What breaks my heart the most is that Senna had an Austrian flag in the cockpit with him that he planned to wave after the race as a tribute to Roland Ratzenberger who died in qualifying.
@nopefranks11542 жыл бұрын
Was it that same turn? When I saw that turn I thought its done this before I bet. Now I hear somebody else died that weekend?
@AliAljoubory2 жыл бұрын
@@nopefranks1154 no it was a different turn later on in the lap from where senna died. It was the day before in qualifying as well.
@derricktieu68642 жыл бұрын
@@AliAljoubory it was at the Villeneuve corner after Tamburello.
@robertplues46612 жыл бұрын
@@nopefranks1154 there was actully 4 crashes that weekend 2 of them were fatals was a horrible race
@aaptyp2 жыл бұрын
Who was the guy who had his car jump up and smash into a wall? Lucky guy to survive it, but forget his name
@weezypeezy43663 жыл бұрын
This guy achieved greatness by turning corners at speeds faster than anyone else. This was equipment failure
@stevepulvers21332 жыл бұрын
Except when Michael Andretti was 1 second faster than Senna in Senna's car at Donington.
@milkshakemuncher2 жыл бұрын
@@stevepulvers2133 so how did Michael Andretti go in the race?
@stevepulvers21332 жыл бұрын
@@milkshakemuncher He never had that ride. Only tested. Senna had to punt Prost off the rode to beat him for the championship. Senna very over rated. Prost better. The British press created the mystique about Senna.
@milkshakemuncher2 жыл бұрын
@@stevepulvers2133 are you forgetting Prost punting Senna off at Suzuka 89? Suzuka 90 was revenge.
@stevepulvers21332 жыл бұрын
@@milkshakemuncher One year later, when the title is on the line sure. As David Hobbs said that the mystique of Senna was a creation of the British press, and that all of the F1 drivers disliked him and shunned him, and Prost is funny looking and(horrors) French!
@j.l.j.44224 жыл бұрын
I think his body language said it all. The way he tilted his body to the left... The way he tried to steer a wheel that did not respond. That’s total loss of control over the machine. A mechanical issue.
@Akiak72 жыл бұрын
why wouldn't he try to turn left? what does this prove??
@cisztheoriginal29112 жыл бұрын
@@Akiak7 Bro he literally pit his whole body into turning left, and it didn't work. Are you that slow?
@Akiak72 жыл бұрын
@@cisztheoriginal2911 i get that, i'm just saying that's kinda obvious that he would do that? what else is he supposed to do lmao
@APR_Racing2 жыл бұрын
@@Akiak7 because the steering column broke.
@charm_48215 күн бұрын
The sniper theory was made because when senna went straight his head had a movey movement as people thought that he had been shot
@andrewb3785 жыл бұрын
So it's the fastest corner in all of motorsports and there's no tires or anything on the wall? Only a hundred feet or so of sand and a concrete wall to stop you from going 190 mph? That seems perfectly safe.
@chrisanagn.35844 жыл бұрын
It isn't a corner. It is a fast curve
@beenusirimanne4 жыл бұрын
@@chrisanagn.3584 It isn't flying. It's falling with style.... Did you read your comment out loud before you posted it 😂
@chrisanagn.35844 жыл бұрын
@@beenusirimanne A fast curve and a corner are different. Parabollica in Monza is considered a fast curve not a corner like in most circuits. Same with the curve in Imola.
@happyfox7114 жыл бұрын
That's exactly what Senna had said in the days before.
@philgiglio79224 жыл бұрын
It was a different era: we live and learn...or we don't live long. The FIA made a large number of safety changes: wheel tethers, tire barriers (they have save a LOT of lives).
@spaceweed10259 жыл бұрын
It's clear what happened - Senna was killed because his steering broke, and Williams tried to cover it up. Simple.
@Mafia6818 жыл бұрын
+spaceweed10 Same as in the case of Jim Clark's crash that was caused by the failure of the rear suspension. But officially, Firestone took the blame for a "flat tire". People first hand at the scene saw that no tires had deflated before impact but the tire company took the blame anyway.
@user-qx7tm5df8j7 жыл бұрын
doesnt it say so in the video??
@MaliVinnyB7 жыл бұрын
WHAT U SAID!!!!
@psychohist7 жыл бұрын
It's not at all clear. The video uses for demonstration extreme cases of skid corrections where the driver actually reverses the steering, but a driver that is skilled enough to catch the skid as it starts to happen can just ease up slightly on the turn without turning in the opposite direction. You can see this slight easing at the point where there is static in the video if you look carefully, as well as the turn rate slowing. Then the second bump causes the front of the car to go loose, eliminating steering control, and all that was left was the brakes. Senna alway pushed hard, and had started pushing really hard in the previous couple of years when ABS and traction control made the car more forgiving. With the banning of such "driver aids" in 1994, he was pushing too hard for what the cars had become. He had already failed to finish either of the previous races of the season.
@machinemanmclaren7 жыл бұрын
and what about the brakes ? he had no brakes either.
@swift74938 жыл бұрын
His steering broke. If he lost control he would correct it, not hit the brakes.
@benconway27218 жыл бұрын
yea thats true because he knew he was going straight on and not steering but why didn't wheels lock up
@AIRDRAC8 жыл бұрын
Because locked up wheels brake less efficiently than wheels that are nearly locked up (still rolling, in other words, hence why ABS shortens the braking distance). Senna was an extremely skilled and experienced driver, and would most likely be capable of braking without locking up the wheels :)
@pgtmr27138 жыл бұрын
ABS also allows you to steer while braking to the max too. Locked up wheels won't steer a car. Skilled as they are, suddenly finding no steering control could itself cause a delay. Race car drivers still get themselves into trouble they can't get out of. How many times do you see a Nascar driver save the car in a spin vs. wrecking into the wall or sliding down the track? Just using it as an example not comparing F1 to Nascar. They almost always wreck with a certain amount of yaw.
@AIRDRAC8 жыл бұрын
PGTMR2 Suddenly finding yourself with no steering, while expecting it would likely cause him to have applied less pressure to the brake pedal than otherwise, because he would expect the car to turn, thus reducing the amount of grip for braking.It's perfectly possible to brake and steer at the same time without ABS (assuming you avoid locking up the wheels), it's just harder to control, especially in unexpected situations. Nascar drivers getting into spins is not comparable at all, because they drive on extremely inclined tracks, and their cars are set up "unbalanced" as a result (so that they will be balanced on an inclined racetrack, but as soon as the incline changes (direction of the car changes relative to the track) the car is unbalanced, and thus almost impossible to save). "flat track" race-cars are far easier to catch from a loss of traction (by no means easy compared to a road car, but far easier than "inclined track" race cars none the less), because the setup of the car is balanced, because it is supposed to react the same way turning left, as when turning right, and the cars reaction is therefore easier to anticipate. As an example look at Le Mans race cars, they all end up in more or less controlled slides at some point during the race, but most of them manage to control the drift, and avoid spinning out and/or crashing into something/someone.
@chasefourman64236 жыл бұрын
Ben Conway locked wheels means you basically can’t turn
@unrequited82004 жыл бұрын
Professional mechanic here... dude's steering column failed. it's plain to see. Senna was a master at correcting in low traction conditions. Look how he performed in the rain. Can't correct with a broken steering column, though... RIP Ayrton Senna
@BB-ft8fj11 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@mexicanopdb10 ай бұрын
@@BB-ft8fjwhy laugh at a tragedy?
@1Roamingwolf10 ай бұрын
Professional mechanic my ass!! and i am donald duck...everyone knows how to wiki like you clearly did, and your language ALSO tells that you are far from a fucking mechanic, punkass clout chaser
@burtpanzer7 ай бұрын
I remember a rule change that was made just prior to this race. The cars wheel base was shortened which would probably affect the length of steering shafts. I noticed on the first replay of his in-car camera that the wheels failed to turn, and knew right then that the shaft had been improperly welded or had just snapped.
@R4sKal7 ай бұрын
You're absolutely right. Got it first-hand, from a metallurgy professor at the university of Bologna, who was part of the team who made the forensic analysis in 1994. The cross section of the broken column showed, that where the metal had been soldered back together, the material had begun degrading and cracking under the stress before finally snapping, probably when he drove over the bump on lap 7.
@mark883nm5 жыл бұрын
For who like me was watching the race at the time, there was a clip taken from helicopter, never shown again, where you can clearly see Senna hands turnong the steering wheel several times to the left but the tyres kept being straigth.
@phildurre94924 жыл бұрын
mark883nm hmm wonder wgy its not shown then...
@aximusroh64533 жыл бұрын
Yes i remember that fatal weekend very clearly and the replays shown live when Ayrton crashed. We who remember and understand racing all saw Ayrton turn the wheel with no reaction from the car.
@kurtnowak88953 жыл бұрын
Hmmm… I still have the complete race on VHS somewhere in my basement! Maybe I’ll look for that.
@DanDD12 жыл бұрын
@@kurtnowak8895 That would be so great if you found it. Reply back to us if you do please
@nejiniisan12652 жыл бұрын
@@kurtnowak8895 cool! I remember watching the race, and may be a false memory, but the footage from the cockpit seemed to be uncut back then.
@FrostBitey109 жыл бұрын
His steering broke. Done. No question about it. The Williams team know they're guilty for this and will haunt them for life.
@FrostBitey108 жыл бұрын
Grim Bonkers Please get a woman? LMAO, that's the best you can do? xD
@bushwickbundy65698 жыл бұрын
***** I really cringed at the "get a woman" thing. ugh, so bad xD
@FrostBitey108 жыл бұрын
Bushwick Bundy Yeah me too, lmao.
@FrostBitey108 жыл бұрын
Grim Bonkers By the way, I don't think you know how cars work. I'll put it simply, when you turn the wheel right for a split second and back to the left, the car won't start going straight until it hits the wall. If a mistake happened, the car would rather spin, not go on straight to the wall.
@BoxyTheSpaceDog8 жыл бұрын
***** Yep,I think you are right.Just before footage cuts off before the crash you can see that in bottom right corner his steering wheel-you can see part of his glove and left steering wheel lamp.Just before the crash both hand and that light disappear as if steering wheel went too far to the left when it broke.Senna knew it was broke and you can see him sit up straight to brace for impact.During whole corner you don't see him sit up but leaning into the corner,he sits up just prior to impact(helmet visible)just when he knew something broke and he lost control of the car.If Williams theory was right than other cars would've crashed at that same spot too,they were all under safety car and prob all entered that long corner under same speeds.Whole fucking week was terrible there,Senna wasn't himself neither,crashes really took a toll on him psychologically.He shouldn't have driven that day.Most haunting of all is that he stood on that same spot 2 weeks prior and said that corner was too unsecure and if car was to hit that wall it will end drivers life.And no one put tires there or anything.
@mikemissesthefairway3 жыл бұрын
100% his steering broke. End of story. Williams has spent the past decades covering it up.
@mirishow2 жыл бұрын
Yes and this video tells the truth how steering is broke, exactly you are right that williams pays even national geo chanel to lie people to keep it people believing wrong thats it, Ceo s are always shit they never care who dies but just think for their self.
@martinrollins44712 жыл бұрын
they didnt cover anything up it was told in court what they had done as senna was not happy wity the length of the steering ffs.where you been ffs.
@mariaevans78112 жыл бұрын
I believe the steering column broke, I am no expert, I agree, but he was to good at driving, will the truth ever come out!!!! No, but I believe certain people know the truth.!!!! 🇬🇧🐩🐩🐩🐩
@midslam2 жыл бұрын
@@martinrollins4471 Spot on. Senna requested the steering column be lengthened because he was unhappy with it. Unfortunately, back in those days, adjustments like that weren't factory-built and they just welded an extension on. This is believed to be the cause of the accident.
@fifthbusiness16782 жыл бұрын
Yes, but that’s not what killed him. The tire killed him.
@rikudousennin44085 жыл бұрын
Anyone else here 2019! R.I.P Senna never forgotten ❤🇧🇷
@chapter112475 жыл бұрын
Loved watching him race. A true and deserving legend.
@romaricojuanites98605 жыл бұрын
Never forgotten! Always the best ever!
@theangeliccatto10145 жыл бұрын
R.I.P.
@kenrudge80025 жыл бұрын
What this does it gives a logical explanation.....you cant steer a car that is not in contact with the road....
@theosas52675 жыл бұрын
we no forget him but we forgot many other from past.1st how to be better human like he did and stop lying to our selves !! ! @ @@ That 1st of may was cursed !!
@jeffmusgrave64673 жыл бұрын
He told his crew the car wasn't right and they told him to drive and he knew it was wrong and it cost him his life. RIP LEGEND!!!!😢🏎
@MajinRixch2 жыл бұрын
¿negro que?
@shinanodafloof4491 Жыл бұрын
Have you read Adrian Newey's book on it?
@Grant80 Жыл бұрын
Yes kinda sounds like the team knew something was going to break.
@Wedgeman_Riley Жыл бұрын
source?
@BB-ft8fj11 ай бұрын
Stop talking shit. Muppet
@raulv049 жыл бұрын
Everybody remembers Senna and everybody forgets about Ratzenberger
@Dasbulldoge5 жыл бұрын
raulv04 I know this is a late response, but F1 driver Max Mosely attended Ratzenberger’s funeral instead of Senna, as he didn’t want Senna’s passing to overshadow Ratzenbergers. (And to be fair, Senna was a national hero who dedicated his life and his fortune to bettering his home country of Brazil. To them and to the world, it wasn’t just the loss of a driver but also the loss of an incredible human being.)
@lionheartita33665 жыл бұрын
I don't forget Roland Ratzenberger .That weekend has been very sad.
@davepastern5 жыл бұрын
not everyone forgets Roland.
@shaedevrij41405 жыл бұрын
The current drivers say that senna is the best driver ever thats why everybody remembers senna eventough ratzenberger was also bad
@neleschweigert1725 жыл бұрын
I will never forget Roland Ratzenberger...
@44hawk284 жыл бұрын
Having worked in Aerospace, automotive, as well as with Metals for a long career. It is my considered opinion, I'll be up with some experience, that the steering shaft had been extended improperly. The method used was to cut the shaft take another shaft and put it in between them with stubs that fit into both shafts and then it's welded around the perimeter. Any flaw in that well whatsoever, or any crack that begins will broadcast all the way through that weld. This is what occurred. The way you properly links on a shaft in a series of three each. Each hole is usually about 120 degrees from the other. And you stagger them about a half an inch or more apart. So that you now have the six holes in line with the tube at 60 degrees from each other. You plug weld the shaft to the underlying connector so that each weld is an independent well. If it fails it doesn't broadcast that failure to the next weld. You can still weld the perimeter of the shaft, for added comfort. That is the procedure used in Aerospace to connect a shaft which must articulate. Although, in the case of most Aerospace connections for such things, it's done with rivets, usually do the fact that it must be able to be disassembled for depot level maintenance. I believe that the reason for the narrower portion of the shaft was also to reduce some of the impact broadcast back through the steering system to the hands. As the 18 mm portion of two would twist a bit more than the 22 mm section of tube. Made it a little easier on the hands and imparted less fatigue. I remember watching that on live TV. There was no sign in the multiple replays they showed of it that he was out of control in any way except that he drove directly into the wall. The argument that he was trying to adjust to the car being out of sorts, does not comport with my memory of the event or the videos of the event. I had always believed that it was a loss of steering control.
@DaveFazzino2 жыл бұрын
Most Aerospace machine shops have a magnaflux department to check for cracks and integrity. If the shaft modification was done in the racing trailer workshop a proper certification surely could not have been done. I had custom brake caliper spacers made with material removed for duct attachments and I brought them in to a company I do electrical work for them and had them tested.
@GaryKari2 жыл бұрын
Of course Senna's accident was a mechanical failure. It's impossible to wreck in Tamburello in that time and configuration of the circuit without some mechanical breakdown. I think it's a shame that Williams evaided their responsibility of the accident... I mean have anyone EVER wrecked in a slight curve like Tamburello in 1994 without something break in a car? I can't remember anyone.
@44hawk287 ай бұрын
@@DaveFazzinoit's been awhile since your response, but let me point out that all the testing in the world does not fix an improper procedure. Magnafluxing, and even several other tests could it be performed that might have showed no issue. Once you apply stressors, and even the austenitic zone of a weld begins to fail, it will propagate throughout the piece unless you have properly staggered the stress risers so that should one fail there's still at least five others to take up the slack. You can actually increase that to where if one fails you have nine others to take up the slack. Testing does not ensure your life. Which is why the man died, I watched that race in real time and I knew what the problem was the moment it occurred. It was clear the very first time I saw it in actual time that he had no control over steering or he was dead before he ever hit the wall and that didn't happen
@joshuatroiani70415 жыл бұрын
It wasn't the impact that killed him. I watched the Senna movie and the person who took pictures of his body said that there were minor bruises. It was the suspension component that went into his head that killed him. If it was positioned a couple of centimetres higher or lower, he would've survived.
@derkaturka Жыл бұрын
You are looking for the words, control arms, upper and lower. Also pretty sure this accident is why they bolt them down to the chassis now with high tensile strength cord.
@takyc7883 Жыл бұрын
that’s incredible do think considering the impulse from the momentum of that impact
@dazzlernator Жыл бұрын
His head was also hit by a wheel & tyre. Senna sustained three severe head injuries where the pathologist said any one of them in isolation would have been fatal.
@user-wz7er7kn9y6 ай бұрын
@@derkaturkaactually those are all suspension components...
@derkaturka6 ай бұрын
@@user-wz7er7kn9y actually?
@OddityDK3 жыл бұрын
"It is perhaps a fitting legacy to a great man" - How I hate statements like that. The man died, his legacy was what he did in life not what consequences his tragic death may or may not have had. What would have been fitting was for him to grow old.
@colinm13253 жыл бұрын
Indeed Well said, for him to continue would have been ideal.
@OsunaS2 жыл бұрын
@@colinm1325 yes. but i guess they mean the mourning was fitting. Not his death
@devonledgister39972 жыл бұрын
Senna wasn't the grow old type .he gladly put his life on the line every lap of the race.his wasn't just winning he wants to go faster on the edge thats where he was happiest.
@twisterwiper2 жыл бұрын
I didn’t notice that at first. But you are right. Obviously what they were trying to say is his death wasn’t in vain. Safety improved because of his death. But it comes off as if Senna would have been happy to sacrifice his life for the safety of the sport.
@jatigre18 жыл бұрын
Before this "documentary" from Nat Geo you could see the whole video of the on board camera and I remember in the video it shows Ayrton turning the wheel to the left as hard as he could and the car going on a straight line to the wall.
@cosmicseer51038 жыл бұрын
That's what I remember too. He definitely steered left hand down buy the wheels didn't turn. I also remember thinking that the 'black box' data recorder on board the car would go missing or become damaged and unusable if the car went straight back to the Williams garage before anyone else could retrieve the telemetry data. Frank Williams who made regular appearances on camera in the pits or interviewed before or after races completely dissipated from our screens after Senna's crash.
@adamt33328 жыл бұрын
so I'm not the only one who remember this crash this way. I believe that in the race time, the footage showed on TV SKY sports I think was a bit longer . They never replayed it. I believe he was turning the wheel right and left quite freely in the end before the car left the track and hit the wall
@treatb097 жыл бұрын
he also had "airway insufficiency" but it took him hours to die without air…it is all just a little too coincidental. broken drive shaft with fatigue, delayed call of death which delayed the evidence to be given to proper authorities. missing film, and damaged film at the most critical moments.
@scottminikhiem13997 жыл бұрын
Conspiracy reborn. I've noticed something dangerous in our times, this concept of "Intellectual property". Nat geo buys the rights and makes their version of history? Could be! Then no one can use the evidence they've deemed their intellectual property. For this reason a lot of bad police cases documented on the old TV series Unsolved Mysteries (in the USA) won't be further investigated because the people who would bring attention to the crimes of the police can't have access to the evidence or the story in general. Bought and sold like everything else in this world. Its evil.
@dre32pitt7 жыл бұрын
+Bo Huggabee Straight out of the CIA's playbook
@gmortimer200315 жыл бұрын
I was at Cosworth at the time, we were supplying the new Zetec-R engine to Benetton. The consensus was that the steering column had broken, and that the Williams demo of available steering wheel movement was disingenuous to the point of comedy.
@testdrive77724 жыл бұрын
Do you have the torque graph of 1994 Benetton? I read it was 796HP, with high mid's.
@spaceweed10253 жыл бұрын
Williams doctored the 'black box' and the video, to wipe evidence of telemetry and visual evidence the moment the steering column broke. The poetic justice is that Williams receded into oblivion and are now no more. Frank Williams is an utter disgrace and he should be struck from the history books - he will pay the ultimate price for his cover up.
@wilspu55903 жыл бұрын
@@spaceweed1025 he was in the senna documentary...the cheek
@matdur20003 жыл бұрын
@@spaceweed1025 Probably not his call. FIA probably had alot of sway
@mariaevans78112 жыл бұрын
@@spaceweed1025 correct!!!! 🇬🇧🐩🐩🐩
@deloreandmc96003 жыл бұрын
My Mum watched that race with me and she said Senna wasnt coming out of that corner sometimes it takes a big Accident for us to realize that things can and will go wrong Rip Senna and my Mum. It seems like yesterday that they passed. Look after your loved ones and stay safe.
@deltapi68803 жыл бұрын
she will stay with you in spirit
@mohamedamineziani14782 жыл бұрын
much love to you stay safe!!
@mrdorifto2 жыл бұрын
Wow that ending was unexpected R.I.P.
@romyenglish4 жыл бұрын
Senna always said: Politics, politics, politics. If the race would have been cancelled due to Ratzenberger's death, Senna would be alive today. Williams and FIA have blood on their hands. Great documentary, great facts. I totally agree. RIP Ayrton. If Senna wouldn't die then, Schumacher would not be the Greatest of all time. Not even close.
@brian-kt1rc6 жыл бұрын
The numbers also tell the story. The yellow g number is the side g force it is round 2 in the corner and then increases to over 3 before immediately falling to zero. This is consistent with turning hard and then a sudden snap as it cant handle the force and then zero force will be experienced because it has snapped and the wheels are no longer turned. The yellow number in top right window seems to show steering input, and it shows a large input and then suddenly zero, even though we can clearly see him turning the wheel after this. check the numbers. ( And also the blue g number is acceleration and deceleration and if you see 5:19 the top right yellow number hits zero input (broken) and the blue g hits zero - he has released the throttle, thereafter the blue g's are negative, he is emergency braking.)
@alexfreitas25713 жыл бұрын
You can also notice that when the G force changes, his head comes to left as that was direction that he was putting the neck effort.
@danksilence95182 жыл бұрын
good explanation on the numbers cause i didnt even know what i was looking at
@CyberRecycle10 жыл бұрын
Today should have been your 54th Birthday. You were a hero and a role model for us growing up. Love and Respect forever.
@Hennessy.F1ex6 жыл бұрын
you probably forgot about this comment
@brunojtii6 жыл бұрын
you probably don't know what he did for children here in Brazil. I'm sorry for you Johan...
@nagyandras88576 жыл бұрын
HE is still a hero. and will ever be.
@riptidev106 жыл бұрын
another autistic screech, but you retracted your statement, at least you dare to own up i have to give you that
@wtookey6 жыл бұрын
0 points in 1994! What a driver he was! :D
@epic_rides_uk3 жыл бұрын
I sat there as a teenager and watched every second of this incident .Ill never forget you ayrton .R.I.P Never forgotten 💔
@RossBayCult4 жыл бұрын
In a way, Williams never recovered after that accident. I understand they had the Renault engines until 1997 and Hill and Villeneuve won in 96-97. But once the Renault engines left, Williams have been in the dumps for over 20 years. It’s 2019 and they’re by far the worst team in F1. Their reputation is tarnished now.
@SonicXisnow20093 жыл бұрын
Letting Adrian Newey go was the real beginning of the end for them. After that, they had a couple of decent years with the BMW partnership, but once BMW wanted more control and found a Sauber team willing to give him said control (The Williams family was notoriously hands-on), Williams was basically left as a midfield team and never recovered since.
@llamaofvinter580110 жыл бұрын
Damn Williams for trying to cover it up. It is clear that they knew damn well what caused the crash. The only good thing that came out of this was increased awareness of driver and car safety.
@eduardop_sousa10 жыл бұрын
course, today we have more security, but lose the greatest driver in history is a very high price to pay..
@ivan12363710 жыл бұрын
Eduardo Sousa We also have Pastor Maldonado ruining general safety in F1 racing... Sorry had to i know its not all his fault but still..
@llamaofvinter580110 жыл бұрын
Ivan A. The guy's a pretty rubbish racing driver. He's only in because of all those big Venezuelan oil dollars. He won't amount to anything other than keeping teams financially afloat and providing us all with amusing jokes about how he professionally crashes F1 cars.
@eduardop_sousa10 жыл бұрын
Röss Lämönt is at this point that formula 1 this below other categories as indycar. drivers that run in Formula 1 just to give money to team really annoy me ...
@llamaofvinter580110 жыл бұрын
Eduardo Sousa There is an argument to be made that without them, the sport would struggle to carry on. It is arguably the most expensive sport to be involved in. New tires, fuel, R&D development costs, buying the car parts, wages, transportation costs etc. It all adds up to be financial suicide. These drivers are needed now with so many teams struggling to stay in the competition. In a way, it allows the better drivers to have the opportunity to race. There are still more good drivers than cash cows in the sport though, Maldonado's lot are not all that common.
@Sturmovik194610 жыл бұрын
Another thing that points that the steering column broke is his head right after he starts going straight. It looks like he's trying to lean to the left as if to steer, but that's obviously not happening.
@cannyfocus10 жыл бұрын
Y.., I once was saying the same in serveral video(s). He tries to take the corner with all might in his mind (head movement to the left side shows that), but front tires don't react anymore.
@petonovy10 жыл бұрын
Absolutely. It's obvious @ 4:55
@TheGoodChap10 жыл бұрын
Peter Nový I didn't even notice that but it makes perfect sense. He probably has incredibly good muscle memory and knows very well when you turn your car hard left at that speed its going to throw you to the right hard, so he throws himself to the left but the car never moves at all.
@Falleen10 жыл бұрын
Yeah, it's pretty obivous. So, we can rule out the point that he was unconscious, like others said around here.
@remuaja847 жыл бұрын
Very well. When I saw it I thought that Senna was pushing his head to the left (to counter the lateral Gs in the corner) and the car suddenly went straight on, to Senna's surprise. This caused his head to move to the left, as he was still attempting to take the corner, but the car going straight = lateral Gs 0.
@crudboy123 жыл бұрын
Nobody with as much experience as Senna would go off the track like that riding the brakes unless there was literally nothing else he could do.
@abbb49354 жыл бұрын
Seems to be a brilliant work, I appreciate making and posting this video!
@ultraslowhand8 жыл бұрын
Why doesn't anyone mention the real cause of death? His helmet was pierced by a broken piece of his front suspension, which entered his skull. :-(
@EmptyBallsOfSteel8 жыл бұрын
This is the truth I remember (without having to look it all up again).
@gaucho50738 жыл бұрын
That is half of the "real cause". 2nd half, actually. The 1st half is "why did he run straight onto the wall?" . The answer is: "because the steering wheel, WHICH HAD BEEN BADLY WELD PREVIOUSLY TO THE RACE, broken loose at the weld point, turning Senna into a passenger of his uncontrolled car"
@michaelsteven10908 жыл бұрын
I'm sure it wasn't the 1st time a "bad weld" caused a crash in motorsports..For some to call the team "murderers" is ridiculous..If Senna had lived, this wouldn't have even been a story. It was an unfortunate accident caused by a piece of flying metal that killed Ayrton, not a bad weld..I'm surprised nobody has blamed the helmet designer!
@ultraslowhand8 жыл бұрын
Perhaps, Gaucho, but that is not a crime. It is a mistake. Unless the bad weld was deliberate (and I am sure that it wasn't), no crime was committed.
@andrewdeighton59268 жыл бұрын
that's not quite true, it could have been negligent homicide I'd presume - if the work was grossly negligent
@druginducedfeverdream16137 жыл бұрын
Steering column broke, and the car hit an unprotected wall at around 130-140mph. The angle of impact caused the right front suspension assembly to fly straight into Senna's head. Some pieces pierced his helmet and caused severe bleeding, others hit his head so hard be suffered blunt force trauma. If the angle of impact was 1 degree more or less, he'd most likely be alive...if the suspension parts hit him a couple inches lower, or higher, he would be survived...
@heamorhoid5 жыл бұрын
Sometimes I think that he somehow knew that he will die in F1. Look at his face some minutes before. He was hard believer. Maybe his God sad to him: "Believe in me and I´ll make you immortal. I will take your life but you will save much more lives" . I mean all protective things in F1, his money after death for charity and so on.
@australium73743 ай бұрын
@@heamorhoidhe did. Before the race he claimed in his own words “it would be surprising if someone does not get hurt this season” and “someone is going to crash for sure” and I think 4 or more incidents occurred relating to mechanical failure or just crashes in itself
@ckarjala2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for putting this together. I remember the crash like it was yesterday. What an incredible talent lost.
@biggerinofudge2 жыл бұрын
I'd love to hear more about it from your point of view I was born in 2001 and I just recently got to know about Him I wish I could see him with my own eyes :(
@ckarjala2 жыл бұрын
@@biggerinofudge My cousin and I were watching the race live, Ayrton goes straight off, it looked strange even in the brief moment it was happening. He hits the wall, and the camera zooms in on his car. He was motionless, so we knew he was unconscious, but just as the track personnel were gathering around him, his body did a large twitch/lurch and we realized that something very bad had happened. The track marshals got in the way of the cameras and then we knew it was extremely serious. The rest is history. I took 20 years away from F1 after watching Senna die.
@biggerinofudge2 жыл бұрын
@@ckarjala i cannot get my mind around the idea of watching that happen live i saw christen eriksen get a cardiac arrest live and i couldnt sleep for the atleast two nights i cannot fathom seeing that happen to him live thank you so much for sharing that with me
@kcenneckennek4 жыл бұрын
"The back of the car stepped out." What? Plain as day in the crash footage the car goes straight as if it had a front tire go flat. Hell, if the back had stepped out, Senna would have spun, or at least hit the wall at a different angle.
@Jorcap10 жыл бұрын
Thank you for all your live lessons Ayrton. I still learn and use it today after seeing multiple interviews and documentary's about you. I was 3 when god decided you to come to him. Much love and respect from me 18 years later. Your my hero stil Aytron, we miss u down here.
@Zamppa865 жыл бұрын
I was 8 years old when this most unfortunate accident happened. I remember how sad people were even here in Finland which is quite far from Brazil and not so close to Italy either. It was in the news for several days. Even though Senna was a brazilian and 'only a motorsport driver' his influence still spanned across the world. He was very loved even in here a rather small country like Finland. Senna possibly was a bit special to us because he was a teammate for our own Formula 1 star Mika Häkkinen. Such a dratic disaster Senna's death was. He would have had so much to give to the world even after his racing days.
@leonardod18462 жыл бұрын
As a Brazilian, I'm happy to know how loved he is still around the world, I've always known that he was admired in Japan, Latin America and Europe, but I didn't imagine he was so much.
@LathropLdST11 ай бұрын
Finns love rally and have the biggest F1 ratio of population to drivers in the category history. As the contrarian I am, I detested him in his heyday and have no love lost for him even today.
@konsueloramirez Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this amazing video. The examples and footage made it much easier to understand. Keep up the good work
@Tom_YouTube_stole_my_handle3 жыл бұрын
I remember Jackie Stewart at the time saying something to the effect of if something breaks on the car there is a moment of hesitation while you work out what has gone wrong, with one exception, steering. You know immediately and brake as hard as you can.
@KushGames10 жыл бұрын
A failure of technology can cost us lives even today, respect to the legend.
@SGDeGalvez9 жыл бұрын
Mechanical failure are part of the risk also? Why do they try to hide it?
@UniversalSoljrr8 жыл бұрын
+SGDeGalvez Check this video out Senna: Schumacher was cheating and this video Senna The Truth Behind Imola
@TheS50b307 жыл бұрын
UniversalSoljrr on senna's trial what was the verdicyt afterall? driver's error or mechanical failure? its obviously the second but did the team pay or they covered it up?
@johnathanchow93605 жыл бұрын
Simple to save their assess
@philwoodward50695 жыл бұрын
Indeed. It's uncontested fact that the steering column was modified (lengthened) at the track at Senna's request because he didn't have enough clearance between the steering wheel and the monocoque. The team didn't have an option to do a safer or more permanent fix at the track, although they obviously would have done so once back at the factory, probably after Monaco. That's the kind of risk that drivers run all the time. You want to wait for a longer steering column to be manufactured and fitted before you will drive the car again? Fine, you miss two rounds of the championship. I don't know if the welded joint failed and caused the crash, but if it did, I don't think it's a crime. I think it's a risk that team and driver took together and Senna got very unlucky.
@davepastern5 жыл бұрын
@ TheS50b30 - the engineering consensus was that the steering wheel failed due to poor mechanical welding. The problem was that the prosecution wanted Frank Williams etc found guilty of manslaughter, rather than lesser charges. Both FISA and Ferrari placed immense pressure on the Italian government regarding this court case, and given the history of the Italian judicial system in general (rather corrupt!), I have no doubt that the decision that was handed down was to appease Ferrari and FISA, i.e. politically and financially motivated.
@umajustiniano30803 жыл бұрын
El más grande, el mejor, Ayrton. Cómo argentino y rival a los brasileros en todo deporte lo reconozco, un genio, un talento único, valiente. Grande Senna, descansa en paz😓
@homemaranhatriste82013 жыл бұрын
Ainda mais ele, humilde e benevolente descanse em paz
@geoffreyblack59825 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this with us.👍. R.I.P
@carlosnumbertwo8 жыл бұрын
steering column linkage broke. I'm convinced. Senna forever! you were let down by your team.
@koopatroopa1878 жыл бұрын
Let down by his team? He was the one that insisted the steering column be modified.
@scottreyes178 жыл бұрын
I've only ever heard the accusation that Senna asked for the steering column to be lengthened in this video. Sounds like a bunch of crap. It is far easier to adjust the seat position if he wanted to be closer to the wheel. I have heard it reported that the steering column was modified such that it had two different diameters. The modified piece was a few mm narrower than the rest of the shaft. Why would the inserted piece be smaller in diameter if it was only to make the shaft longer?? What you see in the video is Senna's hand movement doing exactly what you would expect to see when he's holding a load, pushing with a specific force on the wheel to the left, when suddenly all resistance to his push is gone. Resulting in an erratic movement of his hands to recover the connection he felt was lost. The steering shaft broke. Nat Geo made a critical error assuming that the potentiometer would go to zero indicating no force on the shaft. The wheels are still connected to the shaft and even with no steering wheel connected, the uneven road surfaces would still apply a force back through the column. It's how drivers "feel" the road. The car, designed by Adrian Newey and assembled under Patrick Head, broke due to the small diameter shaft not able to sustain integrity from multiple sheering-force hits from the road surfaces (metal fatigue). With no plan to change the part out, it would have failed at the next session, the next race. There was nothing unique to Imola, Senna, or the ride height that caused the failure. What's amazing is that Rubens Barrichello survived.
@koopatroopa1878 жыл бұрын
DarkMadder Too bad the seats are rather fixed in those cars. You wouldn't adjust the seating position because that would shift the weight balance of the car. It is better to bring the wheel and pedals to the driver versus doing the opposite.
@meerkatandpug7 жыл бұрын
You can adjust everything on these cars.
@turkeyguy07 жыл бұрын
ah the differences in viewpoints from someone using a real name online to someone with a profile picture of cartman from south park. just for the record i know you're right.
@23chopperrob9 жыл бұрын
Steering broke,.. car went straight to the right, no fishtail...End of Senna, End of story :-( Williams can say all they want.
@23chopperrob9 жыл бұрын
What most people do not understand is that the the front wheels do not turn the car. The front wheels only influence where the rear wheels are going. If the front wheels lose influence the car will go wherever the rear wheels are pointed...In Senna's case, the wall.
@TheJer19636 жыл бұрын
I was saying that back in 94 when it happened. Fist time I saw the crash I thought something broke. There was just no reason for him to just go straight like he did. Still got the old vhs tape from back then.
@cspower72596 жыл бұрын
Won't be long before this all comes out in the wash.
@jford12 жыл бұрын
Absolutely tragic, still so emotional to watch this. I was there at Imola on that day and I think we all knew he had passed away well before the helicopter took off for Bologna, the air of tragedy hung heavy over everyone - as it had done for most of the weekend. I could see his plane parked alone at Forli airport from the balcony of my flat for weeks, as if to emphasise the loss...
@TheRealHoltzy2 жыл бұрын
I have actually seen the photos taken of Senna's helmet. There is a very clearly visible puncture mark in the top of the visor, in line with his eyebrow. There was also a MASSIVE amount of blood and a pinky grey substance. He was ABSOLUTELY speared in the head by a control arm connected to the wheel. So although Senna may have suffered a basal skull fracture, he was already dead before then, or at least mortally wounded, so wouldn't have made a difference
@blairrighton6270 Жыл бұрын
absolutely correct, hence why in the corner Senna was already turning his head to the left in the cockpit through the corner during the in car video footage as he was going through a reaction of the upper control arm being embedded in his head and as the car is being transported back to the pits his right seatbelt appears to be saturated in blood. The pinky grey substance you refer to I believe is his brain
@kennethbarrington5773 Жыл бұрын
Heartbreaking
@_TheJ_ Жыл бұрын
Dont know whether to believe wikipedia, but according to them. They arrived at the hospital and restarted his heart. Thwy had the opportunity to restart his heart again, but they didnt. But looking at this accident, I think he probably would have died either way.
@christiansawaya53258 жыл бұрын
telemetry showed that the brakes were fully on just before the crash proving that the steering wheel was broken if senna lost control he would have tried to correct it not step on the brakes
@zebunker4 жыл бұрын
Proves nothing
@Chair9913 жыл бұрын
@@zebunker If you're braindead with no knowledge about cars yeah sure it proves nothing
@cassidybeeson54913 жыл бұрын
The steering column broke in the crash. If it was broken before whe he corrected the slide which telemetry shows he did the car wouldn't have responded in the way it did.
@ayrtonsennavideosss10 жыл бұрын
The charges focused on the car's steering column, which was found to have sheared off at a point where a modification had been made. A 600-page technical report was submitted by Bologna University under Professor of Engineering Lorenzini and his team of specialists. The report concluded that fatigue cracks had developed through most of the steering column at the point where it had broken.
@robdickie92153 жыл бұрын
It's terrifying to think that regardless of raw talent mechanical issues can be the difference between life and death 💀
@lancewatt85143 жыл бұрын
I’m here in 2021. My favorite hero.
@segaiuolo7 жыл бұрын
I remember watching the race and thinking that Senna's impact on tamburello wasn't a big deal, that he'd jump off the car, angry right after it stopped completely...
@maxistexas7 жыл бұрын
All fake...
@tobytoxd7 жыл бұрын
ur fake!
@segaiuolo7 жыл бұрын
no need to get angry and insult. Senna crashed at about 200 kph which is a lot for a normal car but should be sustainable for a F1, considering that the year before I saw Zanardi with Lotus and Berger with Ferrari crashing at probably much higher speed and jumping out "fresh as new" from the cockpit. Ratzenberger the day before crashed at the Villeneuve corner at 320 kph, his car actually taking off due to the loss of the front wing, and that impact itself was fatal. Senna had his skull cracked and his neck and throat snapped because he was hit on the head by the front right wheel and its support, which perforated his helmet's visor. At that time F1 and its circuits were unsafe, but Senna was very very unlucky, dying like this
@terrypetty98227 жыл бұрын
The tire bounced off the wall and hit him in the head, otherwise he would have walked away. This is according to the autopsy, so start the name calling it makes you look like what you are.
@kimjong-un64137 жыл бұрын
same but for dale earnhardt.
@gosianawrot2 жыл бұрын
I was watching that fatal accident on tv. still seems like yesterday. And then cried a lot. I will never forget him. I;m honored to be a fan of such a great man. Love you Ayrton may your beautiful soul rest in peace
@mavos12113 жыл бұрын
Absolute legend who was head and shoulders above anyone else on the track. Hopefully he is full throttle with Sabine somewhere now.
@silva_5792 жыл бұрын
amen
@KC16A64 жыл бұрын
Great analysis. Your points are valid and well documented (if not too much, c.f. sparks in the 4/5 vid). I'm a welding specialist (IWS) and was taught that in critical structures, welding should be avoided if possible. A point to be made is that Senna was reckless; he was extremely fast because he was talented but not only. There were multiple times where he got away with pushing the envelope and that last time... Murphy caught back to him, unfortunately. R.I.P., he was still a nice guy nonetheless. p.s. I wish luck to all who are racing out there !
@WeskerXM96E16 жыл бұрын
Ayrton Senna RIP used his fame and stardom to help so many people and his foundation still does to this day. More "stars" and celebrity actors etc should help the needy the way Ayrton helped people, especially children. He was a incredible human in the true sense of the word, RIP Ayrton Senna :(
@dimitrios-mariosmandalakis89402 жыл бұрын
2:45 He realised that he was unable to do anything when the stearing wheel broke and eventually knew his end was near, panicked and moved his head infront (if u freeze, clearly can see him moving from the back to the front). Realizing how he felt that moment and from the posture of his body, I shudder and grieve.. R.I.P Legend, always and forever the greatest of all time.
@anthonymackintosh47765 жыл бұрын
Still makes me cry when I see this RIP Ayrton
@Serbian19854 жыл бұрын
I still watch his videos almost every day. Man how we still miss you ayrton! Legend maybe in a parallel universe he is alive and never died. His loss was greatest in 20th century and felt by every nation , he was ahead of our time
@jimhiscott29184 жыл бұрын
The woman holding his helmet then leaning her head into it destroyed me. That's when the tears came and I hurt. Brought back many memories of riders, friends and racers I lost in the past. I'm 54 now and retired from all racing however my battle continues. I have terminal cancer......
@bassmith448bassist54 жыл бұрын
Jim Hiscott Senna was a champion. He died a champion. I only hope that I could end my life in that way, doing the thing I loved most.
@jimhiscott29184 жыл бұрын
@@bassmith448bassist5 I agree, ending my life by way of a race accident would be a hell of a lot better then this cancer bullshit!
@10DKJUMP8 жыл бұрын
Clear as day, the steering column broke and the car goes straight off the track. The video evidence is very striking, this is one of the simplest accidents to explain.
@SpeedFire0098 жыл бұрын
+10DKJUMP The FW16 car suffers low aerodynamic pressure (Senna is out of race - slide at corner in Interlagos circuit). At Imola, the car had understerring, Senna fix it, but the sterring column broke... (my opinion, sorry the bad english)
@dathorndike49082 жыл бұрын
Great video. I really understand so much more about Senna's accident after seeing this.
@befree21213 жыл бұрын
The Williams team killed Ayrton Senna with a failed steering fix and this is just another BS cover story. We will never forget. Now it’s the pace car did it.
@epicon65 жыл бұрын
I’m now the same age as Senna was when he passed away. Wow he was taken away young. I feel like my life has just started.
@yobxndit16255 жыл бұрын
Rip Senna 25 years now
@phantomf4747 Жыл бұрын
I'm not an F1 fan, but a drag racer. However, I remember this day like it was yesterday. It would be the equivalent of losing our sports Tony Schumacher. Not knowing much about the sport or the teams, I knew how big of an impact this was. I, as many fans of motorsports in general stopped to say a prayer for his soul, family and team.
@mellow-jello Жыл бұрын
Senna (the doc) explained it most accurately by pointing the root cause: disassembling the active suspension, which forced the Williams team to continually tweak the steering during each race, turning his car into a death trap at racing speeds.
@SuperWayneyb10 жыл бұрын
The steering on that car was not working you can see that.
@enderconka101910 жыл бұрын
***** Does this mean that the technicians should have done a improper job.? Whey did not they say NO ,if it was not possible to do it properly. How could they take this responsibility? Senna most probably created a big pressure on them however, a good technician can convince the pilot with reasons. At the end he is not stupid.
@foxkart6110 жыл бұрын
Ender Conka Sorry, but in racing, there is no "proper job", you do what you can to get the car running fast & on the track in time to race! At the track, there is not time or opportunity for safety testing of design changes. A passenger vehicle steering column design change would take a year of design, analysis, testing and vehicle crash testing before going into a production vehicle. The racing teams & drivers do not choose to not race because they anticipate a safety concern! If they did, no race car would ever take the green flag ... under the best conditions, its dangerous, humans are involved, who try their best under the conditions, its part of the accepted risk.... no one can be blamed for Senna's death, it's racing,
@Jedontrack10 жыл бұрын
Ender Conka No, there was a huge investigation afterwards, Williams was found to be completely blameless.
@SuperWayneyb10 жыл бұрын
watch after he turns into the slide. He cant turn the wheels back to the left because the steering isn't working.if it was he would have tried.
@Jedontrack10 жыл бұрын
wayne burgess Not necessarily, it's hard to explain since it comes so naturally but you wouldn't necessarily turn away from a wall if you were heading towards it, especially not if you didn't feel the grip to do so. Take Schumacher's accident where he broke his legs, he drove the car straight into the wall since he didn't have the grip to turn.
@joannihernandez19484 жыл бұрын
The Williams team did not want to go public with their feelings of annoyance to what the called arrogant driver. The steering graft was faulty and that aspect of "improving steering by personal request" was not mentioned, until there was discovered and questioned in court. Ayrton was passionate about doing the best that he could with understanding of his vehicle and the road surface. I cried for him like I lost a love. God bless him for pushing integration of comprehension of traction and velocity to push the limits.
@arnavsajan87232 жыл бұрын
Fantastic series charrotest.The way you've covered this incident was amazing.It was all so well done with actual evidence and logic. Thank god driver safety has come so far and become so,so much better The death of Ayrton was a dark day in the sport and the loss of f1's biggest legend scarred it and changed it forever.The way the whole NatGeo documentary was presented was disgustingly filled with propaganda to save Williams' blushes.I doubt I'd ever be able to respect them as a team or wish them the best now.There is still a lot of details and evidence that has been covered up and hidden so well,which is absolutely disgusting.People deserve to know what really happened.We need closure and the shambolic reasoning given to us by the FIA and Williams race team is pathethic.I'll always have these sense of remorse/regret for i wish i was born earlier to see Ayrton ripping it up on track in his prime and I wish i could've met him.He must've been the best sight to see on a race track for an era.The race going through after Roland's tragic death was wrong and what happened with Ayrton was the dark hand of fate and lady luck. The world of motorsport lost two amazing drivers that day and two amazing human beings.A lot has been left unanswered in terms of what actually happened and what could've been if things were different.How much more could they have achieved? How many races could they have won? How many more titles could Ayrton have won? And how long would they have gone on for? Would it have been Ayrton and not Schumacher with the most no. of titles now? We,ll never know. All we can do is wish these two amazing people the very best wherever they are.Keep rippin it Ayrton and Roland. Rest easy now guys.
@sfc415rider5 жыл бұрын
I still cry till this day, what a loss
@aaronisgrate10 жыл бұрын
if you go and watch the longer version on board of this race (2 laps or so before the crash) you can clearly see the steering wheel play get progressively worse and worse leading up to the crash. concentrate on the yellow button on the wheel and it shows not only violent up and down play, but what looks like in and out (front to back) play as well. and near the end, the yellow button on the wheel sort of gets darker and less visible, in my opinion because the steering wheel is actually getting pushed in deeper to the front of the car. combine the absurd amount of steering wheel movement, the lack of corrective tire steering movement, the lack of reference point twitch movement, and hard sudden body lean, has me 100% convinced the steering column broke. on such a high speed high grip corner, the amount of steering input torque is at its absolute highest.
@Rusikindusik9 жыл бұрын
Sad, but true
@randomhumanoidblob45069 жыл бұрын
Please excuse my ignorance, but I also find it odd that THIS driver would accept a welded connection/increase in such a vital component? He was too much of a perfectionist, I just find it hard to believe he wouldn't have demanded the entire assembly be replaced, the only way to ensure maximum strength?
@thehistorywatcher9 жыл бұрын
euroaaRON1 If that was the case Senna must have been aware of it. He would have been aware of the increasing "play" in the steering system. One would have thought that he would have pitted the car.
@aaronisgrate9 жыл бұрын
thehistorywatcher and give up the lead? i dont think the glory days racers from back then thought like todays racers(all out attack vs conservation of engine fuel and tires). especially senna who would do absolutely anything in his power to secure a win.
@deadrisingat6 жыл бұрын
euroaaRON1]]]
@44hawk285 жыл бұрын
I remember watching that race live and seeing the accident. I always wondered why it never looked like he lost control do to a slide.
@bhuuthesecond5 жыл бұрын
"An explosion of sparks" oh boy this is going to be dumb
@JavierBonillaC2 жыл бұрын
You totally convinced me. I thought I wouldn’t but it was so straightforward (no pun intended) and so pedagogic that it amazed me. You should do this for a living…. Explain complicated things that is.
@3vimages4719 жыл бұрын
RIP Great Ayrton Senna. Get well soon Great Schumi!
@martinigasalini60399 жыл бұрын
Something mechanical broke on that turn, and it points to the steering mechanism, if you have any knowledge of driving or racing cars you can see it in the vid by the non-movement of the front wheels in the turn.
@mylanmiller96568 жыл бұрын
One thing to remember was Sienna had crashed this same car in the two races before this crash took his life! Who is to say that it was not the previous crash that weakened the steering column
@Minx58927 жыл бұрын
not the same car. they change it.
@kenpugh93846 жыл бұрын
"if you have any knowledge of driving or racing cars" - which you clearly don't. Idiot
@mccririck013 жыл бұрын
@@mylanmiller9656 Because it broke at the weld?
@RickSolis10263 жыл бұрын
2020 crazy year. Still missing Senna R.I.P
@GlutenEruption6 ай бұрын
The data showing senna was applying full brakes in the corner also contradicts the claim that he was trying to catch oversteer. If the car was oversteering, a driver of sennas caliber would never apply full brakes since that would severely exasperate the oversteer. The only time a driver would apply brakes in a flat out full speed corner like that would be if the car was severely *understeering* - and the only time a driver of sennas caliber would apply *full* brakes in that situation was if the front was unresponsive and the car was headed straight off.
@mujtababarakzai16066 жыл бұрын
Death finds reasons ..weather steering , tires or head injury .We miss the legend and i still remember Schumacher was asked winning the same numbers of grand prix after lot of years ..he simply had tears .I love and miss you
@TNStrikeman8 жыл бұрын
The footage from Schumachers car shows it all @ 2:41 Steering column failure also Frank Williams interview he basically admitted he and his team let Senna down and did not follow the correct procedures when modifying it..
@TNStrikeman8 жыл бұрын
What really makes me angry about it all was that Bernie and others hid the fact that Senna and Roland had died on the circuit and they also removed the on board computer.
@TheSandman1212127 жыл бұрын
Do you know the name of the Frank williams interview?
@Fluterra6 жыл бұрын
Frank Williams should be in jail. He was convicted and found guilty. Unfortunately, it was too late; the statute of limitations had passed.
@Mark-nx1zz6 жыл бұрын
It was not Frank Williams fault, it was infact a choice by Adrian Newey and Patrick Head to shorten the steering column.
@David-ud9ju6 жыл бұрын
It was actually a choice by Senna to lengthen the steering column that was reluctantly performed by his engineers who reinforced the hell out of it, because it was a last minute, short term fix. Senna was equally culpable for his own crash (if it was caused by a broken steering column).
@DekGT5mad2 жыл бұрын
So much respect for the editors for never showing the moment that people watching live saw that we knew Ayrton was dead. I have watched many doco's & none have shown the 2 seconds of footage from the crane camera that looked directly down onto Senna's car that was switched to just as the car came to a stop. He twitched & fell limp in the cockpit. It almost seems like divine intervention that nobody has ever turned up with a full video copy of the broadcast recorded at home on VHS or Beta video tape. I'm glad, I have it burned into my memory and don't need to see it again
@damianbesten64864 жыл бұрын
look at 6:07 Senna steers a little extra, just after that he goes straight in the barriers. you can see by the reaction of the car that something of his steering broke.
@idklike32104 жыл бұрын
Elite Soulfly you could even see it with his head. He’s looking to the left likely as a reaction or habit.
@Sirdiggar7 жыл бұрын
Williams took you away from us Senna but your spirit wasn't destined for this world. You were too good and were needed elsewhere. RIP to the greatest F1 driver ever to grace the sport. You will never be forgotten.
@borisVspider668 жыл бұрын
the truth will never truly be known but some sneaky stuff was done at Williams to cover there arses. I believe the steering failed & it was a perfect storm of bad things. a day I'll never forget. there will never be another Senna.
@rezzzzmeeee30463 жыл бұрын
RIP to a True Legend in the Sport. F1 fan since Drive to Survive came out on Netflix. I was a NASCAR fan still am but I’m now addicted to F1. I’ll wake up at 5:00am to watch P1 on my days off. Rewatching these legends racing in a true pleasure. “In Charles We Trust” Now Let’s Go Racing!!!
@charleauxX Жыл бұрын
I'm impressed because you had access to new information like, i didn't see any of the Schumacher's cockpit view ou Senna's cockpit.
@josipmusa11156 жыл бұрын
Even birds on the threes knows that steering columne broke, theory that senna understeer and cold tires is stupid.
@stefanklaus16526 жыл бұрын
He will allways be The best Driver Formula 1 has ever Seen 😢Rest in Peace 😢
@herbyhannan16755 жыл бұрын
Good video. This shows 100% what truly happened and what didn't.williams will never have another days luck,rip the greatest driver to ever step into a race car,very sad and very shameful for williams.
@danielstokker5 жыл бұрын
I was really young when it happend and didnt exactly remember i was 9 or 10 my dad told me with a tear in his eye one of worlds greatest f1 drivers had died and showed me the crash on tv wich looked pretty bad he explained pretty wel how huge this was and there were even people suspected of sabotation and murder in the williams team first rumors were his brakes were cut then the actual cause came to light and it was just sad really really sad.... next thing i know years and years later im playing a game called Gran turismo 6 they annouced that the legendary senna lotus t97 was comming to the game with a challange you had to beat his record on monza to win the rhe car for your own garage but as i was about to break it after trying many times for three days i slammed the breaks i just couldnt because i just heared the entire story in the game the second time in my life and started realizing what had happend and how big he was to the sport and to others and what happend to f1 after that crash it all came back.. that even after his death he is the reason other lives got saved and i broke a bit to be honest. I never broke the record in that game out of respect and went to the menu to buy the car wich was exspensive for me i had to race a whole week to be able to afford that car but i felt good about leav8ng senna record as it was
@littleboi95033 жыл бұрын
respect u dude
@Lehmann10810 жыл бұрын
It is so obvious that the steering column broke. There's not a millimeter of tire twitch as the steering wheel moves left and down.
@itsfocusyt63633 жыл бұрын
Anyone else here in 2021 in the middle of the night
@bulldog1066jpd7 ай бұрын
Senseless loss of life.. it seems hard to comprehend this was nearly 30 yrs ago. RIP 😢
@umeshsonkar41773 жыл бұрын
The race was to cancelled after ratzenberger's death on the track according to Italian law but Fia declared he died at the hospital so race was continued because cancelling would have caused a significant loss to race organisers and Fia perhaps Senna could have lived if organisers and Fia had cared about safety instead of money
@mylanmiller96563 жыл бұрын
The man that sits behind the wheel is the one that is in Control of the race car, Senna and only Senna was IN charge of the crash1
@JohnGeorgeHill9 жыл бұрын
I think this video gets to the logical conclusion, that the steering column broke. Unfortunately Senna had something to do with this, as he was the one demanding the change to the column. I always wondered why the in-car footage always stopped before Senna's car started to leave the track. Obvious conclusion, they didn't want to show the car not being turned into the spin. However, everyone in F1 knows every shot the team gets is being recorded, so the exclusion of that video pointed to a conspiracy not to show that footage.
@tor378a9 жыл бұрын
It is silly to suggest that Senna had anything at all to do with the steering column failure. True, he did ask for adjustments to the position of the steering wheel but he didn't actually carry the changes - the Williams technical team did. It would be like if took your car into your mechanic complaining of a wheel imbalance and then the wheel subsequently falls off on the highway after the mechanic fixed the problem, then somehow you are partially responsible for that! This was not Ayrton's fault at all.
@JohnGeorgeHill9 жыл бұрын
tor378a Look, you and I both liked Senna. But Senna was smart enough to know every little thing that was happening to the car. If he asked for a change to the steering column, he would have asked the mechanics how they were going to accomplish this. If they didn't have a shorter column laying around, he would have asked about cutting and welding it. Then he probably wanted to see what they had done afterwards. Senna was desperate to finish a race at the beginning of the season, as he had not yet done so. Also getting pole was a big deal. He probably knew there was a risk and took the chance. No way is Senna dropping the car off at the local mechanic, and saying fix it. He was a pro after all, and looked after every detail. He took a chance and it bit him.
@cherrylgibson67149 жыл бұрын
John G. Hill I don't understand why F1 would allow a steering column to be cut and welded!
@jasonkent34277 жыл бұрын
John G. Hill you are right
@justracingandgamingjrag36186 жыл бұрын
John G. Hill no they in any motorsport don't show crash unless it is happening while recording race so they gone to overview so crash is seen plus we would never see crash if camera wasn't on senna car just cuz senna wasn't moving same as bianci they never showed it only some ppl got video but fia never showed from cameras
@parabelluminvicta83803 жыл бұрын
Williams did lie about the this crash but sadly for them italian found what happened. "It has been determined that the accident was caused by a steering column failure. This failure was caused by badly designed and badly executed modifications. The responsibility of this falls on Patrick Head, culpable of omitted control"
@CairoAlberto2 жыл бұрын
here in Brazil, the documentary of the brazilian tv was that: before the race started, there was a modification in the car's steering system, and the constant hits with the ground caused such maintenance to fail, breaking the column that connects the wheels with the steering wheel, causing him to lose control of the car. it looks like it was instant death as part of the car impaled his head.
@colebaker___2 жыл бұрын
Senna and Dale Earnhardt, two men who admired each other very much, both died of the same injury. 6 men were killed in NASCAR due to that same injury within a 2-ish year span in the late 90s and early 2000s. Driver safety has come so far, but there is always more to be done
@calvinsbnb7611 ай бұрын
I've always strongly suspected that his steering column was sabotaged, guaranteeing that it would fail in the race. Obviously we'll never know, but given the intense feelings involved in the rivalry with Prost and the extreme competitiveness of these drivers, well, let's just put it this way: if someone could devise a way to eliminate Senna and make it look like an accident, it was gonna happen.
@segoiii6 ай бұрын
what´s indeed weird is that professionals like Head and Newey were okay with such a crappy solution and Senna complained about the weird behaving car. Which Hill didn´t. And because only Senna had the modified steering column, this should have raised alarm bells. For some strange reason, this didn´t happen. That should definitely rise eyebrows, because it seems a bit too unprofessional.
@MegaJoojee8 жыл бұрын
5:22 hes turning the steering wheel hardly to left or at least preparing to turn there as you can see hes helmet is trying to go left...
@gabrielv1856 Жыл бұрын
Senna was one of the greatest racers of all time and i was lucky i could see some of the races he was on as a kid. That day was no exception. I was there watching as my hero crashed in that race. Never watches another f1 race ever again. Senna was quite uneasy before that race, he was nervous and worried. I think he knew what could happen but never expected it to happen. A great loss of a great racer and also a great man. Rest in peace Ayrton.
@karllee23443 жыл бұрын
Even 'IF', the skid pad underneath the car touched the ground reducing the downforce and grip, the wheels would still have turned on Sennas steering commands and the car would not have suddenly veered straight off ahead, perfectly in a straight line as it did. There was no influence from the steering wheel to the wheels and they automatically returned to the centre position, and that would only happen from a broken steering column. Maybe William's are now where they belong to be, in the back and forgotten shadows of Formula One, where they hold no right to great praise and glory. William's, you did this man and great driver, a great injustice.