We’re here to help you solve the mystery of the red light on Formula 1 cars.

By Dan McCarthy

Published: Wednesday, 28 February 2024 at 15:27 PM


While F1 cars are special machines in their own right, there are some more minor and mundane features that are not too dissimilar to every day cars that are driven on roads up and down the land.

For every front front and rear wing for example, you have a standard set of wing mirrors. And all F1 cars are equipped with a red light at the back which can flash.

They may forgettable but are a very important safety feature of a modern Formula 1 car. And after all, driver safety is of paramount importance and one of the biggest differences between now and 1950 when the sport began.

The red light serves two primary functions and RadioTimes.com will take a look at what exactly they are.

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Why is the flashing red light used during wet races?

Quite simply, the light is there to alert drivers behind that a car is in front of them, like in a road car.

Even light rain can be extremely difficult to drive in with all the spray flying up from the road as well as rain marks on the driver’s helmet visor. And, obviously, with cars being open cockpits, there are no windscreens to wipe.

Think about how challenging it can be to drive on a motorway in wet conditions doing 60-70mph. Then times that by nearly three and that is what the experience of wet weather driving in F1 is like.

Cars are so difficult to spot in front and the red light offers a hugely important visible aid to drivers to avoid massive accidents from potentially occurring.