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Season of confusion to continue on Sunday(0) F1′s season of confusion looks set to continue, with an uncertain weather forecast only adding to the uncertainty ahead of the Spanish grand prix. The bizarre 2012 contest stepped into yet another gear on Saturday, with events unfolding to put the previously-derided pay driver Pastor Maldonado on pole, alongside the crisis-ridden Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso. And the Pirelli tyre predicament, worsened on the challenging Circuit de Catalunya layout and under hot Spanish skies, will continue to confound teams on Sunday, with temperatures set to drop and rain clouds predicted to gather. “I am telling you now, honestly,” said Red Bull’s Mark Webber. “We don’t have even the slightest idea who will benefit when it gets colder.” The German magazine Auto Motor und Sport laid out the fascinating if bewildering situation as of Saturday in Spain: “Sebastian Vettel doesn’t know why his car suddenly lost grip in qualifying. “Jenson Button has no idea why he couldn’t generate any tyre temperature on the 40 degrees track. Williams don’t know why Pastor Maldonado clocked the second fastest lap. “Mercedes’ engineers had to admit they still don’t understand the Pirelli rubber.” Acting team principal Bob Bell smiled tortuously: “If we did understand, we’d be on pole. But even Pirelli don’t know all the answers.” Writing in O Estado de S.Paulo newspaper, Livio Oricchio estimated there are up to 12 candidates for victory. “A grid of madness!” said former F1 driver Patrick Tambay on France’s RMC Sport. “And it’s not over yet.” So, is Michael Schumacher – having sat out Q3 in order to save tyres for the race – now even more critical of Pirelli? “I’ll leave it with what has already been said,” he insisted late on Saturday. |
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Updated Ferrari to take cues from SauberComments Off Ferrari is planning to follow Sauber’s lead when the first major development of the disappointing F2012 car is unveiled soon. “No doubt about it,” Fernando Alonso said after winning the Malaysian grand prix, “they (Sauber) were quicker than us.” The Italian magazine Autosprint have mischievously christened the updated Ferrari a ‘Ferrauber’, explaining that the rear of the ‘B’ F2012 will be very similar to Sauber’s impressive C31. Right at the end of the pre-season test period, Red Bull rolled out a Sauber-esque solution at the rear of Adrian Newey’s 2012 car, the RB8. In the wake of the blown diffuser clampdown, the Sauber exhaust layout reportedly flies close to breaching the spirit of the 2012 rules, but the FIA has declared it legal. “We are not in a position to be able to say exactly how much aerodynamic influence each individual system has,” said the governing body’s technical delegate Charlie Whiting. “Hence, it’s impossible for us to say ‘That’s too much, or that’s ok’. The aim of the new regulation was to ensure that we don’t have to do that,” he explained. So, Ferrari looks to be the next in line to copy Sauber’s rear solution, particularly as the small Swiss team already uses Ferrari’s engine and gearbox. It is believed the new 2012 Ferrari gearbox is narrower than last year’s unit. Autosprint reports that the F2012 ‘Ferrauber’ will also be similar to the Sauber in the area of the sidepods. |
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Mercedes suspects Red Bull using ‘illegal trick’Comments Off Hot on the heels of the new F-duct controversy, Mercedes has turned the heat back onto Red Bull. “The discussion about our system has diverted the focus from the exhaust issue,” he said in Australia. The FIA has clamped down hard on the exhaust-blown diffusers seen throughout the grid last year, but much pre-season chatter focused on some teams’ post-ban 2012 solutions that reportedly fly close to the boundaries of the new rules. But now Germany’s Bild newspaper reports that Mercedes suspects Red Bull is also bending the rules in another area. The report said Mercedes’ sound analysis indicated Renault-powered Red Bull is deploying an “illegal engine trick”, apparently involving the turning on and off of individual cylinders. Mercedes’ competition vice-president Norbert Haug commented: “There is no official protest by us. But there are some questions that we are asking the FIA.” Red Bull’s Dr Helmut Marko hit back: “No one will find anything. We comply with the rules.” German specialist magazine Auto Motor und Sport, meanwhile, reports that Melbourne winner McLaren currently has the most sophisticated exhaust solution on the 2012 grid. “I wouldn’t say that it’s illegal,” said Peter Sauber, “but it’s borderline.” Teams including Mercedes, Lotus, Toro Rosso and Williams reportedly used much more conservative solutions in Australia. “First we wanted to see what is allowed and what is not,” said Williams engineer Mark Gillan. |
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Mercedes ‘even faster than Red Bull’Comments Off Mercedes could be set to surprise the entire F1 world by setting the pace in 2012. The major daily Bild agrees, crowning the Ross Brawn-led team the “Bluff champion!” of the winter. “The analysis of recent testing in Barcelona shows that Mercedes are even faster than Red Bull,” the report exclaimed. Brawn is quoted by Brazil’s Globo: “You always believe it. You want a winning car, and I have not seen anything that tells me that we don’t have (now).” Perhaps even more sensationally, Sauber ranked second in the Auto Motor und Sport analysis of long runs, although last year the Swiss team looked similarly fast in testing. Red Bull, McLaren and Lotus come next, followed by the struggling Ferrari. Peter Sauber wrote in Blick newspaper: “It has never been as difficult as it is this year to get a picture of where everybody stands. “Why? Because the field has never been so close together.” |
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Sauber: Red Bull and McLaren lead 2012 fieldComments Off Red Bull and McLaren have the quickest cars as formula one teams prepare for the final pre-season test before Melbourne.
That is the view of Sauber designer Matt Morris, despite the Swiss team’s Kamui Kobayashi setting the fastest overall time at last week’s Barcelona test. “The top teams are yet to show their hands,” read a report in the German magazine Auto Motor und Sport. Morris agrees with that assessment. “If we are to believe our own analysis then Red Bull and McLaren are in front, there is a question mark about Ferrari, and behind them is a very close group of several teams. “I think the gaps between those in this central group will be smaller this year,” he added. The F1 world’s real gaze this week will however be on the apparent title contenders, with Lewis Hamilton quoted by the SID news agency as saying: “Maybe Red Bull are a bit quicker than us.” But McLaren’s team boss Martin Whitmarsh revealed: “We will have a fairly substantial (update) package in Barcelona this week. “We assume Red Bull will do the same,” he added. Unlike last year, however, there will be no last-minute technical sensation that determines the pecking-order for the start of the season. Sauber’s Morris explains: “There will be nothing spectacular; the rules don’t allow it any more.” But he admitted that the best-funded teams will continue to tinker at the edges, as demonstrated by McLaren, Ferrari and Red Bull who have so far run several different exhaust configurations in the wake of the blown diffuser ban. Morris said: “Any modification in this area is an expensive pleasure, while before we (Sauber) do anything, we have to be sure that it is clearly better.” |
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FIA rejected push for 60kph pit speed limitComments Off F1′s governing body reportedly rejected a push to lower the in-race pitlane speed limit from 100 to 60kph for 2012. It was said the change would have a major impact on race strategy this year. But in the wake of the Autosprint report, Britain’s BBC claims the FIA in fact rejected a push by the teams to lower the speed limit to 60. Race director Charlie Whiting reportedly “told them he feels there is no need to make the change as there is no evidence that the current arrangement is unsafe”, according to the broadcaster. Instead, the 2012 rules state that the race limit is 100kph at most races, but that the speed “may be amended by the stewards following a recommendation from the FIA F1 safety delegate”. |
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Toro Rosso’s driver shakeup too late(1) Jaime Alguersuari has told his fans he “will return” to formula one despite not having a seat on the 2012 grid. A Barcelona native, the 21-year-old’s fans showed their support by displaying banners as the Circuit de Catalunya test began on Tuesday. “I did nothing wrong, but I wasn’t killed either,” Alguersuari told the Italian magazine Autosprint. “I’m only 21 and I did my best with the equipment I had.” One of the men who replaced Alguersuari, Daniel Ricciardo, backed Red Bull’s decision to make a clean-sweep of the Toro Rosso lineup for 2012. “The only reason they kick you out is if you are not performing. And then you probably don’t deserve to be world champion,” the Australian is quoted by The Sun newspaper. “That’s just the business we’re in.” But Keke Rosberg, the 1982 world champion and Mercedes driver Nico’s father, criticised Red Bull for not giving Alguersuari a fair chance. “They (Alguersuari and Buemi) had been there for three years and they (Red Bull) didn’t think they would go all the way to the top, so I understand if Red Bull wants to do something else. “What I don’t understand is why the decision was made so late, when there was not anything else available for them. “If someone says in June that they no longer need your services the following year, that’s fair. Then you have the time to find a new job. “Buemi would probably have found something, if he’d have had more time,” added Rosberg. |
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Tyre engineer unlocks secrets for McLarenComments Off There is a secret to McLaren’s recent success, according to the German trade magazine Auto Motor und Sport. With Lewis Hamilton and then Jenson Button winning the most recent German and Hungarian grands prix, the report said a big reason for the erosion of Red Bull’s dominance is a Japanese engineer. Hiroshi Imai, who until 2009 was former F1 supplier Bridgestone’s chief engineer, is now working at McLaren on unlocking the secrets of the heavily-degrading Pirellis. “He seems to have made a breakthrough,” said Auto Motor und Sport, revealing that McLaren has worked to better cool the brakes so that the heat is not transferred to the tyres. |
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Oldest ex-F1 driver turns 100Comments Off Paul Pietsch on Monday becomes the only living former formula one driver with a three-digit age. The German, born on 20 June 1911, drove Alfa Romeos and Maseratis in the modern world championship’s earliest years, failing to win a race or even score a point. But he is also remembered for founding the authoritative magazine Auto Motor und Sport, and in his more recent years for refusing to use a walking stick or a hearing aid because they are “for old people”. Ironically as a 100-year-old now, Pietsch’s nickname was ‘Rennbaby’ (baby racer), due to his spending much of his earlier career as the youngest in the field. When his career stalled due to flagging finances, he founded a publishing company in a bid to get back on track. “I wanted to race again. We had to get the funding somehow, by selling something. I said to myself that I could sell my knowledge about motor racing,” he told the FAZ newspaper. |
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Ecclestone summons F1 Commission for 2013 engine voteComments Off Bernie Ecclestone has organised a meeting of the F1 Commission in an attempt to formally scuttle the proposed engine rules for 2013. The report said F1 chief executive Ecclestone, a staunch critic of the proposed rules, believes FIA president Jean Todt improperly introduced the four-cylinder turbos by bypassing the official bodies including the F1 Commission. Despite Renault’s apparent threat to quit F1 over the controversy, Ecclestone is understood to have attempted to overturn the rules with a recent vote of the World Motor Sport Council. The rules narrowly survived and Wednesday’s F1 Commission is his ‘plan B’ according to Auto Motor und Sport, with the 80-year-old also not ruling out a legal challenge. |
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Brawn to sell rest of F1 team to MercedesComments Off Mercedes is set to take complete control of the Brackley based F1 team that bears its name. The German carmaker took over the team last year but Ross Brawn and his partners retained 24.9 per cent of the shares, the German magazine Auto Motor und Sport said. The report said a deal to make Mercedes and Daimler shareholder AABAR the 100 per cent owner will be in place by March’s Bahrain season opener. The Brackley based team began life in the late 90s as British American Racing (BAR), later becoming Honda who pulled out of F1 at the end of the 2008 season. Auto Motor und Sport said Mercedes intends to keep team boss Brawn on board as an employee. |
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Webber not worried teammate Vettel is ‘superstar’Comments Off Mark Webber insists he is not concerned that it is Sebastian Vettel, and not himself, who is regarded as the star of the Red Bull team. Australian Webber is better placed in the points standings than his German colleague Vettel, but team figures are insisting upon a situation of driver equality for the remaining two races of 2010. Experts believe the situation is a reflection of the fact that it is 23-year-old Vettel who is the darling of the Austrian team. “It doesn’t bother me at all,” Webber said in an interview with the Italian magazine Autosprint. “I am 34 years old and I think it’s great that I’m still at the top level and as competitive as I am,” he added. “If I was ten years younger and was getting the same results, I’m sure you’d all think I’m the superstar. “I think the only difference is that Vettel is young. I don’t really see him working any differently than, say, Heikki (Kovalainen) at Lotus,” said Webber. “I think the best way to judge someone is to consider the consistency of their results,” he added. |
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Brawn denies blocking Red Bull from Mercedes powerComments Off Jun.16 (GMM) Ross Brawn claims he was mistranslated in suggesting Mercedes should not supply engines to Red Bull next year. The Italian magazine Autosprint quoted Brawn, Mercedes GP’s team principal, as saying the German marque should think “long and hard” before adding another customer team to its 2011 stable. The comments were interpreted as Brawn not wanting the best engine in the field to be mated to Red Bull’s arguably best chassis. “I was asked by an Italian journalist whether Mercedes could cope with a fourth team,” Brawn explained to Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport. “I replied that Cosworth should supply any vacancies, because that’s the way it was planned by the FIA — that they (Cosworth) should be in business so that in an emergency there is not the reliance on the manufacturers. “In the translation from Italian into English someone has added one and one together and come up with Red Bull.” However, competition director Norbert Haug told German reporters in Turkey that it would be “definitely very difficult” for Mercedes to supply a fourth team with engines in 2011. |
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Villadelprat warns: We will work closelyComments Off After the project is USF1 is finally broken the 13 Launch site for 2011 at stake. Several teams have applied to participate in Formula 1 next year. In addition to the successful GP2 team ART by Frédéric Vasseur and Nicolas Todt also Joan Villadelprat has applied again with his Epsilon-Euskadi team. “I’m optimistic, but also a bit worried, because the FIA will publish its decision until probably the end of August,” says the former Benetton team manager in the magazine ‘Auto Sprint’. The Spaniard has claimed a good chance of being awarded. Epsilon-Euskadi has experience in prototyping, the company is as a showcase with a direct connection to the university. Sergio is ready Rinland an experienced Formula 1 designer. “We have been a very long time in intensive discussions with major international companies wishing to invest in us,” reports the team boss. “In two weeks we have accurate numbers, and then know how much money we can take control. One thing is certain: Our approach is long term. The budget must from the outset for at least two seasons to be sure. As a Formula 1 team you can not think from year to year. ” With interest Villadelprat pursued the development of three new teams, Lotus, Virgin and HRT. In particular, the team of Timo Glock and Lucas di Grassi’s view of the Spaniard is underfunded. have “I think if you really want to build a promising team, then you have to start at least 100 million euros. Sure, you can ride with 40 million €. But then, stay out of the progress every year and you may start over again . (TMS) |
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Todt denies only staying president for one termComments Off Jean Todt has played down rumours he is prepared to stay as FIA president for only a single four-year term. The 64-year-old Frenchman was elected late last year to be long-term president Max Mosley’s successor, and his reign so far has been praised for its lack of controversy. But reports earlier this year suggested Todt is already planning to depart the unpaid post in 2013. “That’s not true,” he said in the latest edition of the German magazine Auto Motor und Sport. “Nevertheless, I am not thinking today about the second term of office. My priority is to use my time as effectively as possible to reach my goals.” One of those aims is new engine regulations for F1 in 2013, and the return of energy-recovery KERS technology as soon as possible. “I am not happy the teams voted unanimously against using KERS for the 2010 season,” said Todt. “I am personally committed to having this position reconsidered for 2011.” He said it is not acceptable to wait until 2013 to implement a new KERS strategy to accompany the smaller and more efficient new engines of 2013. “We cannot afford to go two and a half years while doing nothing,” said Todt, referring to the global automotive push for greener technologies. “As head of the FIA there needs to be pressure in this direction; it’s the only way we can be credible.” (GMM) |
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