Feature
Classic onboard camera lap - ride with Johnny Dumfries at Adelaide ‘86
Share
In the first of a new series, we delve into the archives to bring you a classic slice of onboard camera action from the start of the 1986 Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide. Our inaugural chauffeur is Lotus driver and Scottish aristocrat John Crichton-Stuart, 7th Marquess of Bute - more popularly known as Johnny Dumfries…
The 1986 Australian Grand Prix is best remembered for the thrilling world championship showdown that ended in tyre-bursting heartbreak for Nigel Mansell and unfettered jubilation for Alain Prost - but it was also one of the very first races in which a modern-style onboard camera was used. Johnny Dumfries’ Renault-powered Lotus 98T was selected as the car to carry the new hardware, and it turned out to be a shrewd move as the future Le Mans 24-hour winner found himself in the thick of some scintillating action. We join Dumfries for the frantic opening lap at the popular 3.780 km street circuit, during which he witnesses a wheel-banging incident at the start which rules Michele Alboreto’s Ferrari out of contention and a first corner clash between Benetton’s Teo Fabi and Ligier’s Rene Arnoux. Having started 14th, Dumfries finished the first lap in 12th, but at the chequered flag he’d risen a further six places to sixth - his second F1 points finish in what was his 15th (and ultimately final) world championship start.
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
News Leclerc lists areas where Sainz has helped him improve as he hails 'incredible team mate'
News New Haas team mates Bearman and Ocon set for F1 test runs this week as 2025 preparations ramp up
Feature From world champions to super-subs – How Ferrari’s other British drivers fared as Hamilton makes his move
News REVEALED: The best driver line-up for the 2025 season as voted for by you