Ecclestone, who got into hot water last year when he suggested Adolf Hitler was a man "who got things done", is by his own admission a dictator -- a man who does a deal on a handshake, has a fondness for the office shredder and an aversion to email and written contracts.
"I don't think democracy is the way to run anything," he said recently.
"Whether it's a company or anything, you need someone who is going to turn the lights on and off."
There is no obvious successor lined up for a ringmaster who went through a triple heart bypass in 1999 ("I recommend everybody has one," he said later) and was more recently divorced from his Croatian wife Slavica, who towered above him, after 26 years together.
"He's an extraordinary individual, when you think of an 80-year-old who is still rushing around in the way he is and the energy that he has," McLaren team principal Martin Whitmarsh told Reuters.
"He intends to be here in 10 years' time because this is his life, isn't it?
"He will be here until sadly he will be incapacitated by some force of nature. So that's very clear," added the Briton. "It's a bit like some performers who just can't stop and they've got to carry on and he's one of those people."
Whitmarsh said the lack of an heir apparent was not ideal but he also recognised it as a situation that was not going to change.
"Those of us who are still around, if we manage to survive, when he finally is no longer around will have to find a way to bring it together," he said.
"But he is not capable of either choosing, grooming or trusting a successor, frankly."
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