The invention of vehicles, with at least four wheels, has dramatically influenced the historical development of Western civilization. A civilization without long-distance motor vehicles would yield a different architectural and urban expression. The most important movement phenomenon in the interior and the periphery of the cities that immediately depends on the intensive use of cars, is the operation of factories, peri-urban general warehouses, suburban districts, villages, communities, satellite cities. Inventive industrialist Henry T. Ford inspired the production line, where every employee, engineer and craftsman, was specialized in a detailed task—adding a part—to the car being formed, on the moving line. This innovative process formed the basic technical production background for the emerging automobile industry but also - more generally - for mass standardized optimal production in many other factories manufacturing domestic machines and components, the aeronautical industry and shipbuilding. With the daily use of thousands of cars, many traffic accidents occur. The need for a safer driving environment and the investigation-testing of multiple technical innovations for the safety of drivers was the main reason that component-system test races began to be organized at the natural speed limits. Human experience/exercise at the limits of speed was limited by the physical capabilities of man/animal. Engineers progressively created a number of early vehicles that, however, were not designed to achieve high speeds. The development of the car was based on achieving mechanical reliability/safety, not speed. Therefore the first races were endurance tests. The machine had to respond properly to high-speed safe movement in order to evolve into a shared, mass, reliable, new means of transportation. The attraction of new technology, and the public admiration, reliability and endurance contributed to the progressive formation of social reflexes linked to the cult of speed. One of the most important motor racing/regular technical testing events is the organized races called Formula1. The reason a significant number of people watch F1 races is not only to systematically watch the factory teams technically (safety, mechanics) develop the cars to gain a speed/racing behavior advantage, but also to watch the implementation/testing of new technologies / of innovations being developed.