More details on Caparo’s F1 car for the road
December 31st, 1969
Safety systems and materials developed for Formula One make the Caparo T1 one of the world’s safest vehicles on the road. Already dubbed the world’s fastest ever track-biased production car, the T1 features a carbon composite tub and an energy-absorbing carbon nosecone for improved driver protection.
Even though it weighs in at just 570kg (1,257lbs) depending on specification, the high speeds it’s capable of mean conventional road car safety systems can’t cope with the levels of kinetic energy experienced during a crash. To solve this, engineers incorporated many of the safety systems used in F1, where drivers can walk away from crashes at speeds of more than 200mph (322km/h).
The two-seater T1 features a carbon composite monocoque sandwiched with a 13mm aluminum core. As well as using high-strength materials, the egg shape of the cell is inherently strong, giving it additional resistance to frontal impacts, and includes an integrated high-strength steel roll-protection hoop.
The nosecone, body panels, wings and floor utilize a similar core and to eliminate joins, which could be a potential point of weakness, all the large components, including the monocoque are molded in one piece.
For the single most important feature of the car, the brakes, Caparo called on AP Racing to do the development work. The huge brake discs measure 14in across and are gripped by six pot (front) and four pot (back) calipers made from aluminum billet.
The final safety touch is a compulsory driver training course to help develop the skills needed to drive this type of vehicle on the road. As you’ll see in this video review, that’s no easy task.More details on Caparo’s F1 car for the road
Safety systems and materials developed for Formula One make the Caparo T1 one of the world’s safest vehicles on the road. Already dubbed the world’s fastest ever track-biased production car, the T1 features a carbon composite tub and an energy-absorbing carbon nosecone for improved driver protection.
Even though it weighs in at just 570kg (1,257lbs) depending on specification, the high speeds it’s capable of mean conventional road car safety systems can’t cope with the levels of kinetic energy experienced during a crash. To solve this, engineers incorporated many of the safety systems used in F1, where drivers can walk away from crashes at speeds of more than 200mph (322km/h).
The two-seater T1 features a carbon composite monocoque sandwiched with a 13mm aluminum core. As well as using high-strength materials, the egg shape of the cell is inherently strong, giving it additional resistance to frontal impacts, and includes an integrated high-strength steel roll-protection hoop.
The nosecone, body panels, wings and floor utilize a similar core and to eliminate joins, which could be a potential point of weakness, all the large components, including the monocoque are molded in one piece.
For the single most important feature of the car, the brakes, Caparo called on AP Racing to do the development work. The huge brake discs measure 14in across and are gripped by six pot (front) and four pot (back) calipers made from aluminum billet.
The final safety touch is a compulsory driver training course to help develop the skills needed to drive this type of vehicle on the road. As you’ll see in this video review, that’s no easy task.
Even though it weighs in at just 570kg (1,257lbs) depending on specification, the high speeds it’s capable of mean conventional road car safety systems can’t cope with the levels of kinetic energy experienced during a crash. To solve this, engineers incorporated many of the safety systems used in F1, where drivers can walk away from crashes at speeds of more than 200mph (322km/h).
The two-seater T1 features a carbon composite monocoque sandwiched with a 13mm aluminum core. As well as using high-strength materials, the egg shape of the cell is inherently strong, giving it additional resistance to frontal impacts, and includes an integrated high-strength steel roll-protection hoop.
The nosecone, body panels, wings and floor utilize a similar core and to eliminate joins, which could be a potential point of weakness, all the large components, including the monocoque are molded in one piece.
For the single most important feature of the car, the brakes, Caparo called on AP Racing to do the development work. The huge brake discs measure 14in across and are gripped by six pot (front) and four pot (back) calipers made from aluminum billet.
The final safety touch is a compulsory driver training course to help develop the skills needed to drive this type of vehicle on the road. As you’ll see in this video review, that’s no easy task.
More details on Caparo’s F1 car for the road
More from MotorAuthority
-
11/06/2009
Opel Boss Carl-Peter Forster Calls It Quits
Carl-Peter Forster, GM group vice president and president of Opel, will be ...
-
11/06/2009
GM Czar Lutz Heading Back To Europe--To Opel?
GM's sudden decision this week to reverse path and keep Opel rather than ...
-
11/06/2009
Toyota To Put 2010 4Runner Through The Baja 1000 Wringer
Toyota's involvement in motorsports has been a hot topic this week with ...
More from High Gear Media
-
AllCarsElectric.com | 11/08/2009
LG Chem Signs Joint Venture to Supply Hyundai Mobis With Li-ion Batteries
Add another automaker to the supplier list of LG Chem as Hyundai Mobis ...
-
GreenCarReports.com | 11/07/2009
First Drive: 2010 BMW ActiveHybrid X6
"Our goal was to fundamentally change the view of hybrids ," said Peter ...
-
AllCarsElectric.com | 11/07/2009
Zero Motorcycles Announces Consumer Financing
I received the following in an email from Zero Motorcycles: "We are ...







Comments (0 total)
Meet the top commenters on the LeaderboardPost a Comment
Sign In |