It went Concorde mode it would be funny if someone added a Pratt and Whitney jet turnine engine and some control surfaces to make it fly like the Concorde
@@mistaowickkuh6249 while this CLR has Aerial suspension setting, the Tesla Roadster that Elon Musk Launched back then has the Orbital suspension setting. might be the only car that has the fancy Orbital Suspension Setting.
Even if somebody managed to flip a car like that and land on it's wheels, it would be undriveable. The impact would destroy the suspension and most likely bend the chassis so bad, the wheels wouldn't even touch the ground, or atleast beyond the point of being able to steer.
I think they know their design is too aggressive after 1st crash. I'm rather curious why they can't do more to fix the car, like extend the length of rear suspension or something. Maybe they were already not the fastest cars, to fix the problem completely will make it much slower. So they only add the little frong wing only, and pray for miracle that never happened.
@@Richard-Gore they knew after the 2nd, because they didn't believe the 1st happened. No footage, light damage and the driver's word for it. Also, the car was still the fastest after they modified it (not enough) after the 2nd crash.
@@Richard-Gore I think it's because it was too late to fix any Fundamental flaws with the design so they put a bandaid on it and hoped for the best, which of course wasn't enough.
I'm surprised that your co-workers even know about this story. They would have to be pretty interested in motorsports for them to make a joke like that.
You can simulate this happening perfectly in Project CARS 2. If you have the front rebound forces very high, with a high rear downforce balance, the air can get uder the car and...well fill in the blank lol.
You mean "the air CAN'T get under the car"... meaning that there is a diminished flow speed which increases the pressure culminating in a "lift" resultant force.
Im glad there now exists a video that clearly states it was the CLR that was flip happy, not the CLKGTR. Im sick of seeing blame pointed where it doesnt belong all the time. 😐
I also saw this happening a lot (mainly 10-12y ago when I was more into watching racing videos) and even remember the CLR being referred to as "CLR-GTR" in the title of one video. The CLK GTR and the CLK LM are quite similar although a trained eye shouldn't have trouble distinguishing them, but I've been always puzzled how many people mess up "CLK GTR" and "CLR" so often...it seems to be more about supposed appeareance similarities than name similarities, but the GT1 cars are SOOO different from the CLR!!! Totally don't get it about how it happens so much!!!
Literally finished my university dissertation on this exact topic a few weeks ago. If people want more technical information then this paper provides an excellent overview: Dominy, R. G. and Ryan, A. and Sims-Williams, D. B. (2000) 'The aerodynamic stability of a Le Mans prototype race car under off-design pitch conditions.', SAE 2000 transactions : journal of passenger cars : mechanical systems., 109 (6). pp. 1454-1460.
You'd be amazed at what can fly in the right conditions. I once saw an inflatable river raft with 8 people lift 6' above the water in a head wind, hover for a bit and then flip over dumping everyone out before landing again.
Mercedes and Le Mans together were "benchmark" for safety measures in motorsport. The famous 1955 disaster defined the whole destiny of motorsport and safety on tracks.
Well it took them a staggering 40 years until the safety on and round the track started to get to an acceptable level. Not impressed if your story is correct..
Other than a few circuits adding a chicane before the pits nothing really changed. Like the Goodwood chicane I don't think motorsport should be unnecessarily dangerous but i do think it shouldn't abandon sport in pursuit of safety. Safety is nice but people don't race or watch racing because its safe. So its of secondary importance to the sport itself. If we only did what was safe we'd never have done anything, and we'd be extinct while we were still cavemen.
Toyota: *It's over Mercedes, I have the high ground* Mercedes: *you underestimate my power* Annnd then we all know what happens next...long story short, attempting to jump over your opponent is never a good idea.
Yep. Webber never forgave them for that. They tried to pin the first crash on him and that it must have been a driving error. It was not caught on film so they doubted Webber's explanation. When it happened again they still left two cars running, doubting Webber. Dumbreck was lucky to survive the final crash. Webber was furious they hadn't taken him seriously earlier and endangered the the lives of the drivers.
Thought I'd check to see if anyone else had already said that. Dumbreck was incredibly lucky that the owner of the trees (local govt? I honestly don't know) had cut down a bunch of them recently and he landed where they had been. When I heard that on the weekend, my blood ran cold!
@@chrisdeo wrong. cars must have it as a safety measure. one would also release pressure to reduce drag behind the wheel (cut out wheel arch), not on top of it.
Well this is chain bear who I'm a big fan of. It's actually kind of cool because he does these videos for all-sorts of big companies and has to keep the copyright friendly.
This wasn't the first time that a race car flew away during an endurance race. In 1953 John Fitch made quite similar attraction with his Briggs Cunningham C5-R at Reims. Umberto Maglioli followed him and couldn't believe when the Cunningham took off, flew above the trees and telegraph posts then smashed to its wheels near the track in the fields. Fortunately Fitch had just minor injuries. In WW2 he was a fighter pilot and I guess he was the only fighter pilot who took off with a race car (and crashed that).
Jann Mardenborough also had a very similar crash in 2015 in a GT-R GT3, over the hill before flugplatz at the Nordschleife, sadly that one killed a spectator
I knew Webber had launched in a Mercedes at Le Mans, but didn't know that he did it TWICE in the same weekend lol. Imagine the onboard footage if they had lol
Two things: I knew a guy who used to run formula, Atlantic and IndyCar, he explained a lot about aerodynamics, and there were two aspects of this that people may find useful…. If they were running under body downforce, it behaves very similar to a magnet; great up close, not very great far away. And, the amount of pressure you generate is specifically dictated by the distance to the road surface. The closer the venturi tunnels are to the ground, the better it produces downforce. In this case, we see the effects of that full force: once the body got far enough away, it stopped production entirely and rapidly. This could be due to the pitch of the road and dirty air from the leading driver more so than the pitch in role of the chassis. I would doubt the suspension had enough pitch and roll in that spec - necessary to handle the weight of the downforce generated - to cause it to pitch and roll that violently. The second compounds over the first, which is that an order to generate under body, downforce, the bottom of the vehicle has to be completely flat with as few open pockets as possible. This means that there is no place for air to escape under the car once it gets there, and this is by design. Once the front end had enough air, moving underneath it, as you said, it became a lifting device instead by virtue of the fact there was no place for air to go, and it began to create an air cushion more rapidly.
To add to this: The rectangular holes above the front wheels of prototypes , and louvers on gt cars, serve to keep air from packing into the front wheel arch creating lift. I am not sure on the date of implementation but they were added in the same spirit of safety targeted at limiting front end lift. Thanks for another great video.
Yeah it’s odd. Most comments here refer to changes that really kicked in after the Toyota crash with Anthony Davidson as well as previously when a car took off in the Porsche curves. It took a couple of years really for the ACO and FIA to realize that this issue was a real problem. They introduced the cutouts over the wheel arches, the dreaded giant rear fin (to break air flow over the car and try and stop it taking off). One other major change was the floor. If you look now, there is a raised section on pretty much on all categories at the front. As well as stepped floors (no longer a giant flat area), the sidepods of the cars are now curved at the base, not 90 degrees. They have a curved radi to them and are no longer touching the floor. Again all designed to try and reduce underfloor downforce and reduce pitch sensitivity and the risk of taking off. Prototypes and Gt’s all have the same issue. Big flat underfloor area, get air under it and the car will try and lift. I have no issues with the changes as they’ve worked very well, just wish that rear fin looked a bit nicer. Lol. Oh and in case anyone’s forgotten, the Courage taking off at Monza. That was by himself, got sideways I think, air got underneath and he took off. A very scary accident too.
@@andrewharper4296 Thanks for a well written and expressed comment. I just want to add to scare the crap out of yourself go watch the Porsche take off at Road Atlanta..... race cars should not fly.
Great explaination! I can still remember seeing this crash during the live broadcast, it probably is the single most terrifying moment I've ever seen. Even all these years later, it still looks scary as hell every time I see it, and it never ceases to amaze me that Dumbreck survived this pretty much unharmed. While I have seen several fatal racing accidents happen live on television, the true horror of those crashes always came later on.
The Toyota TS020 had already the wheel arch cut-outs in 1998. I wouldn't also say that the CLR was expected to "flatten" the competition. After '98 and Porsche's exit, the Toyota's were pretty much the car everyone had their money on. And rightfully so, if you compare the TS020 chassis to anything else in that time, the TS020 remains a timeless beauty and a remarkable piece of design.
I like how you just barely mention that Adrian Newey told them to withdraw. If one of the leading aerodynamic engineers of our time told you to withdraw, probably because he saw a problem, you should really listen.
Well, I think he was working for some team at the time, so they wouldnt listen to a competitor telling them to withdraw...one rival less to beat i guess
The fact that drivers were surviving such accidents is a testament to the progress made in car safety back in 50s and 60s people were driving half the speed and being burned alive in comparatively smaller accidents
1980: I bet there will be flying cars in the future
1999: flying cars
haha funny
FEAR YOUR DREAMS, SON
the gamer guy 14 The first flip I remember seeing was Manfred Winkelhock at the Nordschleife in 1980.
1939: Kars in space
@@thethirdman225 then the future had already happened lol
"For sure Mercedes had aimed high but the car had aimed somewhat higher" hahahaha :D
Portugal gang
777 likes
XD
It went Concorde mode it would be funny if someone added a Pratt and Whitney jet turnine engine and some control surfaces to make it fly like the Concorde
It’s all how the car was designed. It needed more downforce at the front of the car
Webber: Your car flips
Mercedes: He is delusional, get him out of here
You didn't see the car in the air because it's not there!
Tell me how does a Le Mans Prototype race car lift off and flip in the air?
Look at that glow, that's a Mercedes CLR ionizing the air!
ThatLithuanianBoi 3.6 flips.. not good.. but not terrible
The cars fuel was red bull dum dum.
Car has three suspension settings:
1. Highway
2. Sport
3. Aerial
@@mistaowickkuh6249 while this CLR has Aerial suspension setting,
the Tesla Roadster that Elon Musk Launched back then has the Orbital suspension setting.
might be the only car that has the fancy Orbital Suspension Setting.
5. Rocket League
@@mistaowickkuh6249 pahaha gold!
*plane
6. Half flight setting (Mercedes SLR300 only)
Mercedes: *sends a German craft flying in French territory*
France: *sweats intensely*
luftwaffe moment
France proceeds to slowly take out a white flag
AHAHAHAHAHAHHH
Lol
Should we wave the white flag sir?
Imagine he landed it and kept on racing
That would be hell of a moment
Screaming yeeeeeeeeehaaaaaahhhh while or rotation
I believe there's a Porsche GT1(if I'm not wrong) car, which flipped and landed again, but spun out and went into the wall.
Even if somebody managed to flip a car like that and land on it's wheels, it would be undriveable.
The impact would destroy the suspension and most likely bend the chassis so bad, the wheels wouldn't even touch the ground, or atleast beyond the point of being able to steer.
@@MKDC-5 Monster truck is not a lmp car 🙄
@@Randomii666 well, if the landing occurs in the right angle and momentum it can be smooth enough to not ruin the suspension... I guess
*Webber flies 2 times
Redbull: He is the chosen one!!
Fart Vader you just right
Fart Vader how about Valencia 2010?
tfw wings give you Red Bull
Vettel: I can spin my car
Webber: I can flip mine
Kubica: I can... your uber is here "sorry for the delay i was day dreaming and the Williams autopilot took a wrong road.... to victory lane"
Hamilton: I can Call FIA
@@Jimmy-lm2eg lol 🤣
Webber: "it's happening again!"
Mercedes: i can do both
*How others see Le Mans:* Race circuit
*How Mercedes sees le mans:* International airport
This is your captian speaking, the mercedes airlines flight from le mans to Stuttgart will depart shortly
And ladies and gentlemen, unfortunately we have stalled and ended up side down.....
We have arrived back at our starting location: Le Mans International Airport. Thank you for flying with Mercedes Air
Hahaha 😂
This is all wrong... It is obvious they were testing their DAS system to place it in f1 :eyes:
"Mercedes had aimed high but the car had aimed somewhat higher."
When I heard that the coffee I was drinking shot out of both my mouth and my nose.
Sneakily a masterfully crafted statement! 😂 I legit did a double-take, stopped the video, rewind, and watched him say it again!!! 😅
That was great writing, I like this channel!
You can see that a mile away when he said the first sentence
😂😂😂
"Redbull gives you wings"
weber: thats bull-
red bullshit: Ferrari. *double-take*
Redbull gives you wings, but Mercedes gives you *BIRDS* !
merc gives you das
No...Webber got his wings at Valencia in 2010
mercedes gives you wings
Webber got his red bull credentials that day. Badum tss.
Very clever!
I just got that. 🤣
And then again in Valencia 11 years later
Is the same Webber?
@@angelpiretgonzalez8968 yep
Guy flips car twice at 300kph
Yeah thats probably fine, send the car out again
Wtf were they thinking?? Those drivers were so lucky to survive
@@afoxwithahat7846 don't think it was 'go out and don't worry about crashing into trees at 300kph+' strong mate. they were really stupid
actualy the Chassis is strong, the skulls and bones of the audience however…. THEY got lucky.
You try telling your boss that you spent millions of his money building a handful of cars that flip at high speeds and you've got no idea why!
Back in those times drivers weren't pussies but REAL MEN.
"What was that? It flipped?! Scratch Dietmar off of the chalkboard. Tell Hans to get his helmet. Greta, how many drivers do we have left?"
I like how it took 3 cars to flip through the air for Mercedes to realize there was something wrong with their design.
I think they know their design is too aggressive after 1st crash. I'm rather curious why they can't do more to fix the car, like extend the length of rear suspension or something. Maybe they were already not the fastest cars, to fix the problem completely will make it much slower. So they only add the little frong wing only, and pray for miracle that never happened.
Because third time's the charm.
@@Richard-Gore they knew after the 2nd, because they didn't believe the 1st happened. No footage, light damage and the driver's word for it. Also, the car was still the fastest after they modified it (not enough) after the 2nd crash.
@@Richard-Gore I think it's because it was too late to fix any Fundamental flaws with the design so they put a bandaid on it and hoped for the best, which of course wasn't enough.
didn't you watch the video?
"I ordered my new amg gtr with the backflip package pre-installed" is a joke that runs around the merc dealership I work at
Hey, at least Mercedes comes with turning lights from the factory, unlike BMW.
I'm surprised that your co-workers even know about this story. They would have to be pretty interested in motorsports for them to make a joke like that.
somebody pin thisss
@@bluesrike they. work. at. a. car. company.
@@MiG-25IsGOAT Doesn't. automatically. make. them. enthusiasts.
Plot twist: Mercedes wanted to relive the glory days of Luftwaffe
The French instinctively raised the white flag.
THAT'S A GOOD ONE
As it turns out they had DAS Steering back then but had it set to "airplane"
Learn how to spell first but pretty funny tho😂😂
At the 4 hours of Silverstone, they will go flying again
"Okay, 160 knots, V1."
"What? Oh, shi-"
"Rotate. V2."
"AAAAAH WHAT THE FU-"
"Positive rate, gear up."
I was just thinking this ahah
he probably only came down because the "gear up" did not work...
FLAPS!
😂
"sink rate! pull up!"
If it was a gymnastics competition, I would give 10/10 for the backflip.
But it wasnt a gymnastic competition so its totally irrelevant.
@@talhaTWO i really hipe you won't get r/whooooshed...
@@talhaTWO r/whoooooosh
@@talhaTWO Still, a 10/10 backflip.
talha kelleci that’s the joke
I love how chain bear explains everything in very precise technical terms while always maintaining it easy to understand for anyone.
If I had a nickel for every time Mark Webber's car took off and flipped, I'd have two nickels, which isn't a lot but it's weird that it happened twice
You’d have 3 nickels actually. Don’t forget Webber’s F1 crash in 2010. Mark should’ve become a pilot.
@@sevegarza wait mark webber flipped his racing car 3 times..?
@@kirisaki.777 Correct. He backflipped his 1999 Le Mans Mercedes car twice and his 2010 Red Bull F1 car once.
You can simulate this happening perfectly in Project CARS 2. If you have the front rebound forces very high, with a high rear downforce balance, the air can get uder the car and...well fill in the blank lol.
Well.. i know what i'm doing tomorrow..
Wouldn’t high compression and low rebound damping on the front end tend to jack up the front of the car and encourage a flip?
@@mosca3289 was thinking the same thing
I did this in assetto corsa with the URD Mercedes Clr was crazy
You mean "the air CAN'T get under the car"... meaning that there is a diminished flow speed which increases the pressure culminating in a "lift" resultant force.
Man, the Germans really like sending Mercedes engines airborne in Western Europe, huh?
You win
Bf 109's
Wipple Wopple this is an underrated comment
Great comment, but.... Mercedes never made aircraft engines during WW2, only junkers and BMW IIRC
They all got shot down
Im glad there now exists a video that clearly states it was the CLR that was flip happy, not the CLKGTR.
Im sick of seeing blame pointed where it doesnt belong all the time. 😐
Wait someone blamed the CLK GTR? That's facepalm worthy for sure 🤦🏻♂️
r/facepalm
@@Raprada i see it a lot and it's definitely facepalm worthy
I also saw this happening a lot (mainly 10-12y ago when I was more into watching racing videos) and even remember the CLR being referred to as "CLR-GTR" in the title of one video. The CLK GTR and the CLK LM are quite similar although a trained eye shouldn't have trouble distinguishing them, but I've been always puzzled how many people mess up "CLK GTR" and "CLR" so often...it seems to be more about supposed appeareance similarities than name similarities, but the GT1 cars are SOOO different from the CLR!!! Totally don't get it about how it happens so much!!!
I imagine people in the race saying something like this"IS THAT A BIRD IS THAT A PLANE NO THAT'S A MERCEDES
*Mark Webber was not the Impostor*
He was trying to OVERtake the Toyota.
Ok, I'm out
Same comment on another air Mercedes video
Crish :D nice copied comment word for word
That wasn't even funny
Reminds me of what you could do with the 2j in gran turismo.
Literally finished my university dissertation on this exact topic a few weeks ago.
If people want more technical information then this paper provides an excellent overview:
Dominy, R. G. and Ryan, A. and Sims-Williams, D. B. (2000) 'The aerodynamic stability of a Le Mans prototype race car under off-design pitch conditions.', SAE 2000 transactions : journal of passenger cars : mechanical systems., 109 (6). pp. 1454-1460.
I really like that a PhD in aerodynamics(?) has a rage face as user profile pic on youtube. Congrats on your dissertation!
You should apply for a job at Williams. They could use your help.
Good luck on defending your thesis! I hope I'll be able to give your dissertation a read sometime
Mercedes should hire you
That's really impressive! Awesome work you did
A good pilot can fly anything that should fly.
And with some difficulty-what shouldn't.
sees the first line: *nods head*
sees the second line: *double-take, then cackles madly*
This is your captian speaking, the mercedes airlines flight from le mans to Stuttgart will depart shortly
Fellow War Thunder player?
*its better to fly badly than to fall well*
@@kastro4460 Do not stand near the bomb.
Some say there is still an airborne CLR to this day that is floating around in the atmosphere.
Ben Ruether: I like that Mr Clarkson 🤓🤓🤓🤓
🤣🤣
It just got into an accident with Musk’s Tesla roadster just off of Mars.
@@MindVirusYT ok mister-cannot-even-make-a-joke. Whatever.
Ok
Wait whats that in the sky ITS COMING TO ME
Wadsworth Constant in effect
Here starts the explanation 3:50
You'd be amazed at what can fly in the right conditions. I once saw an inflatable river raft with 8 people lift 6' above the water in a head wind, hover for a bit and then flip over dumping everyone out before landing again.
Man it’s good thing this Mercedes didn’t kill anyone like back in the day
FIA just moved the spectators out of the way lol.
@@Themayseffect wooosh
Mercedes reading this comment: *50s accident flashbacks*
@@themagicslinky1773 unnecessary use of woosh
honestly
Webber had a thing for doing backflips in cars he did it in F1 aswell.
I will never forget that one
Yeah, he just didn't get to do a full one in 2010 lol
@@christopherortiz9330 infact he did it... in the redbull powerhouse, monaco lol
red bull job interview:
C. Horner: "So Mark, what do you do in your free time?"
Webber: "Well, mostly flying."
Mercedes cars take flight:
People: nah, they lost now
Mercedes: wings come out from the side
Lewis : *pulls steering wheel to turn it into a airplane*
Cars2 theme starts playing
*_giornos theme_*
*flicks cover on dashboard and presses a big red button*
*giant jet engine comes out the back*
Red Bull gives you wings
The Porsche 911 GT1 also experienced a similar flip at Road Atlanta, so GT1 had well and truly gotten out of hand aerodynamically by then.
Expansion into non-F1 racing? Chainbear Cinematic Universe?
yes
He has donde Formula E too
He’s done many formula e videos...
Hamilton dies in Endgame
Yeah i noticed, i was like.. "wait.. he sounds like chainbear and the visuals he uses in this, are very similar to the ones he uses in his F1 channel"
1925: "I bet there will be flying cars in the future!"
1999:
You mean 1955
Nizmo370z it’s actually 1985
@@nizmo370z4 ooh dark!!
Mercedes and Le Mans together were "benchmark" for safety measures in motorsport.
The famous 1955 disaster defined the whole destiny of motorsport and safety on tracks.
Well it took them a staggering 40 years until the safety on and round the track started to get to an acceptable level. Not impressed if your story is correct..
1955 wasn't Benz fault as it was proven later on
Other than a few circuits adding a chicane before the pits nothing really changed. Like the Goodwood chicane
I don't think motorsport should be unnecessarily dangerous but i do think it shouldn't abandon sport in pursuit of safety.
Safety is nice but people don't race or watch racing because its safe. So its of secondary importance to the sport itself.
If we only did what was safe we'd never have done anything, and we'd be extinct while we were still cavemen.
They can use the Jeep sticker.
"If you can read this flip me over"
Toyota: *It's over Mercedes, I have the high ground*
Mercedes: *you underestimate my power*
Annnd then we all know what happens next...long story short, attempting to jump over your opponent is never a good idea.
Toyota: It's over Mercedes, I have the high ground
Mercedes: We can go higher!
Toyota: Sure, but you forgot about the "ground" part.
This video is fake the Mercedes actually switched to creative mode
Why.
Vykk Draygo youre dumb af
Vykk Draygo wooosh
its a reference to Minecraft obviously
@@markcyrusleano777 r/wooshwithfouros
“Like a ghost through a tennis racket”
God damn that’s brilliant!
Mercedes : making their cars fly at Le Mans since 1955.
The 55 crash was not Mercedes' fault.
Ouch
Yes the track was not wide enough for a car which I forgot avoid the SLR and the slowing down jag
Wait didn't like a BUNCH of people die when it happened in 1955? o.O
@@a.ndy.nonymous 84 people yeah.
incredibly well done presentation, fascinating! thanks!
Dude, they had to have cars flying THREE times before they pulled them off. That is bananas, how is ONE CAR FLYING not too many cars flying?!?!?
Yep. Webber never forgave them for that. They tried to pin the first crash on him and that it must have been a driving error. It was not caught on film so they doubted Webber's explanation. When it happened again they still left two cars running, doubting Webber. Dumbreck was lucky to survive the final crash. Webber was furious they hadn't taken him seriously earlier and endangered the the lives of the drivers.
And this is why modern Prototypes have squares cut out above their wheels. To release the build up of pressure in a situation like these.
Thought I'd check to see if anyone else had already said that. Dumbreck was incredibly lucky that the owner of the trees (local govt? I honestly don't know) had cut down a bunch of them recently and he landed where they had been. When I heard that on the weekend, my blood ran cold!
In addition, the front overhangs were shortened to reduce front lift.
@@chrisdeo wrong. cars must have it as a safety measure. one would also release pressure to reduce drag behind the wheel (cut out wheel arch), not on top of it.
This is an old aero trick. The Dodge Daytona used this back in the day for added down force.
They are already in use but you are correct.
the 1999 CLR is like my music teacher, very pitch sensitive.
There’s the door, LEAVE.
More
Who else was expecting footage
ruclips.net/video/e21ZjwZGjiQ/видео.html
Well i came here after watching the actual Footage of the crash
Well this is chain bear who I'm a big fan of. It's actually kind of cool because he does these videos for all-sorts of big companies and has to keep the copyright friendly.
Me and that's why I gave him a thumbs down 👇
Honestly, not really. But it would’ve been cool.
This wasn't the first time that a race car flew away during an endurance race. In 1953 John Fitch made quite similar attraction with his Briggs Cunningham C5-R at Reims. Umberto Maglioli followed him and couldn't believe when the Cunningham took off, flew above the trees and telegraph posts then smashed to its wheels near the track in the fields. Fortunately Fitch had just minor injuries. In WW2 he was a fighter pilot and I guess he was the only fighter pilot who took off with a race car (and crashed that).
Me: Guys you know how paper flips when dropped?
Mercedes: You mean car?
One year at Petit Le Mans a Porsche GT1 flipped in the exact same way.
Fishsticks yes, that was 1998, so that was actually a precursor to the Mercedes acrobatics the following year.
And a BMW V12 LMR crashed aswell
Jann Mardenborough also had a very similar crash in 2015 in a GT-R GT3, over the hill before flugplatz at the Nordschleife, sadly that one killed a spectator
Hellisoy yep, that was 2000.
that wasnt as bad since it was due to close drafting behind the opther car, the mercedes was even worse because it flipped on its own
Webber is a pro at doing backflips with racecars
He can do backflip himself as well, when he won Monaco.
I knew Webber had launched in a Mercedes at Le Mans, but didn't know that he did it TWICE in the same weekend lol. Imagine the onboard footage if they had lol
Jiggmin1234 Its funny enough that Webber is now notorious for flipping cars. Hell he flipped Redbull in 2010
Such a well put together video! Thanks for sharing! ♡
Very well narrated and put together. Thank you.
"2020 we will have flying cars"
mercedes: makes their cars fly in 1999
improvise.adapt.overcome
‘He was outta the race before the race even started’
Alonso: **Mclaren Honda memories intensifies**
Ooooooh Chain Bear does non F1 videos, the expansion begins
first lemans, after that, rallying
Rallying would be interesting. High speeds, bumpy roads, how to control all that. So many obstacles very near by.
*cough * Formula E *cough *
@@grdprojekt "So what the pit crew usually does is take out the battery and place another one in it instead, and it takes about 30 seconds!"
@@cf6282 while tryong to get the fastest time possible. An insane motorsport indeed
Two things:
I knew a guy who used to run formula, Atlantic and IndyCar, he explained a lot about aerodynamics, and there were two aspects of this that people may find useful….
If they were running under body downforce, it behaves very similar to a magnet; great up close, not very great far away. And, the amount of pressure you generate is specifically dictated by the distance to the road surface. The closer the venturi tunnels are to the ground, the better it produces downforce. In this case, we see the effects of that full force: once the body got far enough away, it stopped production entirely and rapidly. This could be due to the pitch of the road and dirty air from the leading driver more so than the pitch in role of the chassis. I would doubt the suspension had enough pitch and roll in that spec - necessary to handle the weight of the downforce generated - to cause it to pitch and roll that violently.
The second compounds over the first, which is that an order to generate under body, downforce, the bottom of the vehicle has to be completely flat with as few open pockets as possible. This means that there is no place for air to escape under the car once it gets there, and this is by design. Once the front end had enough air, moving underneath it, as you said, it became a lifting device instead by virtue of the fact there was no place for air to go, and it began to create an air cushion more rapidly.
Well that's one way to soar above the competition.
"We just witnessed am exciting 24 Hours Of Le Mans"
We did?
GT and lmp2 were amazing
We did, but not on the LMP1 class.
luckily he told me beacuse i didn't know
Lmp1 is good for speeeeed
But it was good anyway with GTE
GTE Am was fucking lit m8.
Tho it did die out little bit when Corvette supun.
CLR: my people need me.
*take off into the sky*
I need to go back to my planet SISU.
A mix of spa and monza is the BEST analogy for the circuit
The perfect description
1950: "i bet we will have flying cars in the future
1999: "well yes, but no"
Me : I can do a bottle flip challenge 😁
Webber : old my beer
To add to this: The rectangular holes above the front wheels of prototypes , and louvers on gt cars, serve to keep air from packing into the front wheel arch creating lift. I am not sure on the date of implementation but they were added in the same spirit of safety targeted at limiting front end lift.
Thanks for another great video.
Yeah it’s odd. Most comments here refer to changes that really kicked in after the Toyota crash with Anthony Davidson as well as previously when a car took off in the Porsche curves. It took a couple of years really for the ACO and FIA to realize that this issue was a real problem. They introduced the cutouts over the wheel arches, the dreaded giant rear fin (to break air flow over the car and try and stop it taking off). One other major change was the floor. If you look now, there is a raised section on pretty much on all categories at the front. As well as stepped floors (no longer a giant flat area), the sidepods of the cars are now curved at the base, not 90 degrees. They have a curved radi to them and are no longer touching the floor. Again all designed to try and reduce underfloor downforce and reduce pitch sensitivity and the risk of taking off. Prototypes and Gt’s all have the same issue. Big flat underfloor area, get air under it and the car will try and lift. I have no issues with the changes as they’ve worked very well, just wish that rear fin looked a bit nicer. Lol. Oh and in case anyone’s forgotten, the Courage taking off at Monza. That was by himself, got sideways I think, air got underneath and he took off. A very scary accident too.
@@andrewharper4296 Thanks for a well written and expressed comment. I just want to add to scare the crap out of yourself go watch the Porsche take off at Road Atlanta.....
race cars should not fly.
@@andrewharper4296That rear fin needs to go. Looks hideous!!
Great explaination! I can still remember seeing this crash during the live broadcast, it probably is the single most terrifying moment I've ever seen. Even all these years later, it still looks scary as hell every time I see it, and it never ceases to amaze me that Dumbreck survived this pretty much unharmed. While I have seen several fatal racing accidents happen live on television, the true horror of those crashes always came later on.
Red Bull secretly gave Mark Webber wings 😂.
People : "I hope he have flying cars in the future"
Mercedes in 1999 : 9:25 _"Hold my bumpers"_
mark webber was also thrown into the air in the 2010 european grand prix coincidentally
The Toyota TS020 had already the wheel arch cut-outs in 1998. I wouldn't also say that the CLR was expected to "flatten" the competition. After '98 and Porsche's exit, the Toyota's were pretty much the car everyone had their money on. And rightfully so, if you compare the TS020 chassis to anything else in that time, the TS020 remains a timeless beauty and a remarkable piece of design.
Now for a follow up looking at how a similar effect caused the early Audi TTs to fly.
Nobody:
Mercedes-Benz CLR: *YEET*
Hard to focus on the video when you have an ad popping up every 60 seconds. But, from what I could see it was a very informative video.
Who'd have thought that Mercedes would struggle with air flow under a race car????
Red Bull missed a prime marketing opportunity
They get it later in Valencia 2010 though
I like how you just barely mention that Adrian Newey told them to withdraw. If one of the leading aerodynamic engineers of our time told you to withdraw, probably because he saw a problem, you should really listen.
Just saw the video and I had exactly the same thought hehe.
Well, I think he was working for some team at the time, so they wouldnt listen to a competitor telling them to withdraw...one rival less to beat i guess
@@Hernandeces He was with McLaren, who at the time were officially partnered with Mercedes and racing in F1 as McLaren-Mercedes
Adrian Newey was working with Mercedes at the time. He’s not a competitor he’s on the same team
Le Mans really isn’t a good place for Mercedes
yup. Because porsche is merc equivalent in wec and cheats. #FIAisRigged #GiveBackFordItsVictory.
That’s a huge understatement considering what happened in 55 🙏
My comment included 1955
@@ovt8454 You cant compare penalties in endurance and F1
@@ovt8454 butthurt crybaby
Thanks! Not only a good analysis of these Mercedes, but a good lesson on aerodynamics in general.
CLR goes like: „wheeeeee"
Human: „Is it a bird? Is it a plane? Oh its a CLR"
So the Porsche GT1 flip at Road Atlanta would've been a combo of crest & slipstream? Fascinating
James P yes the hump on the backstretch was quite high at the time, and certainly contributed to the Porsche backflip.
Mercedes should make a plane though!!
Prof. Redstone They made the engines for the Hindenburg blimp
@@GTChucker86 Oh... Maybe they should stay on the ground then
they made aeroplane engines during WW2, not only that but also diesel marine engines for submarines, along with heavy trucks and staff cars
@@met_big_kawaii4999 so this is the reason why mercedes is so talented to make flying things😂😂
oh they have
Daimler used to make the engines for the Bf-109
Imagine what could have happened if after his CLR went airborne, it actually went into the crowd enclosure...
Le Mans 1955
Great video. Keep up the good work.
How many ads can you fit on a video?
The Delorean see's the mercedes and cry's in a corner .
Wait a minute is that...It can’t be It’s doc brown in the GRAND STANDS
I believe I can fly
I believe I can touch the sky
I think about it every night and day
Spread my wings and fly away!
I see the chainbair thumbnail style and are plugged in!
**Mercedes Car flips for the second time**
The team : _"I'LL FKING DO IT AGAIN"_
10 ads in 10 minutes? Get the hell outta here.
There's 0 on it now
Legends say that one of those is on its way to pay a visit to Voyager 1.
Weber qualifies for astronaut wings, then.
That's probably true, one of the prototypes is still missing...
How did you animate those graphics.. very nicely done.
Adobe Animate?
2:30 Katayama and Tsuchiya on the grid !!
Red bull
''Gives you wings"
Thanks for the video great commentary and explanation of why that race car went airborne. 👍🙋
Mercedes Benz always wants to be above competition
RUclips: how many ads u want?
Him: yes
He needs all that ad revenue to buy tissues to blow his blocked nose..
What ads? :D
RUclips Vanced; what is ads
i love this kind of videos..... excellent job
The fact that drivers were surviving such accidents is a testament to the progress made in car safety
back in 50s and 60s people were driving half the speed and being burned alive in comparatively smaller accidents
Great subject title, that was a very memorable event. Thanks for the story.