1978 Brazilian Grand Prix
Race 2 of 16 in the 1978 Formula One season
Race details
Date January 29, 1978
Location Jacarepagua, Brazil
Course Permanent racing facility
Course length 5.031 km (3.126 miles)
Distance 63 laps, 316.953 km (196.945 miles)
Weather Very hot and humid, 100.4°F (38°C)[1]
Pole position
Driver Lotus-Ford
Time 1:40.45
Fastest lap
Driver Argentina Carlos Reutemann Ferrari
Time 1:43.07 on lap 35
Podium
First Ferrari
Second Fittipaldi-Ford
Third Brabham-Alfa Romeo
Lap leaders

The 1978 Brazilian Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held on 29 January 1978 at Jacarepagua. The race was run at the height of summer in Rio de Janeiro in 100 degree F temperatures, and it was won by Argentine driver Carlos Reutemann driving a Ferrari 312T2 in a flag-to-flag performance. The win also represented the first win for tyre manufacturer Michelin. Local driver Emerson Fittipaldi was second, scoring the first podium finish for the Fittipaldi team with Austrian Brabham driver Niki Lauda finishing third. French driver Didier Pironi took his first points in Formula One, finishing sixth, while Arrows made its F1 debut with Riccardo Patrese finishing tenth, four laps down.

Qualifying

Qualifying classification

Pos. Driver Constructor Time No
1 Sweden Ronnie Peterson Lotus-Ford 1:40.45 1
2 United Kingdom James Hunt McLaren-Ford 1:40.53 2
3 United States Mario Andretti Lotus-Ford 1:40.62 3
4 Argentina Carlos Reutemann Ferrari 1:40.73 4
5 France Patrick Tambay McLaren-Ford 1:40.94 5
6 Canada Gilles Villeneuve Ferrari 1:40.97 6
7 Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi Fittipaldi-Ford 1:41.50 7
8 Australia Alan Jones Williams-Ford 1:41.87 8
9 West Germany Hans-Joachim Stuck Shadow-Ford 1:42.07 9
10 Austria Niki Lauda Brabham-Alfa Romeo 1:42.08 10
11 France Patrick Depailler Tyrrell-Ford 1:42.10 11
12 South Africa Jody Scheckter Wolf-Ford 1:42.11 12
13 United States Brett Lunger McLaren-Ford 1:42.65 13
14 France Jacques Laffite Ligier-Matra 1:42.71 14
15 Switzerland Clay Regazzoni Shadow-Ford 1:42.80 15
16 France Jean-Pierre Jarier ATS-Ford 1:42.91 16
17 Italy Lamberto Leoni Ensign-Ford 1:43.17 19
18 Italy Riccardo Patrese Arrows-Ford 1:43.19 18
19 France Didier Pironi Tyrrell-Ford 1:43.55 19
20 West Germany Jochen Mass ATS-Ford 1:43.74 20
21 United Kingdom John Watson Brabham-Alfa Romeo 1:43.75 21
22 Mexico Héctor Rebaque Lotus-Ford 1:43.86 22
23 United States Danny Ongais Ensign-Ford 1:43.94 23
24 United Kingdom Rupert Keegan Surtees-Ford 1:44.20 24
25 Italy Arturo Merzario Merzario-Ford 1:44.20 DNQ
26 United States Eddie Cheever Theodore-Ford 1:44.28 DNQ
27 Italy Vittorio Brambilla Surtees-Ford 1:44.66 DNQ
28 United Kingdom Divina Galica Hesketh-Ford 1:46.79 DNQ

*Positions in red indicate entries that failed to qualify.

Race

Report

The first Formula One race held at Jacarepagua was held in typically extreme weather conditions of January in Rio, meaning the race was held in both hot and humid conditions. Ronnie Peterson took the pole position in the leading Lotus ahead of James Hunt in the leading McLaren, teammate Mario Andretti in the other Lotus, Carlos Reutemann in the leading Ferrari, Patrick Tambay in the second McLaren and Gilles Villeneuve in the other Ferrari.

Peterson got off to a poor start from the pole and dropped back to 4th, whilst into the first corner it was Reutemann from 4th on the grid who got the best start and lead the first lap for Ferrari ahead of Hunt, Andretti, Peterson, Tambay and Villeneuve. Hunt in the leading McLaren and Andretti in the leading Lotus were running 2nd and 3rd behind Reutemann, until Hunt was forced to pit for tyres whilst Andretti soon started to suffer from gearbox problems and dropped to 4th, handing their 2nd and 3rd places over to home favourite Emerson Fittipaldi and reigning world-champion Niki Lauda respectively. Peterson eventually retired after a collision by lap 16. The hot and humid conditions had eventually caused Hunt, Tambay and Villeneuve in the other Ferrari to all spin off and crash by lap 36. Reutemann meanwhile had no challengers for the lead all race long, and won by a comfortable margin ahead of former double world-champion Fittipaldi, Lauda, Andretti in the remaining Lotus, Clay Regazzoni in the Shadow and Didier Pironi in the Tyrrell.

Classification

PosNoDriverConstructorTyreLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
1 11 Argentina Carlos Reutemann Ferrari M 63 1:49:59.86 4 9
2 14 Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi Fittipaldi-Ford G 63 +49.13 secs 7 6
3 1 Austria Niki Lauda Brabham-Alfa Romeo G 63 +57.02 secs 10 4
4 5 United States Mario Andretti Lotus-Ford G 63 +1:33.12 3 3
5 17 Switzerland Clay Regazzoni Shadow-Ford G 62 +1 Lap 15 2
6 3 France Didier Pironi Tyrrell-Ford G 62 +1 Lap 19 1
7 9 West Germany Jochen Mass ATS-Ford G 62 +1 Lap 20
8 2 United Kingdom John Watson Brabham-Alfa Romeo G 61 +2 Laps 21
9 26 France Jacques Laffite Ligier-Matra G 61 +2 Laps 14
10 36 Italy Riccardo Patrese Arrows-Ford G 59 +4 Laps 18
11 27 Australia Alan Jones Williams-Ford G 58 +5 Laps 8
Ret 25 Mexico Héctor Rebaque Lotus-Ford G 40 Physical 22
Ret 12 Canada Gilles Villeneuve Ferrari M 35 Spun Off 6
Ret 8 France Patrick Tambay McLaren-Ford G 34 Spun Off 5
Ret 7 United Kingdom James Hunt McLaren-Ford G 25 Spun Off 2
Ret 16 West Germany Hans-Joachim Stuck Shadow-Ford G 25 Fuel System 9
Ret 20 South Africa Jody Scheckter Wolf-Ford G 16 Accident 12
Ret 6 Sweden Ronnie Peterson Lotus-Ford G 15 Collision 1
Ret 22 United States Danny Ongais Ensign-Ford G 13 Brakes 23
Ret 30 United States Brett Lunger McLaren-Ford G 11 Overheating 13
Ret 4 France Patrick Depailler Tyrrell-Ford G 8 Accident 11
Ret 18 United Kingdom Rupert Keegan Surtees-Ford G 5 Accident 24
DNS 23 Italy Lamberto Leoni Ensign-Ford G 0 Transmission 17
DNS 10 France Jean-Pierre Jarier ATS-Ford G Mass Drove Car 16
DNQ 37 Italy Arturo Merzario Merzario-Ford G
DNQ 32 United States Eddie Cheever Theodore-Ford G
DNQ 19 Italy Vittorio Brambilla Surtees-Ford G
DNQ 24 United Kingdom Divina Galica Hesketh-Ford G
Source:[2][3]

Championship standings after the race

  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

References

  1. "Rio de Janeiro January 29, 1978 Historical Weather (Brazil) - Weather Spark".
  2. "1978 Brazilian Grand Prix". formula1.com. Archived from the original on 3 September 2014. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  3. "1978 Brazilian Grand Prix - Race Results & History - GP Archive". GPArchive.com. 29 January 1978. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  4. 1 2 "Brazil 1978 - Championship • STATS F1". www.statsf1.com. Retrieved 13 March 2019.
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