Pirelli hot laps highlight the 2018 F1 season
From track to road
One of the concepts that Pirelli talks about most is ‘track to road' – but what does that actually mean? After all, you can't actually take a Formula 1 car onto the road (unless you happen to be somewhere like Monaco or Singapore for the grand prix weekend, in which case it's actively encouraged).
But now, there's a brand-new initiative from Pirelli together with Formula 1's promoter that illustrates perfectly what we mean by technology transfer from track to road. And it's never been done before. Welcome to the Pirelli hot laps programme, starting in Bahrain this year.
The new scheme gives people a chance to experience what it's like to be driven flat-out in a supercar by a grand prix driver on the actual circuit during the race weekend. In other words, the closest possible experience to taking part: with the added opportunity to observe drivers and circuits from a privileged position to discover just what makes them so special.
The idea is capture the essence of performance: not only from the supercars themselves, but also from their P Zero tyres, which are developed from the experience honed on race tracks. This year, these famous tyres for the road get the chance to come home.
Road-going supercars come to F1
It's also an opportunity for the many car manufacturers involved in Formula 1, as engine suppliers, teams and partners, to showcase the brilliance of their products in the environment that inspired them, as well as associating the global gladiators that are F1 drivers with the cars they are there to promote.
If you want to witness Fernando Alonso at the wheel of a McLaren 720S, for example, now's your chance. Seeing so many F1 drivers display real-world skills at the wheel of road-going supercars is something that's not been done since the 1980s, when BMW supplied a fleet of modified M1s for the Procar championship, which formed part of the support race package for the 1979 and 1980 F1 world championships. As unbelievable as it sounds in today's world of zealously-guarded contracts, drivers from nearly all the teams used to happily jump into the BMWs as a warm-up for the grand prix on eight European rounds. Niki Lauda won the inaugural 1979 season, while Nelson Piquet was champion in 1980.
Commercial and contractual realities bit from 1981 onwards: Procar was quietly moved elsewhere and so we were denied the opportunity of seeing what F1 drivers can do in supercars that we recognise. Until now.
Aston Martin and McLaren the first of many
The first manufacturers confirmed for the Pirelli hot laps programme this year, which will mostly take place on long-haul flyaway events, are Aston Martin and McLaren; with more being announced in the coming weeks. Aston Martin will use both Red Bull Racing drivers – their official partners – while McLaren will use their race drivers as well as two stars of the past and the future: former world champion Mika Hakkinen and reserve driver Lando Norris. Expect to see the new Aston Martin V8 Vantage in the hands of the Red Bull drivers, while the McLaren stars will pilot the latest 720s. Both these cars are very different, but one thing they have in common is Pirelli P Zero tyres as original equipment: as is the case for the majority of the world's supercar manufacturers.
As Pirelli's head of car racing Mario Isola – who himself originally started his career as a test driver for high performance tyres – points out: “This latest initiative allows us to demonstrate the performance and technology of our road car product on the actual circuits used in Formula 1 with the best drivers in the world. We talk a lot about motorsport being our ultimate development tool: now everyone can see that for themselves.”
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