Kevin Magnussen was forced to scramble out of his car following an astonishing pit-lane fine during the morning practice session for the Malaysian Grand Prix.
Magnussen and his Renault team were the talk of the pit lane after the Danish driver's car caught fire following a fuel leak in the opening moments of the first 90-minute session.
As he was being wheeled back into his garage, fuel started spilling out of his Renault before it dramatically set alight. Magnussen, the former McLaren driver, launched his steering wheel out of the cockpit before leaping out of his car.
His Renault mechanics acted quickly to extinguish the flames and thankfully nobody was injured in the incident - but with fuel still pouring out of Magnussen's car, the fire continued to burn.
As such, the session was red-flagged with the Enstone-based team attempting to pump fuel out of the stricken Renault while repeatedly extinguishing the flames. The car and a section of the pit lane were subsequently covered in the foam used to eradicate the fire.
Unsurprisingly, Magnussen did not participate in any further running in the first practice session, but his Renault team performed an impressive clean-up job to enable him to complete 19 laps later in the day.
Renault believes a problem with a fuel breather was the cause of Magnussen’s fire during Free Practice 1 #FP1 #MalaysiaGP🇲🇾 pic.twitter.com/DUzHmKcSPB
— The Caution Clock ⚠️ (@CautionClock20) September 30, 2016
Lewis Hamilton [below] got his stuttering championship campaign back on track by posting the fastest time in practice.
Hamilton, who has fallen eight points adrift of his sole title rival Nico Rosberg after seeing his Mercedes team-mate romp to a hat-trick of consecutive victories, was one quarter of a second faster than the German at a sweltering Sepang International Circuit.
Rosberg topped the morning session but Hamilton, who failed to trouble the top of the practice order before suffering a crushing defeat to Rosberg last time out in Singapore, was the only driver to dip below the one minute and 35 second barrier on Friday.
The world champion's best time of one minute and 34.944 seconds saw him finish ahead of Rosberg with the Ferrari duo of Sebastian Vettel, a winner here last year, and Kimi Raikkonen third and fourth respectively, albeit more than half a second adrift of Hamilton.
Max Verstappen, who celebrated his 19th birthday on Friday, was fifth fastest for Red Bull with Force India's Sergio Perez sixth and Fernando Alonso, who is trialling an updated Honda engine this weekend, seventh in the order.
Jenson Button, who will become only the third driver in Formula One history to start 300 races, was 10th in the order, while British rookie Jolyon Palmer will be heartened by his performance after he finished 12th.