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Toni Cuquerella, new Technical Director of HRT Formula 1 TeamComments Off Engineer Toni Cuquerella assumes, as of today, the role of Technical Director of HRT Formula 1 Team. Cuquerella, besides being at the head of technical development, will continue to exercise his role as the maximum figure of engineering on the track. Since Geoff Willis left the team in September of 2011, the position of Technical Director has not been occupied. The decision was then made for the development of the F112 to take place at the team’s technical office in Munich, at the hands of Holzer Group and the Chief of Aerodynamics, Stephane Chosse, under the supervision of the, until last February, Technical Coordinator Jacky Eeckelaert. With the F112 put on the track, it’s now time to work on its development and evolution and so, the naming of a person to lead this project is necessary. And no one better than Toni Cuquerella, with his experience in Formula 1 and his praiseworthy work at the fore of HRT, to take it on. The appointment of the Spanish engineer at the head of the technical department is a new step in the new management’s desire to centralize and take control of all the activities related to the design and development of the car. This will optimize the coordination of the different departments, helping to meet the set targets, and also rationalize resources. Toni Cuquerella, Technical Director: “The role of Technical Director implies a great amount of responsibility in terms of coordination and decision making. That’s why I’m very proud that the management considers me to be the most adequate person to carry it out. Until now there was a lot of dispersion from within the technical team and that had its repercussions in the concept and quality of the F112. My priority is to solve the current car’s problems to then develop it to its maximum potential, whilst also unifying and expanding the technical department, but I’m confident that we have a good work base and a clear direction to advance and have a good project for the future”. Luis Pérez-Sala, Team Principal: “Toni Cuquerella has been a key figure in the team since its inception and, above all, in this new stage. The transition from the previous project to this one hasn’t been easy and a lot of work has been carried out that without vital figures such as him wouldn’t have been possible. The position of Technical Director was vacant and the development of the F112 was carried out at the technical office in Munich. But now, with the car already on the track, it was important to take control and count on someone influential at the head of the technical office. And because of his experience, judgment and knowledge, Toni’s profile fitted in perfectly”. Profile Antonio Cuquerella was born in Gandía, Spain 38 years ago. He did a degree in Mechanical Engineering at the Universidad Politécnica of Valencia. In 1999 he had his first role as a race engineer for Campos GP at the Open Nissan. After this he worked in various national and international motorsport categories before becoming Chief Engineer of the Toledo WTCC and Leon WTCC projects at SEAT Sport. In 2006 he arrived in Formula 1 as a race engineer for Super Aguri F1, where he spent two years before moving to BMW Sauber F1 Team, acting in the same role with driver Robert Kubica. Towards the end of 2009 he decided to take a risk and back Adrián Campos in a project to establish a new Spanish team in Formula 1, becoming the Chief Race Engineer for Campos Meta. Since the team’s first season, Toni has been the Chief Race and Test Engineer and has been a key figure both in the early days and this new stage of HRT and now he assumes an even more important role as the Technical Director. |
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Pirelli signs test driver AlguersuariComments Off F1 tyre supplier Pirelli on Friday announced that Jaime Alguersuari has been signed as a test driver. The former Toro Rosso driver was left without a role for the 2012 season, so he signed on as a co-commentator for British radio as a means of staying in the paddock full-time. The 22-year-old Spaniard will join Pirelli’s existing test driver Lucas di Grassi, the former Virgin driver, and the pair will also develop tyres for GP2. Pirelli said Alguersuari will “bring his knowledge of the most current generation of formula one machinery”. He and di Grassi will test Pirelli’s newly-acquired 2010 Renault car at Jerez, Spa, Monza and Barcelona between May and September. “I have a huge desire to get behind the wheel of a formula one car again and return to competition, so this is a brilliant chance for me,” said Alguersuari. |
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No French GP return announcement yetComments Off New media reports have contradicted claims French PM Francois Fillon will on Friday announce the country’s 2013 return to the formula one calendar. Le Parisien newspaper on Thursday said Fillon’s visit to the Paul Ricard circuit on Friday is to confirm the successful end to long negotiations to revive the French grand prix. Those negotiations were for Paul Ricard to annually alternate a race date with Belgium’s fabled Spa Francorchamps. But the French-language RMC insists that Belgium is “not ready for the alternation”. “If France has received a contract to organise a grand prix every other year, this is not the case for the Belgian promoters, who are still waiting for the document to send to the government of Wallonia,” the report read. RMC said the hold-up could be because Spa is having trouble paying its sanctioning fee for this year’s race date in September. The French magazine Sport-Auto agrees, insisting that Fillon “will not announce the return of the grand prix de France on Friday”. “The prime minister will travel to the (Paul Ricard) circuit,” an official close to Fillon is quoted as saying by AFP news agency, but Fillon “will not announce the return of the grand prix to the calendar in 2013″. The official, however, said Bernie Ecclestone as approved “in principle” France’s presence on the calendar every other year, beginning in 2013. But “It (the alternation) will not necessarily be with Belgium,” the report added. In an interview to be published by the Nice-Matin newspaper on Friday, Fillon is quoted as saying a grand prix is crucial to France. “Bernie Ecclestone has just sent us a draft contract,” said the prime minister, “which is the result of negotiations that began several months ago. “We now have a concrete basis for discussions,” he added. |
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Two DRS zones for first India GPComments Off For only the second time in 2011, there will be two separate DRS zones in use this weekend. Now, Pastor Maldonado’s race engineer Xevi Pujolar has revealed that there will be two separate DRS zones in India, even though the news is “not official yet”. The detection zone for the first zone will be at the exit of turn 15, with chasing drivers then able to pass down the pit straight. The second zone’s detection point will be on entry to turn 3, with activation between turns 3 and 4, according to the Spanish website caranddriverthef1.com. |
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Perez lined up for Ferrari testComments Off Ferrari will evaluate Sergio Perez during a test with the Italian team’s 2009 car later this year. Mexican rookie Perez, backed strongly by Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, is making his formula one debut in 2011 for the Ferrari powered Swiss team Sauber. The 21-year-old, like French GP2 driver and Ferrari reserve Jules Bianchi, is also a leading member of Ferrari’s driver development academy. The pair are tipped as possible long-term replacements for Felipe Massa. Driver academy director Luca Baldisserri announced this week that Perez and Bianchi will be testing at Mugello or Fiorano in September. “I think they will both be very motivated and for us it will be the perfect opportunity to assess both drivers,” he said. |
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Ecclestone ‘not sure’ F1 to be in HD in 2011Comments Off The likelihood that F1 will be broadcast in high definition next year has taken a backwards step. Bernie Ecclestone boosted the hopes of F1′s global television audience in September when he indicated the sport will be moving to HD “probably next year”. But in an interview with Christian Sylt and Caroline Reid, the F1 chief executive now insists he is “not sure” the 2011 feed will be broadcast in HD. One of the main problems, he indicated, is that high definition cameras are too big to be installed in the cars for the popular on-board footage. That would mean the F1 feed is “50 per cent HD and 50 per cent standard definition”, the 80-year-old Briton is quoted by Germany’s motorsport-total.com. Sylt and Reid hypothesise that Ecclestone’s reluctance to embrace the new television technology could be related to the failure of his multi-channel digital feed for F1 in the 90s. |
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SingTel denies sealing new Singapore GP dealComments Off Singapore telecommunications company SingTel has denied it has agreed a deal to extend its naming sponsorship of the city-state’s night grand prix. “We agreed terms with SingTel for the renewal of their contract for a further two years,” F1 chief executive Bernie Ecclestone was quoted earlier by the local media broadcaster MediaCorp. The news had followed rumours during Singapore’s third F1 event in September that SingTel was considering ending its association with the grand prix. “We have companies worldwide that wish to have association in formula one and I always prefer to have local sponsors for the title sponsorship,” added Ecclestone. A spokesman for SingTel told us on Friday: “We are still in discussions with F1 management regarding the sponsorship of the Singapore grand prix.” An industry expert said SingTel would be spending $10-15 million on the deal. “I don’t know what the cost is but I am sure somebody in SingTel must have done a cost-benefit analysis,” said Nervik Singh, chief executive of the marketing communications company Grey Group Asia Pacific. |
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HRT to buy Williams gearbox in 2011Comments Off The struggling HRT team has emerged as a likely customer for technical support by Williams in 2011. Last month it was reported that famous British team Williams could be set to supply its hydraulic systems and gearboxes to one or more of the sport’s small new teams. In 2010, the standard Xtrac systems have proved outdated and unreliable, and Lotus broke ranks to arrange of a supply of Red Bull’s technology for 2011. “We’ve had enquiries for our hydraulics and gearbox, we’re open to supplying it, but nothing has been agreed at this point,” a Williams spokesman told us in September. The Finnish newspaper Turun Sanomat believes Hispania Racing (HRT), the back-of-the-grid Spanish team, has been in talks with Williams about the systems. |
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Durango admits NASCAR foray more likely than F1Comments Off The plans for a formula one team are reportedly still alive, but Villeneuve/Durango is now more likely to turn its attention to NASCAR. Ivone Pinton, principal of the Italian team Durango that pulled out of GP2 in 2009 with financial problems, echoed Jacques Villeneuve’s comments of last month that the collaboration is looking to buy one of the existing F1 teams. Colin Kolles said in September that the rumours linking the struggling HRT team with Durango left him “speechless”. But Durango’s Pinton insists F1 is a real option, telling the Italian website 422race.com that he and the 1997 world champion Villeneuve are “still working together” and in talks with “a couple of” the sport’s current teams. “If we can do it in 2011, fine. Otherwise we will go on working on it,” he explained. French Canadian Villeneuve told the Canadian media last month that another option is to switch focus to NASCAR. Pinton agreed, explaining that a successful foray in North America could precede a later attempt to “do things well in Europe”. “This (NASCAR) is the most logical and possible situation,” he said. “It’s useless to do something if you aren’t sure of the quality. And we already saw how it is to do F1 without quality.” |
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FIA team selection process ‘too slow’ for Stefan GPComments Off Stefan GP pulled out of the running for the 13th team entry for 2011 because the FIA’s selection process was too slow. That is the view of Zoran Stefanovic, who after missing out on a place on this year’s grid vowed to try again for the 2011 season. Alongside other contenders including Villeneuve/Durango and Epsilon Euskadi, the Serbian outfit tackled the initial stages of the selection process, but ultimately pulled out in August. “We had applied at the beginning but we found out that the process was too long and it didn’t give us assurances on the time when someone will be chosen as the 13th team,” Stefanovic told f1pulse.com. When the FIA invited expressions of interest for the 13th place in March, the governing body said its decision would be made in July. But the decision, with the FIA ultimately ruling that the team place should be left open, was made only this month. Stefanovic said September is “too late to go in and design a car for next year”. “We think it (the process) should be faster and we think it’s necessary to have a 13th team,” he added. Contrary to the ‘plan B’ announced by Jacques Villeneuve, Stefanovic said he is not currently contemplating taking over an existing team. “At the moment we are not doing that thing specifically,” he said. “We will see in the future what we can do.” |
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Korea’s final FIA inspection nearly six weeks overdueComments Off
Instead, the venue has been given until September 21 to prepare for Charlie Whiting’s final inspection, with a FIA spokesman admitting “a lot of work remains to be completed” at the Yeongam site, according to the Telegraph. Appendix O of the Code says the final inspection for a permanent venue should take place “not later than 90 days before the first international event to be held” there. If adhered to, Korea’s final inspection should have taken place at the end of July, given its late October race date. And if a circuit fails its final inspection, the sporting regulations state that the event “will not be considered for inclusion in the following year’s championship unless the FIA judges the cancellation to have been due to force majeure”. Countering ongoing speculation about the state of the site, race organisers have released some photos showing completed buildings and an apparently freshly-laid track surface. But other, unofficial photos recently did the rounds showing that aspects of the venue are far from complete. However, the Telegraph’s Tom Cary said the FIA is “satisfied” with progress. Indian driver Karun Chandhok is currently on his way to the east Asian state, where on Saturday he is scheduled to drive Red Bull’s demo car around the circuit. Event organisers KAVO insist the venue is “90 per cent” complete. |
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Stuck leaves hospital after head surgeryComments Off Hans-Joachim Stuck has left hospital after recovering from head surgery. The German former grand prix driver and now Volkswagen’s competition representative had a hematoma removed just over a week ago, caused by a heavy crash in an Audi R8 at the Nurburgring. The 59-year-old was recovering in hospital in the German town Neuwied, but has now left the St. Elisabeth-Krankenhaus, according to the news agency SID. “Finally I can check out — man, I’m glad about that,” he is quoted as saying, thanking the staff for their “excellent care”. Stuck, who contested 81 races in the 70s, said he is returning home to rest, with his next race in the German endurance championship scheduled for September 25. |
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De la Rosa delays Sauber talks for SeptemberComments Off With half the season now gone, Pedro de la Rosa admits he is not sure what he will be doing in 2011. “I am trying only to enjoy the moment,” said the 39-year-old Spaniard, who returned to the grid this year after a long spell as McLaren’s test driver. Last month, the Sauber driver revealed he is “available” for future employment by other teams. He has now told the EFE news agency that he is hopeful of being able to demonstrate his value in the remaining races this year. “Nine races are a lot,” said de la Rosa, admitting that a podium is unlikely. “That would be too much. My fight is for the top ten. We have to be realistic about our limitations. “We have potential and all the ingredients, I’m driving well, but we are developing the car with a limited budget.” Sauber, and particularly the Japanese rookie Kamui Kobayashi, has performed strongly at the last two races, so de la Rosa acknowledges that “the next two races are very important for the team and for myself”. AS newspaper asked the Spaniard if he had heard that countryman Jaime Alguersuari has had his contract with Toro Rosso extended for 2011. “Yes, I’m happy for him. For me future, I don’t know. We will speak about it in September. I’ve learned not to hurry.” |
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