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McLaren set to race new higher nose in Spain(0) McLaren looks set to run a higher nose this weekend in Spain. Last week, at the very end of the Mugello test, test driver Oliver Turvey debuted a new front wing that featured a conspicuously higher nose tip. McLaren, the early 2012 frontrunner but having struggled recently in Bahrain, was the only notable team this year to ignore the new design trend for ugly ‘stepped’ front noses, introduced as arguably the best solution to new nose-height safety regulations. The MP4-27′s new nose does not feature a step element, but the tip is notably higher than its predecessor. “Nowadays it is quite a critical part of the car, you’re looking to find very small improvements,” team boss Martin Whitmarsh said on Wednesday. As for whether the new nose will be seen in Barcelona, he confirmed: “You may well see it again, yes. “There’s a reasonable chance you’ll see it on Sunday.” |
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McLaren tested higher nose at Mugello(0) McLaren tested a higher front nose at the Mugello test last week. Backmarker Marussia aside, the famous British team is the only team in 2012 to have resisted the temptation of running a high ‘step’ nose, in the wake of new safety regulations. McLaren was the early frontrunner this season with its MP4-27 car, but Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton struggled notably last time out in Bahrain. Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport said the team quietly tested the significant nose development on the final day of Mugello testing last Thursday, with test driver Oliver Turvey at the wheel. The report also speculated that McLaren experimented with an adjustable brake duct system at Mugello, which might be used to regulate tyre temperature for the finicky 2012 Pirellis. The system would have to be adjusted by the mechanics during a pitstop. |
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HRT only team to miss Mugello test(0) HRT has announced it will sit out next week’s rare in-season formula one test at Mugello. For the first time in years, the sport has relaxed slightly its strict testing ban in order to give teams the chance to run between grands prix. The three-day session at Ferrari’s Italian circuit will begin next Tuesday, during the three-week gap between Bahrain and Spain. Struggling backmarkers HRT, however, will not be there, opting instead to be “completely focused” on relocating to its new Caja Magica headquarters in Madrid. Every other team will be at Mugello, 30 kilometres from Florence — the first in-season test for four years. 26 drivers will be in action, as will a lot of update packages following F1′s return from the hectic ‘flyaway’ season. Red Bull, Ferrari, Mercedes, Sauber, Marussia and Toro Rosso will use their regular race drivers. Running regular racers and a tester will be Lotus (Jerome d’Ambrosio), Williams (Valtteri Bottas) and Force India (Jules Bianchi). Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport said Caterham is “using the opportunity to earn some money” by accepting the sponsorship of the Venezuelan Rodolfo Gonzalez. McLaren has scheduled to run its testers Oliver Turvey and Gary Paffett, although Lewis Hamilton has indicated he might gatecrash the programme in order to help solve the MP4-27′s newfound tyre problems. |
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Hamilton to muscle in on McLaren’s Mugello test scheduleComments Off Lewis Hamilton is rethinking McLaren’s scheduled approach to the rare and crucial in-season test at Mugello next week. The British team announced last week that both Hamilton and his teammate Jenson Button would sit out Mugello, so that testers Gary Paffett and Oliver Turvey can run over the three-day session instead. But that was before Bahrain, where McLaren’s early-season upper hand vanished, leaving the drivers and team members scratching their heads over the way the MP4-27 ate rapidly through the Pirelli tyres. “It (the Mugello schedule) might change,” British newspapers report Hamilton as saying. “I need to get back in the car. We need to figure out why the tyres are going off. “If there are other things to test or ways to figure it out, I will be the one to do it, not let someone else do it,” said the 2008 world champion. A McLaren source indicated that if Hamilton wants to test in Italy, the programme will be altered to accommodate him. Button, however, appears unavailable to test, as he is scheduled to attend a promotional team event in Budapest early next week. |
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Hamilton: McLaren must improve race paceComments Off Lewis Hamilton has vowed to push his McLaren engineers to improve the race pace of the British team’s 2012 car. The 2008 world champion put the MP4-27 on pole position for both the Australian and Malaysian grands prix, but then failed to have winning pace in the all-important races. “In qualifying we are very quick but we need to be quicker in the race,” Briton Hamilton is quoted by the Sun newspaper. “I don’t think we are quick enough.” F1′s next stop is in Shanghai mid next month. “We will have some upgrades for the car, I hope,” said Hamilton. “I will go and push the guys to see if we can get some upgrades to try and squeak ahead in the race.” He admitted to being disappointed after the two races so far this season, when the MP4-27′s qualifying promise did not power him to wins. “The main thing is I need to pick up my race pace,” Hamilton is quoted by PA Sport. “I spoke to Fernando (Alonso) and Sergio (Perez) after (the race in Malaysia) and they had lots of understeer whereas I had lots of oversteer. “Maybe I’m setting the car up too aggressively, so I might make some changes for the next two races,” he said. This article may not be copied, redistributed, retransmitted, published, or exploited in any way, in whole or in part, without the express permission of Global Motorsport Media. |
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No F-duct yet on dominant McLarenComments Off Contrary to recent speculation, McLaren does not yet have a Mercedes-style new F-duct on its dominant 2012 car. Not yet, although the FIA did take a long look at the silver car in Melbourne. “If they were looking for an F-duct, we don’t have one,” Whitmarsh smiled to Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport. In fact, the scrutineers were checking and then re-checking the height of the MP4-27′s front wing. But the F-duct might be coming. “All the teams are going to be trying to extract the maximum within the permitted regulations,” confirmed managing director Jonathan Neale in a media teleconference this week. But he also revealed that McLaren doesn’t yet “understand well enough” how the Mercedes system works. Melbourne winner Jenson Button and his teammate Lewis Hamilton will therefore race a basically unchanged McLaren this weekend in Malaysia. But Hamilton’s downbeat mood has been picked up with the news that he was beaten by Button from pole last Sunday due to a minor clutch issue. “It wasn’t my fault,” said the Briton, “but we now understand and know how to improve in the future.” As for their differing race performances, Hamilton insists he now understands “the reasons” for Melbourne “and it puts me in a really positive frame of mind” ahead of this weekend’s Malaysian grand prix. |
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‘F-duct fever’ returns to F1 in 2012Comments Off A new case of F-duct fever appears to have broken out in formula one. But towards the end of last year, Mercedes began testing an F-duct style innovation in the front-wing, which because it is entirely passive is legal. The system is on the W03 car, and Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport reports that McLaren’s final Barcelona test specification of its 2012 car, the MP4-27, featured a similar system. Now, there are rumours Mercedes, McLaren as well as Red Bull and Lotus have designed new F-duct style systems — also for the rear wing. Asked if this would explain Red Bull’s mysterious letterbox-style slit on the stepped front nose, designer Adrian Newey answered: “I can’t say anything.” “Some teams have some doubts about the legality of the supposed systems,” journalist Michael Schmidt said. “We have heard that one has made an official request to the FIA about what is and is not allowed in this area.” |
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Details: Marussia MR01Comments Off Marussia Racing’s new MR01 finally made its first on-track appearance during a promotional ‘filming’ day at Silverstone, just a few miles from is Banbury base. The Anglo-Russian team endured a torrid time in its attempts to get the car ready for the third and final group test at Barcelona last week, having skipped the opening session in Jerez to prepare the MR01 for early March, only to fail the mandatory FIA crash tests. Although both Timo Glock and rookie Charles Pic got some miles under their belts in Barcelona last month, it was at the wheel of the 2011-spec car, leaving them preciously short of time in the new machine ahead of its race debut in Melbourne next weekend. The Silverstone shakedown, part of a promotional event ahead of the car’s departure for the Australian Grand Prix, will provide both team and driver with vital information on the new machine, which has been conceived after a ground-up re-evaluation of the way Marussia designs its racing cars. As such, the car is almost entirely new, with very few carry-over components from last year’s Marussia Virgin MVR-02. The desire to make a clean break from the previous CFD-only creations presented the design team, led by technical consultant Pat Symonds, with the challenge of going back to basics to produce a solid mechanical package, whilst maintaining an eye towards achieving the incremental performance steps required to move the team forward. The starting point for the design programme was a consideration of the people and resources available to the Banbury-based team. The former three-base operation has been consolidated into one site, the Marussia Technical Centre in Banbury, bringing the various elements of the business together to form ‘one team’. In particular, the design department and practices now benefit from far greater integration and collaboration. Furthermore, the aerodynamic department has been completely restructured and the aero methodology reinforced, blurring the boundaries between CFD and experimental work in the wind tunnel, as well as enhancing the fidelity of the team’s aero approach. The technical partnership forged with McLaren Applied Technologies in July of last year has also been influential in the design process and the relationship is starting to yield benefit as the advanced facilities that the Marussia team has access to have been used to prove the correlation process with the MVR-02. It is however early in the relationship and the MR01 will become a beneficiary of the relationship in due course. The key design priorities were to address previous aerodynamic deficiencies and, mechanically, achieve greater weight saving. At the same time, a lot of the detail of the car has been refined and the design team have been a little more adventurous than before, stepping closer to the engineering boundaries. The car can best be described as a significant evolution of its predecessors. The relationship with McLaren is also evident, as the MR01 is only the second car launched this season, after the Woking giant’s MP4-27, to eschew the stepped nose concept favoured by the rest of the field. “We are very pleased to be running the new MR01 for the first time this morning,” team principal John Booth admitted, “It has been a long and frustrating wait for everyone in the team, but we can now get back on track – literally – and start working towards the first race of the season in Australia next weekend. “Today is the first of two promotional events, so while the drivers will be able to get a feel for the car, they won’t be able to draw any real conclusions until we start running in anger in Melbourne. Nevertheless, this is an important day for us and we’ll enjoy every minute on track with the new car.” Glock turned the first laps with the MR01, beginning his third season with the team and providing the all-important element of continuity required to keep moving the package forward. He is joined in 2012 by Frenchman Pic, who embarks on his rookie year in F1, having made the step up from GP2 to replace Belgium’s Jerome d’Ambrosio. Both drivers will get track time with the new car over the next two days, albeit running on demonstration tyres as opposed to the Pirelli P-Zeros that they will use once competition starts in Melbourne. |
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Arms-race speeds up even before first raceComments Off At the front of the field in 2012, before a single racing lap has even turned, the well-known formula one arms-race has already begun. On the RB8, the major difference was the Sauber-style exhaust, after designer Adrian Newey was reportedly “impressed” with the 2012 solution devised by the Swiss midfield team. “It’s effectively a completely new (Red Bull) car,” said the BBC’s technical analyst Gary Anderson, according to the Guardian. The high-profile Red Bull upgrade was the perfect time for McLaren to quietly unveil its own heavily modified car, Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport reported. “Did you see that McLaren have rebuilt half their car?” Force India technical director Andrew Green is quoted as saying. One new innovation on the MP4-27, apparently, is a Mercedes-like front wing W-duct. “The upgrade is a major step forward; better than we expected,” said Jenson Button. Elsewhere, the noises are not so positive: Ferrari stridently denied internet rumours Felipe Massa has been sacked, and then gagged both the Brazilian and his teammate Fernando Alonso from speaking to the media. “The decision has been taken to keep the whole team fully focused on the job and there is not any polemic intent behind it,” the team insisted. But while happily listing Red Bull’s likely contenders for 2012, Mark Webber admitted Ferrari’s form remains a “mystery”. Even less is known about those at the rear of the grid, with Marussia and HRT still yet to launch their 2012 cars. The Spanish team has sought permission at late notice to do a “filming day” with its new machine in Barcelona on Monday, while Marussia wants to run at Silverstone in the coming days. At Marussia, the hold-up was caused by the FIA’s more stringent than ever crash tests. “We’re going to make sure we get it right this time,” team boss John Booth told the BBC. |
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Pecking order hints McLaren fast, Ferrari notComments Off After an inconclusive and perhaps even worrying performance at Jerez, the faces in the McLaren garage are looking happier as the second group test progresses this week in Barcelona. “We have learned a lot; the car is much better balanced now. I can say that we have a stronger base than last year,” added the 2008 world champion. According to Britain’s Mirror newspaper, Hamilton’s teammate Jenson Button agreed: “There are no excuses this year. I feel we have everything. “We’re on target,” said the 2011 championship runner-up. “There’s nothing to say we’re one and a half seconds quicker than anyone, but then there’s also nothing to say we’re not fast.” Red Bull’s reigning back to back world champion Sebastian Vettel is quoted by the Telegraph as saying he thinks McLaren will be “strong straight from the beginning of the season”. Added Mercedes’ team boss Ross Brawn: “Red Bull will have a strong car again, and so will McLaren. “Ferrari seem to be having a few difficulties,” Auto Motor und Sport quotes him as saying, referring to his former Maranello based employer. Red Bull reserve Sebastien Buemi, having watched from a trackside position on Wednesday, said Fernando Alonso looked uncomfortable with the handling of the F2012. “I think we are probably not the quickest today,” Spaniard Alonso agreed, “but neither are we the slowest. “At the moment we are not where we want to be, nor where we want to be in Australia, but I remain optimistic. “We just have to hope that we have completed this learning process we are going through with a very complex car by the time the season starts,” Spanish reporters quote the former two-time world champion as saying. |
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Hamilton ‘disappointed’ with 2012 McLaren(1) Behind the scenes, Lewis Hamilton is quietly concerned about McLaren’s early progress with its 2012 car, according to media reports. “When I saw that all the other cars are high at the front, it did make me wonder if we had done the right thing,” the 2008 world champion, referring to the ‘step’ nose trend that McLaren has sidestepped, is quoted as saying. Hamilton was quicker than his teammate Jenson Button at Jerez, with his 1.19 laptime set on Thursday close to Sebastian Vettel’s Red Bull pace on the same day. The previous day, however, Vettel’s teammate Mark Webber had been the quickest of the 2012 car runners in the RB8. And when referring to his 1.19, Hamilton admitted that the lap was set while McLaren was being “aggressive”, implying that he was light on fuel. If so, the MP4-27 is at least a full second off Lotus’ Jerez pace. There are more clues: asked about the change in blown diffuser rules, Briton Hamilton said the MP4-27 is “difficult to control in the fast corners”. That contrasts with Vettel’s comment that, “In the fast corners I don’t feel very much difference to before (in 2011)”. Moreover, Spain’s Marca sports daily claims Hamilton confided to his former McLaren teammate Heikki Kovalainen at Jerez that he is “disappointed” with his new car. On the record, he said: “I feel quite positive about where the car is at the moment and I’m confident that the guys can push it forward. “You’ve got to remember that everyone is just focusing on their own programmes. It’s not a contest for who’s the fastest at the moment,” Hamilton insisted. “Over the coming weeks we’ll get a better indication of where everyone is.” |
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McLaren stops Hamilton answering ‘pathetic’ insult(1) McLaren has once again stepped in to prevent Lewis Hamilton from answering a reporter’s question about the Adrian Sutil affair. “We’ve been told that Lewis shouldn’t really go there because it (the conviction) might go under appeal,” the spokesman quickly intervened. Hamilton smiled: “I’ll listen to him.” The Briton’s former F3 teammate did indeed file an appeal, but not before Sutil’s father Jorge described Hamilton as “pathetic” in the German press. Asked about the latest insult from the Sutil camp, Hamilton was once again prevented from answering in the Jerez paddock by a McLaren media minder. “That question is not permitted,” the spokesman is quoted as saying by Auto Motor und Sport. The German magazine article read: “We say that Hamilton should have the courage to speak for himself.” In other courtside F1 news, former Benetton driver JJ Lehto’s attempt to appeal his prison sentence for manslaughter got off to a dismal start, the Swiss newspaper Blick reports. Finn Lehto’s lawyer reportedly appeared in court to file the appeal but was “immediately arrested himself, apparently because of money laundering”. |
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Vettel admits doubts over F1 grandees’ 2012 paceComments Off While the smiles in the Lotus pits are obvious at Jerez, the same cannot be said of ‘grandee’ outfits Ferrari, McLaren and Red Bull. “My initial feelings are pretty positive,” he added. “The car feels reasonably quick.” But with every other 2012 car featuring a radical ‘step’ in its front nose, some reports believe McLaren may have missed a trick by opting for a conservative solution. “It is not a trick or a loophole that we did not spot,” said McLaren’s technical director Paddy Lowe. “Some people have some interesting ideas around the use of that step, and we are looking with interest at all of that stuff,” he told the Mirror. Actually, the McLaren was not far off the pace of Sebastian Vettel’s new Red Bull, but the pair were a long way from Romain Grosjean’s impressive Lotus E20, and the 2011 Mercedes driven by Nico Rosberg. Vettel, also getting his first taste of his 2012 machinery on Thursday, admitted there are “question marks” about all of F1′s regular pacesetters. Nevertheless, “We are where we want to be,” the reigning world champion smiled. “It feels fine and as we expected.” Agreed team owner Dietrich Mateschitz on a rare paddock visit: “It looks quite good but anything else would have been a surprise as the car is a development.” Much more worried is Ferrari, after the aggressive 2012 Ferrari on Thursday looked no more impressive in Fernando Alonso’s hands than it had under Felipe Massa’s control earlier this week. Britain’s Daily Mail said the F2012 is “ugly in more ways than one”. “I can only say that it is going to take a lot of analysis to put all the pieces of the jigsaw together,” said Ferrari’s British technical director Pat Fry. “I am not happy with where we are at the moment.” Arguably even less happy on Thursday were Force India’s Jules Bianchi and Nico Hulkenberg, after the French test driver crashed the new VJM05 before setting a laptime. There were not enough parts to repair the car and so Hulkenberg’s scheduled track debut was postponed. “I’m very sorry,” said Bianchi, “because my mistake has cost the team a lot of time and effort.” |
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New blown exhaust saga begins at JerezComments Off While ‘step’ noses were still occupying some in the F1 paddock, the sport’s purists were staring at the rear of the cars as the field of 2012 tested at Jerez on Tuesday. But according to Auto Motor und Sport, the Ferrari and McLaren solutions are not necessarily visible from a bird’s eye view, causing some insiders to predict a new controversy about the legality of cars this season. So at Jerez, the game began. “We have had a lot of correspondence with the FIA,” said Ferrari designer Nikolas Tombazis. “We believe that what we are doing is legal.” McLaren’s solution is also innovative, with the side ‘bump’ seen at the launch of the MP4-27 still on the car at Jerez. One early analysis is that the team is using a rule loophole to cleverly redirect the exhaust air. “There’s always a chance that somebody will come up with something that’s right on the border,” said Red Bull designer Adrian Newey. Added Lotus’ James Allison: “So far we have a conservative solution,” he commented on the day Kimi Raikkonen went quickest in the 2012 car. “We will watch the competition and also what the FIA says. Depending on how much they will allow, we will act accordingly.” Some of the smaller teams are already expressing frustration. “The FIA has said that the exhaust should no longer influence the aerodynamics. We support that and we will stick to that,” said Toro Rosso’s Giorgio Ascanelli. Added Williams’ Mark Gillan: “The rules are actually pretty clear and we are trying to be on the right side of them.” |
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2011 no cakewalk for Red BullComments Off Nick Heidfeld is sure Red Bull and Sebastian Vettel will not walk away with the 2011 world championship. “After the first races some people said it was going to be a walkover for Sebastian and Red Bull,” he said in an interview with German broadcaster RTL. “But if you look back on the past few years, something like that is really very rare. Particularly McLaren in recent years have often started a bit behind and then moved forward quite rapidly,” added Heidfeld. Indeed, McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton won with a superior tyre strategy in China three weeks ago, although insiders expect Red Bull to shine this weekend in Turkey. Heidfeld said of McLaren: “If they have the development pace they’ve had in previous years, they will be a very serious challenger. And I hope that some other teams and us (Renault) as well can also be at the very front.” In a teleconference with reporters on Tuesday, McLaren’s chief engineer Phil Prew admitted the gap separating Red Bull’s RB7 from the MP4-26 is up to five tenths per lap. |
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