Overdrive

F1, reduced attention span, Jeep Wrangler Rubicon


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Overdrive: F1 tech, attention drift and the Jeep Wrangler Rubicon
Mercedes starts the 2026 Formula One season with a one-two in Melbourne, prompting a broader discussion about race-car complexity, driver workload and visibility. David Brown and Paul Murrell also cover cars on screen, faster EV charging, a tiny classic car selling for big money, and whether shrinking attention spans are making everyday driving worse. The episode finishes with a practical road test of the Jeep Wrangler Rubicon.
Episode Breakdown
F1 season opens with Mercedes — 00:01:02
Driver overload and visibility — 00:03:07
Cars in film and culture — 00:09:42
EV charging moves faster — 00:16:37
Tiny classic, huge price — 00:26:00
Are drivers losing focus? — 00:28:57
Jeep Wrangler Rubicon tested — 00:40:11
F1 season opens with Mercedes
George Russell leads Kimi Antonelli home for a Mercedes one-two at the Australian Grand Prix, ahead of Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton. The result opens a wider chat about how modern F1 cars load drivers with information, controls and constant feedback.
Brown and Murrell reflect on Oscar Piastri’s formation-lap crash and the reality that even the world’s most advanced cars can catch drivers out. They also touch on downforce, mirrors, cameras and the old racing art of finding an edge within the rules.
Driver overload and visibility
From F1, the discussion moves to the limits of attention. Murrell notes how much information elite drivers process at speed, while Brown questions whether more screens and warnings always help.
That leads neatly into road cars: camera mirrors, rearward vision and driver aids that can support safety but also add distraction. It is one of the episode’s strongest themes.
Cars in film and culture
A story about Hispano Suiza appearing in a Barcelona-set streaming drama sparks a lively detour into product placement. The pair compare movie cars that became icons with others that gained screen fame without commercial success.
The DeLorean, Mad Max Falcon, Monaro, Mini and Kingswood Country all get a run. Their broader point is that cars once carried more cultural aspiration than they do for many younger people today.
EV charging moves faster
Polestar’s updated 3 electric SUV brings quicker charging, more computing power and stronger specs, but the hosts wonder whether the market is already moving beyond it. Public charging access remains as important as headline recharge times.
That sets up BYD’s latest ultra-fast charging claims. Murrell sees the technology as a possible answer to range anxiety, while Brown notes how quickly EV development is making long product cycles look outdated.
Tiny classic, huge price
Murrell highlights the sale of a Peel P50 for an extraordinary figure, reviving the old question of what makes a classic valuable. Rarity, novelty and collector appeal clearly matter more than practicality.
The pair enjoy the absurdity of a tiny car with no reverse gear and barely any mass. It is a light segment, but it says a lot about classic-car culture.
Are drivers losing focus?
This is the feature segment: a thoughtful look at whether digital life is reducing attention spans and weakening driving standards. Murrell links phone use, GPS dependence and constant information flow to poorer focus and spatial awareness.
Brown broadens the issue to sleep, stress, work pressure and the design of in-car warnings. Their conclusion is clear: better driving now depends as much on managing distraction as on handling the vehicle.
Jeep Wrangler Rubicon tested
The Wrangler Rubicon is presented as a serious off-roader that has grown larger, dearer and more civilised, but still carries compromises. Brown finds it more usable in daily driving than expected, though wind and tyre noise remain part of the deal.
Murrell agrees it is still a niche buy, but one with real off-road credibility and a loyal following willing to forgive its rough edges. It remains an adventure machine first and a commuter second.
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OverdriveBy David Brown

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