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    "title": "SEE Business travel &amp; meetings magazine",
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        {
            "id": "https://www.seebtm.com/en/formula-1-from-different-point-of-view/",
            "url": "https://www.seebtm.com/en/formula-1-from-different-point-of-view/",
            "title": "FORMULA 1 \u2013 FROM DIFFERENT POINT OF VIEW",
            "content_html": "<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">The Formula One season consists of a series of races, known as Grands Prix, held throughout the world on purpose-built circuits and public roads. Everybody included, from racing drivers, constructor teams, track officials, organisers, and circuits are required to be holders of valid <strong>Super Licences</strong>, the highest class of racing licence issued by the FIA.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">At the en<img class=\"alignleft wp-image-18774 size-medium\" title=\"Formula 1 Race\" src=\"https://www.seebtm.com/wp-content/uploads/Formula-1-Race-300x200.jpg\" alt=\"Formula 1 Race\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\" srcset=\"https://www.seebtm.com/wp-content/uploads/Formula-1-Race-300x200.jpg 300w, https://www.seebtm.com/wp-content/uploads/Formula-1-Race.jpg 640w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" />d of season,<strong> the drivers&#8217; and constructors&#8217; championship titles</strong> are awarded to the driver and constructor who score the most points over the course of the season.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">The top ten finishers in each Grand Prix score points towards both the drivers\u2019 and the constructors\u2019 world championships, according to the following scale: 1<sup>st</sup> &#8211; 25 points; 2<sup>nd</sup> &#8211; 18 points; 3<sup>rd</sup> &#8211; 15 points; 4<sup>th</sup> &#8211; 12 points; 5<sup>th</sup> &#8211; 10 points; 6<sup>th</sup> &#8211; 8 points; 7<sup>th</sup> &#8211; 6 points; 8<sup>th</sup> &#8211; 4 points; 9<sup>th</sup> &#8211; 2 points and 10<sup>th</sup> &#8211; 1 point.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>The Racing Drivers</strong></span></p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>Formula One</strong> <strong>drivers</strong> are some of the <strong>most highly conditioned athletes on earth</strong>, their bodies specifically adapted to the very exacting requirements of top-flight single-seater motor racing.</p>\n<div style=\"background-color: #a52a2a; padding: 10px; color: #eec85f; font-size: 14px; width: 200px; height: auto; margin: 10px; font-family: calibri; float: right; text-align: center;\"><strong> The 2014 Formula 1 season is the 65th season of the Formula One World Championship.</strong></div>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">All drivers who enter Formula One need to undergo a period of conditioning to the physical demands of the sport: no other race series on earth requires so much of its drivers in terms of stamina and endurance. The vast loadings that Formula One cars are capable of creating, anything up to a sustained 3.5 g of cornering force, for example, means drivers have to be enormously strong to be able to last for full race distances.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">The extreme heat found in a Formula One cockpit, especially at the hotter rounds of the championship, also puts vast strain on the body: drivers can sweat off anything up to 3kg of their body weight during the course of a race.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>Driver\u2019s suite</strong> in basics consists of clothing, helmet and HANS, and there are some <strong>incredible facts</strong> about them:</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>&#8211;</strong> <strong>Drivers in driver clothing can survive for 11 seconds in temperatures of 840 degrees Celsius.</strong></p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>&#8211; Despite the cutting edge materials used in their construction, Formula One helmet liveries are still painted by hand. It\u2019s an incredibly skilled job requiring hundreds of hours of work for more complicated patterns and designs.</strong></p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>&#8211; Head and Neck Support (HANS) is intended to prevent a stretching of the vertebrae and to prevent the driver\u2019s head from hitting the steering wheel. In tests HANS was shown to reduce typical head motion in an accident by 44 percent, the force applied to the neck by 86 percent and the acceleration applied to the head by 68 percent &#8211; bringing the figures for even large impacts under the \u201cinjury threshold\u201d.</strong></p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Race Strategy</strong></span></p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Part science, part art &#8211; a decent strategy is essential to the business of winning races. Or, indeed, losing them. The basic variables of the equation are simple enough: fuel load and tyre wear. But from then on, it gets vastly more complicated.</p>\n<div style=\"background-color: #a52a2a; padding: 10px; color: #eec85f; font-size: 14px; width: 200px; height: auto; margin: 10px; font-family: calibri; float: left; text-align: center;\"><strong> A modern Formula One helmet weighs only about 1,250 grams.</strong></div>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Regardless of rules, there are certain factors that must always be considered. Data such as weather forecasts, the likelihood of overtaking at a particular track, the length of the pit lane and even the chances of an accident likely to require the use of the safety car all come into play when deciding strategy. And, of course, one of the largest ingredients remains, as always, luck.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Race Control<img class=\"alignright wp-image-18776 size-medium\" title=\"Formula 1 - Raikkonen helmet\" src=\"https://www.seebtm.com/wp-content/uploads/f-1raikkonen-helmet-300x200.jpg\" alt=\"Formula 1 - Raikkonen helmet\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\" srcset=\"https://www.seebtm.com/wp-content/uploads/f-1raikkonen-helmet-300x200.jpg 300w, https://www.seebtm.com/wp-content/uploads/f-1raikkonen-helmet.jpg 640w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" /></strong></span></p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">At every Grand Prix meeting there are seven key race <strong>officials</strong> who monitor and control the activities of the stewards and marshals to ensure the smooth and safe running of the event in accordance with FIA regulations.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Facilities vary between different circuits, but all will have several key features essential to allowing the FIA Race Director and his staff to make the right decisions to keep things safe, legal and to schedule.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>Screens provide images from every part</strong> of the circuit with a dedicated Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) system. This enables the location of problems to be detected quickly &#8211; and the appropriate action taken.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">There is also <strong>telephone and radio contact</strong> with the principal marshals&#8217; posts, safety car, medical response car and the medical centre, so that in the event of any major problem the Race Director can remain in full contact with the relevant people.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span style=\"color: #800000;\"><strong>Logistics</strong></span></p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">For Formula One racing teams one of the biggest battles of a race weekend or testing session will be over before a car even turns a wheel: the vast logistical effort required to get all of the team&#8217;s equipment to the circuit. Indeed each team competing in the FIA Formula One World Championship now travels something like <strong>160,000 kilometres a year</strong> between races and test sessions.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Nor is the logistical effort as simple as merely getting people and equipment in place. <strong>Hotel accommodation </strong>must also be found and booked (a team can require anything up to 100 rooms), <strong>hire cars </strong>must be sourced and the team&#8217;s facilities at the circuit &#8211; from the pit garage equipment to the drivers&#8217; motorhomes and the paddock corporate hospitality units must all be in place.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><img class=\"alignleft wp-image-18772 size-medium\" title=\"Formula 1 - air craft loading\" src=\"https://www.seebtm.com/wp-content/uploads/F1-aircraftloading-300x199.jpg\" alt=\"Formula 1 - air craft loading\" width=\"300\" height=\"199\" srcset=\"https://www.seebtm.com/wp-content/uploads/F1-aircraftloading-300x199.jpg 300w, https://www.seebtm.com/wp-content/uploads/F1-aircraftloading.jpg 640w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" />Almost equally important, in this digital age, are the secure data links that connect the team to its base, enabling telemetry and other data to be sent directly back (which in turn allows engineers to study any potential problems, even while the race is running). All-in-all, an enormous task.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><strong>For the European rounds</strong> of the championship most of a team&#8217;s equipment will travel by road, in the liveried articulated lorries so familiar from race paddocks across the continent. All of the race equipment required for the weekend will be loaded in these: cars, spare parts and tools. Most teams will \u201cpack\u201d three cars, one spare chassis and several spare engines plus a full kit of other spares. Tyres, fuel and certain other equipment are brought separately by technical partners and local contractors.</p>\n<p><strong>For the non-European \u201cflyaway\u201d races</strong> the logistical effort is considerably more complicated (all Formula One teams being resident in Europe at the moment) as equipment has to be flown out on transport planes.</p>\n<p>Rather than use conventional aircraft containers, teams have created their own specially designed cargo crates, designed to fill all available space in the planes&#8217; holds.</p>\n<div style=\"background-color: #a52a2a; padding: 10px; color: #eec85f; font-size: 14px; width: 200px; height: auto; margin: 10px; font-family: calibri; float: right; text-align: center;\"><strong>Each team travels something like 160,000 kilometres a year.</strong></div>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">At present most of the teams use <strong>cargo planes</strong> chartered by Formula One Management (FOM) which fly from London and Munich to wherever the race is being held. In the case of successive flyaway races there is insufficient time between them to allow the teams&#8217; equipment to be brought home, meaning direct transit between the two races. This means that considerably more components have to be packed.</p>\n<p>As the number of races outside Europe continues to expand, so the logistical effort required to transport the teams and their equipment will expand alongside it.</p>\n<p style=\"text-align: right;\"><a href=\"mailto:svetlana@kongresniturizam.com\" target=\"_blank\">S.G.</a></p>\n<p>The post <a rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https://www.seebtm.com/en/formula-1-from-different-point-of-view/\">FORMULA 1 \u2013 FROM DIFFERENT POINT OF VIEW</a> appeared first on <a rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https://www.seebtm.com/en\">SEE Business travel &amp; meetings magazine</a>.</p>\n",
            "content_text": "The Formula One season consists of a series of races, known as Grands Prix, held throughout the world on purpose-built circuits and public roads. Everybody included, from racing drivers, constructor teams, track officials, organisers, and circuits are required to be holders of valid Super Licences, the highest class of racing licence issued by the FIA.\nAt the end of season, the drivers&#8217; and constructors&#8217; championship titles are awarded to the driver and constructor who score the most points over the course of the season.\nThe top ten finishers in each Grand Prix score points towards both the drivers\u2019 and the constructors\u2019 world championships, according to the following scale: 1st &#8211; 25 points; 2nd &#8211; 18 points; 3rd &#8211; 15 points; 4th &#8211; 12 points; 5th &#8211; 10 points; 6th &#8211; 8 points; 7th &#8211; 6 points; 8th &#8211; 4 points; 9th &#8211; 2 points and 10th &#8211; 1 point.\nThe Racing Drivers\nFormula One drivers are some of the most highly conditioned athletes on earth, their bodies specifically adapted to the very exacting requirements of top-flight single-seater motor racing.\n The 2014 Formula 1 season is the 65th season of the Formula One World Championship.\nAll drivers who enter Formula One need to undergo a period of conditioning to the physical demands of the sport: no other race series on earth requires so much of its drivers in terms of stamina and endurance. The vast loadings that Formula One cars are capable of creating, anything up to a sustained 3.5 g of cornering force, for example, means drivers have to be enormously strong to be able to last for full race distances.\nThe extreme heat found in a Formula One cockpit, especially at the hotter rounds of the championship, also puts vast strain on the body: drivers can sweat off anything up to 3kg of their body weight during the course of a race.\nDriver\u2019s suite in basics consists of clothing, helmet and HANS, and there are some incredible facts about them:\n&#8211; Drivers in driver clothing can survive for 11 seconds in temperatures of 840 degrees Celsius.\n&#8211; Despite the cutting edge materials used in their construction, Formula One helmet liveries are still painted by hand. It\u2019s an incredibly skilled job requiring hundreds of hours of work for more complicated patterns and designs.\n&#8211; Head and Neck Support (HANS) is intended to prevent a stretching of the vertebrae and to prevent the driver\u2019s head from hitting the steering wheel. In tests HANS was shown to reduce typical head motion in an accident by 44 percent, the force applied to the neck by 86 percent and the acceleration applied to the head by 68 percent &#8211; bringing the figures for even large impacts under the \u201cinjury threshold\u201d.\nRace Strategy\nPart science, part art &#8211; a decent strategy is essential to the business of winning races. Or, indeed, losing them. The basic variables of the equation are simple enough: fuel load and tyre wear. But from then on, it gets vastly more complicated.\n A modern Formula One helmet weighs only about 1,250 grams.\nRegardless of rules, there are certain factors that must always be considered. Data such as weather forecasts, the likelihood of overtaking at a particular track, the length of the pit lane and even the chances of an accident likely to require the use of the safety car all come into play when deciding strategy. And, of course, one of the largest ingredients remains, as always, luck.\nRace Control\nAt every Grand Prix meeting there are seven key race officials who monitor and control the activities of the stewards and marshals to ensure the smooth and safe running of the event in accordance with FIA regulations.\nFacilities vary between different circuits, but all will have several key features essential to allowing the FIA Race Director and his staff to make the right decisions to keep things safe, legal and to schedule.\nScreens provide images from every part of the circuit with a dedicated Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) system. This enables the location of problems to be detected quickly &#8211; and the appropriate action taken.\nThere is also telephone and radio contact with the principal marshals&#8217; posts, safety car, medical response car and the medical centre, so that in the event of any major problem the Race Director can remain in full contact with the relevant people.\nLogistics\nFor Formula One racing teams one of the biggest battles of a race weekend or testing session will be over before a car even turns a wheel: the vast logistical effort required to get all of the team&#8217;s equipment to the circuit. Indeed each team competing in the FIA Formula One World Championship now travels something like 160,000 kilometres a year between races and test sessions.\nNor is the logistical effort as simple as merely getting people and equipment in place. Hotel accommodation must also be found and booked (a team can require anything up to 100 rooms), hire cars must be sourced and the team&#8217;s facilities at the circuit &#8211; from the pit garage equipment to the drivers&#8217; motorhomes and the paddock corporate hospitality units must all be in place.\nAlmost equally important, in this digital age, are the secure data links that connect the team to its base, enabling telemetry and other data to be sent directly back (which in turn allows engineers to study any potential problems, even while the race is running). All-in-all, an enormous task.\nFor the European rounds of the championship most of a team&#8217;s equipment will travel by road, in the liveried articulated lorries so familiar from race paddocks across the continent. All of the race equipment required for the weekend will be loaded in these: cars, spare parts and tools. Most teams will \u201cpack\u201d three cars, one spare chassis and several spare engines plus a full kit of other spares. Tyres, fuel and certain other equipment are brought separately by technical partners and local contractors.\nFor the non-European \u201cflyaway\u201d races the logistical effort is considerably more complicated (all Formula One teams being resident in Europe at the moment) as equipment has to be flown out on transport planes.\nRather than use conventional aircraft containers, teams have created their own specially designed cargo crates, designed to fill all available space in the planes&#8217; holds.\nEach team travels something like 160,000 kilometres a year.\nAt present most of the teams use cargo planes chartered by Formula One Management (FOM) which fly from London and Munich to wherever the race is being held. In the case of successive flyaway races there is insufficient time between them to allow the teams&#8217; equipment to be brought home, meaning direct transit between the two races. This means that considerably more components have to be packed.\nAs the number of races outside Europe continues to expand, so the logistical effort required to transport the teams and their equipment will expand alongside it.\nS.G.\nThe post FORMULA 1 \u2013 FROM DIFFERENT POINT OF VIEW appeared first on SEE Business travel &amp; meetings magazine.",
            "date_published": "2014-07-04T16:33:49+02:00",
            "date_modified": "2015-03-26T16:02:35+01:00",
            "author": {
                "name": "Svetlana Gavric",
                "url": "https://www.seebtm.com/en/author/ceca/",
                "avatar": "https://www.seebtm.com/wp-content/uploads/Ceca.jpg"
            },
            "image": "https://www.seebtm.com/wp-content/uploads/Race-car-F1.jpg",
            "tags": [
                "facts",
                "formula",
                "interesting",
                "interesting facts",
                "race",
                "Hot topics"
            ]
        }
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