Paddock Magazine — Page 114

Share your love

Paddock Magazine

Paddock Magazine

It's the only business publication in the motorsport industry. Now in its sixteenth year, Paddock magazine brings a sharper focus on the business and lifestyle of high-end racing.

Brembo Brake Facts: Japan

The hardest braking point at the Suzuka circuit is approaching turn 16, Casio Triangle. Here the driver has to brake down hard, decelerating by 218 km/h over just 146 metres. 1,688 kW of power is released in the process. The…

Brembo Brake Facts: Singapore

The hardest braking point on the Marina Bay Street Circuit is approaching Memorial. Here the driver has to brake down hard, decelerating by 220 km/h over just 132 metres. 2,181 kW of power is released in the process. The driver…

At the berth

Camper & Nicholsons is widely recognised to be one of the world’s oldest and most prestigious yachting business names, with origins dating back to 1782 when boat building began at Gosport, in the south of England. We are lucky to be…

If I Ran F1: Chris Frampton

Having been working in the New Media space since 1991 and launching an Internet broadcast business in 1995, Chris Frampton first approached Formula 1 in 1997 with an idea for concerts and internet broadcasting when the Internet was very much…

Quick Monza Q&A with Paul Hembery

Pirelli motorsport director Paul Hembery sits down for a quick Q&A about the Italian Grand Prix with our man at Monza – Piero Savazzi. What can you tell us about yesterday’s Free Practice results and today’s weather conditions? Yesterday was a pretty…

Lewis Hamilton – Circuit Preview: Monza!

Highspeed in “bella Italia” with the World Champion “Real car control and confidence: this is a track where the most confident breaker generally wins.” MERCEDES AMG PETRONAS Formula 1 Team Driver Lewis Hamilton chats about the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza.…

Brembo Brake Facts: Italy

  The Autodromo di Monza’s hardest braking point comes ahead of the chicane after the start/finish line. The driver has to decelerate here by 189 km/h over just 160 metres. 2,777 kW of brake power are released in the process.…

Stay informed and not overwhelmed, subscribe now!