1988
1989

MANSELL’S GEARS

F1-89, ELECTRO REVOLUTION

MANSELL’S GEARS
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MomentsGarage
1947
1947FIRST VICTORY
1948Launch of 166 MM
1949TRIUMPH AT LE MANS
1950
1950A RED MILLE MIGLIA
1950DEBUT IN F1
1951FIRST F1 WIN
1952MARZOTTO'S MONACO WIN
1952VICTORY FOR ASCARI
1953SPORTSCAR CHAMPIONS
1954LAST PAN AMERICAN
1954QUEEN OF PARIS
1955THE LADY OF THE COUPÉ
1956FANGIO CHAMPION
1957LAST MILLE MIGLIA
1957CALIFORNIA DREAMING
1958ELEGANT CHAMPION
1959AMERICAN RESISTANCE
1960
1960SERIES BEGINS
1961RED MONOPOLY
1962MASTERPIECE
1963LE MANS, ITALY
1964HERO OF THE TWO WORLDS
1965VICTORY AT TARGA
1966365 P JEWEL
1967LEGENDARY FINISH
1968TRIBUTE TO THE TRIUMPH
1968ARGENTINE TANGO
1969DINO OF TASMANIA
1969MASTERS OF EUROPE
1969A NEW PARTNER
1970
1970THE 512 S MIRACLE
1971THE 365 GT4 BB
1972CLEAN SWEEP FOR 312 P
1972HOME TRACK
1973DINO 308 GT4 ARRIVES
1974FEVER AT 50
1975LAUDA CHAMPION
1975FIRST TIME
1976AUTOMATICALLY LOVELY
1977NIKI DOUBLE
1978PROPHET AT HOME
1979SCHECKTER WORLD TITLE
1980
19804 PLACES, 8TH TITLE
1981TURBO WIN IN MONACO
1982UNSTOPPABLE 308 GTB
1983OPEN AIR PLEASURE
1984MASTERPIECE OF STYLE
1984FIRST OF A KIND
1985328, LAST ACT
1986AMERICAN SURPRISE
1987ENZO’S DREAM
1988DAY OF FAREWELL
1989MANSELL’S GEARS
1990
1990100TH F1 WIN
1991EVOLUTION OF AN ICON
1992A CLASSIC GT
1993DEDICATED TO CUSTOMERS
1994EXTREME REFINEMENT
1995F1 IN A ROAD CAR
1996SCHUMY’S FIRST
1997REVOLUTIONARY GEARBOX
1998SHAPE AND SPEED
1999RETURN TO THE TOP
2000
200021 YEARS LATER
2001SECOND WORLD TITLE
2002HOMAGE TO THE FOUNDER
2003REMEMBERING AGNELLI
2004UNSTOPPABLE
2005SUPERAMERICA MAGIC
2006EXCLUSIVE XX PROGRAMME
2007KIMI FINAL MASTERPIECE
2008STILL CHAMPIONS
2009BENCHMARK CAR
2010
2010RED FUN
2011FF FOR EVERY CONDITION
2012PERFORMANCE AND DESIGN
2013EXTREME INNOVATION
2014THE ULTIMATE
2015INTO THE FUTURE
201670 YEARS OF AN ICON
2016STOCK MARKET LAUNCH
2017HAPPY 70TH BIRTHDAY!
2018Farewell Sergio
2019DIFFERENT FERRARI FOR DIFFERENT FERRARISTI
2020
2020AN ENORMOUSLY RESILIENT BRAND
2021A YEAR OF GREAT CHANGE
2029
1989Unparalleled beauty

MANSELL’S GEARS

F1-89, ELECTRO REVOLUTION

Mere milliseconds can make all the difference between victory and defeat. And finishing second just means being the first of the losers. That, in a nutshell, is Formula 1, the very pinnacle of motor sport in which the best teams, cars and drivers do constant battle for supremacy. An arena in which technology rules.

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Take steering wheel-mounted gearshifting, for example. It was tried and tested in Formula 1 and is now standard on all self-respecting sports cars. Thirty years ago, however, this was far from the case. In fact, the mere idea was unimaginable. Back in 1979, the Scuderia had developed an electrohydraulic gearbox and tested it on a 312 T3 laboratory car. Rather than the traditional gear lever inside the cockpit, Ferrari’s unique system used two buttons on the steering wheel to change the gears. The buttons activated electromagnetic valves that, in turn, activated actuators in the gearbox. However, the advanced electronics required to make the system work were not yet available and it was mothballed. That said, the experiment was not in vain. Ten years later, now armed with new technology, Ferrari went down the same route and, in the process, ushered in a whole new era in Formula 1, courtesy of the revolutionary F1-89 (design no. 640), the brainchild of John Barnard. A car that was, to all intents and purposes, the first of the present generation of electronically-managed single-seaters. The new F1-89 sported an innovative aerodynamic body, push-rod suspension with torsion bars, and the latest iteration of the naturally-aspirated V12 which punched out 600 bhp at 12,000 rpm. Nonetheless, the real jewel in the F1-89’s crown was its gearbox with electronic management, controlled by twin paddles mounted behind the steering wheel. The driver used the right hand one to go up through the gears and the left hand one to go down. The gearbox itself was a conventional longitudinal transmission in which the gears were selected by hydraulic selectors controlled by electrohydraulic actuators.

The advantages to the driver were obvious: he could now focus more fully on driving, resulting in faster lap times as well as fewer errors and instances of the engine over-reving, thereby improving the reliability of power units and gearboxes alike.

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Reliability. Therein was the rub. This, unfortunately, was exactly what the F1-89 seemed to lack on the eve of the first race of the 1989 season in Brazil. The technology was still too new and bets were laid in the paddock over how many laps Gerhard Berger and his new team-mate Nigel Mansell would last on the circuit at Jacarepaguá, just outside Rio de Janeiro. There was so little faith in the new system that Mansell himself even booked his flight home for late afternoon as he was certain his race would finish early. But as it turned out, the British Lion’s red car with race number 27 lined up in sixth position on the starting grid on the swelteringly hot day of the race and then proceeded to race hitch-free for longer than it had ever done in testing.

In the end, it completed all 61 laps of the grand prix and roared across the finish-line to victory over seven seconds ahead of the McLaren-Honda of Alain Prost. The hands of Ferrari’s rivals were swollen from all the gear shifting they’d done throughout the race, but the only marks on Mansell’s came from lifting the winner’s cup on the podium. The Prancing Horse had just written yet another milestone chapter in Formula 1 history.

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1989 Masterpieces