Метка: Williams

Sargeant baffled about not being told of illegal F1 safety car overtake


During the caution period to remove Valtteri Bottas’s stricken Sauber, Sargeant was running down the start-finish straight towards Turn 1 as his Haas rival emerged from the pits following a change of tyres.

But while Hulkenberg reached the critical safety car line that determines the running order a split second in front, Sargeant’s speed offset and momentum left him thinking he had got there first so he slotted in ahead.

Then, with no feedback from his pit wall or the FIA over needing to give the position back, Sargeant was handed a 10-second penalty after the racing resumed for what was ruled an illegal overtake.

Asked how hard the situation had been to read as he charged down to the first corner, Sargeant said: “There’s a bit of elevation there as well and I guess it just makes things hard to see when cars are split by quite a big distance.

 “To my side, I thought I was way ahead. I didn’t think it was even close so, to me, it was no discussion. So, to hear about that at the end of the race was a bit strange. I don’t know if there’s any way the FIA could maybe give us some feedback.

“We were under safety car for ages, I don’t know why they didn’t just tell me to give the position back. Obviously, I would’ve done so, had they said, but to my knowledge, I thought I was way ahead.”

Sargeant’s subsequent 10-second penalty dropped him to 17th in the final classification, and came at the end of a weekend where he struggled to find consistent performance from his Williams – having complained in qualifying the car felt “disconnected”.

A major set-up change for the race prompted a pitlane start and, while there was some encouraging early pace, he thinks circumstances worked against him with the timing of the safety car.

Plus, an inability to get the hard tyre switched on, left him enduring what he said was one of the most “painful” stints he has experienced in F1.

“There were good moments, bad moments,” he said. “I think the start of the race on the softs was strong and when we put on the medium tyre, we were in a really good place.

“But we probably could’ve done without that safety car because we would’ve gone medium, medium and that would’ve suited us much better.

“We put the hard tyre on, and I couldn’t even get it to switch on, and immediately destroyed the fronts.

“From that point on, it was a massive, massive struggle. Bit confused about that last stint and probably one of the most painful ones I’ve had. We will see if we can do better going forward.”



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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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Albon feared about Williams F1 spares «before I even hit the wall»


On the opening lap, Albon was hit by RB’s poor-starting Daniel Ricciardo in Turn 3, at the start of the Esses.

The glancing blow sent both cars into the tyre barriers, which had to be repaired during the following 30-minute red flag interruption.

While the accident happened at relatively low speeds, another crash was the last thing Williams needed.

The team still has no spare chassis available, which made Logan Sargeant sit out the Australian Grand Prix after Albon damaged his chassis in a practice shunt and took over his team-mate’s car.

Sargeant returned for Japan with the repaired chassis and escaped further drama when he crashed in FP1.

Another shunt in the race for Albon puts further squeeze on Williams in terms of spare parts production and the Thai driver said the thought of damaging his chassis went through his mind even before he hit the wall.

«Immediately. Before I even hit the wall,» he replied when asked when the spare chassis situation played on his mind.

Marshals assist after a crash between Daniel Ricciardo, RB F1 Team VCARB 01, Alex Albon, Williams FW46, at the start

Marshals assist after a crash between Daniel Ricciardo, RB F1 Team VCARB 01, Alex Albon, Williams FW46, at the start

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

«It’s exactly what we don’t need. The impact itself was relatively low speeds, but it’s the way that I hit the tyre wall. Normally, we have this kind of plastic barriers, the Armco. But this was much more dug in and it really stops very violently.

«They’re the questions I’m worried about, not for me, [but] for the car, because that’s where you can do damage.

«We haven’t had the car back yet. We need to assess it, hopefully it’s okay.»

When asked for his view of what happened, Albon said he was trying to back off once he realised he was in Ricciardo’s blind spot, but couldn’t help avoiding the contact.

«I had a grip advantage [on soft tyres], kind of surprised [with] the grip I had out of [Turn] 2, and was able to pull underneath him and have a good run into 3,» Albon explained.

«More about just trying to get him a little bit off line [at Turn] 3 and try and find a way for 4, 5, 6, 7 — to see if I could upset his line a little bit.

«Obviously just one of them. He didn’t see me, clearly. I tried to back out of it last minute.

«There was a moment where I realised he hadn’t seen me here, the way he’s pulling across, so I hit the brakes and tried to get out of it.

The cars of Daniel Ricciardo, RB F1 Team VCARB 01 and Alex Albon, Williams FW46 in the tyre barrier after they crashed on the opening lap

The cars of Daniel Ricciardo, RB F1 Team VCARB 01 and Alex Albon, Williams FW46 in the tyre barrier after they crashed on the opening lap

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

«But I was almost too far alongside him and he still was coming across, I couldn’t avoid it.»

With no spare car available until Miami, Williams is continuing to walk on eggshells while its pool of spare parts dwindles.

«It’s no secret that we are having a tough time with it at the moment with the parts we’ve got,» Albon acknowledged. «This is going to hurt us for sure.»



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Improving Williams F1 team ‘like fixing a bicycle puncture while riding it’


The Grove outfit is undergoing updates to its factory infrastructure and changes to its working processes as owner Dorilton Capital tries to move it up the grid.

Team principal James Vowles and chief technical officer Pat Fry have both made it clear that the team lags behind rivals, citing how late everything came together with the build of the FW46.

The lack of a spare chassis that led to Logan Sargeant’s non-start at the Australian GP was a clear public sign of how the team needs to improve.

Robson admits that changing the team while also running a racing programme is a huge challenge.

“Still a huge amount going on,” he said. “It’s a bit like trying to fix a puncture on your bicycle whilst riding it at the same time.

“It’s so hard just to take some time out of the programme and give everyone a chance to adopt new ways of working.

“So it’s not easy, but it’s ongoing. There’s lots to do. That’s clear. There’s a lot been done. It’s just generally improving the tools, improving the software.

“And then getting everyone to understand what that allows us to do and how you sort of maximise those tools to push the whole programme through.”

Dave Robson, Head of Vehicle Performance, Williams Racing, in the Team Principals Press Conference

Dave Robson, Head of Vehicle Performance, Williams Racing, in the Team Principals Press Conference

Photo by: Motorsport Images

Asked by Autosport about the acknowledgement of the team’s failings made by Vowles and Fry, Robson admitted they were right.

However, he suggested that other teams may also have issues that are less obvious.

“I think we’ve known for a long time that the way we do it, or have done it, isn’t always terribly efficient,” he said. “But it does require or does rely on quite a lot of human glue to bring it all together.

“It will be fascinating to know where the other teams are. I’m sure that the very best teams are quite different to how we do it. I don’t know whether everyone is.

“To a certain extent, as you entertain the question, I think, the big difference is Pat’s and James’s honesty about the whole thing, perhaps more than the actual problems themselves.

“That said, the problems are there, and they need fixing, and we were doing that. We’ve known it for a long time. But it’s always very difficult to invest in those processes when you’re struggling to invest in the car.

“Obviously, that’s quite a few years ago now. So now we know we’ve got the resources to do it. And with James and Pat we know what state of the art looks like.

“Hopefully we can quite quickly shortcut from where we are to where we need to be.”

Alex Albon, Williams FW46

Alex Albon, Williams FW46

Photo by: Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images

Robson insists that the team has made progress, and that will continue to pay off in terms of on-track performance, even if it may take time for the full results to come to fruition.

“It’s massively different to where it was four or five years ago,” he said. “It’s massively exciting, and there’s no doubt it will appear as performance. We can’t control what everyone else does, but we will definitely be in a better place.

“The whole way we develop and run the project is going to get hugely better. At the same time, it’s frustrating that we can’t just click our fingers and have it all today or yesterday.

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“We’ve got to carry on doing what we do at the track and make the most of what we’ve got. And it’s great that it will get better.

“There’s no doubt that that happens, we just want to see it happen ASAP. We can’t do that, so we’re just going to have to slog it out for a bit longer.”



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