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Posts Tagged ‘Ferrari’

Motorsports Mondial - May 13, 2012

Head & Shoulders

Venezuela, the land of motor cycle legend Johnny Cecotto and ‘Caballo Viejo,’ now has a Formula 1 Grand Prix winner.

The “Pay Driver” posted his first victory in the top tier of motor racing on Sunday in Barcelona.

Pastor Maldonado’s “Montmelo Moment” saw him start the race from his first pole position, following Lewis Hamilton’s disqualification for running on empty after posting the fastest time on Saturday.

Local legend Fernando Alonso got the jump on Maldonado at the start and looked set to become season’s first two-time winner in the early stages. Alonso would stay in command till his second pit stop when Maldonado assumed the lead.

In other on track incidents Michael Schumacher’s Mercedes collected Bruno Senna’s Williams; not surprisingly, each driver blaming the other. The German driver was given a five grid place penalty for the next round in Monaco.

Defending double world champion Sebastian Vettel was given a drive-through penalty for ignoring yellow flag; Massa also endured the same penalty.

Alonso was expected to mount a challenge on Maldonado after the final pit stop, and the Malaysian Grand Prix winner was, in the words of David Hobbs, “all over Maldonado like a cheap suit.”

Maldonado was reminded by his team on more than one occasion to look after his rear tires. Alonso also had a very fast closing Kimi Raikkonen to deal with; the Lotus driver had made a late final stop and was closing on the race leaders more than a second per lap.

In the end Raikkonen ran out of laps to snatch second place from Alonso, who in turn was unable to push his Ferrari and Pirelli tires any further to delight the fans with a home win.

So it was Pastor Maldonado scoring his first F1 victory and also giving the fabled English team their first victory since the 2004 season ending Brazilian Grand Prix, when another Latin American driver, the effervescent Juan Pablo Montoya, won in his final race for Williams.

Romain Grosjean was fourth for Lotus, Kamui Kobayashi fifth for Sauber, followed by the Red Bull of Sebastian Vettel, Mercedes of Nico Rosberg, and McLaren of moral pole winner Hamilton. His teammate Jenson Button was ninth.

Nico Hulkenberg in a Force India held off a strong charge from the second Red Bull of Mark Webber to claim the final championship point from tenth place finish.

Sunday’s Spanish Grand Prix was round five in the 2012 Championship. Each race has been won by a different driver from a different team.

Maldonado is season’s second first-time winner following Nico Rosberg’s maiden success in Shanghai.

Veni, Vidi, Venezuela

Before Maldonado two other drivers from Venezuela raced in Formula 1.

Ettore Chimeri raced in the 1960 Argentine Grand Prix in an ex-Fangio Maserati 250F. Two weeks later he was dead after crashing his Ferrari in practice for a race on an airfield near Havana.

Motor cycle champion Johnny Cecotto was teammate to Ayrton Senna at Toleman in 1984. His final race was that year’s Dallas Grand Prix before his F1 career came to a crashing halt at Brands Hatch in preparation for the British Grand Prix.

Crowded at the top

In the championship, Alonso’s second place finish has propelled him to joint lead with Vettel, both on 61 points each.

Hamilton, still winless this season, is third with 53 points. Raikkonen is fourth on 49 points, one ahead of Webber.

Button, winner of season opener in Australia is sixth with 45 points, four ahead of Rosberg.

Rosberg’s teammate, Michael Schumacher, and Alonso’s teammate, Felipe Massa, both have only a couple of points to their credit.

Red Bull leads the constructors’ championship with 109 points. McLaren second on 98 points and Lotus third with 84 points.

Heidinado

In another first, SpeedTV skipped the post-race press conference of this historic win to show a Chelsea football game.

What’s next? Mud wrestling from Macon on a rainy night in Georgia. 

 

– Nasir Hameed

   Greetings and Benton regards from Barcelona.

 


F1Weekly podcast # 574 -

F1weekly podcast number 574

Special Interview with Inder Lal from McLaren F1

Pastor Madonado takes his first victory in the Spanish Grand Prix.

Pastor: “It was so close. We were looking to manage the tyre degradation so I couldn’t push that hard, just to keep the tyres alive for the end of the race and Fernando got very close,” said Maldonado.

There were some moments where he was so close especially at end of the straight, but I was managing the gap and controlling everything.

Our pace today was very strong, the car was fantastic, so was the team. We did a small mistake at the last pitstop but it did not affect our performance.

I think it’s a wonderful day, unbelievable for me and all the team,” he said. “We have been pushing so hard since last year to improve race by race and here we are.

It was a tough race because of the strategy as well, it was hard especially because of rear tyres, after a couple of laps we were struggling with them, but I need to say I am pretty happy because car was so competitive since the first lap.

It will be a great opportunity for us to be strong again,” said Maldonado. “We need to keep continuing like that to develop it as soon as possible. Consistency will be the most important thing in this championship.”

Kimi Räikkönen: “I had a very good start and had a chance to overtake on the outside, but we did not have enough speed and I hit the limiter in fifth gear. I am a bit disappointed because if everything had gone right in the first part of the race, we could have won. There was no issue with the speed of the car, but it is so close between all the teams that if you have a small problem or a small issue it can cost so much.

Our car can do it, but everything has to fall into the right place to be able to get on to the top step. My first stint was okay, but I didn’t have the speed to stay with the cars in front. We changed the tyres and it seemed to be pretty good, but we were too far away. At the end we needed a few more laps and we could have fought for the win. We’re not far away from it and so far we’ve made good steps forwards; the car feels strong everywhere.”

Romain Grosjean: “We lost position at the start and with it a bit of front wing too! It was cooler today which didn’t suit us so much. Despite this, I am very happy with P4 especially when you look at yesterday where I missed all of the final practice session.

Both cars finishing strongly in the points is great for the team. It was pretty difficult for me at the start of the race as it was hard to get the front working properly with the wing damaged, but we made some changes and at the end of the race the car was really flying. I think we made the right decisions today; if you told us we could finish third and fourth at the beginning of the weekend we’d have taken it.


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Motorsports Mondial - May 10, 2012

Renault Sport F1 preview to the Spanish GP 

Spanish Grand Prix facts and figures

The 1km pit straight, where the cars reach over 300kph and maximum rev limit, gives a possibility for a double KERS release as the KERS energy counter resets, which should increase overtaking possibilities. There are several good opportunities for the KERS to be recharged over the course of one lap, including turns 1, 4 and 10.

Wind direction can often change at Barcelona due to its proximity to the sea and mountains. This can make gear ratio selection difficult down the long straight, particularly as there are a couple of bumps down the pit straight, which can cause the engine to hit the limiter.

The track follows the contours of the hills, and therefore undulates over the course of the lap. The up-and-down nature of the track and the length of the corners mean the cars will be subject to high lateral forces. To maximise acceleration without compromising on power, Renault Sport F1 engineers create engine maps that can be used with short gear shifts.

The second sector is more flowing than sector one, but it is nevertheless hard on the tyres due to the long corners and the fact that the drivers run onto the kerbs through this section. Different overrun settings can be used to stabilise the rear under braking, but this can increase fuel consumption.

The long turn 3 is a challenge for the drivers. In qualifying it can be taken almost flat, but in race trim the driver may short shift before the apex to make it easier to control the delivery of torque through the corner, thus preserving tyre life. With up to four stops expected in Barcelona, this could be a vital advantage in gaining track position.

The drivers’ view

Pastor Maldonado, Williams F1 Team

We know Barcelona very well from winter testing; in fact Williams-Renault covered the most kilometres of any team there this year. It is a medium downforce, medium speed track but the changing altitude over the lap plus the length of the corners make it quite a physical race. The first corner is quite representative of this; we accelerate through the mid corner to the exit into the second and third turns, so it forms one long corner. Lateral g-forces are quite high but the corner also goes uphill, so we need the engine to deliver a smooth torque curve but also short shift pattern to give controlled power to counter the high g. Through the final sector, which features the new chicane, we need effective engine braking but also responsiveness as we brake down to round 60kph before accelerating hard onto the long pit straight.

The engineers’ view

Head of Renault Sport F1 track operations Rémi Taffin gives his thoughts on Barcelona:

We covered more than 10,000km over our four teams in winter testing at Barcelona, so we know this track like the back of our hand. It is around 60% full throttle with a variety of low and medium speed corners, so it makes a very good ‘average’ of characteristics of the other circuits on the calendar, and therefore very good for testing purposes.

With 60% of the track taken at full throttle, we need to deliver response and drive through all the ranges, but particularly the lower end for the medium and slow speed sections in sector three.

We expect to be running higher mileage on Friday as our partners introduce new mechanical and aero parts for the first race of the European season, so we will be fitting engines previously used in race conditions for free practice to not put extra mileage on the race units. The extra test session held at Mugello last week means we got a head start on understanding some of the developments so we can concentrate on optimising all the systems.

After the result in Bahrain of course we are all motivated to keep this momentum going. We also have a target to keep our results up in Spain. Red Bull has won both the last races and over the past 10 Spanish GPs, a Renault engine has finished on the podium seven times so there’s a record to keep!


Motorsports Mondial - May 9, 2012

Photo: HRT formulaoneteam

Dani Clos will take part in the first free practice session at the Spanish GP

Spanish driver Dani Clos will step into the F112 for the first time on Friday to take part in the first free practice session of the Spanish Grand Prix which will take place at the Circuit de Catalunya. 23 year-old Clos will substitute teammate Narain Karthikeyan for that session and will join Pedro de la Rosa for the first 90 minutes of practice in Montmeló.

It will be history in the making for HRT Formula 1 Team at the Circuit de Catalunya since this will be the first time that two Spanish drivers hit the track forming a part of a Spanish team at the Spanish Grand Prix. It will be a moment to remember for Spanish motorsport and a great opportunity for Clos to prove his worth in front of his home crowd.

After having completed 377.67 kilometres at the helm of the F111 in the Young Driver Test in Abu Dhabi last November and having joined the team as an official test driver in February, Dani Clos will take another step on Friday and will fulfill another vital aspect of his testing role by completing his first laps at the wheel of the F112. A car that will be brining a series of aerodynamic upgrades for this important Grand Prix.

Dani Clos: “I’m delighted to have this opportunity. It’s something I’ve fought for all my life; to make my debut in Formula 1 and, above all, to be able to do it at the Circuit de Catalunya which is something very special for me. Besides, I’m extremely lucky to be able to do it with a Spanish team, alongside another Spanish driver who I admire and at home. I can’t ask for more! It’s the ideal situation and I’m proud to be where I am with the people who have always been with me and still are. I hope to extract a lot of data from this practice session, contribute with positive things to the team and do my job in the best way I can. I feel 100% ready and I can’t wait for the moment I step into the car and hit the track”.

Luis Pérez-Sala, Team Principal HRT: “I’m very proud and happy that this moment has arrived and that we’ve given Dani the chance to get in the car on Friday’s first free practice session at such a special and important Grand Prix as is a home Grand Prix. In this first contact he will drive next to Pedro de la Rosa and will have the chance to drive the new F112 for the first time. It’s an important session given the short amount of time on track that we have and more so when you take into account the various aerodynamic upgrades which we have brought. Dani is a great driver and I have no doubt that he will do a good job. Besides, this debut also represents another step forward in our desire for HRT to serve as a platform for young drivers to make it into F1”.

DANI CLOS – PROFILE AND CAREER SUMMARY

Dani Clos was born in Barcelona on the 23rd of October 1988. With a renowned trajectory in karting, Clos made his debut in single-seater racing in 2004 in Formula Renault Italia 2.0, going on to win the Championship in 2006. A year later he joined Renault’s F1 programme and took part in the Formula Three Euroseries. In 2008 he entered Williams F1′s young drivers’ programme and finished in 2nd in the 24H Barcelona race. In 2009 he made his debut in the GP2 series, with a 3rd place finish in Portimao being his best result. In his second year in GP2 he achieved his first win in Turkey alongside various podium finishes. Last year, Dani Clos took one win and two podiums in what was his third season as a GP2 driver. Also in 2011, he took part in the Young Driver Test in Abu Dhabi with HRT F1 Team, completing total of 377.67km in one day and leaving a very good impression on the team. In 2012, Dani Clos joins the HRT Formula 1 Team as its official test driver.


Motorsports Mondial - May 1, 2012

 

Photo: lotusf1

Lotus F1 Team completed only morning session running due to inclement weather on the first of three days testing at the delightfully located Autodromo Internazionale del Mugello in Italy. Jérôme D’Ambrosio sampled the E20 for the first time, completing 40 trouble free laps. Because of today’s weather-induced reduced running, Romain Grosjean will drive for the next two days – contrary to the original plan of Kimi Räikkönen running tomorrow and Romain only on Thursday – due to the uncertain weather predictions for the next two days.

Jérôme D’Ambrosio, Lotus F1 Team Third Driver:
“It was great to finally get my hands on the E20 and I’d like to thank the team again for giving me this opportunity. It’s a fantastic car and I felt confident with it straight away, especially in the dry. It’s a real shame we’ve been limited by the weather today in terms of what we could achieve, but we had known for a few days that rain was forecast so it’s not a big shock. We managed to complete 20 laps in both wet and dry conditions which gives me a good knowledge of the car and will help me be a better asset to the team with this experience.”

Alan Permane, Trackside Operations Director:
“It was not the most ideal day, but in spite of the weather we managed to get some useful laps on the board. Of course, it was the first taste of the E20 for Jérôme who was very happy with the car including his seating position and all the controls. This is important, as it means he will be much better prepared if called upon again further into the season. The mixed conditions, running intermediates to start and then switching to the medium compound slicks, also gives us a good base line for Romain over the next two days. We’ve opted for one driver for the next two days so we can make better use of the time after losing this afternoon’s running.”

James Allison, Technical Director:
“We had a busy programme lined up for Jérôme including a fair amount of aerodynamic work, sensor measurement work and of course preparing foundations for Romain over the next two days. We’ve been able to do some of that work in the limited dry running that was available, but there is now a lot more we need to fit in to Wednesday and Thursday. The important thing is we now have base line to build on, so the next two days should be much more productive.”



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