2019 Formula 1 GP de Brasil - The Brembo Animated Infographic

  • 5 years ago
Built in 1940, the circuit has been modified throughout the course of the years, most recently in 1990.

The cars drive counterclockwise and the straights are fairly short: As a consequence, there is only one occasion when braking is used to drop the speed by more than 200 km/h (124 mph). ​

The track is very drivable with frequent changes in direction, but it also has high-speed turns that don't require use of the brakes. Every lap, the brakes are used barely seven times, but it is not the negative record for the ​World Championship: in Hockenheim are used five times, in Monza and Montreal six.

Overall, during one lap at Interlagos, the brakes are used for almost 12 seconds which comes to 19% of the duration of the race.​

The presence of few hard braking points results in ​the average peak deceleration per lap of 3.6 G.

Even the energy dissipated in braking by each single-seater during the entire GP is contained: 206 kWh.​

From the starting line to the checkered flag, each driver exerts a total load of 40 tons and a half on the brake pedal, which is almost identical to the Russian GP.​

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