Aston Martin Red Bull Racing
perform a Zero-G pit stop
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[November 21, 2019]
The team take a pit stop to new
levels in the weightlessness of Zero-G.
Zero gravity, zero problem! Aston Martin Red Bull Racing needed a
new challenge after three record-breaking pit stops this season –
and they found it at an altitude of nearly 33,000 feet on board an
Ilyushin Il-76 MDK cosmonaut training plane. Here is all you need to
know:
- Drawing on the help of the Russian space agency Roscosmos, the
team took the 2005 RB1 car to the Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training
Center in Star City and set about proving that the sky really is the
only limit.
- Over the course of a week, 16 pit crew members took a crash course
in cosmonaut training in preparation for multiple Zero-G flights in
the plane’s fuselage along with the F1 car and a 10-strong film
crew.
- Each flight consisted of a series of parabolas, with the aircraft
climbing at a 45° angle, then falling in a ballistic arc, to produce
a period of near weightlessness of around 22 seconds before the next
climb.
- The F1 car and equipment had to be carefully secured before and
after each weightless period – because no one wants gravity
returning when a 400-kg car, the tyres or the pit crew are a metre
or so off the deck.
- Each filming take was around 15 seconds and provided the most
physically and technically demanding activity the live demo team has
ever undertaken.
- It was certainly a creative way to raise the bar for an F1 show
car team who have taken cars everywhere from the Himalayas to the
shores of the Dead Sea, driving across snow, ice and the baking
desert. Putting their bodies through the strains of Zero-G certainly
left the pit crew with a whole new level of respect for their
newfound cosmonaut colleagues.
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Aston Martin Red Bull Racing needed a new challenge after three
record-breaking pit stops this season - including one at the
Brazilian Grand Prix - and they found it in Russia at an altitude of
nearly 33,000 feet on board an Ilyushin Il-76 MDK cosmonaut training
plane. 16 pit crew members took a crash course in cosmonaut training
in preparation for multiple Zero-G flights in the plane’s fuselage
along with the 2005 RB1 F1 car
and a 10-strong film crew. Each flight consisted of a series of
parabolas, with the aircraft climbing at a 45° angle, then falling
in a ballistic arc, to produce a period of near weightlessness of
around 22 seconds before the next climb. // Aston Martin Red Bull
Racing team perform a pit stop in Zero-G during the Zero Gravity
Project by Aston Martin Red Bull Racing in Moscow, Russia on
September 14, 2019. // Denis Klero / Red Bull Content Pool
- Support Team coordinator Mark Willis said: “My stomach was fine –
but it felt like my head was going to explode. It took two or three
runs to understand what was happening. At first, I couldn’t think
straight. My brain couldn’t compute what was happening. I’ve been
involved in some special events from slaloming the car in Kitzbühel,
to the salt lakes of Argentina, we’ve been to some strange places
and done some strange things – but ultimately this is the oddest –
but also the most special because there’s simply nothing
comparable.”
- Support Team chief mechanic Joe Robinson added: “It pushed us
harder than I thought it would. You realise how much you rely on
gravity when you don’t have any! It challenges you to think and
operate in a different way – and that was brilliant. It was a once
in a lifetime opportunity and honestly, I could have stayed and done
it all month. It was amazing. I think it’s the coolest, most fun
thing the Live Demo team has ever done with a show car.”
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