$50K race car steering wheel even pours drinks

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It wouldn't be Formula 1 without some kind of constant friction between racers, team owners and organizers, and this year's kerfuffle involves steering wheels that force drivers to push more buttons than a 747 pilot having a seizure.
Image: Jalopnik Mercedes wheel
Here is the steering wheel of the McLaren Mercedes MP4-26, pictured during the launch of the new car at Potsdamer Platz on Feb. 4, 2011, in Berlin.Andreas Rentz / Bongarts / Getty Images

It wouldn't be Formula 1 without some kind of constant friction between racers, team owners and organizers, and this year's kerfuffle involves steering wheels that force drivers to push more buttons than a 747 pilot having a seizure.

Image: Jalopnik Ferrari wheel
A Ferrari technician holds the steering wheel of Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso of Spain during the first free practice at the Yas Marina racetrack , in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, Friday, Nov.12, 2010. The Emirates Formula One Grand Prix will take place on Sunday. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)Luca Bruno / AP

With the season's first race in Australia this weekend, drivers are still getting used to the layout required to handle the newest rule changes. Steering wheels of an F1 car are the only pieces of instrumentation inside the vehicle, and as safety and racing technology has advanced, they've become overgrown with controls.

Made from carbon fiber, each wheel can cost $50,000; they have to unlatch in less than five seconds for emergencies, and the weight-saving cutouts along the bottom are possible because they never turn more than 3/4ths of a circle from lock to lock.

Image: Jalopnik BMW wheel

Each F1 team has a different setup, but the basic layout is similar: Buttons and toggle switches control on-off functions, from this year's adjustable rear wing to engaging neutral gear. The dials can be used to vary torque, differentials, brakes, clutches, engine rev limits and anything else a team can dream up. The display on top relays shifting point alerts and messages from race managers, and if the drivers need to hydrate while in the cockpit, they can even control their in-helmet beverage system with the "drink" button.

The revival of the KERS hybrid system has also added a button and dial back to the controls — and FIA also allows the adjustable rear wing to be deployed only in certain places along the track.

That's led Lotus Renault driver Nick Heidfeld to say the wheels force drivers to "play piano" while racing, and that "the f***-up potential is extremely high."

To give an even clearer idea of how much distracted driving goes on in F1, here's a Ferrari video walking through its wheel for last season — absent the KERS system and the fussing over movable rear wings. Drivers association Chairman Sebastian Vettel has already suggested that unless FIA curbs the steering wheel sprawl, drivers could just hit the button labeled "strike."

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