zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Racing
/
Revel In The Glory Of The Iconic Williams FW14B Formula One Car
Revel In The Glory Of The Iconic Williams FW14B Formula One Car-May 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:11:03

Image for article titled Revel In The Glory Of The Iconic Williams FW14B Formula One Car

Formula One designers have been trying to get away with crazy shit for years, and one of the coolest examples of innovation from the early 1990s is the FW14B, the car that Williams brought to the 1992 season. It was one of those machines so damn good that the FIA banned it—and all the things that made it cool—for the following year.

The FW14B was a development of the FW14 that was used in the 1991 season. The latter had evolved to include active suspension, traction control, and a semi-automatic gearbox, a combo that made the thing unstoppable. In 1992, driver Nigel Mansell won nine of F1's 16 races behind the wheel of the FW14B.

You can learn a little more about the car in the following video from Williams:

Basically, the FW14 worked just fine, but further technical developments transformed it into a thing of beauty. Williams had been developing active suspension for years and finally it in its 1992 car. Active suspension adapts to the conditions of the road it’s driving on. Sensors feed on the information of the road, its every bump and rattle, which makes for a much smoother ride.

Imagine driving down a road littered in potholes. In a car with passive suspension, you’re going to be rattled around like crazy, probably even feeling like you’re about to shake your teeth out of your head. In a car with active suspension, the suspension does the work of providing you with a much smoother ride by adjusting the suspension to match the road features. It’s a little like the human body; our vision adapts to the dimming light of sunset, and we react to a painful stimulus by doing something to alleviate that pain. Active suspension uses that same basic process.

That’s obviously a huge advantage for an F1 car. Consider a lap around the Spa-Francorchamps circuit in a . Now compare it to an onboard of the following year. Yes, the FW14B onboard is still a little shaky, but there’s a significant improvement compared to the 1991 car. The line of sight has steadied in 1992 because the car is able to account for the most significant road changes. That makes it easier to focus, easier to turn, and easier to perform at a more dominant level. A level ride height also provided a much more stable aerodynamic base.

All that extra technology made for an added challenge, though. Any new tech involves a certain level of trust that certain drivers just couldn’t give. Mansell’s teammate Ricardo Patrese much preferred passive suspension, which allowed him to feel the motions of the car and better respond to them. Mansell himself said he never “trusted” the FW14B but instead learned to adapt to it.

And it could be finicky stuff. Suddenly, there were tons of tiny components to worry about, that could wreak havoc if not working correctly. Williams did an admittedly damn good job of making the FW14B work, but it was also the kind of technology that required years of development and hundreds of thousands of dollars to build and maintain. It was ultimately banned by the FIA for providing an unfair competitive advantage.

The car is still regarded as one of the most technologically advanced F1 cars of all time, and Mansell’s dominant machine has been painstakingly preserved by both Williams and a . Recently, Ferrari driver purchased the historic machine to add to his collection of privately owned cars.

It was the car that halted Ayrton Senna’s massive dominance at McLaren, and it cemented both Mansell’s and Williams’ names in the history books. Why not spend some time reveling in the glory of some of its finest on-track footage?

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Racing
Formula E CEO Jamie Reigle On Pandemic Sustainability And Hopes For The Future
Formula E CEO Jamie Reigle On Pandemic Sustainability And Hopes For The Future
As you might have seen, we had a chance to talk to earlier this week to coincide with the announcement of an updated schedule. But our conversation went far beyond just chatting about the schedule itself—I also wanted to know more about the complexities of creating that schedule, of...
May 27, 2026
New Documentary Shows How Racer Sir Stirling Moss Developed Disc Brakes
New Documentary Shows How Racer Sir Stirling Moss Developed Disc Brakes
Motorsport has served as a proving ground for loads of new technologies that eventually make their way into the auto industry’s consumer cars, and a new documentary shows exactly how that happened with disc brakes. And yes, it involves legendary racer Sir Stirling Moss and Jaguar test driver and...
May 27, 2026
Andretti Family Launches #CheckIt4Andretti Charitable Foundation
Andretti Family Launches #CheckIt4Andretti Charitable Foundation
One year ago today, racer John Andretti died after a battle with colorectal cancer. Now, the legendary Andretti family has set up a charity in his honor which is designed to carry on John Andretti’s legacy even in his death. In April of 2017, Andretti announced that he had...
May 27, 2026
F1 Is Getting Rid Of Its Goofy Start Times
F1 Is Getting Rid Of Its Goofy Start Times
When Liberty Media, an American-owned media company, took control of Formula One, it kicked off its tenure by immediately adopting the strangest possible start time procedure for Grands Prix. Now, the series is reneging on that idea because it... hasn’t actually done anything. The supposedly genius plan was pretty...
May 27, 2026
The LMP3 Category Looks Like A Rolling Disaster Ahead Of The Rolex 24
The LMP3 Category Looks Like A Rolling Disaster Ahead Of The Rolex 24
This afternoon’s 2021 Rolex 24 at Daytona International Speedway is looking, uh, a little more dangerous than usual. Not because of weather or track conditions—mostly because of the addition of the LMP3 class, which has turned out to be a little bit of a hot mess. In theory, there’s...
May 27, 2026
Le Mans Legend Tom Kristensen's House Is Obscenely Cool
Le Mans Legend Tom Kristensen's House Is Obscenely Cool
The 2021 Rolex 24 broadcast has been an interesting one for plenty of reasons but in part because the NBC crew has been calling different folks on Zoom to check out their thoughts on the event since they can’t be there in person. And, folks, Tom Kristensen’s house is...
May 27, 2026
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved