Pirelli, sole Formula 1 tyre supplier for the next three seasons, is colour-coding the ‘Pirelli’ and ‘PZero’ sidewall logos so that spectators can determine what compounds are being used.
The colours chosen are:
· Wet – Orange
· Intermediate – Light blue
· Supersoft – Red
· Soft – Yellow
· Medium – White
· Hard – Silver
At first sight, it appears that it’s going to be difficult to tell some of the types apart, with silver and white in particular being hard to distinguish.
However, the rules stipulate that only two compounds of dry weather tyre can be used at each round, designated ‘prime’ and ‘option’. Pirelli’s cunning plan is that there will always be at least one step between the different tyre specifications on offer.
So, that means all the teams will have a combination of either Medium (white) and Supersoft (red) rubber available to them, or - as is the case for the three opening events in Australia, Malaysia and China - Hard (silver) and Soft (yellow). That ploy should encourage some interesting strategic race decisions, as well as averting any potential identification problems.
As per last season, each driver must use both nominated types of dry tyre during a dry race in order to be included in the results. If a dry race is suspended following an incident and cannot be restarted, a 30 second penalty will be added to a driver’s time if only one variety was used.
Also available at every round of the championship will be the Wet (orange) and Intermediate (light blue) compounds, in case of rain.
Related posts:
Virgin reveals MVR-02
Team Lotus reveals T128
Ferrari F150 unveiled
Two Lotus teams in F1?
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Showing posts with label F1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label F1. Show all posts
Saturday, March 26, 2011
Monday, February 7, 2011
Virgin reveals MVR-02
Marussia Virgin Racing has unveiled its Formula 1 challenger for 2011.
After scoring zero points last season with the VR-01, naturally the team will be hoping for better things from its successor, the MVR-02. The addition of that ‘M’ to the name recognises that Russian sports car manufacturer Marussia Motors bought a large stake in the operation last November.
Virgin is sticking to Cosworth power for the MVR-02, but it hasn’t bothered installing a Kinetic Energy Recovery System (KERS). Wisely, the team recognises that there are bigger issues to address if it wants to slash a couple of seconds off its lap times and improve reliability.
Timo Glock remains as a driver for 2011, but Lucas di Grassi has been replaced by Belgian Jérôme d'Ambrosio.
After scoring zero points last season with the VR-01, naturally the team will be hoping for better things from its successor, the MVR-02. The addition of that ‘M’ to the name recognises that Russian sports car manufacturer Marussia Motors bought a large stake in the operation last November.
Virgin is sticking to Cosworth power for the MVR-02, but it hasn’t bothered installing a Kinetic Energy Recovery System (KERS). Wisely, the team recognises that there are bigger issues to address if it wants to slash a couple of seconds off its lap times and improve reliability.
Timo Glock remains as a driver for 2011, but Lucas di Grassi has been replaced by Belgian Jérôme d'Ambrosio.
Monday, January 31, 2011
Team Lotus reveals T128
Team Lotus - not to be confused with the Lotus Renault GP Team - has unveiled its 2011 Formula 1 car.
Even if that naming clash is still to be dragged through the courts, thankfully the team has decided not to swap last season’s green and yellow colour scheme for a gold and black one. At least that means spectators will be able to tell the numerous Lotuses apart.
The big changes are under the paintjob, though. Gone are 2010’s Cosworth engines, replaced by motors from Renault which have been combined with gearboxes and hydraulics systems courtesy of Red Bull Technologies.
Together with more aggressive aerodynamics and revised suspension, the Norfolk-based team seems confident that the improved package will be good enough to let drivers Heikki Kovalainen and Jarno Trulli score some points in 2011.
Mike Gascoyne, Chief Technical Officer, said: ‘I think that basically this car looks like a front-running car in every area. We said very clearly that we want to start challenging the established teams and I think that's very achievable.’ Fighting talk indeed.
Related post:
Two Lotus teams in F1?
Even if that naming clash is still to be dragged through the courts, thankfully the team has decided not to swap last season’s green and yellow colour scheme for a gold and black one. At least that means spectators will be able to tell the numerous Lotuses apart.
The big changes are under the paintjob, though. Gone are 2010’s Cosworth engines, replaced by motors from Renault which have been combined with gearboxes and hydraulics systems courtesy of Red Bull Technologies.
Together with more aggressive aerodynamics and revised suspension, the Norfolk-based team seems confident that the improved package will be good enough to let drivers Heikki Kovalainen and Jarno Trulli score some points in 2011.
Mike Gascoyne, Chief Technical Officer, said: ‘I think that basically this car looks like a front-running car in every area. We said very clearly that we want to start challenging the established teams and I think that's very achievable.’ Fighting talk indeed.
Related post:
Two Lotus teams in F1?
Friday, January 28, 2011
Ferrari F150 unveiled
Scuderia Ferrari has become the first Formula 1 team to reveal its 2011 car.
Unveiled at Maranello, Italy, Ferrari’s new challenger is named F150 to honour the 150th anniversary of the unification of Italy. Continuing the patriotic theme, it also sports a prominent Italian Tricolore on the rear wing.
Changes to the 2011 car, which has an internal code name of 662, have primarily been made to comply with this season’s revised FIA regulations. That means no double diffuser or blown rear wing, but KERS makes a return and the rear wing is now hydraulically adjustable. Other modifications are courtesy of stricter safety rules regarding cockpit protection, wheel retention and crash testing.
A continued ban on development means the Ferrari’s engine is largely unaltered, although work has been done to improve reliability. The team has also taken the opportunity to completely redesign the rear suspension and tweak that at the front, while the Brembo braking system has been totally revamped too.
But it’s not just those changes that need evaluating ahead of the first race in Bahrain, because there’s also the switch from Bridgestone to Pirelli tyres to factor in, plus Ferrari is saying that the aerodynamic package isn’t yet final. With only fifteen days of pre-season testing allowed, it should all make for a packed schedule.
Ferrari is expecting great things from the F150, especially after Fernando Alonso managed to lose the 2010 drivers’ championship to Sebastian Vettel by just four points, and the team ended up in third spot on the constructors’ table behind Red Bull and McLaren. Both team boss Stefano Domenicali and company president Luca Di Montezemolo are making it very clear that victory in 2011 is the only objective.
And finally, if you’re privileged to drive for one of the top-ranking teams in Formula 1 and you get invited to a nice event to launch a new car, then showing a bit of enthusiasm might be appropriate. Obviously not if your name is Alonso, who - judging by the pictures - was in full miserable git mode. Again.
Unveiled at Maranello, Italy, Ferrari’s new challenger is named F150 to honour the 150th anniversary of the unification of Italy. Continuing the patriotic theme, it also sports a prominent Italian Tricolore on the rear wing.
Changes to the 2011 car, which has an internal code name of 662, have primarily been made to comply with this season’s revised FIA regulations. That means no double diffuser or blown rear wing, but KERS makes a return and the rear wing is now hydraulically adjustable. Other modifications are courtesy of stricter safety rules regarding cockpit protection, wheel retention and crash testing.
A continued ban on development means the Ferrari’s engine is largely unaltered, although work has been done to improve reliability. The team has also taken the opportunity to completely redesign the rear suspension and tweak that at the front, while the Brembo braking system has been totally revamped too.
But it’s not just those changes that need evaluating ahead of the first race in Bahrain, because there’s also the switch from Bridgestone to Pirelli tyres to factor in, plus Ferrari is saying that the aerodynamic package isn’t yet final. With only fifteen days of pre-season testing allowed, it should all make for a packed schedule.
Ferrari is expecting great things from the F150, especially after Fernando Alonso managed to lose the 2010 drivers’ championship to Sebastian Vettel by just four points, and the team ended up in third spot on the constructors’ table behind Red Bull and McLaren. Both team boss Stefano Domenicali and company president Luca Di Montezemolo are making it very clear that victory in 2011 is the only objective.
And finally, if you’re privileged to drive for one of the top-ranking teams in Formula 1 and you get invited to a nice event to launch a new car, then showing a bit of enthusiasm might be appropriate. Obviously not if your name is Alonso, who - judging by the pictures - was in full miserable git mode. Again.
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| Somewhere else you'd rather be, Fernando? Check out that body language. |
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| Go on, give us a smile... |
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Two Lotus teams in F1?
The 2011 Formula 1 season could see the bizarre sight of two Lotus-branded teams on the grid.
Group Lotus - the Proton-owned manufacturer of Lotus road cars - has just bought a stake in the former Renault F1 Team, also becoming title sponsor in the process. The move coincides with Renault selling its share in the outfit, although the French firm will continue to supply engines to the newly renamed Lotus Renault GP Team.
A black and gold livery has been revealed too, which harks back to the cigarette-sponsored Lotus F1 cars of the 1970s and 1980s. It might look striking, but why the team would want to give free subliminal advertising to a tobacco company is anyone’s guess.
Confusingly Lotus Racing, which competed for the first time during 2010 but is nothing to do with Group Lotus, has already announced a couple of significant changes for next season: not only will it be switching from Cosworth to Renault power, but it will also be painting its cars black and gold. What a coincidence.
To make matters even more complicated Lotus Racing has, according to the official FIA 2011 Formula 1 entry list, now rebranded itself as Team Lotus and intends to race under the Lotus Renault name.
However, Group Lotus is claiming that Lotus Racing / Team Lotus / Lotus Renault (take your pick) was only using the Lotus moniker under licence this year, but that licence has now been revoked.
Consequently Team Lotus and Group Lotus are now involved in an escalating battle for the right to continue using the name. But with neither side looking likely to back down, the dispute will probably end up being resolved by the UK High Court sometime in the new year.
Group Lotus - the Proton-owned manufacturer of Lotus road cars - has just bought a stake in the former Renault F1 Team, also becoming title sponsor in the process. The move coincides with Renault selling its share in the outfit, although the French firm will continue to supply engines to the newly renamed Lotus Renault GP Team.
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| Lotus Renault GP Team - 2011 Livery |
A black and gold livery has been revealed too, which harks back to the cigarette-sponsored Lotus F1 cars of the 1970s and 1980s. It might look striking, but why the team would want to give free subliminal advertising to a tobacco company is anyone’s guess.
Confusingly Lotus Racing, which competed for the first time during 2010 but is nothing to do with Group Lotus, has already announced a couple of significant changes for next season: not only will it be switching from Cosworth to Renault power, but it will also be painting its cars black and gold. What a coincidence.
To make matters even more complicated Lotus Racing has, according to the official FIA 2011 Formula 1 entry list, now rebranded itself as Team Lotus and intends to race under the Lotus Renault name.
However, Group Lotus is claiming that Lotus Racing / Team Lotus / Lotus Renault (take your pick) was only using the Lotus moniker under licence this year, but that licence has now been revoked.
Consequently Team Lotus and Group Lotus are now involved in an escalating battle for the right to continue using the name. But with neither side looking likely to back down, the dispute will probably end up being resolved by the UK High Court sometime in the new year.
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
2010 South Korean GP
Following his victory at the Yeongam construction site, venue of the inaugural South Korean Formula 1 Grand Prix, Fernando Alonso is now set to win the 2010 drivers’ championship.
That’s if the odds currently being offered by UK online bookmakers are anything to go by. They all seem to have the moaning Spaniard as favourite.
Indeed, Alonso could secure the title at the next round, which is in Brazil, if he wins that race and nearest challenger Mark Webber finishes fifth or lower. Otherwise, the fight will go to the season’s final event in Abu Dhabi.
2010 Championship standings after the South Korean Formula 1 Grand Prix:
That’s if the odds currently being offered by UK online bookmakers are anything to go by. They all seem to have the moaning Spaniard as favourite.
Driver | Betfred | Paddy Power | Ladbrokes | 888 Sport |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fernando Alonso | 1/2 | 4/6 | 4/6 | 8/13 |
| Mark Webber | 9/4 | 2/1 | 2/1 | 15/8 |
| Lewis Hamilton | 12/1 | 10/1 | 8/1 | 10/1 |
| Sebastian Vettel | 16/1 | 11/1 | 12/1 | 12/1 |
| Jenson Button | 500/1 | N/A | 250/1 | 250/1 |
Indeed, Alonso could secure the title at the next round, which is in Brazil, if he wins that race and nearest challenger Mark Webber finishes fifth or lower. Otherwise, the fight will go to the season’s final event in Abu Dhabi.
2010 Championship standings after the South Korean Formula 1 Grand Prix:
Pos. | Driver | Team | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Fernando Alonso | Ferrari | 231 |
| 2 | Mark Webber | Red Bull-Renault | 220 |
| 3 | Lewis Hamilton | McLaren-Mercedes | 210 |
| 4 | Sebastian Vettel | Red Bull-Renault | 206 |
| 5 | Jenson Button | McLaren-Mercedes | 189 |
| 6 | Felipe Massa | Ferrari | 143 |
| 7 | Robert Kubica | Renault | 124 |
| 8 | Nico Rosberg | Mercedes GP | 122 |
| 9 | Michael Schumacher | Mercedes GP | 66 |
| 10 | Rubens Barrichello | Williams-Cosworth | 47 |
| 11 | Adrian Sutil | Force India-Mercedes | 47 |
| 12 | Kamui Kobayashi | BMW Sauber-Ferrari | 31 |
| 13 | Vitantonio Liuzzi | Force India-Mercedes | 21 |
| 14 | Vitaly Petrov | Renault | 19 |
| 15 | Nico Hulkenberg | Williams-Cosworth | 18 |
| 16 | Sebastien Buemi | Toro Rosso-Ferrari | 8 |
| 18 | Nick Heidfeld | BMW Sauber-Ferrari | 6 |
| 19 | Jaime Alguersuari | Toro Rosso-Ferrari | 3 |
| 20 | Heikki Kovalainen | Lotus-Cosworth | 0 |
| 21 | Jarno Trulli | Lotus-Cosworth | 0 |
| 22 | Bruno Senna | Hispania-Cosworth | 0 |
| 23 | Lucas di Grassi | Virgin-Cosworth | 0 |
| 24 | Karun Chandhok | Hispania-Cosworth | 0 |
| 25 | Timo Glock | Virgin-Cosworth | 0 |
| 26 | Sakon Yamamoto | Hispania-Cosworth | 0 |
| 27 | Christian Klien | Hispania-Cosworth | 0 |
Friday, September 10, 2010
2011 Formula 1 calendar
The 2011 Formula 1 season is going to be a busy one because, with the addition of India, there’ll be twenty races in the schedule.
Running from the middle of March to the end of November, Bahrain remains the opening event, although Brazil becomes the finale instead of Abu Dhabi.
The teams still get a month-long break in the summer between Hungary and Belgium, but the trade-off is that four races will take place the week after their preceding events.
As confirmed by the FIA World Motor Sport Council this week, the calendar is:
Running from the middle of March to the end of November, Bahrain remains the opening event, although Brazil becomes the finale instead of Abu Dhabi.
The teams still get a month-long break in the summer between Hungary and Belgium, but the trade-off is that four races will take place the week after their preceding events.
As confirmed by the FIA World Motor Sport Council this week, the calendar is:
Date | Race |
|---|---|
| 13 March | Bahrain |
| 27 March | Australia |
| 10 April | Malaysia |
| 17 April | China |
| 08 May | Turkey |
| 22 May | Spain |
| 29 May | Monaco |
| 12 June | Canada |
| 26 June | Europe |
| 10 July | Great Britain |
| 24 July | Germany |
| 31 July | Hungary |
| 28 August | Belgium |
| 11 September | Italy |
| 25 September | Singapore |
| 09 October | Japan |
| 16 October | Korea |
| 30 October | India |
| 13 November | Abu Dhabi |
| 27 November | Brazil |
Friday, September 3, 2010
Building F1 circuits
Will the inaugural South Korean Grand Prix actually take place on 24 October?
Construction of the Yeongam circuit, designed by Hermann Tilke, is still not yet finished. It should have had its FIA inspection by the end of July, as the regulations state that that should happen at least 90 days ahead of a venue’s first international event. That particular target has clearly been missed by some margin.
However, in order to help ensure the South Korean round remains on the 2010 Formula 1 calendar, the FIA has now decided to relax the rules by delaying its final inspection until 21 September. The organisers remain upbeat, saying the track is currently “90% complete”. Only 10% to go, then.
As a sign of progress, a Red Bull F1 car is due to complete a lap this weekend, driven by Karun Chandhok. Incidentally, his race seat at Hispania Racing now seems to be in jeopardy, because Sakon Yamamoto will almost certainly be contesting the season’s remaining races. The move is, allegedly, due to the personal sponsorship that the Japanese driver brings to the team.
Meanwhile, in Texas, the first details have emerged of the Austin circuit which will host the US Grand Prix from 2012. The 3.4 mile long lap has apparently been inspired by classic tracks, and features substantial elevation changes.
It’s another Tilke project so, as with Yeongam, fans will doubtless just be hoping that the tracks allow for decent racing and overtaking. That has definitely not been the case with some other of his designs, such as boring Bahrain and the dreadful Valencia street circuit.
Construction of the Yeongam circuit, designed by Hermann Tilke, is still not yet finished. It should have had its FIA inspection by the end of July, as the regulations state that that should happen at least 90 days ahead of a venue’s first international event. That particular target has clearly been missed by some margin.
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| Yeongam Circuit |
However, in order to help ensure the South Korean round remains on the 2010 Formula 1 calendar, the FIA has now decided to relax the rules by delaying its final inspection until 21 September. The organisers remain upbeat, saying the track is currently “90% complete”. Only 10% to go, then.
As a sign of progress, a Red Bull F1 car is due to complete a lap this weekend, driven by Karun Chandhok. Incidentally, his race seat at Hispania Racing now seems to be in jeopardy, because Sakon Yamamoto will almost certainly be contesting the season’s remaining races. The move is, allegedly, due to the personal sponsorship that the Japanese driver brings to the team.
Meanwhile, in Texas, the first details have emerged of the Austin circuit which will host the US Grand Prix from 2012. The 3.4 mile long lap has apparently been inspired by classic tracks, and features substantial elevation changes.
It’s another Tilke project so, as with Yeongam, fans will doubtless just be hoping that the tracks allow for decent racing and overtaking. That has definitely not been the case with some other of his designs, such as boring Bahrain and the dreadful Valencia street circuit.
Sunday, July 11, 2010
2010 British GP
Mark Webber deserved his British Grand Prix win, especially after the Red Bull team’s fiasco on Saturday. The strange decision, made just before qualifying, to take the new design of front wing off the Australian’s car and give it to team-mate Sebastian Vettel instead certainly caused trouble.
Webber’s "Not bad for a number two driver" radio message to team boss Christian Horner on the slowing down lap was especially telling. It seemed to be evidence of a growing tension in the team, something that has been brewing ever since the two Red Bulls had their infamous coming together during the Istanbul race.
Further proof was Vettel’s cryptic comments in a post-race interview, which suggested the ‘good fun happy family’ image of Red Bull is just a thin veneer that’s starting to crack in places. "Obviously I focus on myself and so does he I guess," said the German. "Especially after what happened in the past people have different opinions. I have opinions, I have my experiences and sometimes, good and bad, you get to know people a little better and see their true faces. So I think I have learned my lesson and focus on myself."
At least Red Bull managed to get both its cars into the points. Over at Ferrari, it was a disastrous afternoon at Silverstone. Fernando Alonso unsurprisingly seemed a bit miffed at the stewards’ decision to give him a drive-through penalty after he cut a corner to pass the Renault of Robert Kubica.
Arguably it was a harsh punishment, especially as Alonso didn’t really have anywhere else to go, and Kubica then retired soon after. The icing on the cake was that the penalty had to be served immediately after the Safety Car had been out, which meant most of the field could stream by as the Spaniard drove slowly down the pit lane.
But maybe Alonso should have let Kubica back through straight away after the incident, instead of getting on the radio to ask Ferrari to sort something out with the race officials? He certainly didn’t bother with the radio much after his drive-through, petulantly telling his team not to talk to him for the rest of the race. And he wasn’t in the mood for a chat afterwards, either, apparently being ‘too angry’ to be interviewed. A while later though Alonso had calmed down enough to say, allegedly without any hint of sarcasm, "What the stewards say is always right so I am not too upset." Yeah, right.
Conversely, McLaren managed to salvage a decent result from what could have been a race to forget. Jenson Button clawed his way up from fourteenth on the grid to an eventual fourth place, thanks to some decent early overtaking, retirements and a good pit stop strategy. Only a rumoured lack of fuel meant he couldn’t go on to challenge Nico Rosberg in his Mercedes for third place.
Team-mate Lewis Hamilton meanwhile secured second spot, benefiting from Vettel’s first lap puncture. He now leads the championship with 145 points, 12 ahead of Button in second.
Webber’s "Not bad for a number two driver" radio message to team boss Christian Horner on the slowing down lap was especially telling. It seemed to be evidence of a growing tension in the team, something that has been brewing ever since the two Red Bulls had their infamous coming together during the Istanbul race.
Further proof was Vettel’s cryptic comments in a post-race interview, which suggested the ‘good fun happy family’ image of Red Bull is just a thin veneer that’s starting to crack in places. "Obviously I focus on myself and so does he I guess," said the German. "Especially after what happened in the past people have different opinions. I have opinions, I have my experiences and sometimes, good and bad, you get to know people a little better and see their true faces. So I think I have learned my lesson and focus on myself."
At least Red Bull managed to get both its cars into the points. Over at Ferrari, it was a disastrous afternoon at Silverstone. Fernando Alonso unsurprisingly seemed a bit miffed at the stewards’ decision to give him a drive-through penalty after he cut a corner to pass the Renault of Robert Kubica.
Arguably it was a harsh punishment, especially as Alonso didn’t really have anywhere else to go, and Kubica then retired soon after. The icing on the cake was that the penalty had to be served immediately after the Safety Car had been out, which meant most of the field could stream by as the Spaniard drove slowly down the pit lane.
But maybe Alonso should have let Kubica back through straight away after the incident, instead of getting on the radio to ask Ferrari to sort something out with the race officials? He certainly didn’t bother with the radio much after his drive-through, petulantly telling his team not to talk to him for the rest of the race. And he wasn’t in the mood for a chat afterwards, either, apparently being ‘too angry’ to be interviewed. A while later though Alonso had calmed down enough to say, allegedly without any hint of sarcasm, "What the stewards say is always right so I am not too upset." Yeah, right.
Conversely, McLaren managed to salvage a decent result from what could have been a race to forget. Jenson Button clawed his way up from fourteenth on the grid to an eventual fourth place, thanks to some decent early overtaking, retirements and a good pit stop strategy. Only a rumoured lack of fuel meant he couldn’t go on to challenge Nico Rosberg in his Mercedes for third place.
Team-mate Lewis Hamilton meanwhile secured second spot, benefiting from Vettel’s first lap puncture. He now leads the championship with 145 points, 12 ahead of Button in second.
Monday, June 28, 2010
2010 European GP
Is it time to ditch Valencia from the Formula 1 calendar? The only interesting incidents during this weekend’s race were Mark Webber’s frightening crash (which thankfully he emerged unscathed from), Lewis Hamilton’s passing of the Safety Car (after which Fernando Alonso spent the rest of the afternoon on the radio whinging to his team), Kamui Kobayashi’s performance in his Sauber, and a stray bottle on the track.
Indeed, the excitement levels only mounted after the race, as everyone waited to see whether the race stewards would impose penalties on Jenson Button, Rubens Barrichello, Nico Hulkenberg, Robert Kubica, Vitaly Petrov, Adrian Sutil, Sebastien Buemi, Pedro de la Rosa and Vitantonio Liuzzi for going too quickly behind the Safety Car.
In the end, they were all each given a five second penalty, which hardly affected the standings: the moaning Alonso got promoted one place to eighth, while Nico Rosberg was awarded tenth place and a single point.
Yet again, the problem lies with the circuit layout, because it appears almost impossible to overtake. This was visibly demonstrated after the Safety Car returned to the pits. An out of place Kobayashi, who was running third (after he hadn’t bothered to stop for new tyres), headed a convoy of cars for lap after lap that made no real attempt to pass one another. That makes for a dull spectacle.
Ironically, two of the few passing manoeuvres during the race were later performed by Kobayashi after he eventually pitted. Exploiting the advantage of comparatively fresh tyres, he got by Alonso on the penultimate lap, and then overtook Buemi on the very last corner of the race.
Certainly Ferrari’s complaining isn’t doing them any favours. Yes, it was bad luck that Alonso ended up in ninth on the track after the Safety Car deployment, and the situation was even worse for Felipe Massa. But to claim that the result was in some way manipulated by the FIA against Ferrari is ridiculous, especially when many would argue that Ferrari has benefited from FIA decisions on several occasions in the past.
Indeed, the excitement levels only mounted after the race, as everyone waited to see whether the race stewards would impose penalties on Jenson Button, Rubens Barrichello, Nico Hulkenberg, Robert Kubica, Vitaly Petrov, Adrian Sutil, Sebastien Buemi, Pedro de la Rosa and Vitantonio Liuzzi for going too quickly behind the Safety Car.
In the end, they were all each given a five second penalty, which hardly affected the standings: the moaning Alonso got promoted one place to eighth, while Nico Rosberg was awarded tenth place and a single point.
Yet again, the problem lies with the circuit layout, because it appears almost impossible to overtake. This was visibly demonstrated after the Safety Car returned to the pits. An out of place Kobayashi, who was running third (after he hadn’t bothered to stop for new tyres), headed a convoy of cars for lap after lap that made no real attempt to pass one another. That makes for a dull spectacle.
Ironically, two of the few passing manoeuvres during the race were later performed by Kobayashi after he eventually pitted. Exploiting the advantage of comparatively fresh tyres, he got by Alonso on the penultimate lap, and then overtook Buemi on the very last corner of the race.
Certainly Ferrari’s complaining isn’t doing them any favours. Yes, it was bad luck that Alonso ended up in ninth on the track after the Safety Car deployment, and the situation was even worse for Felipe Massa. But to claim that the result was in some way manipulated by the FIA against Ferrari is ridiculous, especially when many would argue that Ferrari has benefited from FIA decisions on several occasions in the past.
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
FIA agrees F1 changes
Following today’s meeting of the FIA World Motor Sport Council, which took place in Geneva, several changes have been agreed for the 2011 Formula 1 season.
Pirelli has been named as sole tyre supplier, following Bridgestone’s decision to withdraw after the 2010 championship. The contract will run for a term of three years, the Italian firm being chosen over rivals Michelin and Cooper Avon. Perhaps, though, it would give the series an extra competitive element if multiple tyre providers were represented?
Of potential concern to Lotus Racing, HRT F1 Team and Virgin Racing (plus any more newcomers) is the reintroduction of the ‘107%’ rule for next year. Originally included in the regulations from 1996 to 2002, it seems the increasingly widening gap in pace between teams has prompted its return.
It will mean that any driver whose first qualifying session performance exceeds 107% of the fastest time will not be allowed to take part in the race. However, sensibly, the WMSC has decided that in exceptional circumstances - such as previously setting a decent lap time in free practice - the stewards may allow a car to start from the back of the grid. This safeguard will mean that top-level drivers who fail to complete first qualifying, as Fernando Alonso did when he crashed his Ferrari at Monaco earlier this season, will still be able to participate.
In yet another attempt to increase overtaking opportunities, cars will be fitted with driver-adjustable rear wings in 2011. Only available after two laps have been completed, a driver will have to be less than a second behind a competitor at one of the pre-determined points around the circuit if he wants to use the system, which then becomes disabled when the brakes are used. Adjustable front wings, devices such as McLaren’s ‘F-duct’ and anything else that allows drivers to change the aerodynamics of their cars will be banned.
Away from F1, the WMSC also agreed that the name of the co-driver will now be displayed alongside that of the driver on the rear side windows of cars competing in the World Rally Championship. The ruling also applies to the FIA Regional Rally Championships, and comes into force with immediate effect. It seems only fair, because without their co-driver calling out the pace notes, a rally driver might as well get out and walk.
Pirelli has been named as sole tyre supplier, following Bridgestone’s decision to withdraw after the 2010 championship. The contract will run for a term of three years, the Italian firm being chosen over rivals Michelin and Cooper Avon. Perhaps, though, it would give the series an extra competitive element if multiple tyre providers were represented?
Of potential concern to Lotus Racing, HRT F1 Team and Virgin Racing (plus any more newcomers) is the reintroduction of the ‘107%’ rule for next year. Originally included in the regulations from 1996 to 2002, it seems the increasingly widening gap in pace between teams has prompted its return.
It will mean that any driver whose first qualifying session performance exceeds 107% of the fastest time will not be allowed to take part in the race. However, sensibly, the WMSC has decided that in exceptional circumstances - such as previously setting a decent lap time in free practice - the stewards may allow a car to start from the back of the grid. This safeguard will mean that top-level drivers who fail to complete first qualifying, as Fernando Alonso did when he crashed his Ferrari at Monaco earlier this season, will still be able to participate.
In yet another attempt to increase overtaking opportunities, cars will be fitted with driver-adjustable rear wings in 2011. Only available after two laps have been completed, a driver will have to be less than a second behind a competitor at one of the pre-determined points around the circuit if he wants to use the system, which then becomes disabled when the brakes are used. Adjustable front wings, devices such as McLaren’s ‘F-duct’ and anything else that allows drivers to change the aerodynamics of their cars will be banned.
Away from F1, the WMSC also agreed that the name of the co-driver will now be displayed alongside that of the driver on the rear side windows of cars competing in the World Rally Championship. The ruling also applies to the FIA Regional Rally Championships, and comes into force with immediate effect. It seems only fair, because without their co-driver calling out the pace notes, a rally driver might as well get out and walk.
Monday, May 10, 2010
2010 Spanish GP
Exciting, thrilling and breathtaking. All words that couldn’t really be used to describe this weekend’s Spanish Formula 1 Grand Prix.
Once again the Circuit de Catalunya served up a rather processional race, which Mark Webber effectively lead from start to finish in his Red Bull. For some reason F1 cars find it almost impossible to overtake at the track, with the main opportunity being the entry into turn one after the long start/finish straight. However, sometimes even that doesn’t work, as Jenson Button demonstrated in his numerous failed attempts to pass the Mercedes of an on-form Michael Schumacher.
The main on-track interest came in the closing laps, when Lewis Hamilton’s McLaren suffered a puncture on its left front tyre, and Sebastian Vettel’s Red Bull experienced brake issues. Hamilton had to retire from second place when his car ended up in the barrier, while Vettel managed to limp the Red Bull home to third. The beneficiary was Fernando Alonso in his Ferrari, who ended up in second spot.
With four different winners from five races, at least it means that the championship is still wide open. Button is holding onto a slim lead for now, but with 25 points available for a win, things could change very quickly:
Pos. Driver / Team / Points
1 Jenson Button / McLaren-Mercedes / 70
2 Fernando Alonso / Ferrari / 67
3 Sebastian Vettel / Red Bull-Renault / 60
4 Mark Webber / Red Bull-Renault / 53
5 Nico Rosberg / Mercedes GP / 50
6 Lewis Hamilton / McLaren-Mercedes / 49
7 Felipe Massa / Ferrari / 49
8 Robert Kubica / Renault / 44
9 Michael Schumacher / Mercedes GP / 22
10 Adrian Sutil / Force India-Mercedes / 16
11 Vitantonio Liuzzi / Force India-Mercedes / 8
12 Rubens Barrichello / Williams-Cosworth / 7
13 Vitaly Petrov / Renault / 6
14 Jaime Alguersuari / Toro Rosso-Ferrari / 3
15 Nico Hulkenberg / Williams-Cosworth / 1
16 Sebastien Buemi / Toro Rosso-Ferrari / 0
17 Pedro de la Rosa / BMW Sauber-Ferrari / 0
18 Kamui Kobayashi / BMW Sauber-Ferrari / 0
19 Heikki Kovalainen / Lotus-Cosworth / 0
20 Karun Chandhok / Hispania-Cosworth / 0
21 Lucas di Grassi / Virgin-Cosworth / 0
22 Bruno Senna / Hispania-Cosworth / 0
23 Jarno Trulli / Lotus-Cosworth / 0
24 Timo Glock / Virgin-Cosworth / 0
Once again the Circuit de Catalunya served up a rather processional race, which Mark Webber effectively lead from start to finish in his Red Bull. For some reason F1 cars find it almost impossible to overtake at the track, with the main opportunity being the entry into turn one after the long start/finish straight. However, sometimes even that doesn’t work, as Jenson Button demonstrated in his numerous failed attempts to pass the Mercedes of an on-form Michael Schumacher.
The main on-track interest came in the closing laps, when Lewis Hamilton’s McLaren suffered a puncture on its left front tyre, and Sebastian Vettel’s Red Bull experienced brake issues. Hamilton had to retire from second place when his car ended up in the barrier, while Vettel managed to limp the Red Bull home to third. The beneficiary was Fernando Alonso in his Ferrari, who ended up in second spot.
With four different winners from five races, at least it means that the championship is still wide open. Button is holding onto a slim lead for now, but with 25 points available for a win, things could change very quickly:
Pos. Driver / Team / Points
1 Jenson Button / McLaren-Mercedes / 70
2 Fernando Alonso / Ferrari / 67
3 Sebastian Vettel / Red Bull-Renault / 60
4 Mark Webber / Red Bull-Renault / 53
5 Nico Rosberg / Mercedes GP / 50
6 Lewis Hamilton / McLaren-Mercedes / 49
7 Felipe Massa / Ferrari / 49
8 Robert Kubica / Renault / 44
9 Michael Schumacher / Mercedes GP / 22
10 Adrian Sutil / Force India-Mercedes / 16
11 Vitantonio Liuzzi / Force India-Mercedes / 8
12 Rubens Barrichello / Williams-Cosworth / 7
13 Vitaly Petrov / Renault / 6
14 Jaime Alguersuari / Toro Rosso-Ferrari / 3
15 Nico Hulkenberg / Williams-Cosworth / 1
16 Sebastien Buemi / Toro Rosso-Ferrari / 0
17 Pedro de la Rosa / BMW Sauber-Ferrari / 0
18 Kamui Kobayashi / BMW Sauber-Ferrari / 0
19 Heikki Kovalainen / Lotus-Cosworth / 0
20 Karun Chandhok / Hispania-Cosworth / 0
21 Lucas di Grassi / Virgin-Cosworth / 0
22 Bruno Senna / Hispania-Cosworth / 0
23 Jarno Trulli / Lotus-Cosworth / 0
24 Timo Glock / Virgin-Cosworth / 0
Sunday, April 4, 2010
2010 Malaysian GP
Sebastian Vettel finally got rid of his reliability gremlins in Malaysia, allowing him to lead Mark Webber to a dominant Red Bull one-two.
So assured was their race, they barely featured in the television coverage. Not much was seen either of third-placed Nico Rosberg, who had a lonely run but managed to secure a first podium for Mercedes GP. That was in contrast to his team mate Michael Schumacher, who had to retire on lap eight after his car encountered rear suspension problems. His disappointing results continue, then.
As expected, most of the action centred on the McLarens and Ferraris as they fought their way through the field following disastrous qualifying sessions. Most impressive were Lewis Hamilton and Felipe Massa, who both made up fourteen places to finish sixth and seventh respectively.
Hamilton might have finished even further up the order, but after the pit stops he just couldn’t pass Adrian Sutil. Despite the trick vent system on the McLaren, which is designed to increase top speed by limiting air flow to the rear wing, Sutil in his similarly-engined Force India was able to keep Hamilton at bay, even on the long straights of Sepang.
Massa’s consistency meanwhile means he now leads the drivers’ championship. The new points system is making things very close as, going into the Chinese round in two weeks, only nine points separate the top seven drivers.
Championship standings after the Malaysian Grand Prix:
Driver / Team / Points
1 Felipe Massa / Ferrari / 39
2 Fernando Alonso / Ferrari / 37
3 Sebastian Vettel / Red Bull-Renault / 37
4 Jenson Button / McLaren-Mercedes / 35
5 Nico Rosberg / Mercedes GP / 35
6 Lewis Hamilton / McLaren-Mercedes / 31
7 Robert Kubica / Renault / 30
8 Mark Webber / Red Bull-Renault / 24
9 Adrian Sutil / Force India-Mercedes / 10
10 Michael Schumacher / Mercedes GP / 9
11 Vitantonio Liuzzi / Force India-Mercedes / 8
12 Rubens Barrichello / Williams-Cosworth / 5
13 Jaime Alguersuari / Toro Rosso-Ferrari / 2
14 Nico Hulkenberg / Williams-Cosworth / 1
15 Sebastien Buemi / Toro Rosso-Ferrari / 0
16 Pedro de la Rosa / BMW Sauber-Ferrari / 0
17 Heikki Kovalainen / Lotus-Cosworth / 0
18 Karun Chandhok / Hispania-Cosworth / 0
19 Lucas di Grassi / Virgin-Cosworth / 0
20 Bruno Senna / Hispania-Cosworth / 0
21 Jarno Trulli / Lotus-Cosworth / 0
22 Timo Glock / Virgin-Cosworth / 0
23 Vitaly Petrov / Renault / 0
24 Kamui Kobayashi / BMW Sauber-Ferrari / 0
So assured was their race, they barely featured in the television coverage. Not much was seen either of third-placed Nico Rosberg, who had a lonely run but managed to secure a first podium for Mercedes GP. That was in contrast to his team mate Michael Schumacher, who had to retire on lap eight after his car encountered rear suspension problems. His disappointing results continue, then.
As expected, most of the action centred on the McLarens and Ferraris as they fought their way through the field following disastrous qualifying sessions. Most impressive were Lewis Hamilton and Felipe Massa, who both made up fourteen places to finish sixth and seventh respectively.
Hamilton might have finished even further up the order, but after the pit stops he just couldn’t pass Adrian Sutil. Despite the trick vent system on the McLaren, which is designed to increase top speed by limiting air flow to the rear wing, Sutil in his similarly-engined Force India was able to keep Hamilton at bay, even on the long straights of Sepang.
Massa’s consistency meanwhile means he now leads the drivers’ championship. The new points system is making things very close as, going into the Chinese round in two weeks, only nine points separate the top seven drivers.
Championship standings after the Malaysian Grand Prix:
Driver / Team / Points
1 Felipe Massa / Ferrari / 39
2 Fernando Alonso / Ferrari / 37
3 Sebastian Vettel / Red Bull-Renault / 37
4 Jenson Button / McLaren-Mercedes / 35
5 Nico Rosberg / Mercedes GP / 35
6 Lewis Hamilton / McLaren-Mercedes / 31
7 Robert Kubica / Renault / 30
8 Mark Webber / Red Bull-Renault / 24
9 Adrian Sutil / Force India-Mercedes / 10
10 Michael Schumacher / Mercedes GP / 9
11 Vitantonio Liuzzi / Force India-Mercedes / 8
12 Rubens Barrichello / Williams-Cosworth / 5
13 Jaime Alguersuari / Toro Rosso-Ferrari / 2
14 Nico Hulkenberg / Williams-Cosworth / 1
15 Sebastien Buemi / Toro Rosso-Ferrari / 0
16 Pedro de la Rosa / BMW Sauber-Ferrari / 0
17 Heikki Kovalainen / Lotus-Cosworth / 0
18 Karun Chandhok / Hispania-Cosworth / 0
19 Lucas di Grassi / Virgin-Cosworth / 0
20 Bruno Senna / Hispania-Cosworth / 0
21 Jarno Trulli / Lotus-Cosworth / 0
22 Timo Glock / Virgin-Cosworth / 0
23 Vitaly Petrov / Renault / 0
24 Kamui Kobayashi / BMW Sauber-Ferrari / 0
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Hamilton a 'dickhead'
Lewis Hamilton will probably just want to forget his Australian Grand Prix weekend.
First of all, he got nicked by the rozzers on Friday for ‘improper use of a motor vehicle’ after they saw him wheel-spinning his Mercedes-Benz road car, which was then promptly impounded.
He was then outclassed by McLaren team mate Jenson Button in both qualifying and the race itself, Hamilton ending up in sixth place and clearly frustrated. Afterwards, he decided to publicly criticise the team’s tactics. Realising that was never going to make him very popular, Hamilton has since done some diplomatic back-peddling to smooth things over, saying he now ‘understands’ the decision to bring him in for a second pit stop.
But the icing on the cake has been the comments made by Tim Pallas, the Minister for Roads and Ports in the Australian state of Victoria. Launching his ‘Don’t Be A Dickhead’ road safety campaign on Monday, the day after the Grand Prix, Pallas was asked whether Hamilton would fit into that category. Pallas admitted, "OK, I'll say it. He's a dickhead" before going onto claim that Hamilton’s actions had “put people’s lives at risk”. Really?
Aussie driver Mark Webber swiftly came to Hamilton’s defence, saying his country had become a “nanny state” with ridiculous driving rules. Pallas thought Webber irresponsible for making those remarks, but confirmed he definitely isn’t another dickhead.
Perhaps the real dickheads in the Hamilton ‘improper use’ saga were the two McLaren flunkies who tried to shield both Hamilton and his Mercedes-Benz from being filmed after the police stop. One of these guys seemed to believe he could achieve that by holding open his brown jacket, without looking like a total prat. The irony is he’ll probably be strung up for daring to wear a non-regulation piece of clothing with his McLaren uniform. Rumour is the team’s very strict on that sort of thing.
First of all, he got nicked by the rozzers on Friday for ‘improper use of a motor vehicle’ after they saw him wheel-spinning his Mercedes-Benz road car, which was then promptly impounded.
He was then outclassed by McLaren team mate Jenson Button in both qualifying and the race itself, Hamilton ending up in sixth place and clearly frustrated. Afterwards, he decided to publicly criticise the team’s tactics. Realising that was never going to make him very popular, Hamilton has since done some diplomatic back-peddling to smooth things over, saying he now ‘understands’ the decision to bring him in for a second pit stop.
But the icing on the cake has been the comments made by Tim Pallas, the Minister for Roads and Ports in the Australian state of Victoria. Launching his ‘Don’t Be A Dickhead’ road safety campaign on Monday, the day after the Grand Prix, Pallas was asked whether Hamilton would fit into that category. Pallas admitted, "OK, I'll say it. He's a dickhead" before going onto claim that Hamilton’s actions had “put people’s lives at risk”. Really?
Aussie driver Mark Webber swiftly came to Hamilton’s defence, saying his country had become a “nanny state” with ridiculous driving rules. Pallas thought Webber irresponsible for making those remarks, but confirmed he definitely isn’t another dickhead.
Perhaps the real dickheads in the Hamilton ‘improper use’ saga were the two McLaren flunkies who tried to shield both Hamilton and his Mercedes-Benz from being filmed after the police stop. One of these guys seemed to believe he could achieve that by holding open his brown jacket, without looking like a total prat. The irony is he’ll probably be strung up for daring to wear a non-regulation piece of clothing with his McLaren uniform. Rumour is the team’s very strict on that sort of thing.
Sunday, March 28, 2010
2010 Australian GP
What a difference two weeks make. After the yawn-fest that was the Bahrain Grand Prix, the Australian event had excitement from start to finish. Drivers were even managing to overtake each other.
It just goes to show that you don’t have to spend $150 million on a sterile Hermann Tilke creation to get a decent race… just run the track through your local car park instead.
Jenson Button’s win was definitely helped by his bold decision to stop early and swap his wet weather inter tyres for slicks. His smooth driving style then meant he could make those tyres last until the end, without needing to change again.
By contrast, Button’s team mate Lewis Hamilton did have to use another set of dry tyres. But those too began to degrade towards the end and, although he caught the fourth and third place Ferraris of Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa, he was unable to pass them.
Hamilton was very public in his criticism of McLaren’s decision to bring him (but not Button) in again for new tyres. It was extraordinary, especially as during the closing stages he was heard complaining over the radio that even his second lot of dry tyres had gone off. That surely just proved that Hamilton was heavier on his tyres.
Either way, he was riled. It’s got to be hurting him psychologically that Button secured McLaren’s first victory this season.
After a first lap spin, Alonso’s drive from the back of the field was impressive, scything through with apparent ease. However, like Hamilton, he then seemed to reach a point where he couldn’t overtake anymore and he had to be content with fourth place, finishing just behind Massa.
Compare Alonso’s performance with that of Michael Schumacher. The Mercedes driver was also sent to the back after an opening lap bump meant his car’s front wing needed replacing. However, he seemed to struggle to overtake mid-ranking cars such as the Torro Rosso of Jaime Alguersuari.
Schumacher eventually finished in tenth place, gaining a single point, but it’s debatable whether this has been the glorious return to Formula 1 he was envisaging.
Sandwiched between Button and the Ferraris was Robert Kubica in his Renault. He managed to hold onto a tremendous second place, nursing his tyres to the end despite being under constant pressure.
Red Bull should consider its weekend a disaster. The promise of a win was there following a dominant qualifying performance by Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber.
Things started going downhill when both drivers stayed out too long on their inter tyres with a drying track. Neither was going significantly slower than those cars already on slicks, but it resulted in Webber getting caught up in the pit lane traffic, dropping him several places.
Of course, the lowest point for Red Bull was Vettel’s brake failure on lap 25. It dumped him into the gravel trap and out of a race that he’d been leading since the start. Two races, two technical faults… not good.
Webber eventually finished in ninth, earning a reprimand from the stewards after he collided with Hamilton during the closing phase. His only consolation was setting the fastest lap.
Bernie Ecclestone is probably breathing a sigh of relief that Australia addressed many of the criticisms levelled at Formula 1 after Bahrain. Maybe he’s also thinking that a more interesting track should host the opening round in 2011?
Going into next weekend’s Malaysian Grand Prix, Alonso retains his lead in the championship with 37 points, followed by Massa and Button on 33 and 31 points respectively. Fans might just be wishing for a repeat of last year’s torrential rainfall at Sepang if it makes for another thrilling race.
It just goes to show that you don’t have to spend $150 million on a sterile Hermann Tilke creation to get a decent race… just run the track through your local car park instead.
Jenson Button’s win was definitely helped by his bold decision to stop early and swap his wet weather inter tyres for slicks. His smooth driving style then meant he could make those tyres last until the end, without needing to change again.
By contrast, Button’s team mate Lewis Hamilton did have to use another set of dry tyres. But those too began to degrade towards the end and, although he caught the fourth and third place Ferraris of Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa, he was unable to pass them.
Hamilton was very public in his criticism of McLaren’s decision to bring him (but not Button) in again for new tyres. It was extraordinary, especially as during the closing stages he was heard complaining over the radio that even his second lot of dry tyres had gone off. That surely just proved that Hamilton was heavier on his tyres.
Either way, he was riled. It’s got to be hurting him psychologically that Button secured McLaren’s first victory this season.
After a first lap spin, Alonso’s drive from the back of the field was impressive, scything through with apparent ease. However, like Hamilton, he then seemed to reach a point where he couldn’t overtake anymore and he had to be content with fourth place, finishing just behind Massa.
Compare Alonso’s performance with that of Michael Schumacher. The Mercedes driver was also sent to the back after an opening lap bump meant his car’s front wing needed replacing. However, he seemed to struggle to overtake mid-ranking cars such as the Torro Rosso of Jaime Alguersuari.
Schumacher eventually finished in tenth place, gaining a single point, but it’s debatable whether this has been the glorious return to Formula 1 he was envisaging.
Sandwiched between Button and the Ferraris was Robert Kubica in his Renault. He managed to hold onto a tremendous second place, nursing his tyres to the end despite being under constant pressure.
Red Bull should consider its weekend a disaster. The promise of a win was there following a dominant qualifying performance by Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber.
Things started going downhill when both drivers stayed out too long on their inter tyres with a drying track. Neither was going significantly slower than those cars already on slicks, but it resulted in Webber getting caught up in the pit lane traffic, dropping him several places.
Of course, the lowest point for Red Bull was Vettel’s brake failure on lap 25. It dumped him into the gravel trap and out of a race that he’d been leading since the start. Two races, two technical faults… not good.
Webber eventually finished in ninth, earning a reprimand from the stewards after he collided with Hamilton during the closing phase. His only consolation was setting the fastest lap.
Bernie Ecclestone is probably breathing a sigh of relief that Australia addressed many of the criticisms levelled at Formula 1 after Bahrain. Maybe he’s also thinking that a more interesting track should host the opening round in 2011?
Going into next weekend’s Malaysian Grand Prix, Alonso retains his lead in the championship with 37 points, followed by Massa and Button on 33 and 31 points respectively. Fans might just be wishing for a repeat of last year’s torrential rainfall at Sepang if it makes for another thrilling race.
Sunday, March 14, 2010
2010 Bahrain GP
Beware samples of one, but the opening Grand Prix of 2010 didn’t bode particularly well for the new Formula 1 regulations.
The revised pit-stop rules - tyres have to be changed during the race, but no refuelling is allowed - seem to have resulted in drivers being more concerned with tyre preservation, rather than battling to get up the running order (something the new points system is supposed to encourage).
Most cars came into the pits fairly early on, resulting in an especially dull middle section of the race as drivers made sure they wouldn’t need to make a second stop.
It may have been the Sakhir circuit, or it may have been the cars’ delicate aerodynamics, but the other problem was that overtaking appeared impossible.
Indeed, apart from the first few corners of the first lap, and Sebastian Vettel’s enforced drop from the lead to fourth after his exhaust problems, was there any on-track overtaking at all amongst the top eight runners?
This situation was ably illustrated by eventual winner Alonso. Even before Vettel had his issues, the Spaniard was able to catch him, only to have to immediately back off or move out of the Red Bull’s slipstream to restore down force and / or get cooler air onto his Ferrari’s engine to prevent it overheating.
Let’s hope Bahrain won’t be typical of the season and the next round in Melbourne, on 28 March, provides a more exciting spectacle.
On a more positive note, it was good to see Felipe Massa back racing - and getting on the podium - after his nasty accident last year.
Bahrain Grand Prix result:
1 Fernando Alonso / Ferrari / 25 points
2 Felipe Massa / Ferrari / 18 points
3 Lewis Hamilton / McLaren-Mercedes / 15 points
4 Sebastian Vettel / Red Bull-Renault / 12 points
5 Nico Rosberg / Mercedes GP / 10 points
6 Michael Schumacher / Mercedes GP / 8 points
7 Jenson Button / McLaren-Mercedes / 6 points
8 Mark Webber / Red Bull-Renault / 4 points
9 Vitantonio Liuzzi / Force India-Mercedes / 2 points
10 Rubens Barrichello / Williams-Bosworth / 1 point
11 Robert Kubica / Renault
12 Adrian Sutil / Force India-Mercedes
13 Jaime Alguersuari / Toro Rosso-Ferrari
14 Nico Hullender / Williams-Cosworth
15 Heikki Kovalainen / Lotus F1
16 Sebastien Buemi / Toro Rosso-Ferrari
17 Jarno Trulli / Lotus F1
18 Pedro de la Rosa / BMW Sauber (Retired)
19 Bruno Senna / Hispania Racing F1 (Retired)
20 Timo Glock / Virgin Racing (Retired)
21 Vitaly Petrov / Renault (Retired)
22 Kamui Kobayashi / BMW Sauber (Retired)
23 Lucas di Grassi / Virgin Racing (Retired)
24 Karun Chandhok / Hispania Racing F1 (Retired)
The revised pit-stop rules - tyres have to be changed during the race, but no refuelling is allowed - seem to have resulted in drivers being more concerned with tyre preservation, rather than battling to get up the running order (something the new points system is supposed to encourage).
Most cars came into the pits fairly early on, resulting in an especially dull middle section of the race as drivers made sure they wouldn’t need to make a second stop.
It may have been the Sakhir circuit, or it may have been the cars’ delicate aerodynamics, but the other problem was that overtaking appeared impossible.
Indeed, apart from the first few corners of the first lap, and Sebastian Vettel’s enforced drop from the lead to fourth after his exhaust problems, was there any on-track overtaking at all amongst the top eight runners?
This situation was ably illustrated by eventual winner Alonso. Even before Vettel had his issues, the Spaniard was able to catch him, only to have to immediately back off or move out of the Red Bull’s slipstream to restore down force and / or get cooler air onto his Ferrari’s engine to prevent it overheating.
Let’s hope Bahrain won’t be typical of the season and the next round in Melbourne, on 28 March, provides a more exciting spectacle.
On a more positive note, it was good to see Felipe Massa back racing - and getting on the podium - after his nasty accident last year.
Bahrain Grand Prix result:
1 Fernando Alonso / Ferrari / 25 points
2 Felipe Massa / Ferrari / 18 points
3 Lewis Hamilton / McLaren-Mercedes / 15 points
4 Sebastian Vettel / Red Bull-Renault / 12 points
5 Nico Rosberg / Mercedes GP / 10 points
6 Michael Schumacher / Mercedes GP / 8 points
7 Jenson Button / McLaren-Mercedes / 6 points
8 Mark Webber / Red Bull-Renault / 4 points
9 Vitantonio Liuzzi / Force India-Mercedes / 2 points
10 Rubens Barrichello / Williams-Bosworth / 1 point
11 Robert Kubica / Renault
12 Adrian Sutil / Force India-Mercedes
13 Jaime Alguersuari / Toro Rosso-Ferrari
14 Nico Hullender / Williams-Cosworth
15 Heikki Kovalainen / Lotus F1
16 Sebastien Buemi / Toro Rosso-Ferrari
17 Jarno Trulli / Lotus F1
18 Pedro de la Rosa / BMW Sauber (Retired)
19 Bruno Senna / Hispania Racing F1 (Retired)
20 Timo Glock / Virgin Racing (Retired)
21 Vitaly Petrov / Renault (Retired)
22 Kamui Kobayashi / BMW Sauber (Retired)
23 Lucas di Grassi / Virgin Racing (Retired)
24 Karun Chandhok / Hispania Racing F1 (Retired)
Friday, March 12, 2010
Should Chandhok race?
HRT driver Karun Chandhok was unable to participate in either of the Friday practice sessions for the Bahrain Grand Prix, after mechanics couldn’t get his car going.
That means the rookie will now get to drive his car for the very first time during Saturday’s free practice, which takes place just before qualifying. He’ll be on a very steep learning curve.
Although it’s sometimes difficult to take too much from Friday practice times, Chandhok’s HRT team mate Bruno Senna was over eleven seconds down on the best lap time, set by Nico Rosberg in the Mercedes. If that pace difference continues into the race, it seems there could be a couple of mobile chicanes for the front runners to contend with.
That means the rookie will now get to drive his car for the very first time during Saturday’s free practice, which takes place just before qualifying. He’ll be on a very steep learning curve.
Although it’s sometimes difficult to take too much from Friday practice times, Chandhok’s HRT team mate Bruno Senna was over eleven seconds down on the best lap time, set by Nico Rosberg in the Mercedes. If that pace difference continues into the race, it seems there could be a couple of mobile chicanes for the front runners to contend with.
Friday, March 5, 2010
SLS AMG pace car
After two seasons, the Mercedes-Benz SL 63 AMG is being retired as the F1 Safety Car.
Its replacement is the 571 bhp SLS AMG, powered by a 6.3 litre V8 engine and capable of accelerating from zero to 100 km/h in 3.8 seconds.
Characterised by its gull-wing doors, the SLS AMG has an aluminium spaceframe body that keeps its weight down to just 1620 kg. The F1 Safety Car version will have exactly the same engine, seven speed double-clutch transmission and suspension as the production SLS AMG. The only technical difference is a new rear silencer, mainly to produce a bit more noise.
Visually, the F1 Safety Car is distinguished by prominent graphics, carbon fibre door mirrors and an LED roof-mounted light bar, which incorporates a TV camera.
There’s also a second camera, mounted next to the rear number plate. That’s so FIA representative Pete Tibbetts, who will sit alongside SLS AMG driver Bernd Maylander, can keep an eye on the following F1 cars via an in-cockpit monitor.
It would be cruel to suggest that some of the cars and drivers on the F1 grid this year might struggle to keep up with the new 2010 pace car...
The road-going version of the SLS AMG is available in the UK for £157,500.
Its replacement is the 571 bhp SLS AMG, powered by a 6.3 litre V8 engine and capable of accelerating from zero to 100 km/h in 3.8 seconds.
Characterised by its gull-wing doors, the SLS AMG has an aluminium spaceframe body that keeps its weight down to just 1620 kg. The F1 Safety Car version will have exactly the same engine, seven speed double-clutch transmission and suspension as the production SLS AMG. The only technical difference is a new rear silencer, mainly to produce a bit more noise.
Visually, the F1 Safety Car is distinguished by prominent graphics, carbon fibre door mirrors and an LED roof-mounted light bar, which incorporates a TV camera.
There’s also a second camera, mounted next to the rear number plate. That’s so FIA representative Pete Tibbetts, who will sit alongside SLS AMG driver Bernd Maylander, can keep an eye on the following F1 cars via an in-cockpit monitor.
It would be cruel to suggest that some of the cars and drivers on the F1 grid this year might struggle to keep up with the new 2010 pace car...
The road-going version of the SLS AMG is available in the UK for £157,500.
Thursday, March 4, 2010
Final F1 entry list
The FIA has confirmed the entries for 2010’s Formula 1 season.
As anticipated, US F1 has failed to be ready in time, so won’t be competing this year. In another twist to the new teams saga, the empty grid slots haven’t been offered to Stefan Grand Prix. That’s despite its numerous claims about being all set to race, although nobody ever actually saw any cars.
By contrast, Campos Meta will be taking part, albeit under a new name. It’s now called HRT (Hispania Racing F1 Team), following its recent acquisition by Ramon Carabante. Hard to see how it will be prepared, though. The car has only just been unveiled, and won’t get its maiden run until Friday practice at the first race in Bahrain - just one week from today.
Confirmed drivers for HRT are Bruno Senna and Karun Chandhok. During 2009 Chandhok raced in GP2, but only managed to finish in 18th position following a season typified by retirements.
Sauber is a peculiarity on the entry list. The official team name continues to be BMW Sauber F1 Team, with the confusing BMW Sauber Ferrari constructor moniker, even though BMW withdrew from the sport at the end of last year.
It turns out that changing a team name isn’t such a simple process, although Brawn GP was able to manage it. Sauber’s reluctance to amend its name might be about not wanting to jeopardise TV money due to BMW from 2009, however.
There’s a chance this anomaly could be cleared up at the next meeting of the Formula One Commission, to be held on 10 March in Bahrain. Seems daft to leave it as it is.
As anticipated, US F1 has failed to be ready in time, so won’t be competing this year. In another twist to the new teams saga, the empty grid slots haven’t been offered to Stefan Grand Prix. That’s despite its numerous claims about being all set to race, although nobody ever actually saw any cars.
By contrast, Campos Meta will be taking part, albeit under a new name. It’s now called HRT (Hispania Racing F1 Team), following its recent acquisition by Ramon Carabante. Hard to see how it will be prepared, though. The car has only just been unveiled, and won’t get its maiden run until Friday practice at the first race in Bahrain - just one week from today.
Confirmed drivers for HRT are Bruno Senna and Karun Chandhok. During 2009 Chandhok raced in GP2, but only managed to finish in 18th position following a season typified by retirements.
Sauber is a peculiarity on the entry list. The official team name continues to be BMW Sauber F1 Team, with the confusing BMW Sauber Ferrari constructor moniker, even though BMW withdrew from the sport at the end of last year.
It turns out that changing a team name isn’t such a simple process, although Brawn GP was able to manage it. Sauber’s reluctance to amend its name might be about not wanting to jeopardise TV money due to BMW from 2009, however.
There’s a chance this anomaly could be cleared up at the next meeting of the Formula One Commission, to be held on 10 March in Bahrain. Seems daft to leave it as it is.
Monday, March 1, 2010
2010 WTCC points
The FIA has changed the points system for the World Touring Car Championship.
Instead of the top eight finishers scoring (allocated on a 10, 8, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 basis), the first ten will now be awarded points:
1st: 25 points
2nd: 18 points
3rd: 15 points
4th: 12 points
5th: 10 points
6th: 8 points
7th: 6 points
8th: 4 points
9th: 2 points
10th: 1 point
This brings the WTCC in line with the new system already adopted by F1 and the World Rally Championship for the 2010 season.
The much larger points disparity - especially for the podium positions - is designed to push drivers to battle on, as just one place difference could have a big impact on their overall standing.
Arguably, given the already close racing in touring cars, that’s more applicable to F1 than the WTCC.
Instead of the top eight finishers scoring (allocated on a 10, 8, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 basis), the first ten will now be awarded points:
1st: 25 points
2nd: 18 points
3rd: 15 points
4th: 12 points
5th: 10 points
6th: 8 points
7th: 6 points
8th: 4 points
9th: 2 points
10th: 1 point
This brings the WTCC in line with the new system already adopted by F1 and the World Rally Championship for the 2010 season.
The much larger points disparity - especially for the podium positions - is designed to push drivers to battle on, as just one place difference could have a big impact on their overall standing.
Arguably, given the already close racing in touring cars, that’s more applicable to F1 than the WTCC.
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