Метка: Chinese GP

Red Bull can be more resilient to graining after Melbourne


Red Bull continues to be the dominant team in 2024, but its race performance was less convincing in last month’s Australian Grand Prix, in which Ferrari looked to edge ahead.

The Melbourne race was marked by heavy front graining, which is believed to be a factor in why Ferrari was so strong relative to Red Bull.

Max Verstappen’s early retirement meant it was much harder to make comparisons, but team-mate Sergio Perez finished a distant fifth as Carlos Sainz and Charles Leclerc secured a 1-2 finish for the Scuderia.

Shanghai could be another venue where Red Bull might struggle more to show the RB20’s full potential, with lower temperatures and uncertainty over the state of the tarmac all factors that could see the tyre graining phenomenon return.

As the first sprint weekend of 2024, teams will only have one practice session to get a handle on their set-ups and won’t have time to try out all tyre compounds, so their understanding will be limited.

But Perez believes the experience from Melbourne means the Milton Keynes team is in a better position to mitigate the issue, which makes surface rubber shear off and stick to the tread, causing a loss of grip.

«There are so many uncertainties with the tarmac, it’s been five years since something has been here,» Perez said when asked about whether or not graining could return to be an obstacle for Red Bull.

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

«So, it will be an interesting FP1 and we’ll see from there. Obviously, it looks like a front-limited circuit, where potentially we can struggle a little bit more.

«We’ve learned a lot from Melbourne, we have some understanding of things we did over there, so we just have to remain optimistic.

«If we were to be in the same boat, hopefully with the things we’ve learned we can have a much better resilience to the graining.»

Team-mate Verstappen said Red Bull had made set-up changes before Melbourne qualifying that made his car feel better in race trim, but his retirement on Lap 3 meant he was unable to show it.

Nevertheless, he pointed out that Shanghai’s technical layout is different enough from Albert Park to go into the weekend with too many preconceptions about Red Bull’s form.

“I think Australia, the Friday wasn’t ideal. Maybe the Saturday morning wasn’t either, but we made some changes to my car that I felt better with. Unfortunately, I couldn’t show that,» he said.

“I don’t think that Australia is the same as here. Australia had a lot more faster corners. Here there’s a little bit more low speed, so it’s a little bit different. We just have to wait and see, really.”



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Williams may as well “go home” if spares situation changes its F1 approach, says Albon


The Thai driver and team-mate Logan Sargeant have faced a challenging start to the season with Williams having been without a spare chassis and not being flush with replacement parts.

With Sargeant having been forced to sit out the Australian Grand Prix because of the need for his team-mate to take his car, and the American crashing in opening practice in Japan, things were not helped much in the Suzuka race when Albon hit the barriers after an opening lap clash with Daniel Ricciardo.

Williams has pulled out all the stops since Suzuka though, with both cars running the latest front wing that was introduced in Japan. Furthermore, Albon will run with a revised Halo fairing.

But although mindful about the spare parts issue not being totally behind it yet, Albon said that the team could not afford to alter its racing mindset as it chases its first points of the year.

Asked by Autosport how challenging the current situation was, Albon said: “You go about your racing not really thinking about it, if I’m totally honest.

“Obviously, it’s there, but the moment that you start to think about the lack of parts, or the lack of whatever, you might as well stay home.

“You have got to attack the weekend like you do any other weekend. You can’t treat it any differently. You’ve got to be on the limit to feel what the limit is, and you’ve got to get a balance for the car.

Albon damaged a second chassis of the season in Japan

Albon damaged a second chassis of the season in Japan

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

“It’s one of those ones where you do have to kind of part block your brain and just go about racing as normal.”

Albon had nothing but praise for the way in which Williams had worked to get both cars fitted with as many new parts as possible.

“It’s been a tremendous effort,” he said. “Obviously, we’ve been on the backfoot with the crashes, and it is no secret that we were already on the back foot before the crashes.

“So it’s another mighty job as always, and we have to rely on the staff back at Grove to pull things together – as they continuously do so.»

“And it is very, very important, especially coming into a sprint race as well, with all the possibilities of whatever can happen this weekend, you kind of want to be as best prepared as possible.

“Races like this, where it’s so unknown, are an opportunity for teams like us.”



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What Aston Martin’s curfew burn told us about its F1 upgrade trajectory


Although there is no downside to using them up if needed, teams also know that if they are not in their back pocket for the end of the season, then that carries big risks.

For if the points battle is tight, the last thing a team would want would be some unexpected late-night work triggering a final race grid penalty that could derail all the year’s efforts up until that point.

It is why it is often only in extreme emergencies – like Williams switching cars over in Australia following Alex Albon’s Friday crash – that teams use them up early on in the campaign.

So, it was interesting that at the recent Japanese Grand Prix, Aston Martin elected to also burn through one of its jokers, considering there had been no unexpected drama on the track.

Instead, it was done to ensure that the team did not have to rush the switching over of Fernando Alonso’s car to its latest upgrade package for qualifying day.

As performance director Tom McCullough explained about the early use of a joker: “We never want to do that. But when we looked at the amount of work to do, it was becoming clear that to do a good job with the fit and finish of the cars, and there were some bits that needed bonding to the chassis and stuff like that, it wasn’t going to be possible to get it all done.”

Team principal Mike Krack added: “You have to take everything off, and then you have to put it on. And then, actually, the long time that all this stuff needs is the quality check.

Mike Krack, Team Principal, Aston Martin F1 Team, on the grid

Mike Krack, Team Principal, Aston Martin F1 Team, on the grid

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

“So, is everything in the right place? Do all the parts fit 100% the way they should?

“If you do not have the quality, and if you go into the next day and one car is one way, and the other car measures something different, it’s the worst case.

“The quality checking and the quality control is actually insane sometimes: how much you have to check and double-check and recheck again.”

But there was a bigger factor at play behind Aston Martin’s call in not sacrificing quality  – and that was in ensuring its upgrade path for this year has a different outcome to last season.

The story of the team’s 2023 campaign was of a car that was super competitive at the start of the season, especially when rivals like Ferrari and McLaren were on the back foot, but then lost its way when upgrades produced effects which were labelled as ‘side effects’ that left it a bit lost.

It had to devote a lot of the middle phase of the campaign to understanding what was going on and testing things to try to get a handle on what had changed.

While it came out of the other side with answers, Aston Martin clearly does not want to experience such a rollercoaster again – which is why it is being much more thorough with its development programme for 2024.

Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin AMR24

Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin AMR24

Photo by: Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images

This does not mean it is more cautious about bringing new parts, for the timing of the Suzuka updates was ambitious because of the way the calendar shakes out, but there is a hint of a new level of confidence about what it needs to do.

As McCullough explained: “You’re always just trying to bring the bits to the track as quick as possible.

“We had a kit that we could bring [to Japan], but it was tight. Then obviously, the next two events are sprint events, and we didn’t want to do it at sprint events.

“Austin last year was quite tough for us, introducing an update there as you’re trying to understand the car. So, for us, it’s just we’re always working in the wind tunnel to develop the car as hard as we can do.»

Aston Martin’s upgrade policy in Japan paid off handsomely, as Alonso duly went on to deliver what he claimed was one of the top five best weekends of his career as he came home sixth.

It proved too that work coming out of the factory was translating to performance on track, and that the AMR24 appears to be a much better platform for improvements than its predecessor.

“I think last year, as we were developing the car, we were struggling to put big steps on the car,” added McCullough.

Lance Stroll, Aston Martin AMR24

Lance Stroll, Aston Martin AMR24

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

“We’ve changed quite a bit the philosophy of the car. The aerodynamic team are on a good development curve at the moment, and it’s a matter of just bringing the updates and putting them on.

“I think that the architecture and the philosophy of the car has given us the scope to find performance, and we’ve given ourselves a platform to keep doing that.

“The proof of the pudding is going to be the next 20 races. But, for the moment, it’s on the trajectory that we want it to be on.”



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Honda targets F1 title bid with Aston Martin from 2026


From 2026 Honda will move its works engine deal to Aston Martin, ending its successful association with Red Bull.

Following Honda’s initial decision to withdraw from F1, which led to Red Bull deciding to take its engines in-house and link up with Ford for 2026, the Japanese brand was forced to seek a new works partner when it reversed its exit decision.

After being approached by several candidates, Honda was impressed by Aston owner Stroll’s ambition to put all the key elements in place for a title bid from 2026 onwards.

In an exclusive interview with Autosport, Honda Racing Corporation president Koji Watanabe says that this target is shared by Honda as well.

When asked about Honda’s ambitions with its new partner, Watanabe replied: «To become world champion from 2026 onwards.

«We know that it will be very difficult and it is not so easy, but we need some good targets to put in our best effort together with Aston Martin.

«So, that’s why together with Stroll and Toshihiro Mibe [Honda CEO and president], we set the target to just aim for the world championship in that year. In reality, it is not so easy.»

Lance Stroll, Aston Martin AMR24

Lance Stroll, Aston Martin AMR24

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

Offering an assessment of whether Aston Martin and Honda will have all the ingredients in place to mount a title challenge, Watanabe added: «Probably we’re missing something [right now], but we have to tell each other what is missing.

«From an Aston Martin point of view what is missing on the Honda side and also what is missing on the Aston Martin side. That is an honest conversation to become a top-class team together.»

Pressed further on what impressed Honda so much about Stroll’s plans for Aston Martin, Watanabe pointed to the squad’s state-of-the-art Silverstone facility as a key marker of just how serious the Canadian businessman was about realising his lofty goals.

«After we registered as a power unit supplier for 2026 some other teams contacted us as they were interested in working with Honda. Then we talked to those parties and made a decision,» he explained.

«Honda was very impressed with Mr Stroll’s strong passion and his strong leadership to fight for the world championship in 2026.

«They invest a lot of money to establish the factory in Silverstone. We visited them to see the factory that was under construction.

«Several times we have meetings with Martin Withmarsh and Mike Krack, so the management team. They are very open and the entire team is working in the same direction, it’s one united team. That is a very good image for us.

Watch: Alonso Commits to Aston Martin with Multi-Year Extension

«At the same time, they also think that Honda is a good partner for them to become world champion.

«We have already started a technical working team and also a steering committee meeting to discuss some important issues that we can maybe improve.»



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McLaren F1 team bracing for «damage limitation» in Chinese GP


McLaren started off 2024 in good shape, heading into the fifth round of the season as the third team in the pecking order, ahead of Mercedes.

But while it remains strong on high-downforce circuits, the team admitted at the start of the year that its persistent low-speed weakness still hadn’t been addressed yet.

That weakness could come back to haunt it at some circuits more than others, with F1’s return to the Shanghai International Circuit a particular headache for the Woking team.

The 5.4km venue is not only littered with hairpins, but it also has a unique start of the lap through the ever-tightening Turn 1 through 4 complex that combines the type of slow, long corners where the McLaren lacks grip compared to its rivals.

«I have to say that of these first part of the season, China is the track that worries me the most from a competitiveness point of view,» Stella acknowledged.

«You have so much low-speed, hairpins. Even in corner two, corner three, you spend so long in long corners.

«And I think it’s been a theme I’ve been repeating. So far, we haven’t been able to improve the car enough in these low-speed, medium-speed long corners.

«So from a competitive competitiveness point of view, I would expect a more difficult situation than here in Suzuka, Australia and the first part of the season.»

Andrea Stella, Team Principal, McLaren

Andrea Stella, Team Principal, McLaren

Photo by: Erik Junius

«China may be a bit of damage limitation for us. And then from Miami onwards, hopefully we start kind of a better stage of this 2024 season and more to come in the second part of the season.»

But Stella also recognised China hosting the first sprint format of the season offers some opportunities, as teams will have just one free practice session to get to grip with the circuit and its new tarmac before sprint qualifying.

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«Definitely it’s going to be a challenging event, from several points of view. What is the tarmac situation will we find?

«At the same time, let’s not forget that China was one of the most severe tracks for graining. So how will the tyres be able to cope with this?

It’s also a tricky track in terms of balance between some very high-speed corners, like entering corner one, and then many low-speed sections.

«Seeing it in isolation, it gives a headache. But once you see it from a competitive point of view, I think you need to think: ‘If I do not do a perfect job, but a little bit better job than others, then this could be a big opportunity.»

Additional reporting by Jonathan Noble



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Gene Haas still keen to invest in F1 team if money not wasted


After four podium-less seasons during which Haas scored just 52 points in total, team principal Guenther Steiner and technical director Simone Resta left the squad last winter.

The former was replaced by ex-trackside engineering director Komatsu while the latter’s position was taken over by Andrea de Zordo, who used to be the outfit’s chief engineer.

These decisions were made amid team founder and owner Gene Haas’ frustration with the latest poor run of results, while outgoing boss Steiner lamented a lack of investment.

Although these developments cast doubt on the outfit’s future, Komatsu says Gene Haas has reaffirmed his commitment and remains keen to invest in the outfit, with a new motorhome on the way, while the squad is also hiring new members.

«I got appointed officially on 10 January, right? Gene’s message from day one was absolutely clear: he said he’s got money, he is ready to invest it,» the Japanese said. «But we’ve got to show him we can use the money responsibly, efficiently.

«He doesn’t want to see the waste. There’s a reason he’s a billionaire, right? He doesn’t like to waste money, right?

«So when I looked at it, then there’s so many areas we can improve. So that’s why I wasn’t too worried about his initial message: ‘Come on, you guys need to show me you are using my money responsibly, then get to a certain position, then I think about the investment’.

«But I know for a fact that he’ll really invest when we get to that stage. And already he’s commissioned a new motorhome for next year, which is not a small investment. So we are doing that.

Kevin Magnussen, Haas F1 Team, Gene Haas, Owner and Founder, Haas F1 Team

Kevin Magnussen, Haas F1 Team, Gene Haas, Owner and Founder, Haas F1 Team

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

«And also we are now recruiting reasonably – from our size of people, a decent chunk of new recruitments is approved. So yes, Gene is now actioning what he told me. So I’m not worried that he’s not going to invest. He will invest. But we got to do our part, which is to use his money responsibly.»

Komatsu added that he was «just trying to get [Haas’] trust back». He also clarified that the investment into a new motorhome had been agreed before the encouraging start to the 2024 season, a sign that Gene’s commitment had not wavered.

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Currently holding seventh place in the constructors’ championship, Haas will however struggle to maintain that level against the likes of RB, Williams, Sauber and Alpine.

Komatsu said the American team would «absolutely» be outpaced in the upgrade race and would focus on swiftly introducing quality parts rather than on quantity, as it waits for new hires to join by the end of the year.

«Even if we increase the number of people right now, you know, before people joined, it’s going to be another six months, right?» he said. «So we’re really just focused on things we can control, which is what we got.

«How can we do it most efficiently? And then we try to, let’s say, define the updates in a way that we can bring it early, sooner than later.»



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