|
Vettel defends Schumacher after Senna crash(0) Sebastian Vettel has defended his former mentor Michael Schumacher. The seven time world champion has been roundly criticised since last Sunday’s Spanish grand prix, after crashing into Williams’ Bruno Senna at the end of the Barcelona straight. He called the Brazilian driver an “idiot” on the radio and later defended the outburst, but the FIA did not agree, imposing a five-place qualifying penalty for Monte Carlo for causing a collision. “For us, that manoeuvre of Michael’s cost us a lot,” Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said on Austrian Servus TV. He said the debris from the crash not only damaged Vettel’s front wing, but led to the reigning world champion having to serve a drive-through penalty due to activating his DRS wing in the yellow-flag zone. German Vettel, however, defended Schumacher. “In those situations we don’t have much time of course,” he said, “and you can get very great speed differences (between the cars) on the straights. “I think it should be classified simply in the category of racing accidents. Unfortunately it happens,” said the reigning world champion. “Of course you can always say what is what afterwards,” added Vettel, “just as you can say that it always takes two to tango.” Mercedes’ Norbert Haug was less eager to comment, although he did tell Germany’s Sport1 that the team “accepts the verdict of the race stewards”. |
|
McLaren sure gaffes won’t hurt Hamilton talks(0) Martin Whitmarsh is sure McLaren’s recent errors will not affect contract negotiations with Lewis Hamilton. The British team’s latest mistake not only cost Lewis Hamilton pole in Spain, it put the 2008 world champion to the very back of the grid. Asked if he worries that the now seemingly constant flow of team gaffes will damage McLaren’s efforts to re-sign Hamilton, Whitmarsh insisted: “No, I don’t. “He has got to build the support of the team, he has got to feel comfortable doing it, he has got to want to drive and he is in good shape,” British newspapers quote the McLaren team principal as saying. “I look forward to working with him for a long time to come.” But Whitmarsh admitted that, given Hamilton’s tumultuous 2011 season, he was worried the British driver might have despaired last Saturday when the team’s refuelling mistake cost the 27-year-old pole. “I was concerned,” he said, “because it is a pretty tough thing to happen to a driver. “But I have to say he showed some greatness I had not seen before. By the end of our chat he was consoling me. “The relationship between Lewis and the team is stronger and better and hopefully we will work together for a long time,” added Whitmarsh. |
|
Williams denies cigarette caused Barcelona blaze(0) Two days after winning in Spain, Williams is scrambling to put together the equipment it needs to contest next weekend’s Monaco grand prix. Mere hours after Pastor Maldonado secured the once-great British team’s first victory since 2004, a huge fire broke out in the pits, leaving one team member still in a Barcelona hospital with burns. “His family are in constant communication and he is in good spirits,” Williams said in a media statement. The Oxfordshire based team is now making efforts to ensure it can race in Monte Carlo, having lost a lot of equipment in the fire. Mercifully, however, Bruno Senna’s car appears to have survived, with the Finnish broadcaster MTV3 saying an initial inspection of the chassis showed no devastating damage. Maldonado’s winning car was in parc ferme at the time of the incident. “We had a lot of damage and lost a lot of equipment, including IT equipment,” chief operations engineer Mark Gillan said, according to the Daily Mail. “Over the next couple of days we will be looking at where we are parts-wise. “We will have everything we need to run operationally at Monaco, but we may be missing a few of the extras because obviously we don’t carry a complete set of spares for everything,” he said. It is believed more than one rival team has offered to help Williams by loaning the Sir Frank Williams-led outfit any equipment it needs. A McLaren spokesman confirmed the Woking based team has offered to help. Germany’s Bild newspaper said Williams’ damage bill runs into the millions. Team manager Dickie Stanford denied a rumour the fire was caused by a cigarette in the vicinity of Senna’s fuel tank while it was being emptied. “We don’t know the cause, but we would never allow smoking in the pits,” he insisted. Williams and F1′s governing FIA are investigating. |
|
No rolling heads as Ferrari tackles new crisis(0) Stefano Domenicali has ruled out responding to Ferrari’s latest crisis with the old ‘rolling heads’ technique. One perception in the paddock is that the fabled Italian team, under intense pressure from the Tifosi and president Luca di Montezemolo, often reacts by emotionally shedding staff, with Aldo Costa and Chris Dyer the obvious recent examples. So, having installed new faces including Pat Fry but still struggling with the latest F2012 project, will boss Domenicali set heads rolling again? “Firing people is the work of two minutes,” he is quoted by Germany’s Auto Bild, “but this would not solve our problem. “Instead I need to find new people who can improve the organisation and push the engineers to improve the car,” added the Italian. In the meantime, there is no silver bullet. “I am not happy with the F2012 project,” he acknowledged. “But if you want to see the glass half full rather than half empty, then Fernando has done a great damage control and, with an improved car, he at least has the possibility to continue to fight for the championship. “We have to improve,” Domenicali insisted. “I have asked my people to wake up and respond, and I will no longer hear excuses.” |
|
Alonso: ‘More treasure than deserved’ with F2012Comments Off Amid Ferrari’s performance crisis with the struggling F2012 car, the Italian team has emerged from the opening ‘flyaway’ races with a solid head of steam. He might be just fifth, but Fernando Alonso is a mere 10 points off the lead of the drivers’ world championship, after a see-sawing pecking order emerged from the overseas races in Australia, Malaysia, China and Bahrain. The Spanish driver admitted mere days ago that the F2012, at present, is perhaps the “sixth or seventh” best on the grid. But next up is the test at Mugello, where major upgrades to the car – so significant that some sections of the media are expecting a ‘new Ferrari’ – will be tested ahead of its Barcelona debut. Sepang winner Alonso’s latest surprise was to finish ahead of the best McLaren in Bahrain. “If we had said that beforehand, it would be unthinkable,” he told Antena 3 television. “It was another race where we have limited the damage pretty well. “We were eight points behind the leader, now it’s 10. We have spent the first four races outside Europe losing ten points, which I think is more treasure than we deserve. “For Montmelo (Barcelona) we have to be better. We have to stop depending on others and start depending on ourselves,” added Alonso. Asked how much he is expecting the F2012 to improve, the 30-year-old was coy. “I have said it could be one tenth, maybe two, one and a half … but we may not be in the same situation as before.” Alonso was also critical of the stewards’ decision to leave Nico Rosberg without a penalty on Sunday, after the German driver forced him off the circuit whilst defending position. “He also did the same to Hamilton, so it’s two to zero for him (Rosberg),” said Alonso. “But if there was a wall there, you would have to be talking to someone else now …” On Twitter, he sarcastically added: “I think you are going to have fun in future races. You can defend position as you want and you can overtake outside the track! Enjoy!” |
|
Ecclestone: F1 to return to Bahrain ‘forever’Comments Off The calamitous Bahrain grand prix saga has not jeopardised the island Kingdom’s future on the F1 calendar. That is the strident claim of Bernie Ecclestone, after the F1 chief executive and FIA president Jean Todt displayed rare unity as they insisted the country’s civil and political problems would not affect the grand prix. But amid the bubbling Bahrain saga, Ecclestone had suggested that Bahrain might face trouble when it comes to negotiating a new contract, with the existing agreement only set to extend for three more years. However, when asked by Reuters if F1 is going to keep returning to Bahrain despite this year’s troubles, Ecclestone insisted on Sunday before leaving the Persian Gulf: “Absolutely. Forever. No problem.” Like Todt, he even played down the damage done to F1′s reputation this weekend. “I think it’s good because people talk about things, you know. You know what they say — there is no such thing as bad publicity,” said Ecclestone. In truth, reputation damage has undoubtedly been done. But Roger Benoit, the veteran correspondent for the Swiss newspaper Blick, admitted he is dismayed with how politics interfered with sport so strikingly this weekend. “On all continents, somewhere, all hell is breaking loose. And as a formula one reporter, you’re flying around this globe two or three times a year,” he wrote. “We go to countries that are politically explosive. Where human rights are violated, where poverty reigns. “But we hardly talk about it — not in China, India, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore or Brazil. In 2014, we’re going to Russia. “Years ago, our circus happily danced around in apartheid South Africa, and the military dictatorship of Argentina. “Formula one is pure entertainment. Detached from the problems of the world. But here, in Bahrain, every reporter entered the political field, whether he liked to or not,” wrote Benoit. So that is why Ecclestone is unapologetic, after championing the Bahrain grand prix. “Because, basically, the problems they have in Bahrain have nothing to do with F1,” the 81-year-old told El Pais newspaper. “The relevant agencies gave the nod as far as security was concerned, and I think it is clear that they were not wrong.” He also sees no problem with F1 being used as a political tool. “Governments want to have an F1 race for the same reason as they want the Olympics. We come to agreements with the promoters and, if that’s good for the country, fine,” said Ecclestone. |
|
More pull out as F1 resists Bahrain axe pressureComments Off A support-race team and a respected journalist have become the next to pull out of this weekend’s highly controversial Bahrain grand prix. The Porsche Supercup team MRS said its decision to skip the support race in the divided island Kingdom is the “first time in our history that we have had to cancel”. “In the end we have the responsibility for our employees,” said team boss Karsten Molitor, citing security concerns. Another withdrawal – joining the sacked Williams catering staff member, and the TV broadcasters Sky Deutschland, Fuji TV and MTV3 Finland – is the respected correspondent for O Estado de S.Paulo newspaper, Livio Oricchio. “I have decided in agreement with Estado to not go,” he said. “We had the tickets for the entire season, except for Bahrain and the United States, because there was a doubt they would be run. “Like many journalists, I will not be at Sakhir,” Oricchio admitted. “I always believed that the race would not take place, and I’m still not 100 per cent sure that something will not happen that will lead the FIA or FOM to cancel.” Indeed, following the sport’s decision to push ahead, the pressure on formula one to cancel at the eleventh hour has only intensified. Nabeel Rajab, the leader of the government opposition group Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, admitted that the next protests – ‘three days of rage’, to coincide with the race’s three-day calendar – are aimed specifically at F1. “We’re protesting to show anger at formula one for conducting the race here,” he is quoted by the BBC. And the wife of a well-known jailed Bahraini activist who is on a long hunger strike, added: “I am not angry with the government… what makes me angry is people like Ecclestone who decide to come to Bahrain because he thinks everyone is happy.” Italy’s La Stampa reports that F1 personnel have been advised to stay away from restaurants and shops, while “girlfriends and wives stay at home”. That’s not entirely true, as Felipe Massa touched down at the airport on Thursday with his wife and baby son. And Giedo van der Garde, the reserve driver for Caterham, said he has found Bahrain peaceful since his arrival on Wednesday. “I’ve not been here long,” he is quoted by Auto Hebdo, “but everything seems quiet. Obviously, there’s a heavy police presence,” the Dutchman continued. “But I haven’t seen any trouble or anything. Let’s hope it stays like that.” Marco Canseco, the correspondent for the Spanish sports daily Marca, said he witnessed a “minor altercation” in the capital Manama on Wednesday. “Then all the teams and everybody were able to get to the track for work without a hitch, the same on return,” he revealed. Many are protesting the race going ahead on moral grounds, others due to security fears, whilst others fear for F1′s image. “The ongoing debate about Bahrain is the only damage to the high gloss of the exciting 2012 season so far,” agreed Austria’s Kleine Zeitung newspaper. |
|
Sponsors nervous as F1 ploughs on with BahrainComments Off High-profile sponsors are nervous, as formula one ploughs ahead with next week’s Bahrain grand prix. Despite widespread trepidation felt within the paddock this weekend in Shanghai, the FIA has declared that there is no reason the Sakhir event cannot go ahead. And after meeting with the teams on Friday, Bernie Ecclestone told reporters the race is “200 per cent” on. But The Times reports that, amid the threat of violence, some sponsors have pulled the plug on providing hospitality for guests next weekend. “When you have an environment like Bahrain then all the sponsors will be watching developments very, very closely and talking to each other,” a source said. “It’s a case of ‘watch this space’ basically.” However, the British newspaper said it is unlikely any major sponsors will pull their logos from the cars. “(They) will effectively just have to follow the sport,” said Tim Bampton, of the motor sports marketing company Just Marketing. “They will have to watch and wait to see what happens even though they could be caught in the vortex.” But, at the same time, it is believed that sponsors’ contracts with the teams – such as Vodafone’s estimated $75m deal with McLaren – contain “brand damage” clauses. An added complication for McLaren is that it is part owned by Bahrain’s sovereign wealth fund, with Mumtalakat Holdings “on course to own half the business” according to writer Kevin Eason. Also under heavy scrutiny is the conspicuously silent FIA president Jean Todt, whose son Nicolas shares ownership of his GP2 team with Bahrain’s controversial crown prince. “We all know why it (the Bahrain saga) might have dragged a bit,” Mark Webber is quoted by the Telegraph. “F1 is like that. There’s a lot of funding and finances that have come from Abu Dhabi and Bahrain and the Middle East. “They’re very excited about F1 and they clearly want to give it another go. Let’s see if it works,” added the Red Bull driver. |
|
‘Small’ chance Hamilton to swerve grid penaltyComments Off There remains a chance Lewis Hamilton will not have to move back five places on Sunday’s Chinese grand prix grid. It emerged on Thursday that McLaren had discovered a problem with his Malaysia gearbox, requiring an out-of-sequence change and penalty in Shanghai. “Of course it’s not the nicest thing to hear that we’ve got a problem, but you just have to take it on the chin,” the 2008 world champion told reporters. “We’re still here, we’ve still got a great chance to win. “It just means I have a steeper hill to climb this weekend,” Hamilton is quoted by the Times. Indeed, Hamilton set the pace in the initial practice session. And it then emerged that he had comfortably outpaced his rivals with the very gearbox that is bearing a worrying crack. Team boss Martin Whitmarsh confirmed to the British broadcaster Sky there is a “very, very small chance” Hamilton can keep the damaged gearbox throughout the weekend, thereby avoiding the penalty. However, he also confessed that the chance it will be replaced by a fresh gearbox on Saturday morning is “99 per cent”. Either way, defending Chinese grand prix winner Hamilton – who has started the first two races in 2012 from pole – insists he is not overly fussed. “When I was a kid I always used to like coming from the back of the grid,” he smiled. |
|
Clever Sauber turning heads in 2012Comments Off Fernando Alonso’s win was a complete surprise, but the name of another team was on more paddock-dwellers’ lips after Malaysia — Sauber. “Only one team could do consistently good laptimes on all the tyres and in all the conditions, and it was Sauber,” confirmed Martin Whitmarsh, whose McLaren team had travelled to Sepang with arguably the fastest car. Also in Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport, Red Bull team boss Christian Horner agreed: “They (Sauber) have somehow managed to get all of the tyres to work perfectly, which at the moment is the key to success. “The (tyre) window is so small that it’s very easy to not be in it,” added the Briton. And Sepang winner Fernando Alonso, whose victory was only ensured by a late-race mistake by Sauber’s Sergio Perez, admitted: “No doubt about it, they were quicker than us.” Some believe it was only the Malaysian weather chaos that brought the Ferrari-powered C31 to the top of F1′s form-guide, but the Sauber was in fact also fast in Australia. “Our cars were severely damaged at the start (in Melbourne),” explained chief designer Matt Morris. “At the front for Perez, the rear for Kobayashi.” Nonetheless, both finished inside the top eight. “The race in Malaysia showed very clearly how fast our car is,” insisted team boss Peter Sauber, writing in Blick newspaper. “After two very different tracks, we have the assurance now that the C31 is a success.” The next question is precisely how the small Hinwil based team has managed to build a pace-setting car. One possible answer is the end of the blown diffuser era, and the fact that Sauber’s 2012 solution has already been copied by F1′s formerly-dominant Red Bull. Italy’s Autosprint, meanwhile, claims Ferrari is next, mischievously suggesting that the updated F2012 might aptly be called the ‘Ferrauber’. Referring to the FIA exhaust clampdown, Morris admitted: “We had to give up less than our opponents.” Peter Sauber added: “When I saw that Red Bull had chosen a similar route to us, I was sure that we were right.” Another trick on the C31 is a clever use of the loophole allowing an opening at the front of the car for driver cooling. “It’s no match-winner,” Morris insists, “but it gains us some (lap) time.” And Autosprint reports that another “trick” on the Sauber is located in front of the rear wheels, exploiting yet another “grey zone” in the regulations. |
|
Sauber undecided on copying Mercedes F-ductComments Off Sauber has revealed it cannot afford to simply jump in and copy Mercedes’ innovative F-duct solution. The small Swiss team had almost winning race pace in Malaysia last weekend even without the extra straight-line speed that would be provided by a system along the lines of Mercedes’ DRS-complimenting concept. Despite their complaints about the legality of the system, there is little doubt the big-budget teams will be working frantically to emulate the Mercedes’ concept, which to date has the blessing of the FIA. According to Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport, however, it will be a different story for the smaller teams. “If we started now with a blank sheet of paper, we would be ready in two months,” said Sauber’s chief designer Matt Morris. “But it would really add up. We have to ask ourselves whether it’s worth it for us, or whether we would be better off chasing the laptime with more conventional steps. “On the other hand the big teams can handle a development like that in parallel to their normal programmes,” he added. Also on the technical front, Auto Motor und Sport reveals that rival teams are closer to getting to the bottom of Red Bull’s ever-flexible front wings. After the last day of testing in Barcelona, detailed photographs emerged of Sebastian Vettel’s stricken RB8 that appeared to show a sort of torsion bar inside the damaged front wing. The report said the torsion bar may be pre-loaded in order to pass the FIA’s static load tests, but then bend at speed. An FIA insider suggested the system, although permitted in private testing, “would not be allowed” at the actual grands prix. |
|
Force India to push on with new F1 spy sagaComments Off Years after F1′s ‘spygate’ sagas, the issue could be set to return to the very top of the governing body’s agenda. Force India claims Caterham and their common former wind tunnel partner Aerolab were this week “found liable” by a British court of using Force India data for the Team Lotus car of early 2010. Vijay Mallya’s Silverstone based team said the ruling has been “referred for the consideration” of the FIA. But Aerolab has hit back, insisting the judge “entirely rejected” Force India’s charge of “systematic copying”. “On the contrary, such misuse as I have found to have occurred mainly consisted of opportunistic copying of CAD files by CAD designers in order to take a short cut,” the wind tunnel company quoted judge Justice Arnold as saying. Nonetheless, Caterham was ordered to pay EUR 25,000 to Force India, but not the 18 million requested by the team. “We were deeply disappointed with the damages award,” Force India deputy team principal Robert Fernley told the Guardian. He said Caterham/Aerolab did not make a simple “short cut” in copying the CAD files, but copied “front and rear break duct systems, the front wing, the rear wing, the barge boards, the vortex generators and the diffuser”. “The judge might say it’s not systematic but in my view it’s pretty extensive,” added Fernley. Force India is expected to appeal. And if the FIA intervenes and charges Caterham with theft, “it would cost Caterham tens of millions for the money they received for finishing tenth in the world championship for the past two years”, wrote Guardian correspondent Paul Weaver. “And that is before any fine.” |
![]() |
The goal of Way WipersComments Off
Regardless of what are the workshop you work, in case you have bird feeders that supply right into a slicing equipment of some type, you’ll realize that during the period of time, these bird feeders can accumulate a fair volume of airborne debris as well as other excess waste elements, based on exactly what the slicing equipment is slicing. To keep go ways free from particles, Way Wipers were made. What these devices do is simply work as an automatic better to get rid of the debris and dust from slicing devices go ways, that allows for additional effortless much less tricky operation. When the go ways were permitted to gather dirt, debris and dust, this could not only hamper the smooth function of the slicing devices, but it might damage the devices by subjecting the slicing equipment and details of such slicing devices to a excess volume of particles, dirt and unsafe airborne debris. In the event you own or chance a workshop, and you’re simply not at present employing Machine Way Wipers, you may want to take into account finding this device to be used with your workshop. This will not only come up with a better atmosphere for the slicing devices to become more effective, it’ll lessen the opportunity of devices extracting and achieving inoperable because of excess particles around the go ways of these slicing devices. Additionally it is important to recognize that as the simple design of Way Wipers is primarily the same, a synthetic rubber floor which has a metal experiencing which the rubber floor is connected, considerably much like an automobile windshield windsheild wiper, don’t assume all Way Wipers are manufactured equally. The synthetic rubber metal experiencing design is a normal way windsheild wiper. However the metal could be custom made-generated for diverse conditions like a brass or stainless steel metal experiencing, rather than the vulcanized metal the way wipers usually will come normal with. It doesn’t matter what kind of slicing equipment you happen to be operating, be it a running equipment, a lathe, a exploration equipment or any other kind of metal slicing equipment, way wipers will be indispensable on the successful and successful using people devices. Should your shop isn’t at the moment with these, you should consider making them a regular product with your slicing devices procedures. |
|
Mercedes triggered latest FIA clampdownComments Off The latest twist in F1′s endless ‘blown diffuser’ saga was reportedly triggered by Mercedes. For 2012, the FIA has clamped down on engine exhaust blowing for aerodynamic purposes, but speculation continued to sweep the paddock that some teams had devised ways to minimise the impact of the ban. Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport reports that it was Mercedes engineers who found the loophole, in terms of how to utilise the standard electronic software to maximise the off-throttle exhaust blowing effect. “The FIA has responded by rewriting the software,” read the report. Auto Motor und Sport said Mercedes was right about the loophole, but that it could only have been exploited at the price of dramatic fuel consumption, and potential damage to the engine. “We have erred on the safe side,” an FIA source is quoted as saying. Writing in Spain’s Mundo Deportivo, Raymond Blacafort said the 2012 Red Bull’s exhaust was making a strange sound in the chicane in Barcelona last week. |
|
Jenson Button: Raikkonen ‘quick’, not showboatingComments Off Williams’ official launch took just five minutes in the Jerez pitlane on Tuesday, before the new Renault-powered FW34 had a difficult birth. Official testing action burst into life in 2012, with every team except Marussia – and nine all-new cars in action for the first time – kicking off their campaigns. Returning 2007 world champion Kimi Raikkonen was fastest all day. “The lap times don’t matter today,” Lotus’ Finn insisted. “I do have a good feeling, and that was not always the case in my career after the first day of testing,” he told Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport. “But I would rather be P1 at the end of the first race than at the end of the first test day,” smiled Raikkonen. Red Bull’s Mark Webber, with the team’s brand new title-defending car only the third quickest of the 2012 runners, agreed. “If what we saw today happens in Melbourne, then we’ll talk again,” he laughed, explaining the missed morning of testing as due to a crucial part being held up at an airport shrouded in fog. The Guardian also reports that a Red Bull truckie was stopped for speeding. Lotus team boss Eric Boullier, however, is convinced Raikkonen’s speed is real – and his motivation intact – after two years away. “Believe me, he is there.” Agreed technical director James Allison: “You can tell Kimi is a class act.” Like fellow top team Red Bull, the new McLaren also had a low-profile day, with Jenson Button just eighth quickest. But he didn’t accuse Lotus and Raikkonen of showboating. “Maybe he (Raikkonen) was running heavy,” said the 2009 world champion. “We maybe haven’t seen eye to eye a lot of the time when we’ve been racing, but he’s a very quick driver, a world champion. “He’s obviously in a very competitive car, and whatever they did today – low fuel or whatever – it was still quick.” Struggling on Tuesday was Caterham, whose new car could not be restarted following damage to the engine starter shaft, and Toro Rosso with an oil leak. And Felipe Massa was just ninth in the new Ferrari. “It is obviously too early to say if this year we will be able to win or not,” said designer Nikolas Tombazis. |
Contacts and information
|
Social networks |
Most popular categories |