Thus the Brazilian became involved with notorious Andrea Sassetti and his eponymous team. Staff and some dilapidated equipment had come had come over from the Coloni squad Sassetti purchased, as well as the intellectual rights to an aborted BMW F1 car.
Despite having some of the basics in place, the team seemed barely able to make it to a race – not that it put Moreno off.
“I still had the willpower to be involved in Formula 1, basically,” he explains. “That was the first opportunity that showed up for me in ‘92.
“I got a call from a guy in Monaco that rented my apartment to me who said ‘Look there’s a team going to Brazil, you’re down there and the drivers [Alex Caffi and Enrico Bertaggia], they don’t want to drive for this guy anymore.
“I said ‘As long as he pays me on arrival immediately at every race, I’ll do it.’ Every round I saw Andrea [Sassetti] and he handed me an envelope full of cash, and I stayed for my job. It was as simple as that.”
Turning up in the Rio paddock for his first attempt at pre-qualifying, Moreno found a car and team quite literally in bits. The Brazilian had been tasked with getting the car to turn three laps, thus securing FIA approval to head on to the next race, whilst the other AM machine – driven by the hapless Perry McCarthy – was there “just for show” in Moreno’s words.
“They didn’t have much – just pieces of a new car and a bunch of good people trying to put all together,” he says.
“The [Nick Wirth-designed] Simtek was a definitely a well-designed car,” Moreno says. “The only problem was that it wasn’t designed for the Judd engine that went in it, so the cooling wasn’t effective – it couldn’t last more than six laps before overheating!”