Transcript
Introduction - Colin Chapman
What you're actually looking for the whole time is the unfair advantage. No one understood this better than a former Royal Air Force pilot whose first love was airplanes. His name was Colin Chapman, and over more than 20 years, he did more to influence F1 design than any other person in history.
This was the man who turned Formula One from a playground for gentlemen mechanics into rocket science. All of it stemmed from his singular purpose in life, which was to extract every ounce of performance from whichever engine he happened to be dealt. What Chapman realized first, and far more dramatically than any of his contemporaries, was that there was more to this racing business than pure horsepower.
Engine capacity didn't matter if he couldn't first solve the paradox of making his cars as light as possible while also engineering them to stick to the racetrack. His mantra was simple: "Adding power makes you fast on the straights. Subtracting weight makes you faster everywhere."