ESPN F1 [UK] Junkie Jabber WilliamsF1 Turkish GP Preview
|
|
WilliamsF1 Turkish GP Preview |
|
|
|
Monday, 24 May 2010 |
|
When: Friday 28 to Sunday 30 May,
2010
Where: Istanbul Park
Round: 7 of 19
Sam Michael, Technical Director
We've spent the past week or so manufacturing new parts in readiness for
Istanbul after the damage we sustained in Monaco. All of the items that
needed replacing have been replaced now, apart from the front wings which
require more time. As a result, we have to revert back to a previous
specification for this race and wait until Montreal for the updated
version.
Cosworth have been working hard on the issues we have been seeing during
the first part of the season and have had some positive indications from
their dyno work. Istanbul will be an opportunity for us to test how these
solutions look on the track. In line with our development programme, both
FW32s will have new brake ducts for Istanbul and some additional
mechanical changes.
Rubens Barrichello
Returning from Monaco with a DNF for both cars was very disappointing for
the team, particularly as we now know the cause of my accident. I
know everyone has been working hard in the factory, so we are all looking
to have a much better race in Turkey.
Istanbul is a favourite track of mine. It has a good layout; the corners
all flow nicely into each other and that makes it a smooth lap to drive.
Because the circuit runs anti-clockwise, the lefthanders can be quite a
challenge on your neck muscles but we all do extra training to compensate
for that. Personally turn 8, a high speed, triple apexer, is the best part
of the track as it's a real test.
Nico Hülkenberg
Turkey is a real about turn after Monaco; everything is pretty much the
complete opposite. The track goes in an anti-clockwise direction, it has
lots of long straights and quick corners so you can get into a nice rhythm
around the lap and there's loads of room! I think at its widest the track
reaches about 20m so there should be plenty of opportunities to overtake.
The long, ultra-fast turn 8 complex is probably the most challenging part
of the lap, for the drivers and the cars, but I'm really looking forward
to running it in a Formula One car.
I have experience of the circuit from my GP2 days and enjoyed racing it
then. It's always helpful to have prior knowledge of a track so you aren't
going into practice blind so you can just concentrate on set-up straight
away. After another frustrating end to a race last weekend in Monaco, I'm
keen to have a better weekend in Turkey.
|
|
|
|
Next Up
|