89 was Barnard's last year with Ferrari again from GP.com:Courted by Ferrari in 1987, Barnard was able to dictate his terms to the Italian company - he was given $2 million and his own design center - Ferrari Guildford Technical Office - in England. It was from here that he masterminded his next technical breakthrough - the semi-automatic gearbox. Soon afterwards he was lured to Benetton and established the Benetton Advanced Research Group at Godalming and designed the B191, which formed the basis for the 1994 World Championship-winning B194.
In March 1989 Cappelli was replaced as head of the racing department by Cesare Fiorio, formerly the competitions director of Lancia and Alfa Romeo. Barnard's new 641 appeared in Brazil and Mansell won on the car's debut. Berger was fortunate to emerge unscathed from a fiery accident at Imola and was not fully competitive until the autumn. In June the team announced that Enrique Scalabroni would take over chassis design from John Barnard for the 1990 car.
I watched that a while ago - Brazil 1989scarbs wrote:As I recall the Ferrari always raced with paddles, the paddles failed in an early race and Mansell pitted to replace the steering wheel. Ferrari also changed all four tyres, so perhaps the first five wheel pitstop!
It was Mclarens belated entry to Semi-auto's that was with buttons.
The McLaren did not have the auto until 1992, because Ron Dennis was rude to me outside his hosp unit at Estoril in 1989.Raptor22 wrote:The First F1 car with a paddle shift semi auto matic gearbox was the Ferrari type 639 Designated the F189 and raced for the first time at Jacarapagua in Brasil. It won first time out.
It only raced for 2 events before being replaced by the f189B or type 640. The changes to the car were engine, airbox and diffusor. The changes were significant enough to warrant a new type designation to the car.
The type 639 had the engine airbox inlet on either side of the roll hoop just behind the drivers head. also the diffusor on the 639 was a very simple raised floor and not the sophisticated design that McLaren debuted on their MP4-5.
The next car to go paddle shift was the Williams Renault FW-12B of 1990.
McLaren only followed in 1992 with a paddle shift override full auto box.
Wasn't McLaren (if I remember right with Porsche) the first one to try something in gear selection with a sequential stick?scarbs wrote:As I recall the Ferrari always raced with paddles, the paddles failed in an early race and Mansell pitted to replace the steering wheel. Ferrari also changed all four tyres, so perhaps the first five wheel pitstop!
It was Mclarens belated entry to Semi-auto's that was with buttons.
autogyro wrote:The McLaren did not have the auto until 1992, because Ron Dennis was rude to me outside his hosp unit at Estoril in 1989.
His loss.
I knew I should have started that sweepstake...1 day 20hrs and 8 minutes.autogyro wrote:The McLaren did not have the auto until 1992, because Ron Dennis was rude to me outside his hosp unit at Estoril in 1989.Raptor22 wrote:The First F1 car with a paddle shift semi auto matic gearbox was the Ferrari type 639 Designated the F189 and raced for the first time at Jacarapagua in Brasil. It won first time out.
It only raced for 2 events before being replaced by the f189B or type 640. The changes to the car were engine, airbox and diffusor. The changes were significant enough to warrant a new type designation to the car.
The type 639 had the engine airbox inlet on either side of the roll hoop just behind the drivers head. also the diffusor on the 639 was a very simple raised floor and not the sophisticated design that McLaren debuted on their MP4-5.
The next car to go paddle shift was the Williams Renault FW-12B of 1990.
McLaren only followed in 1992 with a paddle shift override full auto box.
His loss.
Just thought I would post it again, in case Dennis has not yet read it.xxChrisxx wrote:autogyro wrote:The McLaren did not have the auto until 1992, because Ron Dennis was rude to me outside his hosp unit at Estoril in 1989.
His loss.
Quoting for emphasis. Just in case people missed your original comment.
The 640 was John Barnard's first atmospheric car since the original MP4-1, which didn't have a "snorkel-type" airbox either.Raptor22 wrote:...the 640 which started the season with a suboptimal airbox.