Hero material!
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In the high-tech world of motorsport, risk is omnipresent. Racewear consequently needs to comply with strict safety requirements, which is why you’ll never see a driver get behind the wheel in casual cotton slacks! Alpine Elf Matmut Endurance Team driver Matthieu Vaxivière reveals the relationship he has with his helmet and details the level of safety required for all the clothing he puts on before getting into the A480’s cockpit.
PAR RENAULT GROUP
Not only is our helmet our best friend in an accident, it is also our crest.
A reinforced but lightweight helmet
Thanks to the work of its partner, the Global Institute for Motor Sport Safety, the FIA (Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile) continuously endeavours to improve existing racewear, as testified by the new safety standard it introduced for Formula 1 and the World Endurance Championship at the beginning of the 2020 season.
Fighting fire
But the peril all drivers fear the most is fire and, for this reason, flame-resistant race suits and underwear – made chiefly of Nomex – have been mandatory since the late 1960s .
Do not forget comfort
Although the primary purpose of race suits is to protect drivers from burns, they still need to be comfortable, especially in endurance racing where drivers spend up to four hours at a time behind the wheel. “It is important for race suits to be individually tailored to match your build,” says Alpine Elf Matmut Endurance Team driver Matthieu Vaxivière. “During a long stint, you really don’t want anything to hamper you. Even a poorly-stitched seam can prove highly uncomfortable.”
Our main concern is safety.