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Spanish team HRT’s car made in GermanyComments Off Former boss Colin Kolles and his Greding-based company is no longer involved, but there remains a strong German input with the struggling team HRT. It is there that, since November 2011, the Holzer-Gruppe company has been frantically building up the Cosworth-powered cars for Pedro de la Rosa and Narain Karthikeyan. “Under our management almost everything has been made here in Bobingen,” said Gunther Holzer. “For the wind tunnel we used the Mercedes facility in Brackley (UK),” he added. Eight of F1′s 12 teams are based in England, with the others either in Italy (Ferrari and Toro Rosso) or Switzerland (Sauber). HRT uses Williams’ gearbox. “We wanted to go our separate way, not like almost everyone else who are all within a few miles of Oxford,” said HRT chief executive Saul Ruiz de Marcos. The team’s longer plan is to be solely based in Madrid, but for now Holzer will lead the development of the F112. “For the start of the European season in Spain we are planning the first improvements to the car,” said Marcos. Holzer explained: “The car is designed first for safety and so is heavy compared to the competition. For the future we are focused on making it lighter.” Before the lighter car debuts in Barcelona, HRT faces three more challenges – Malaysia, China and Bahrain – at which the sport’s 107 per cent rule will be a major hurdle. “The goal is to qualify, there is no other,” admitted de la Rosa. “Race reliability is something else we need to work on, but first we have to qualify.” |
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Next few races crucial for Ferrari’s 2011 campaignComments Off Ferrari might have more to say in the coming days about the banning of its innovative new high rear wing in Spain. “I do not say anything,” said Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo afterwards from Italy, according to ANSA news agency, “but I want to comment on the matter in the coming days.” Fernando Alonso led the race early but insists the team took a backwards step relative to the opposition. “We were too slow on soft tyres and very slow on hard ones,” he is quoted as saying by Finland’s Turun Sanomat. The Spaniard added that a lack downforce is the main issue but he is refusing to give up. “We took a step forward but at the same time McLaren and Red Bull took two,” he said. “I have not given up but we need a better car. Let’s see what happens at Valencia at the latest.” Team boss Stefano Domenicali is quoted by La Stampa newspaper as saying Monaco, Montreal and Valencia will be crucial races to compare the performance in Spain due to the different tyres that will be in use. Spain’s AS newspaper said Ferrari is coming under pressure from major sponsor Santander, whose boss Emilio Botin reportedly had some hard words with Domenicali at the Circuit de Catalunya. “There is no doubt that in 2012 there will be new staff in key positions at Ferrari,” wrote the authoritative Livio Oricchio in his Jornal da Tarde column. And Alonso is quoted by O Estado do S.Paulo newspaper: “Let’s have a very different car in Canada, and the next three races we have the soft tyres with which we are faster.” Added Domenicali, according to Autosprint: “After these races, we will see where we are and what direction to take.” |
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Renault could supply four F1 teams in 2011Comments Off Jun.18 (GMM) There could be more Renault-powered cars on next year’s formula one grid than any other engine supplier. Although the French marque currently supplies its 2.4 litre V8 only to the team that bears its name as well as Red Bull, it is reported that Williams is now close to agreeing a deal for 2011. There have been reports that the Grove based team is less than fully happy with the returning supplier Cosworth this year, while at the same time Renault has confirmed it is looking to add a team to its customer engine roster. Also linked with a switch to Renault has been the currently Cosworth-powered new team Lotus, while Cosworth’s business director Mark Gallagher recently said he suspects equipping the sport’s 13th team for 2011 will be “a Cosworth/Renault competition”. A report by France’s Auto Hebdo said it is likely that eight cars on the 2011 grid will be fitted with Renault engines. “An agreement with Williams is almost done,” said the magazine. |
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Ferrari struggle shows Lotus not ‘rubbish’Comments Off On the occasion of Ferrari’s 800th grand prix, Tony Fernandes made sure the Italian team’s celebratory champagne tasted sour. After proving the strongest of the three new teams in 2010, the Lotus team boss stared mockingly at the qualifying timesheets in Turkey and recalled the pre-season words of Luca di Montezemolo. The Ferrari president had derided the new teams, accusing them of reducing F1 to little more than a glorified junior series. But Lotus is now closing on the tail of the established teams, including Force India whose Tonio Liuzzi was just 1.2 seconds clear of Jarno Trulli at Istanbul Park. And “The team who has done 7 races (is) 2.4 seconds slower than the team who has done 800 races. Wonder if Luca still thinks we are rubbish,” Fernandes wrote on his Twitter. Ferrari began the season with one of the favoured cars, but a worried Fernando Alonso said in Turkey that the F10 is now “far behind” Red Bull and McLaren, outpaced by Mercedes and at risk of falling away from his old team Renault. “We need to roll our sleeves up even higher,” team boss Stefano Domenicali told Finland’s Turun Sanomat after Alonso suggested the car has not been developed quickly enough. “In Valencia we will have a strongly updated package,” he promised. (GMM) |
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F-ducts back on teams’ agendas for TurkeyComments Off Sauber removed the F-duct from its C29 for Monaco for safety reasons, the Swiss team’s boss has revealed. Ferrari also decided not to run the downforce-spoiling concept in the Principality, but the Italian team argued that the device simply was not effective on the twisty streets. But Peter Sauber said his team’s decision was for a different reason. “I wanted my drivers to have both their hands on the steering wheel through the tunnel,” he is quoted by Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport. “Ever since Karl Wendlinger had his accident there in 1994, I have respect for this place,” added Sauber. Like Ferrari, Sauber’s system involves blocking an air inlet with the drivers’ hand. The McLaren system is activated by the knee, but Lewis Hamilton acknowledged that the time advantage was just a few hundredths per lap in Monaco. Ferrari’s system will be back on the F10 car in Turkey in two weeks. “Our system did not work as desired in Barcelona,” confirmed team boss Stefano Domenicali. “We are still fine-tuning it.” The red cars were very fast in a straight line in Spain, but the system was also shedding downforce in the corners “when the system was not being activated”, the Italian admitted. Red Bull will also begin experimenting with the concept in Turkey. “We are doing the research and for sure at the next couple of races we will have a look at it, but we will only introduce it when it earns a place on the car,” Christian Horner told F1′s official website. (GMM) |
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Field Fillers May Re-emerge in Sprint CupComments Off The 2008 NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup season was dominated by a small circle of teams that have ingeniously advanced their entire programs over the past four or five years. Most NASCAR fans will agree the Roush Fenway Racing, Hendrick Motorsports, Richard Childress Racing, and Joe Gibbs Racing are at the zenith of the sport when it comes to on-track performance and achievements. Take a glimpse at the driver roster for each of the above mentioned teams. Roush Fenway Racing boasts a blend of talented personalities in Carl Edwards, Matt Kenseth, Greg Biffle, David Ragan, and Jamie McMurray. Hendrick Motorsports owns perhaps the most star-studded lineup in NASCAR history with Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr, and Mark Martin. Richard Childress Racing possesses perhaps the most consistent trio of drivers with Jeff Burton, Kevin Harvick, and Clint Bowyer. He added former Hendrick Motorsports driver Casey Mears to his driver roster for the 2009 season. Joe Gibbs Racing has the youthful vigor of Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, and rookie Joey Logano, with their ages ranging from 18 to 28. Logano replaces the two-time champion Tony Stewart. In 2006, the four teams made up eight of the ten drivers in the Chase for the Championship. In 2007, they occupied ten of the twelve slots in the ten-race championship chase. In 2008, the entire Chase for the Championship field was drivers and teams from the ‘big four’. Clearly, it is no surprise that other teams may tremble at the thought of having to compete with these juggernauts. However, there are a few teams out there with drivers and personnel capable of giving the big four a run for their money. |
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