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  • This video was made possible by the Crew 2—a new open world racing game from Ubisoft.

  • More about it after the video.

  • No sport is as logistically challenging as motorsports.

  • While equipment matters in any sport, in motorsports the human is only half the athletethe vehicle

  • is the other half.

  • The performance of a motorsports vehicle is directly tied to having the right components

  • in the right place at the right time so the logistics are part of the competition.

  • Racing may be a sport but it's not all fun and games.

  • Teams are businessesbusinesses that are expected to make money.

  • The most valuable Formula 1 teamScuderia Ferrariis worth over $1.3 billion.

  • This means this team is valued at about as much as tech companies Discord, Bird Rides,

  • or DoorDash.

  • The wealthier teams, like Ferrari, are able to spend more money on transport to bring

  • more equipment and spare parts which can make the difference between winning and losing

  • when things go wrong.

  • Formula 1 is by many measures the most international sports competition.

  • Over its 21 yearly races the teams traverse five continents with as little as a week between

  • events.

  • A chaotic ballet of trucks, boats, and planes transports this show across the world each

  • year.

  • Ten teams compete in Formula 1 and despite it taking place worldwide it is by all measures

  • a European sport.

  • Eight of the ten teams are registered in and operate out of Europe.

  • Only the Indian and American teams are from elsewhere although, the Indian team is actually

  • based in the UK while the US team, based in North Carolina, operates a secondary forward

  • base in the UK so that its staff doesn't have to travel all the way back to the US

  • between each of the European races which in recent years have been held consecutively,

  • with the brief interruption of the Canadian Grand Prix, in the middle of the season over

  • summer.

  • Thanks to this, the European leg of the season is, compared to the rest, relatively easy

  • logistically because within Europe you can drive.

  • The cost of shipping by truck is so comparatively low to shipping by plane that teams bring

  • whole buildings with them to the European races.

  • These buildings are what are modestly referred to asmotorhomesbut can be as large

  • as Red Bull's three story structure that includes offices, bars, and a restaurant with

  • a complete kitchen.

  • All of that packs into a number of trucks and can be assembled in less than two days.

  • Along with all the other equipment including cars, spare parts, and electronics, convoys

  • of dozens of trucks per team criss cross the continent before each European race.

  • Typically races are held every two weekends on Sunday which gives teams plenty of time

  • to relocate before activity begins on the Thursday before the Grand Prix but from time

  • to time the schedule is crunched and races take place two weekends in a row.

  • This proves a more daunting logistical challenge as teams only have three full days to break

  • down, transport, and reassemble their equipment at the new race site.

  • Even worse, for the first time ever the 2018 season saw three weekends with three races

  • in a row.

  • On June 24 the French Grand Prix took place in Le Castellet then the next weekend the

  • Austrian one was held in Spielberg finishing off the following weekend with the British

  • Grand Prix in Silverstone.

  • The Austria-UK transfer was the most difficult one as it involved driving nearly 1,000 miles

  • including through the choke-point of the channel tunnel.

  • For this trek, each truck was manned by three drivers so that while one drove the others

  • could sleep in an RV that accompanied the convoy.

  • That way, the trucks could drive continuously only stopping to refuel.

  • But again, these races are easy logistically compared to the ones outside of Europethe

  • ones known as flyaway races.

  • Just like with the European races the majority of flyaway races occur with two weeks between

  • them but from time to time races are scheduled on back to back weekends thousands of miles

  • apart.

  • These back to back flyaway races are the most logistically difficult weeks of the Formula

  • 1 season.

  • On Sunday April 8th, 2018 the Bahrain Grand Prix was held in Sakhir, Bahrain then seven

  • days later, the following weekend, the Chinese Grand Prix was held in Shanghai, China.

  • Over 4,000 miles separated those two racetracks and yet, just like with every race, everything

  • came down on Sunday night in Bahrain and had to be operational by Thursday morning in China.

  • Even worse, Shanghai is five hours ahead of Bahrain which is effectively five hours fewer

  • to do the work but in reality, the planning for this transfer began months before.

  • Around January 2018, three months before the first races of the season, each of the ten

  • teams packed up five sets of shipping containers.

  • Each of these sets held their sea kits carrying things like chairs, tables, appliances, cooking

  • utensils, and some elements of their garages.

  • They send these bulkier and less expensive pieces of equipment by sea as it's massively

  • less expensive than sending them by plane.

  • The number of containers per team varies as the wealthier teams like Red Bull will take

  • more but in general each team takes about three 40 foot containers.

  • Of course ocean shipping is slower, but since there are five sets there is always one at

  • the right place at the right time.

  • That January shipment sent the first five kits to the first five flyaway racesMelbourne,

  • Australia; Sakhir, Bahrain; Shanghai, China; Baku, Azerbaijan; and Montreal, Canada.

  • Then, as each race was completed its kit was packed up and sent to the next flyaway race

  • destination without a kitthe Australian one went to Singapore, the Bahraini one to

  • Russia, the Chinese one to Japan, the Azerbaijani one to the United States, and the Canadian

  • one to Mexico, and then towards the end of the season, when there are no more tracks

  • to send kits to, they're sent back to the teams' home bases for the winter.

  • At the racetrack, the Formula 1 logistics team's main downtime is actually during

  • the race itself but for the Bahrain to China transfer real work began the Thursday before

  • the race.

  • That's when each team's logistics manager started making their tear-down plandeciding

  • in which order and into which containers their different pieces of equipment should go.

  • Once that was completed there was really not a lot to do until Sunday.

  • On Sunday morning, before the race even started, the pack up began.

  • Many of the spare parts can't be used during the racethey're not going to replace

  • an engine during the Grand Prixso they're the first pieces of kit to be packed into

  • their containers.

  • Not much happened during the race itself but within 15 minutes of it ending the main pack

  • up began.

  • The cars, the most important pieces of equipment, were subjected to a post-race inspection to

  • be sure no illegal modifications were made but everything else was immediately ready

  • for packing.

  • All the equipment that the teams wanted at the destination first were put in one of three

  • priority pallets.

  • Together each team's priority pallets filled up the first plane to Shanghai.

  • As soon as these were packed they were driven directly to the airport only a few hours after

  • the race ended to be prepared for an early morning flight to Shanghai.

  • As that plane took off the final pallets were being packed up back at the racetrack.

  • Only about six to eight hours after the drop of the checkered flag, all pallets were packed

  • up and on their way to the airport.

  • By midday Monday, all six of the Boeing 747's used to transport the teams equipment to China

  • were in the air.

  • These planes were chartered by Formula 1 but the teams still pay for the space.

  • Also on Monday all the staff started their journey to Shanghai.

  • Many of the lower level staff just flew on normal commercial flights while some of the

  • higher profile drivers flew private between the two countries.

  • After nine hours in the air the first plane touched down in Shanghai around early evening

  • local time.

  • The freight was unloaded and brought to customs.

  • By midnight, all the priority freight was on its way to the racetrack.

  • Overnight, logistics workers arranged the different teams' freight into their respective

  • paddocks.

  • No team is allowed to touch their freight until all the other teams' freight has arrived

  • both for fairness purposes and safety to assure that there aren't many people around as

  • pallets are being unloaded and moved.

  • By Tuesday morning, it's game on for the assembly crews.

  • At this point each team had their three priority pallets and their sea kit.

  • In their priority pallets teams didn't put the highest value or most important cargo,

  • they put the things they needed to assemble firstthe bare bones of their garage.

  • That includes the wall paneling, the core of their electrical system, and the majority

  • of the IT and communications equipment.

  • By Tuesday evening that build was done and the track was once again made inaccessible

  • to the teams as the non-priority pallets were delivered overnight.

  • Early Wednesday morning around 6am the teams arrived back at the track and began work on

  • the final assembly of the garage.

  • Only after about four hours, by late morning, all the different teams garages were operational.

  • All in all, ten Formula 1 teams successfully packed up, shipped all their equipment 4,000

  • miles, and reassembled their paddocks in 58 hours.

  • Thanks to careful planning and practiced workers, Formula 1 pulls off this impressive feat every

  • year without a hitch.

  • Earlier in the video I mentioned how the short 7-day Spielberg, Austria to Silverstone, UK

  • transfer is the hardest race transfer in Europe but interestingly, about a month ago Ubisoft

  • brought me out to the Spielberg Formula 1 track to try out their new racing gamethe

  • Crew 2.

  • This game is open world meaning they actually recreated the entire US and you can drive

  • and race through all of it not only in cars but also motorcycles, boats, and planes.

  • Even as someone who doesn't play video games much, I enjoyed the Crew 2 a lot and it seemed

  • an accurate recreation of the actual racing I did that day on the Spielberg track.

  • If you think you might be interested in playing this, there will be a link in the description

  • where you can check it out.

  • Thanks to the support of the Crew 2 and Ubisoft, this video is an extra one so there will be

  • another Wendover video out next week.

This video was made possible by the Crew 2—a new open world racing game from Ubisoft.

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B1 中級 美國腔

一级方程式的疯狂物流(The Insane Logistics of Formula 1)

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    joey joey 發佈於 2021 年 06 月 10 日
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