Minus 20deg C is the sort of temperature at which it gets hard to breathe – let alone service a car. Yet this is exactly what rally mechanics are expected to do on the Arctic Rally Finland. The clue is in the name, with the service park located right next to the Arctic Circle and Santa Claus Village (the big man was even called on to present the prizes last weekend).

In the end, temperatures warmed up to just below zero for the rally: positively tropical under the circumstances. But at the test, it was closer to -20deg C and in the past it’s been as cold as -38, with a very real risk of hypothermia. The cars are adapted specifically to suit the extreme conditions – and so are the mechanics.

Keiron Bowness, M-Sport’s head event technician, explains that the Arctic Rally is probably the most challenging event of the year for the mechanics. “It gets to the point sometimes that you can’t physically complete a job, and somebody else has to take over,” he says. “When you can’t feel anything in your fingers, there’s no way to carry on. So everything takes a lot longer.”

Although the conditions are like nowhere else, the short time allocated for service remains the same: with entire gearboxes having to be replaced in a matter of minutes, for example. The mechanics wear thick thermal suits on top of their usual overalls, but while these are crucial for survival, they make the job harder.

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“It feels like you and everyone else is taking up so much more space than normal,” adds Bowness. “When there are several of you under the car, it gets really cramped. That can make it harder to work together, but on the whole everyone copes pretty well.”