +1

    It seems I may have a similar driving style to Schumacher and Räikkönen. I very much like the car to have a snappy front end

  • @marcjackson7411
    @marcjackson7411 8 лет назад +1

    Rocket Ronnie, the King of drift.. RIP Superswede...

  • @schpyy
    @schpyy 12 лет назад

    It was only a matter of time, both Raikkonen Button was marked as future world champions and super natural talent when they came in to F1 in 2001 and 2000

  • @thesauceboss2610
    @thesauceboss2610 2 года назад

    Just realized how great the track and what part they used to test thus

  • @nunslittletoy
    @nunslittletoy 12 лет назад

    yeh this is true, the old kent engined cars are rather lacking in the power department... You're right actually, I even drive slightly differently from circuit to circuit depending on the level of grip, corner radius, how bumpy a corner is etc... although for single seaters the same basic principle normally applies. But in hindsight that guy seems to have a very simplistic view on driving a car ;)

  • @renesisrx8
    @renesisrx8 12 лет назад

    Very interesting comment. I also think Raikkonen's style has changed now with his rallying experience. He's not as smooth with the wheel as he used to be in the McLaren days. I wish we could see more of the drivers' movements behind the wheel.

  • @clonebin0
    @clonebin0 2 года назад +2

    this video is so mid 2000s

  • @jannadrielcervo7753
    @jannadrielcervo7753 3 года назад

    In a simulator game like Assetto Corsa. I'm naturally in a Schumacher/Raikkonen style. Then I tried to adapt in Alonso's style. It's way harder than I thought.

    • @jesseh9523
      @jesseh9523 3 года назад +6

      Alonso's driving style was only like that in 2005 and 2006 because the way the car and tires were set up, he has said it was very difficult to adapt to that style of driving because of how wrong it felt. That is a terrible way to drive unless you have a specific car setup and specific tires.

  • @taylorjohnson5148
    @taylorjohnson5148 2 года назад

    Second time I’ve seen someone explain what Alonso does. Seems insane to me

  • @yngvaibucketrucci
    @yngvaibucketrucci 12 лет назад

    On games I usually drive more like alonso because its more intersesting and challenging to brake as late as possible, take really agressive lines and spend the whole of long corners trying to edge it to the point where you can just slam the gas, I'd say its a kind of impatient driving style and quite often results in me missing the apex, losing the back from hitting the gas too early, stuff like that. On games it is more fun but I can not believe that he gets so much speed driving like that IRL

  • @rosun82
    @rosun82 12 лет назад +1

    2:11....When other drivers warm up the tire and brake, Alonso is warming up the chassis and suspension...

  • @1chai
    @1chai 13 лет назад

    if this video clip was made in 2006,martin brundle seemed could predict who would be world champion. in this video clip, he predicted button.

  • @Asdfqwerty1243
    @Asdfqwerty1243 5 лет назад

    The beauty about Alonso's style is he uses the momentum of the car on turn in to place the car perfectly on the apex. His driving style is less steering and more momentum, i.e a balance between grip and throttle, which is why he gets so much out of the car than anyone else. He doesn't do anything that is unnatural to the car but he can still be aggressive as hell. This allows him to have a car that is both race ready and also performs quite decently in qualifying. Glad that he is reckoned as one the top 10 best of all time and the best in his generation. A phenomenal and unique talent!

    • @ciaronsmith4995
      @ciaronsmith4995 5 лет назад

      He doesn't get more out of the car than anyone when the likes of Kimi and Michael like their car. This is the key point. Their ultimate speed is much quicker than that of Alonso. It's just that Alonso is great at manhandling cars with a poor balance because he has insanely aggressive steering inputs and basically forces the car to do what he wants. Ugly but massively effective. But nowhere near as quick as Kimi, (softest inputs), Michael or Lewis in a car they love.

    • @Asdfqwerty1243
      @Asdfqwerty1243 5 лет назад +1

      @@ciaronsmith4995 Not to be rude but everyone has an opinion on the definition of what getting everything means. Michael and Kimi have never performed well in cars that were not outright fastest cars. What Alonso did in 2010 and 2012 is pretty much unmatched in the history of the sport. Michael, Lewis and Kimi have outright pace when they have the quickest car. Alonso on the other hand drives thur car to its absolute physical limit on the Sunday.

    • @ciaronsmith4995
      @ciaronsmith4995 5 лет назад +1

      @@Asdfqwerty1243 What?!. That is completely false! Kimi Raikkonen nearly won the 2003 WDC in the third or fourth fastest car scoring over 40 points more in the old system than his teammate. McLaren failed to launch their car for the 2003 seasons so Kimi had to drive the 2002 McLaren all season. They customized the steering for Kimi and he ust took off like a rocket. Michael Schumacher did the same in 1997 in a piece of junk that was probably the third or fourth fastest car as well and outperformed his 1996 and 1998 cars as well. Alonso meanwhile got beaten by Trulli in 2004 (Trulli left after Monza) and failed to win a race that season in a GREAT Renault car.

    • @Asdfqwerty1243
      @Asdfqwerty1243 5 лет назад

      @@ciaronsmith4995 TBH I am really sick and tired of this crap! Here, this is what is math gives you, not your opinion, not my opinion, but straight up freakin math (this is on Red Bull's own website and given the crap that Alonso has got from Horner you can bet your behind that it is NOT biased in any way) - www.redbull.com/gb-en/fangio-the-greatest-formula-1-driver-ever If you disagree with this then you should take it up with your reasoning as to why Kimi needs to be above Alonso and see if they buy your argument, cause right now it is in my favor. Michael would be 8th if his drive in the Merc was included.
      Kimi's 2003 Mclaren was a race winning Mclaren. One in which Coulthard won in the first round of that season. It was Coulthard that fell back and not just Kimi rising above him. I am sure anyone reading this can see it on Wikipedia themselves!

    • @Asdfqwerty1243
      @Asdfqwerty1243 5 лет назад

      @@ciaronsmith4995 WTF are you talking about? Alonso beat Trulli in 2004! He was right up his tail and was going to beat him in the next round of pit stops in Monaco when Alonso crashed trying to avoid Ralf in the tunnel. What? You're going to leave those kind of details out just to suit your argument? With that he would have been even further ahead of him! Where do you get your facts from mate? He even got more points than Kimi that year even though Kimi won a race that year. Even the race that Kimi won that year, Alonso was in the lead when he had an oil leak and fell out of contention while in the lead! Seems to me that you are either extremely forgetful or rather deceitful in your arguments.

  • @redfireblast57
    @redfireblast57 12 лет назад

    i still have a lot to learn if one day i want to be a racing driver..

  • @zurabdzhidzhilava7161
    @zurabdzhidzhilava7161 4 года назад

    He is a good commentator

  • @EpicRiman
    @EpicRiman 12 лет назад

    i miss u mb

  • @TheMuricanMerc
    @TheMuricanMerc 9 лет назад +3

    So I am a bit confused by Alonso's style. Are you trying to get the car to stay at a higher speed so the air passes over the rear wing giving more downforce? And wouldn't that also hurt straight line speed? That wouldn't really work in any other car then which is why I think I am missing something here. Or its the reason he only cars about F1...

    • @Dani94Ultra
      @Dani94Ultra 9 лет назад +40

      +PallyWoods Alonso tends to attack the apex as early as possible. By doing this, he hits the apex twice in a harpin for example. This is because in the middle of the corner, he suffers from understeer and then attacks the apex again. That is what you call a V turn. It gives you better speed but lots of understeer and by doing so, the car stays at a higher speed yes. And it doesn't hurt the straight line speed, because by taking the corner like this, the car will have more time to reach top speed in a straight line...

    • @ivan987100
      @ivan987100 8 лет назад +2

      D.a.n.i That's a nice explanation..

    • @Asdfqwerty1243
      @Asdfqwerty1243 5 лет назад +2

      @@Dani94Ultra To add to this really clear explanation, in a way it does affect the total straight line speed of the car because such a driving style needs more rear wing, hence lower terminal straight line speed. This helps stabilize the rear without any nasty surprises but makes overtaking a lot more difficult. That's why Alonso would catch up to Lewis in 2007 but couldn't pass him that easily. Since Alonso didn't have a dominant car/engine from 2006, he would have already driven the car to it's breaking point to the last race and in the last race he wouldn't have the straight line speed needed to make his over takes(and since his engine was used more than others surrounding him, he wouldn't be able to rev it to the max without breaking it). In that sense, his style nearly won him and certainly lost him several world titles.

    • @Dani94Ultra
      @Dani94Ultra 5 лет назад +1

      @@Asdfqwerty1243 Wow, looking back at my comment, I learned a lot in 3 years. And I do agree with what you say.

  • @landonderbyshire6462
    @landonderbyshire6462 2 года назад

    As much as I give this guy the gears for talking too much during his commentary time, if you actually listen to what he's saying, he's analyzing everything so critically, it's incredible