13.6.11 The Chinese, Turkish and Spanish GPs saw the influence of KERS, DRS and tyres came into full effect. Of these tyres are the most significant. Pirelli have done what the teams asked and made a big difference in grip and therefore lap time between the harder "prime" and the softer "option" tyres. All the tyres degrade rapidly and when their life is over there is a big decrease in performance which the teams refer to as "falling off the cliff".This has made strategy even more important than before as seemingly a driver on older tyres can do nothing to resist one on newer, or one on prime to resist one on options. Quite what Pirelli is getting out of this I'm not sure, but maybe it's just a matter of getting their name in front of the public. I went to a tyre shop recently and didn't recognise many of the brands, the vendor told me they were mostly from China and that these now formed the majority of tyres he sold. DRS has had a big effect too and this has meant a lot of passing which has made for exciting races, though many purists are still uneasy about what they consider to be a gimmick. This may be true but looking at the championship standings they don't seem too different to what might have expected had the regs. not changed. Gradually more information has leaked out about exhaust blown diffusers. Some teams have mapped the engine to keep the exhaust gases flowing even when the throttle is closed, thus providing downforce. The FIA plans to ban this on the grounds that the function of the exhaust system is to remove gases from the engine and when the throttle is closed it's not, it's providing more downforce as a sort of a driver-controlled aerodynamic device. Off track F1 has been as controversial as ever with News Corp/EXOR stating that they are looking into taking over F1's commercial rights from CVC. Now everyone has heard of News Corp, but EXOR SpA is an Italian holding company controlled by the Agnelli family. Exor have a significant holding in Fiat and Fiat own Ferrari! Voila, Ferrari to own F1? Luca di Montezemolo says Formula 1 teams would be open to the idea of forming their own championship from 2013 after the contract with CVC expires. Bernie Ecclestone has said there has been no approach, but those are clearly very serious organisations and, unlike CVC with Bernie (82 at the end of 2012), look to have a succession plan. There was also a kerfuffle going on over the re-instatement of the Bahrain GP (or not) and the introduction (or not) of the 1.6 litre 4 cylinder turbo engines for 2013, but there is so much of this stuff it gets very tedious and is probably infused with lots of mischievious misinformation. Such is F1.
Chinese GP - April 17thSebastian Vettel took his third pole in three races by a massive seven tenths of a second from Jenson Button. In previous years, barring accident or breakdown, that would have been it for the weekend; but this is a brave new world and third place qualifier Lewis Hamilton had saved a set of new softer option tyres for the race. This proved crucial and four laps from the end Hamilton scythed past Vettel on fresher tyres to take the lead and the win. Vettel was second and Webber third - after qualifying 18th! He had no KERS and did not warm his prime tyres up enough to get through Q2. The leading teams all attempt to get as far as possible in qualifying on the harder tyres to save the softer ones for the race - and Webber had lots. It seems that tyres and DRS have made qualifying, once absolutely vital, almost into a sideshow. Jenson Button was fourth for McLaren after one stop in the Red Bull pit box! Rosberg led the race for Mercedes and came home fifth. Felipe Massa was first Ferrari home in sixth with Alonso seventh. Alonso made a bad start and Massa got past. The Brazilian led briefly as the pit stops unfurled, whilst Alonso seemed to spend the entire race fighting Schuey. Running the hard tyre for their final stint, both Felipe and Fernando were experiencing some significant degradation which meant the Brazilian had to see other cars come flying past him, while the Spaniard hung on to that seventh spot. Schuey was eighth and Petrov (Renault) and Kobayashi (Sauber-Ferrari) took the final points scoring-positions. Click here for FIA lap chart.
Turkish GP - 8th MayOnto Istanbul Park where rain in Practice 1 gave most teams their first proper experience of the Pirelli wet tyres and Vettel bashed his Red Bull. The rain went away for the rest of the weekend and his shunt didn't stop Vettel from maintaining his 100% qualifying record. His dominance was such that a second run in Q3 was not necessary - thus saving a set of soft tyres. He led throughout the race (but for one lap after his first pit stop) and took a comfortable victory. Click here for FIA lap chart.
Spanish GP - 22nd MayIn the past Barcelona was an aero track where overtaking was nearly impossible, but no more! Qualifying saw a Red Bull on pole but this time it was Mark Webber, spoiling Vettel's perfect record. Hamilton was third and Alonso ecstatic to be fourth by just three thousandths of a second with a "perfect" lap in front of his adoring home crowd. Felipe was eighth. As the lights went out second placed Vettel was all over his pole-starting team-mate. With the two Red Bulls fighting and thanks to a great getaway off the line, Alonso was able to jump into the lead, to huge cheers from the partisan crowd. The Ferrari led the first two stints of the race, meanwhile Vettel got past Webber for second. Lewis Hamilton ran fourth for the early part of the race. He pitted later in session 1 and ran longer in session 2 to take second where he finished, a mere sixth tenths behind Vettel. Button was third after dropping to tenth after a poor start. Webber was fourth, jumped by Alonso at the start and trapped behind him for much of the race. He then lost out to Button who took one less pit stop to pass him. Fifth was Alonso, sixth Schuey ahead of his team mate Rosberg. Eighth was Heidfeld for Renault and ninth and tenth the Sauber pair of Sergio Perez and Kobayashi. Massa fought around the lower points positions before retiring with a broken gearbox. After Spain Vettel had scored 94.4% of all the points available to him and opened up a 41 point lead in the Drivers' title. Alonso and Massa were fifth and eighth Red Bull were 47 points ahead in the constructors', Ferrari third. Click here for FIA lap chart.
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