Otherwise known as F1, it’s arguably the most demanding and dangerous motor racing. Or as F1 Racing magazine says, “the pinnacle.” F1 cars, sleek with narrow bodies and tall rear wings, highly engineered, incredibly expensive, are the fastest road course racing cars in the world, reaching speeds of up to 220 miles per hour. The machines look, sound and fly around twisting grand prix courses all over the globe like land-locked (barely) missiles. Grand prix racing dates back 110 years, to 1906. Today, the cost of designing and constructing one of these “road missiles” reaches upwards of $120 million. F1 had a total television audience of 425 million people during the 19-race 2014 season.