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F1′s sixth winner shapes up for Monaco(0) F1′s next winner could be at the wheel of a black and gold car. “I think Kimi (Raikkonen) will be the sixth different winner in the sixth race,” said Finnish commentator and former driver Mika Salo, to the MTV3 broadcaster. Although the results in 2012 have proved impossible to predict so far, many paddock pundits expected Lotus’ E20 to be the car to beat last weekend in Barcelona. “The big surprise was when Kimi didn’t win,” admitted former Ferrari driver Salo, referring to Pastor Maldonado’s victory for Williams. Also confident about Lotus’ potential is Raikkonen’s teammate, Romain Grosjean, who finished behind the 2007 world champion last weekend. “It’s good to be a little disappointed with third and fourth,” he told the French language RMC Sport. “It shows that as a team we are convinced we can win.” According to the reigning world champion team Red Bull’s drivers, however, there is a downside to this year’s impossible-to-predict F1 landscape. “Maybe we will see an HRT or a Marussia on pole in Monaco,” world champion Sebastian Vettel said, unenthusiastically and half-seriously. Mark Webber insists that what has been described as the Pirelli ‘lottery’ might not be a good thing for the sport. “I don’t know if they (the fans) will get sick of seeing so many different winners,” the Australian told Fox Sports. “It’s nice to have different winners but also we want rivals.” |
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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. |
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Ferrari getting ready for ‘double-DRS’(0) Ferrari might be gearing up to incorporate a ‘double-DRS’ setup aboard its improving F2012 car. If true, the famous Italian team would be the first team to successfully emulate the controversial Mercedes system, which has been declared fully legal by the governing FIA. Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport said a new rear wing was among the very last upgrades to be trialled by Fernando Alonso as the Mugello test concluded late on Thursday. “The wing has only minor changes. You have to look closely,” read the report. The magazine reported rumours that the wing might eventually accommodate the so-called ‘double-DRS’ or 2012-style F-duct, which would work in conjunction with a new and so far unseen front wing. “That (wing) will debut along with a new diffuser and nose in Barcelona,” added Auto Motor und Sport. There were happy faces in the Ferrari garage on Thursday, as – despite a minor off by Alonso – the upgrades appeared to work well. “Barcelona will be a key moment in the season, but not a decisive one,” the Spanish driver insisted. “It’s not a case that we will suddenly find ourselves back on pole position, because there is no magic button.” Echoing the earlier words of Mark Webber, Alonso said the “fastest car” at Mugello this week was the Lotus. Red Bull’s Dr Helmut Marko agrees: “It looks like Lotus are the quickest.” Veteran Swiss correspondent Roger Benoit wrote in Blick newspaper: “Lotus, with Kimi Raikkonen in super shape, is the championship dark horse.” |
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Insider expects F1 to lose two races in 2012Comments Off A respected F1 correspondent is expecting F1′s 2012 calendar to shrink to eighteen races this year. Livio Oricchio, who writes for Brazil’s O Estado de S.Paulo, thinks the sport is now on the verge of cancelling next weekend’s visit to Bahrain. And he also thinks November’s US grand prix, scheduled to take place at the brand new Circuit of the Americas in Austin, is in doubt. “The construction has fallen way behind,” said Oricchio, “and there are serious problems between the promoter and the Texas government. “Each side is looking to the other on the obligation to pay the fee, estimated at $18 million, to FOM (Formula One Management). “So the championship that should have 20 races will most likely have only 18,” he concluded. At least publicly, however, the Circuit of the Americas is continuing to take shape. This Thursday, a private ceremony is scheduled to take place as circuit contractor Austin Commercial celebrates the milestone of completing the full height of the main three-storey pit building. The Austin Business Journal reports that “several business and civic leaders are scheduled to attend”. |
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Force India preview the Malaysian GPComments Off
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Ferrari glass ‘half full’ but no improvement yetComments Off Fernando Alonso kept up a positive outlook on Sunday despite some Italian newspapers describing Ferrari’s situation as a “crisis”. “After the way qualifying went, ending up with ten points behind the top two teams is good news,” he is quoted by La Gazzetta dello Sport. The sports daily Marca described the attitude as Alonso “seeing the glass half-full”. “For the Ferrari fans I say ‘wait a few races’,” former F1 driver Jarno Trulli told Italy’s Rai Uno television. “Alonso managed to do something good but Ferrari needs to react, immediately,” the Italian, who was Alonso’s Renault teammate in 2004, added. Team boss Stefano Domenicali, however, told Finnish MTV3 television that the F2012 will not be in better shape for ‘a few races’ at least. Alonso agreed that, with one week between Australia and Malaysia, “We will have almost exactly the same car” at the Sepang circuit this weekend. Added Domenicali: “We know what needs to be improved, but it can’t be done overnight.” Former F1 driver Jaime Alguersuari remarked that the improvement in Alonso’s pace between Saturday and Sunday was significant. “The opposite of Mercedes,” he told AS newspaper. “I think Alonso once again showed his quality, although clearly they have much work ahead. “A driver can only win with the best car, but what he can do is demonstrate his quality with a good or a bad car,” he added. It is on that final point that the pressure on Felipe Massa merely increased in Australia, as the Brazilian had a disastrously poor weekend from start to finish. “We need to get behind him now as it’s clear he’s under pressure,” Domenicali told Gazzetta dello Sport. “When people find themselves under pressure you have to find a way to relieve that pressure so they are free to express themselves in the way they can. “I’ve asked his engineers to work closely with him and analyse the data so they can offer their support,” he added. |
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Red Bull and McLaren to fight for winComments Off A general consensus has emerged about the likely pecking-order this weekend in Australia. “From what I saw in the tests, Red Bull and McLaren seem to be at a similar pace,” Francesco Nenci, Kamui Kobayashi’s race engineer at Sauber, told O Estado de S.Paulo newspaper. “Then comes Mercedes and then our team along with Lotus and Ferrari. But we’ll only really find out here,” he told Brazilian correspondent Livio Oricchio in Melbourne. Steve Nielsen, Caterham’s sporting director, roughly agrees. “Red Bull and McLaren are the best, Mercedes is a little bit behind and then it’s Lotus, Ferrari, Sauber and Force India,” he said. And given that the top three teams will presumably dominate the first six positions in Q3, the last part of qualifying “should be exciting”, Nielsen smiled. But so will the fight at the front, with McLaren’s Jenson Button desperate to end Red Bull’s two-year run of dominance. “With quite a big change in the regulations in terms of the blown diffuser, now is the interesting time to see whether Red Bull can hang onto the advantage they have had,” said the Briton. “If they can, it is going to be very difficult to beat them over the next few years.” |
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De la Rosa: Ferrari ‘better than people think’Comments Off Pedro de la Rosa has admitted he senses a little too much pessimism from the Ferrari camp. De la Rosa, the veteran Spanish driver for HRT, thinks there is an element of truth to that. “They are better than people think,” he told Cadena Ser radio. “On the other hand I know that there are teams that are stronger, but I wouldn’t rule out the podium — I assure you,” the 41-year-old insisted. “What happens is you try to remove the pressure that is on you. As for me, I see Ferrari in a better shape than the sort of negative feeling that exists here in Spain. “I think they have their problems like everyone else, but their car is faster than it seems.” It was Pat Fry, Ferrari’s new technical director, who announced recently that the F2012 is not currently a podium contender. “This is not something that goes through my head,” Felipe Massa admitted to reporters in Sao Paulo this week. “It is true we tested a type of exhaust and realised it was not the right thing. But last year everyone was 90 per cent sure we would fight for the title and then we did not. “I won’t hide that we are not 100 per cent satisfied with what we did in the three test sessions in Spain. “But we have a very strong team and I have lots of faith in their capacity to be able to develop the chassis during the season,” he added. |
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‘In two weeks we’ll know’ says fast RaikkonenComments Off Kimi Raikkonen ended the 2012 pre-season with this year’s fastest Barcelona laptime, but the Finn is not yet predicting a win in Melbourne at the end of next weekend. Lotus – fast at Jerez and also at the Circuit de Catalunya – is expected to trail pacesetters Red Bull and McLaren this season. Yet in reality, the situation is deliberately clouded: Red Bull had a bad final day of testing on Sunday, but when he was running, rivals expected Sebastian Vettel’s RB8 was brimmed with fuel. And when he came into the pits, there was the odd sight of team mechanics using large umbrellas to hide the car’s newly-added secrets, including the sidepod exhaust. “I think that’s a question for Charlie Whiting,” said Ferrari’s technical director Pat Fry when asked about the legality of the solution. Even so, Red Bull’s position of dominance seems to have been somewhat eroded for 2012, with Mercedes chief Ross Brawn suggesting the RB8 is closely matched by its rivals unless the team has been “running a huge amount of fuel”. Sebastian Vettel told DPA news agency: “McLaren are strong. Mercedes are definitely stronger than last year and Lotus and perhaps some other teams should not be forgotten — Sauber, Force India. “Ferrari seem to be having some difficulties,” added the reigning world champion. World champion Vettel’s final comment appears undoubtedly true, with the famous Italian team’s drivers oddly banned from speaking with the media while technical boss Fry confessed that all is not well. “I’m always pessimistic,” said the Briton, who said a podium for Ferrari in Melbourne is not likely. “I’m disappointed with our performance at the moment.” Fernando Alonso, meanwhile, ignored his media muzzle and told Spanish television at a football game: “In the first races we will suffer — we are not yet at 100 per cent. “We’re not in as good shape as (Barcelona players) Messi and Iniesta,” he is quoted by Barca TV. But for now, it’s all talk, and so the reticent Raikkonen summed it up well: “Like I said, I don’t know, probably no one does,” he is quoted by Germany’s Sport1. “In two weeks, we’ll know.” |
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Experts expect 2012 to be close fight in F1Comments Off The precise pecking-order is clouded, but one thing is clear: 2012 looks set to be a highly competitive season in formula one. Earlier this week, Force India’s Nico Hulkenberg was the pacesetter, causing Mercedes’ Norbert Haug to tell Bild newspaper: “That’s great.” “I didn’t expect that,” agreed world champion Sebastian Vettel. Hulkenberg smiled: “‘Test champion’ gives me nothing. But I am in good shape.” Vettel continued to Kleine Zeitung newspaper: “This year everything is closer together”, he said, after his teammate Mark Webber admitted there is “no question” Red Bull needs to keep working on the pace of its new RB8. According to Die Welt newspaper, Vettel continued: “Most of the competitors are difficult to assess. It’s the same old game.” He is referring to unknown fuel levels, tyre age and differing approaches and programmes — and teams’ deliberate sandbagging or ‘show-run’ efforts. “I never paid too much attention to direct comparisons on headline laptimes,” insisted David Coulthard, “but on the longer runs you can start to build a picture.” Williams engineer Mark Gillan told Auto Motor und Sport: “It seems as though the entire field has moved much closer together. It will be a tough fight.” An early assessment of the pecking order might have Red Bull and McLaren at the front, and Mercedes and Lotus possibly ready to join the fight. “It looks like Red Bull are fairly stable,” Coulthard agreed to Russia’s Ria Novosti news agency, “(and) McLaren and Mercedes maybe closer than they were. “Ferrari is a bit of an unknown but I wouldn’t write them off. Let’s be patient, another three weeks of tweaking and then we’ll find out,” said the former McLaren and Red Bull driver. |
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Whitmarsh: Team unity can survive FOTA turmoilComments Off Lotus could become the next team to withdraw from the formula one teams association FOTA. Now, this week, team owner Gerard Lopez has been quoted as admitting that Lotus is contemplating pulling out. The reasons for the withdrawals appear different, with Red Bull having been accused of breaching the gentleman’s Resource Restriction Agreement (RRA) and Ferrari rumoured to want to use its individual power to shape the future of the sport’s rules and structure. The formerly BMW-owned Sauber, however, insisted that recent cost-cutting in formula one has not made it easier for smaller teams to survive. “The RRA was a step in the right direction, but now other steps must urgently follow,” he told F1′s official website. “It definitely has not become easier for the smaller teams.” But beneath the surface, unity has not broken down completely, argues McLaren team boss Martin Whitmarsh, who doubles as the FOTA chairman. It is true, for example, that the new non-FOTA members will continue to respect aspects of the body’s agreements, such as the summer factory closure. “I’m not too hung up on the brand ‘FOTA’,” Whitmarsh said recently. “I think what’s important is that the teams realise there are critical issues within this sport where it will be better if we cooperate and take sensible decisions, and I hope and believe that we’ll continue to do that.” He added last month: “Relations between McLaren, Red Bull and Ferrari remain very good indeed.” |
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Doubts remain about Red Bull ‘cooling’ inletComments Off When Adrian Newey said a mysterious ‘letterbox slot’-shaped air inlet in the stepped nose of his new RB8 car is for driver cooling, a wave of speculation eased. When the 2012 Red Bull was launched recently, it was apparent the ‘step’ nose design differed from its rivals in the form of a sizeable inlet where the monocoque meets the new mandatory lower nose height. Some surmised it must be for KERS cooling, or perhaps even an F-duct style channel through to the diffuser. Amid suggestions Mercedes has come up with an F-duct style channel in its 2012 front wing, Red Bull designer Newey explained that the nose slot is in fact simply to cool the drivers. “Traditionally the driver cooling slot is at the front of the nose,” explained Newey, “but really for styling as much as anything we moved it to where you now see it to break up the aesthetics of the ramp.” There are, however, doubts about that explanation, particularly with close-up images showing that the main inlet is actually divided into two channels at the middle. Indeed, the Telegraph last week quoted Newey as having said the slot is “primarily” for cooling, which suggests that it might have another use. According to Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport, “the competition is suspicious”, having already been outsmarted by Newey in past years in the area of flexing wings and blown diffusers. When asked about Newey’s driver-cooling explanation for the big letterbox slot-style inlet, an unnamed rival engineer smiled: “Then the drivers are going to get their feet wet when it rains.” Asked last week about the ‘cooling inlet’ amid Jerez’s cold temperatures, Mark Webber reportedly grinned to Autosprint: “The toes are a bit too cold now actually.” |
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Work racing ahead at 2012 US GP siteComments Off 450 workers are pushing to enable Austin’s new Circuit of the Americas to be ready for the US grand prix later this year. Another recent setback, however, was 2 inches of rain in the last ten days. “We’ve got a lot of dry weather we know is going to be coming, and are hoping to be gaining some time,” said a contractor spokesman. He revealed that the first layer of track asphalt will be poured around April “so we can get other elements, the tire barriers (and) the FIA fence going on”, he told the local Austin American Statesman. The report said construction is scheduled to be essentially completed two months before the November 18 race. |
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Polyphony Digtial has today fully revealed the “X1 Prototype”Comments Off Polyphony Digtial has today fully revealed the “X1 Prototype”, a project in conjunction with Red Bull Racing. All races that exist in today’s world are restricted by regulations. However the X1 is a machine born from a fantastic “what if” dream of Polyphony; “What would the fastest racing car on Earth, free of any and all regulations look like?” Initially the X1 prototype was a single seater, canopied prototype wing car with covered front wheels. The performance brought about by the 1500ps direct injection V6 Twin Turbo would have been spectacular as is, with a top speed of 400km/h and a maximum lateral acceleration of 6G. But this concept showed an even greater advancement through the help of Red Bull Racing, who became a partner in this project. Red Bull Racing’s chief technical officer, the genius aerodynamicist Adrian Newey proposed that “Fan Car” technology, a dream that he had held to himself over the years be added to the X1 Prototype. A “fan car” is a vehicle having a fan mechanism which forces the air out from underneath the car, to reduce air pressure under the car’s floor. The resulting suction draws the car to the ground surface and creates a massive amount of downforce. And because it can create downforce regardless of the vehicle’s current speed, it dramatically raises it’s cornering speed even in low speed corners. The incredible ability of fan cars has already been proven in history. The Chaparral 2J fan car entered in the 1970 Can-Nam series was so fast that it was banned after just 1 season. Even in the F1, the BT46B fan car entered in 1978 by Brabham dominated the opening round of the series with extreme speed, and was banned just after that single race. With this proposal from Mr. Newey, the machine was transformed with a large fan added to the rear end of the body. With additional advice regarding the shapes of the front and rear wings and rear diffuser, its aerodynamics became even further refined. As a result, the X1 prototype attained an astonishing level of performance, reaching a top speed of over 450km/h, with a maximum lateral acceleration reaching up to 8.75G. This is a performance level that is at the very limits of what a normal human body can withstand. The driver who performed the shakedown test of the machine in Gran Turismo 5, was the world famous Sebastian Vettel. In his very first run on the Suzuka Circuit, he shortened the record time of the course by over 20 seconds. And in the test drive on the Nurburgring GP Course, he marked a record time of 1 minute 4 seconds, drawing out the incredible potential of the X1 Prototype. This is the dream of the fastest racing car on land, brought to life through the collaboration between Polyphony and Red Bull. Witness for yourself the power of the X1 through the in-game “X1 Challenge”, the first driving lesson ever in Gran Turismo to be performed by a top professional driver. Adrian Newey, Chief Technical Officer at Red Bull Racing The results were thrilling. X1 is about evolution. Delivering the optimum combination of tested technologies in a single integrated design. This would be the future of racing were we not bound by regulations, but one that is achievable today. And as Sebastian has shown, it is about devastating speed coupled with real handling control. Today thanks to PlayStation®3 and Gran Turismo we can test drive the future. Kazunori Yamauchi, President, Polyphony Digital Inc and creator of the Gran Turismo series X1 sees the marriage of virtual and real worlds as we explore the boundaries of our technology and aesthetic senses. The X1 Prototype Project has been motivated by curiosity and passion, powerful forces that brought together the best the world has to offer in design, physics simulation, racing car product technology and driving. X1 Downforce Specifications Lets try calculating the cornering G’s of the X1 at 300km/h from the total tire load and coefficient of friction for the tires. The total load on the X1′s tires at 300km/h is 1142.7kgf at the front tires, and 1432kgf at the rear tires. The coefficient of friction for the tires isμ=1.97. From these conditions, the maximum cornering force that the tires can exhibit can be determined to be 5073kgf. Dividing this by the wet weight of the X1 of 615kg comes to be 8.25, which is the maximum cornering G of the X1. 8.25G greatly exceeds the G’s felt during the launch of the Space Shuttle, and is roughly the same as that of a jet fighter plane at full afterburner. It is a figure at the very limits of what a human body can withstand. Test Calculation: Cornering G at 300km/h Read more: http://www.worldcarfans.com/110102929262/red-bull-x1-prototype-revealed-for-gran-turismo-5-video#ixzz13tUTExBi |
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Dani Pedrosa “The title? Difficult, but I believe “Comments Off With 63 points behind is hard for Dani Pedrosa think the victory of the season. Difficult but not impossible, at least according to his last speech in personal blog: Pedrosa will try our best to beat Lorenzo, trying to keep alive the comparison for the title as long as possible. “Many have asked me if I still believe and work towards the title. You can not hide it, Lawrence is away, but there are still many races. It ‘impossible to win the championship? No. But it is difficult to secure this, partly because Lorenzo is very smooth and his worst result is third place. We must continue to give our best in recent races this season and work to try to win every race. “ The comeback will continue this weekend at Motorland Aragon, a circuit that has been able to find running with a Honda CBR 1000RR series in recent weeks. “Motorland Aragon will be a new circuit for everyone, at least riding a MotoGP bike. We learned a lot from Silverstone De Puniet had tried before with a bike series and has been proven to be very fast. This time all the drivers have taken this decision to try to Alcaniz, myself I walked a few laps with a CBR. It ‘s a good circuit, demanding on Friday will be very important to find a good set-up. ” Speaking of shape when he won the last two races, Pedrosa inevitably points to the trio this weekend at Alcaniz. “We come to Aragon after two consecutive victories, four seasons. We are in a good time and although it will be hard to beat the opponents we are now on their own level. We confirm, I hope to bring home its third consecutive victory. |
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