The car Ayrton Senna made his Formula 1 debut in 40 years ago fired back into life at Silverstone earlier this month with Pierre Gasly at the wheel.
Gasly is a lifelong fan of the Brazilian three-times champion, who died at Imola 30 years ago. The 28-year-old Alpine racer wore Senna’s helmet design as a tribute the first time he raced at the track in F1 in 2020 and will do the same this weekend.
He also wore the helmet when he took the Toleman-Hart TG183B around the home of the British Grand Prix recently. Senna drove the car at the beginning of the 1984 season. Toleman, which entered F1 three years before that, eventually became the team Gasly drives for today.
“I can’t remember such an incredible experience,” said Gasly. “Driving Senna’s first-ever F1 car exceeded all my expectations.
“It was so emotional. I had never before been in a racing car older than me and the purity of the driving was incredible – just three pedals and a simple steering wheel, quite unlike what I’m used to in a modern F1 car. It was a once-in-a-lifetime episode that I will never forget. Very, very special.”
Senna and the TG183B
At just 540 kilograms, the TG183B weighed almost one-third less than Gasly’s usual A524. Designed by Rory Byrne, it sported an unusually tall front wing which housed its oil and water radiators and a double rear wing arrangement which was also novel for its time. Power came from a 1.5-litre turbo designed by Brian Hart, producing around 700bhp.
It was based on a car Toleman originally introduced for the final races of 1982. Derek Warwick gave the team its first points finish with the TG183B late in 1983, and the team continued with the car for the first four rounds of 1984.
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Senna retired eight laps into his debut on home ground at Jacarepagua with a loss of turbo boost. He’d already signalled his potential by qualifing over 1.7 seconds quicker than team mate Johnny Cecotto. He took his first point next time out at Kyalami with sixth place, despite damaging the TG183B’s nose when he struck debris.
He repeated that result at Zolder, though only took the point several weeks after the Belgian round when Tyrrell were disqualified from the championship and Stefan Bellof lost sixth place. On his final weekend in the TG183B Senna registered the only ‘did not qualify’ of his career: He didn’t run…
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