Renault, the French car maker who is due to come into India on its own steam soon has put out teaser’s of its car models for India. On it India website, Renault has put the picture of the Fluence which will be launched on the 23rd of May with sales commencing in June. But what is interesting is that Renault has outlines of vehicles that it will launch till September 2012. And that has sent auto journos into a tizzy. While the September launch of this year will be the Koleos, everything is open for speculation post that. The sketch that shows the car to be launched in January, 2012 is a hatchback. Some websites believe that this will be the Clio which shares a platform with Nissan Micra, others believe that this will be the Sandero hatchback based on the Logan platform. The July, 2012 launch picture show outlines of an SUV and all the websites are united in their belief that this will be the Duster, again based on the Logan platform. The final outline is a car and no one seems sure of what this will be. Renault has set the minds racing and tongues wagging. Amazing.
Yearly Archives: 2011
Team Suzuki’s sole representative in MotoGP for this season, Alvaro Bautista is confident that all is not lost for his team. Bautista suffered a complex fracture to the femur bone in his leg in a practice session and was sidelined till the last GP at Estoril where he rode a fairly steady race. He believes that all is not lost for him and Suzuki since less than a handful of races have been held so far. He is confident that lost ground can easily be retrieved over the rest of the season. He is looking forward to the GP at Le Mans this weekend.
The Monday testing after the Portuguese Grand Prix has led to some breakthroughs in performance for the Yamaha Racing Team. At that time Jorge Lorenzo had claimed that this will neutralize some of the advantage that Honda seems to be enjoying at the moment. Wilco Zeelenberg the manager of the team and Jorge Lorenzo have expressed confidence ahead of this weekend’s race at Le Mans circuit. They believe that Yamaha has a good shot at victory.
There has been some criticism of F1’s dependence and spending on aerodynamics and this led to some thinking about the re-introduction of ground effect technology. But this proposal has been unanimously vetoed by the F1 teams on the grounds (no pun intended) that the same could be achieved by restricting aerodynamic dependency. In our opinion article we have talked about this. Ground effect essentially requires a shaped under tray for the car and moving to this means that all teams will be equal when the rule comes into effect and so the defiance. Some lessons are never learnt.
What does one do with Formula One these days? Why is it so horrible and why are politics more important the racing? There have been in the past, debates about Formula1. Some have called it a sport, others have called it business and now everyone calls it politics. Take a closer look at F1 in the recent years and you will see it is none of these things. It is reasonable to assume that in sport, business or in politics the main aim is to succeed and win. F1 of today contradicts that basic purpose. It is a mindless game that geriatrics who are in control of F1 play and God only knows if they are happy with the productions of this mindlessness. Look at the personalities associated with F1. The ring master and Supremo is an 80 year old man who goes by the name of Bernie Ecclestone. The President of the FIA Jean Todt is a man who seems younger in comparison with Ecclestone but is someone who is firmly in his mid sixties and he recently succeeded a near seventy year old man called Max Mosley. Most of the team Principals are well into their fifties perhaps with the exception of Christian Horner who is only in his thirties. By F1 standards he is a babe in arms as yet since some of the drivers such as Michael Schumacher are older than him. Older drivers are in big numbers in F1. Rubens Barrichello, Narain Karthikeyan, Nick Heidfeld, Jarno Trulli, Jenson Button and Felipe Massa are in their thirties. The last two have only just made it there while the others are well entrenched there and Barichello and Trulli are getting to forty. Then the likes of Fernando Alonso, Heikki Kovaleinen, Vitantonio Liuzzi and Adrian Sutil are almost there in their thirties. With the exception of Alonso, Button and Massa the others are not in a position to justify their position on the F1 grid. Jaime Alguersuari and Sebastian Buemi are the real youngsters.
Obviously when an ageing population is in control of things it is most akin to a gerontocracy and that is precisely the reason why Formula1 has become so near sighted. All kinds of rubbish is promoted in the name of cost cutting and slowing the cars down so that it, F1 is safer. At one time ribbed tyres were introduced to slow the cars down. But nobody ever bothered to do something about the whole aerodynamics thingy in F1. If you take a close look you will see that this reliance on aerodynamics is what brought trouble to F1 in a big way and is at the root of all the things cited so far. Cars being too fast, lack of overtaking and high costs, all of them can be put down to the excessive involvement of aerodynamics. It has been pointed out that we have reached a stage in F1 where we cannot do without aerodynamics. We agree. But there is a way of cutting the expenditure involved.
Presently most of aerodynamics requirement is taken care of by wind tunnels that have to run 24 hrs a day. Please turn your attention to this team called Marussia Virgin Racing team. Its technical director is a man who goes by the name of Nick Wirth and not only is he behind the disastrous showing of Marussia Virgin till date but also in the 1990s of a team called Simtek. If you are wondering as to why we are invoking the name of a man who presides over disastrous teams here is the reason. Nick Wirth believes that costs can be brought down radically by giving up the ghost of the wind tunnel. He and Virgin have been using CFD or Computational Fluid Dynamics that does not require a wind tunnel but makes do with computers. If you see the time difference over one lap between the fastest car and the Virgin cars, you would see that sometimes it is three seconds per lap but mostly in the two second region.
So why does not the FIA ban the usage of wind tunnels completely and ask the teams to rely on CFD alone? The answer is simple. Try telling Luca Di Montezemolo or Adrian Newey or Ron Dennis this. Di Montezemolo and Dennis will explode in anger because this means that their “heritage” as F1 greats will be compromised and they will be reduced to starting on par with the Marussia Virgins, the Team Lotuses etc. Adrian Newey could lose his position as the genius behind winning cars and Mike Gascoyne could lose employment. Try convincing Patrick Head that this is the new way forward, he will pooh pooh the suggestion. After all he is pushing seventy, so what else do you expect? Despite the wide spread use of computational aids in various things including fluid dynamics (air is also a fluid), the older generation (put that as all over the age of fifty) are not fully familiar with the whole concept.
To draw a parallel, just think of the older people in offices that you work in. How savvy are they with new technologies and how open are they to new ideas? How near sighted are they? How much are they sacrificing the future for the comfort of the present? The same problem is what haunts F1 today. Gerontocracies are enemies of the future. The mindlessness that is so visible today is a result of everyone in power in F1 and FIA clinging on to their comfort zones. This leads to piecemeal experimenting with things such as moveable front and rear wings, different engine capacities and most recently tyres.
The issue of Pirelli tyres is worth looking into. They along with the moveable rear wing or the Drag Reduction System (DRS) have reduced F1 to a farce thus far this season. When tyre wear dictates that race strategies cannot be firmly put in place there is the great equalizer of all things. The DRS system has meant that there is no fun in racing because at any given point in the race, there are so many cars breezing past others only to find that once the car that they have overtaken on the previous lap is behind it can do the same to them this lap.
The justification for the tyres is that Pirelli is coming back into the sport after a long layoff going over twenty years. Please recall the first season that Bridgestone came into in F1. It was going up against Goodyear who had been there for a while. From race one onwards, Bridgestone tyres were performing as well as the Goodyear tyres, sometimes better. When Michelin came back they were able to compete straight away. So why is Pirelli not able to do so? Is it an inferior company? The answer is that Pirelli walked in as the sole supplier with no competition. It earns a handsome amount of money but due to the lack of competition they are not forced to accelerate development and their head honcho will say stupid things such as “It is more difficult to make tyres that don’t last than it is to make tyres that last”. Need we say anything here?
Let us face it, nothing will change in F1 for the better with these half baked and ill thought out measures. Even the new engine formula of four cylinder, turbo charged engines of 1600cc will not serve any constructive purpose. This is a measure to bring manufacturers such as Volkswagen into F1, since VW has been talking about a World Engine of these specifications. VW wants to make one engine that fits all, F1, World Rally Championship (WRC), World Touring Car Championship (WTCC) and anything else you can think of. Should F1 be dictated by these considerations? To hell with the manufacturers, let the teams make their own engines. Remember the Arrows team that made its own engines and also engines for the MotoGP project of Team Roberts? There are enough engine designers and consultants that the teams can use to make their own engines. Let us face it, for F1 to succeed we need a paradigm shift. Nothing less will do. Bring in young people and let them find refreshing and new ways of doing things. Till then F1 will be this, a pale shadow of what it once was.
In season testing was banned from the year 2008 citing economic problems following the sub prime housing crisis in the USA and rising costs in Formula One. Three years on the paranoid Max Mosley is out of the FIA presidency and Jean Todt believes that the time has come to lift the in season test ban. Jean Todt believes that new drivers do not get time and opportunity to acclimatize with F1 cars and that is compromising the quality of racing. His old rival Bernie Ecclestone believes otherwise and wants the ban to stay. The bigger teams believe that the lifting of the ban may not be good for smaller teams who do not have the financial power to escalate costs that come up due to testing. Is this a ploy of Todt’s to bring Bernie to his knees in the battle for the engine formula? Or is this Bernie’s ploy to bring Todt to his knees? Fascinating. Let us all watch.
The President of the FIA, Jean Todt has said that the opposition to the new engine formula to come into place from 2013 for Formula1 cars will stay as it is unless and until a good and strong reason is given to get rid of it. The FIA had proposed last year a formula involving four cylinder turbocharged engines of 1600cc to replace the existing 2400cc naturally aspirated V8 engines. This is the FIA’s effort to make motorsport greener than it is now. However, opposition to this has come from Bernie Ecclestone, Luca Di Montezemolo of Ferrari and from some teams in the F1 paddock. Most drivers also don’t seem to prefer the formula with Jenson Button actually wanting to go back to big V10 engines and Sebastian Vettel expressing preference for V12 engines. In interesting battle is in the offing and the gloves are off and the punches are already being thrown. The irrepressible and indefatigable Bernie Ecclestone said tongue firmly in cheek that it was he who brought Jean Todt from the rally division of Peugeot to a blue chip Formula1 team such as Ferrari, hinting that rally engine rules are not applicable to Formula1. This could be fun.
Charlie Whiting the technical delegate of the FIA sees no reason why the moveable rear wing or the Drag Reduction System should not be used in the Grand Prix of Monaco. Some drivers had expressed apprehension that the DRS system could be dangerous on the roads of Monte Carlo which are narrow and have no run off areas. The FIA does not share the fears of the drivers since some teams anyway did not want the ban of the system. Charlie Whiting did not find a strong enough case for banning it and so the system will stay it seems, even in Monte Carlo.
Yesterday we brought you the news that Narain Karthikeyan was unhappy with his qualifying time and position in relation to his team mate at the Hispania Racing Team, Vitantonio Liuzzi. In the race itself Narain made amends by staying in front of his team for most of the race and actually finishing ahead of him. This is very important for Narain who is coming back from a five year absence on the Formula1 grid. Liuzzi has been racing at Force India and therefore offers a reasonable bench mark for Narain. The main sponsorship so far for the struggling Hispania Racing Team has come from Tata, who have always thrown their might behind Narain.
Ross Brawn, the team Principal of Mercedes Petronas has said that the reason why the Mercedes car is good in qualifying but not so good in the race is because of how it treats its tyres when the car is heavy with the full fuel load. Nico Rosberg had expressed his surprise at not doing well in the race after having done well in qualifying. Brawn’s answer is what we have seen above. Brawn also cites the fact that once fuel loads were down, the car was able to go faster again, and this explains why Rosberg was able charge back up the field again towards the end after he kept going backwards rapidly in the early part of the race. Mercedes will look for solutions for otherwise they are unlikely to win races.