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The Lego Group announced a partnership with Ferrari, McLaren, Mercedes, and Porsche. As part of the marketing campaign, The Lego Group released six sets based on racing cars. Each set featured different racing cars such as Ferrari, McLaren, Mercedes, and Porsche. The sets were designed primarily for children 7 to 14 years old. [14] [15] [16]
The deal comes as F1’s popularity has skyrocketed in recent years, thanks to the hit Netflix series “Drive to Survive,” which has spawned a new following.
The McLaren MP4-28 [7] is a Formula One racing car designed and built by the McLaren team for use in the 2013 Formula One season. The chassis was designed by Paddy Lowe , [ 8 ] Neil Oatley , Tim Goss , Mark Ingham and Marcin Budkowski and was powered by a customer Mercedes-Benz engine.
Before 1988, the most dominant car seen in a single season of F1 had been McLaren's 1984 car, the John Barnard designed MP4/2 which had won 12 of the 16 races that year driven by Prost and World Champion Niki Lauda (Lauda had defeated Prost in the Drivers' Championship by only half a point). However, the MP4/4's successes eclipsed the MP4/2 not ...
Yet, away from one-on-ones with drivers, the core aspect to the alternative broadcast was the informal race coverage, live on free-to-air Sky Showcase, which presented an F1 race in an entirely ...
McLaren Formula One cars (50 P) Pages in category "McLaren racing cars" ... McLaren F1 GTR; L. McLaren LT170; M. McLaren M1A; McLaren M2A; McLaren M3; McLaren M6A;
The McLaren MP4-X is a concept car produced by the McLaren Formula 1 team in 2015. [1] The MP4-X is a lighter, faster, more efficient, and above all else, safer car. [ 2 ] Following 2018's Formula 1 regulation changes, including the introduction of the halo , the concept was revisited as the McLaren X2.
The McLaren MP4-30 was a Formula One racing car designed by Tim Goss and Neil Oatley for McLaren to compete in the 2015 Formula One season. [3] [4] [5] The car was driven by 2005 and 2006 World Drivers' Champion Fernando Alonso, who returned to McLaren eight years after he last drove for the team [6] and 2009 World Champion Jenson Button. [6]