Wednesday, 10 October 2012

Yamaha Fazer


In 2011, Yamaha India made some serious waves in the Indian motorcycle market with the release of the FZ16, FZS, Fazer, and YZF R15. Following the remarkable release of some of the best bikes to enter the market, Yamaha is upping the ante with the launch of the Fazer 250cc. The bike, for all intents and purposes, is Yamaha’s next step in reaching for the success of the 250cc segment.

The all new Yamaha Fazer 250cc is expected to be powered by a newly designed 153cc air-cooled, 4-stroke, SOHC, single-cylinder, 2-valve engine. The engine is capable of producing 14 horsepower and a max torque of 13.6 Nm (10 lb-ft).

Just like the FZ16 and FZ-S, the Yamaha Fazer carries the Monocross suspension, a technology that ensures agile running performance and handling. The placement of this model’s ‘MidShip Muffler’ toward the center of the machine provides the right kind of weight balance that makes for an efficient ride. Add that to the bike’s “140/60-17” size rear radial tire with a 60% aspect ratio and it all makes for a bike that comes with enough power, better grip, and handling stability.

Find out more about the Yamaha Fazer after the jump.

Yamaha Fazer originally appeared on topspeed.com on Wednesday, 10 October 2012 13:00 EST.

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Source: http://www.topspeed.com/motorcycles/motorcycle-reviews/yamaha/2012-yamaha-fazer-ar130233.html

Clemar Bucci Ronnie Bucknum Ivor Bueb

MOTOGP: Pedrosa In Pursuit, Stoner Back On Track

Dani Pedrosa's difficult task of tracking down Jorge Lorenzo might be aided by the return of teammate Casey Stoner.

Source: http://moto-racing.speedtv.com/article/motogp-pedrosa-in-pursuit-stoner-back-on-track/

Lorenzo Bandini Henry Banks Fabrizio Barbazza

Honda Dio


Back in 2001, Honda started selling its gearless scooter in India and it began with Honda Activa and Honda Dio with the sale rating of these two scooters going through the roof.

Recently, Honda Motorcycle and scooter India (HMSI) decided to re-launch the Honda Dio with some new upgrades to make it the first choice in the Indian market.

The New Honda Dio is powered by a 102cc air cooled, 4 stroke, and single cylinder OHC engine. This powertrain is able to mill 7 horsepower at 7,000 rpm and churns out a top torque of 7.8 Nm (5.7 lb-ft) at 5500 rpm. It also uses a v-matic transmission that comes with electric and kick start options.

The Dio also comes equipped with a standard suspension and a braking system. It also has a newly-designed instrument panel, a flat floorboard, and a large luggage compartment that allows us to keep our small things together. The company used tuff-up tube at the rear tire in this Honda Dio to reduce chances of puncture.

The Honda Dio is assembled with great panels and graphics, and provides a two-tone wrapped seat. The scooter boasts of new style blinders at the front and integrated rear winkers. It is also loaded with a maintenance free battery as well.

Find out more about the Honda Dio after the jump.

Honda Dio originally appeared on topspeed.com on Wednesday, 10 October 2012 12:00 EST.

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Source: http://www.topspeed.com/motorcycles/motorcycle-reviews/honda/2012-honda-dio-ar130055.html

Walt Brown Warwick Brown Adolf Brudes

Cutting to the chase in F1 politics

I believe that it was Benjamin Franklin, the revolutionary, inventor, philosopher and (incidentally) US Ambassador to France, who wrote that “in the world nothing can be said to be certain except death and taxes”. David Coulthard discovered his own version of that theory in his wild youth, remarking that “the only sure things are “death, [...]

Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2012/10/10/cutting-to-the-chase-in-f1-politics/

Clemar Bucci Ronnie Bucknum Ivor Bueb

F1 2012 Championship Standings after Singapore GP

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/6LLImcU_HSc/f1-2012-championship-standings-after_23.html

Duane Carter Eugenio Castellotti Johnny Cecotto

ATS Sport 1000


It’s official that Italian automaker, ATS, is coming back and in full force. Back in the 1960s, ATS began its short, but storied, history as a racecar manufacturer, then quickly turned to manufacturing road-going cars when racing fell through. Well, we have already seen the road-going ATS model, the 2500 GT, and now we are going to have a look at the other end of the spectrum, the race-ready ATS Sport 1000.

The thing about racing is that it is not always about massive power. In most road races, it is more about agility, acceleration, and fast-revving engines. Judging by some of the details on the ATS Sport 1000, this car certainly meets and even exceeds some of the expectations of a racecar. So, can this up-and-coming automaker really produce a successful racecar and road car at the same time?

To figure that out, we need to have a look at what makes this car tick.

Click past the jump to read our full review on the ATS Sport 1000 and find out if it has what it takes to dominate the racing world.

ATS Sport 1000 originally appeared on topspeed.com on Tuesday, 9 October 2012 19:00 EST.

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Source: http://www.topspeed.com/cars/others/2013-ats-sport-1000-ar136020.html

Joie Chitwood Bob Christie Johnny Claes

2012 Italian Grand Prix: Team-by-team analysis

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/UzuTD3r5zCY/2012-italian-grand-prix-team-by-team.html

Martin Donnelly Carlo Abate George Abecassis

Professor Sid Watkins dies

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/X4CdrqmIyvg/professor-sid-watkins-dies.html

Pedro Matos Chaves Bill Cheesbourg Eddie Cheever

Tuesday, 9 October 2012

2013 Indy Car Series Schedule announced

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/gH8y5g0N7dk/2013-indy-car-series-schedule-announced.html

Elio de Angelis Marco Apicella Mário de Araújo Cabral

Hamilton saga nearing endgame

Only Lewis Hamilton truly knows where he wants to drive next season - and perhaps not even he does just yet. But the signs are that the saga that has been occupying Formula 1 for months is nearing its endgame.

Hamilton has two competing offers on the table for his future - one to stay at McLaren and one to move to Mercedes.

The word at the Singapore Grand Prix - for what it's worth - was that he is leaning towards staying where he is; one McLaren insider even suggested that a deal could be inked within days.

At the same time, there may be a complication. There are suggestions that earlier this year Hamilton signed something with Mercedes - a letter of intent, a memorandum of understanding, perhaps - that he would need to get out of before he could commit to McLaren. His current team have heard talk of this, too. Hamilton's management deny this.

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The conventional wisdom is that Mercedes are offering Hamilton more money and that the deal is sweetened further by greater freedom over personal sponsorship deals. Those are highly restricted at McLaren because of the team's breadth of marketing tie-ups.

But BBC Sport understands it is not quite as simple as that.

For one thing, some sources say the figures quoted for the Mercedes offer in the media so far - of £60m over three years - are significantly larger than what is actually on the table.

Of course, in theory, as one of the largest car companies in the world, Mercedes can afford to pay almost any figure it wants.

But the board's commitment to Formula 1 has been in question all year. While it is understood that the company has now reached an agreement with the sport's commercial rights holders defining the financial terms under which they have committed for the next few years, F1 is not a money-no-object exercise for them.

McLaren believe their offer to Hamilton is broadly similar to Mercedes', and that in terms of total remuneration he could actually end up earning more money if he stays where is.

How so? Well, it seems the headline salary figures may not differ that much - although I understand Mercedes' offer is larger.

Mercedes offer greater freedom in terms of new sponsorship deals with which Hamilton can top up his income, and out of which his management group - music industry mogul Simon Fuller's XIX - would take a cut that some sources say is as great as 50%, a figure XIX say is wildly exaggerated.

McLaren, by contrast, have strict rules around their driver contracts - they do not allow any personal sponsorship deal that clashes with any brand owned by a company on their car.

So deals with mobile, fashion, household products, perfumes, oil and so on are all out. Jenson Button is allowed to have his deal to endorse shampoo because it was signed before McLaren had GlaxoSmithKline as a partner.

McLaren, I'm told, have loosened some of their restrictions in an attempt to give Hamilton more freedom.

And in their favour is that all contracts contain clauses that define bonuses for success; in McLaren's case for wins and championships. These amount to significant amounts of money and on current form Hamilton would earn more in bonuses with McLaren than with Mercedes.

Financially, it is in XIX's interests for Hamilton to move to Mercedes - that is where they will earn most money.

But that may not be the case for Hamilton, which of course begs the question of whether the driver and his management group actually have conflicting interests.

While Hamilton has steadfastly refused to discuss his future with the media, he has been consistent in one thing. As he put it at the Italian Grand Prix earlier this month: "I want to win."

He knows exactly how good he is and it rankles with him that he has so far won only one world title.

In which case, the last few races will have given him pause for thought.

McLaren started this season with the fastest car in F1, the first time they have done that since at least 2008 and arguably 2005.

But Hamilton's title bid was hampered by a series of early season operational problems that prevented him winning until the seventh race of the season in Canada. Was it during this period that he signed that "something" with Mercedes?

After a slight mid-season wobble through the European and British Grands Prix in late June and early July, though, McLaren have come on strongly.

Upgrades introduced at the German Grand Prix gave them a big step forward, making the McLaren once again the fastest car.

Progress was disguised in Hockenheim by a wet qualifying session, which allowed Alonso to take the pole position from which he controlled the race.

Even then, though, with Hamilton out of the reckoning after an early puncture, Button ran the Spaniard close.

Since then, it has been all McLaren. Hamilton won from pole in Hungary and Italy; Button the same in Belgium. Then in Singapore Hamilton lost an almost certain victory, also from pole, with a gearbox failure.

Meanwhile, Mercedes have floundered. And while rival teams agreed that a big upgrade to the silver cars in Singapore did move them forward a little, Nico Rosberg and Michael Schumacher only just scraped into the top 10 in qualifying and were anonymous in the race until Schumacher's embarrassing crash with Toro Rosso's Jean-Eric Vergne.

Undoubtedly, Mercedes will have given Hamilton the hard sell.

They'll have pointed out that they have won the world title more recently than McLaren - in their previous guise of Brawn in 2009.

They'll have said they are a true works team backed by a huge car company, whereas McLaren are from next year paying for their "customer" Mercedes engines.

They'll have argued that, in team boss Ross Brawn, Mercedes have the architect of the most dominant dynasty in F1 history - the Ferrari team of the early 2000s - who is determined to do it again. Triple world champion Niki Lauda, who is expected to be given a senior management role at the Mercedes team, has also been involved in trying to persuade Hamilton to join the team.

And they'll have said Hamilton has relative commercial freedom with them to make as much money as he wants.

What they won't have said is that the 2009 world title came about in rather exceptional circumstances and that at no other time has the team looked remotely like consistently challenging the best - whether as BAR, Honda or Mercedes.

And they won't have said that McLaren - for all Hamilton's frustrations over the cars he has had since 2009 and the mistakes that have been made in 2012 - have a winning record over the past 30 years that is the envy of every team in F1.

Of course, the past does not define the future, but the future is built on the past.

It's possible that the near future of F1 is one of Mercedes hegemony, but it would be a hell of a gamble to take for a man who professes he just "wants to win".

If the latest indications about his mind-set are correct, perhaps that is what Hamilton has now realised.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/09/hamilton_saga_nearing_endgame.html

Gino Bianco Hans Binder Clemente Biondetti

2011 season review:

Source: http://www.metrof1.com/blogs/metrof1/2011/11/2011-season-review.html

Tommy Byrne Giulio Cabianca Phil Cade

Toyota GT86 is the First of Three New Sports Cars

In a recent interview with Top Gear, Toyota GT-86 chief engineer Tetsuya Tada has confirmed that the new GT 86 is just the first of a series of three new sports cars set to be launched by Toyota. He also announced that the GT 86 is placed in the middle of the two future sports cars, with pricing obviously following in the same pattern.

These two new sports cars will not include the long-rumored successor of the Supra. When asked about this, Tada said that it could be possible for Toyota to also offer such a model, but right now, the engineers are pretty busy developing the other two Toyota sports cars. It usually takes about five years to develop a sports car from conceptualization to production, so the odds of seeing anything for the Supra before that are not good.

But back to the new sports cars... Will we be seeing successors for models like the Celica and the MR2/MR-S? Aside from these choices, there isn’t much left for Toyota to pick through and develop.

Toyota GT86 is the First of Three New Sports Cars originally appeared on topspeed.com on Tuesday, 9 October 2012 16:00 EST.

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Source: http://www.topspeed.com/cars/car-news/toyota-gt86-is-the-first-of-three-new-sports-cars-ar136025.html

Bob Anderson Conny Andersson Mario Andretti

Vergne gets penalty

Jean-Eric Vergne has been given a three-place grid penalty for impeding Bruno Senna at the end of the Q1 session. This means that Vergne will actually drop two places because Michael Schumacher has a 10-place penalty left over from Simngapore, when he assaulted Jean-Eric. There is a spat going on between Fernando Alonso and Sebastian [...]

Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2012/10/06/vergne-gets-penalty/

Luiz Bueno Ian Burgess Luciano Burti

Lotus focus on on exhaust after Double DRS problems | 2012 Korean Grand Prix

Lotus focus on on exhaust after Double DRS problems is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

Lotus will introduce a major update to their car's exhaust at the Korean Grand Prix but won't run their problematic Double DRS.

Lotus focus on on exhaust after Double DRS problems is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/f1fanatic/~3/NRH5MBtq6ao/

Frank Dochnal Jose Dolhem Martin Donnelly

Double DRS boosts Red Bull’s speed at Suzuka | F1 Fanatic round-up

Double DRS boosts Red Bull’s speed at Suzuka is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

In the round-up: Red Bull use Double DRS at Suzuka • Ferrari tipped to retain Massa after podium • Grosjean apologises to Webber

Double DRS boosts Red Bull’s speed at Suzuka is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/f1fanatic/~3/P_TjQcsT7fI/

Phil Cade Alex Caffi John CampbellJones

2013 Calendar confirmed by FIA, only 2 changes to the Provisional

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/PR8Wxn8TyvU/2013-calendar-confirmed-by-fia-only-2.html

Ivan Capelli Piero Carini Duane Carter

Mercedes gets their Man, McLaren signs rising Star and Sauber & Ferrari wonder What If?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/hgKeERkYcfM/mercedes-gets-their-man-mclaren-signs.html

Jimmy Daywalt JeanDenis Deletraz Patrick Depailler

Late Show Homecoming...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/ToBhP5BJjIk/late-show-homecoming.html

Frank Armi Chuck Arnold Rene Arnoux

MOTOGP: Pedrosa In Pursuit, Stoner Back On Track

Dani Pedrosa's difficult task of tracking down Jorge Lorenzo might be aided by the return of teammate Casey Stoner.

Source: http://moto-racing.speedtv.com/article/motogp-pedrosa-in-pursuit-stoner-back-on-track/

George Amick Red Amick Chris Amon

The season so far: pattern amid the unpredictability

This Formula 1 season has so far been a perfect storm of unpredictable results, thrilling races and a closely fought title battle.

Who would have predicted that a man who has not once had the fastest car would be leading the world championship as it neared its halfway stage?

Yet Fernando Alonso, whose Ferrari started the campaign more than a second off the pace, goes into this weekend's British Grand Prix with a 20-point lead.

Who would have predicted that the defending world champion, who took 15 pole positions in 19 races last year, would fail to get into the top 10 qualifying shoot-out?

New Pirelli tyre

Formula 1 teams will have the opportunity to test a new hard tyre compound that Pirelli are developing for the future during the practice sessions of the British Grand Prix. Photo: Getty

Yet that is exactly what happened to Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel in China - and very nearly again in Monaco.

Who would have predicted that last year's runner-up, a man who is renowned for his delicacy with tyres, would struggle for pace in a season in which the fragile Pirellis are the defining characteristic? Yet there is Jenson Button having a terrible time in the McLaren.

Who would have predicted that a driver who owes his place to sponsorship money and who was previously known best for inconsistency and mistakes would win a race? Williams's Pastor Maldonado did exactly that in Spain.

Or that it would take until the eighth grand prix for the season to have its first repeat winner? Step forward Alonso again.

F1 has been maligned for years as being boring and predictable - overtaking, people said, was too hard and working out who was going to win too easy.

No longer. There has been so much action in the eight races so far this season that you almost don't know where to look.

There are concerns that F1 has now gone too far the other way, that it is too unpredictable, that too much of a random element has been introduced by the fast-wearing, hard-to-operate Pirelli tyres that are at the root of this new direction.

In essence, the fear is that F1 has been turned from an exercise in precision engineering into a lottery.

And there is unease in certain quarters that the drivers are always having to race "within themselves", with tyre life their biggest concern.

Yet through the fog of uncertainty and apparent haphazardness, a pattern has emerged.

As the competitive edge swung wildly from one team to another in the opening races, it was revealing that the positions at the top of the championship were very quickly occupied by the best drivers - Alonso, Vettel, his Red Bull team-mate Mark Webber and McLaren drivers Lewis Hamilton and Button.

The list of different winners continued, until Alonso's spectacular win in Valencia last time out, but through it all the big hitters continued to be the ones who scored most consistently.

Despite that, there has undoubtedly been a welcome element of unpredictability, and the top teams have not had it their own way.

So while Red Bull, McLaren, Ferrari, Mercedes and Lotus - the teams who have won every world title for the last 15 years - have all figured at the front, Williams and Sauber have also been up there mixing it with them. As, on occasion, have Force India.

This is partly to do with the tyres. This year's Pirellis have been deliberately designed with an unusually narrow operating-temperature window. Getting - and keeping - them there is far from easy, and the big teams do not have exclusivity on clever engineers.

The unusually great importance of the tyres has so far lessened the effect of aerodynamics - for so long the determining factor in F1.

Just as importantly, the regulations have now been pretty stable for the last four years. When that happens the field always tends to close up. Both Sauber and Williams have serious engineering resources of their own, and have clearly built very good cars.

Through all of this, one man has stood out above all others.

Alonso has long been considered within F1 as the greatest all-round talent, and this year the Spaniard has driven with a blend of precision, aggression, opportunism, consistency and pace that is close to perfection.

He has taken two stunning wins and scored consistently elsewhere. In fact, had Ferrari's strategy brains been a little sharper, he may have had four victories by now - that's half the races. And all without anything close to the best car.

Of the two wins he has taken, Alonso himself rates the wet race in Malaysia as the better.

For me, though, the one in Valencia shades it, for the skill and determination he showed in battling up to second place from 11th on the grid before Vettel's retirement from the lead handed him the win.

Some of the overtaking moves Alonso pulled on the way to that win were utterly breathtaking in their audacity, the way he balanced risk and reward and made it pay off.

Hamilton's season has been almost as good, but he has been let down by a number of operational errors from McLaren, ranging from bungled pit stops to refuelling errors in qualifying. He now faces an uphill battle to get back on terms with his old rival.

Alonso has long regarded Hamilton as the man he fears most in this title battle, but one wonders if he might change his mind following Valencia.

After two years of domination, Red Bull have stumbled a little this year. Yet operationally they have still been the best team and their car has always been among the strongest on race day.

After a difficult first three races, either Vettel or Webber have now been on pole for four of the last five.

Before retiring with alternator failure in Valencia the German put in a performance as crushing as any in his title-winning years (2010 and 2011), thanks to a major aerodynamic upgrade at the rear of his car.

Up and down the pit lane, rivals fear Red Bull have moved their car up to another level.

The confirmation - or otherwise - of that will come at Silverstone this weekend. Its blend of high-speed corners provide one of the most stringent tests of a car's quality on the calendar.

Last year, following a one-off rule change that hampered Red Bull more than anyone else, the British Grand Prix was won by Alonso.

But if the Red Bull proves as effective around the sweepers of Northamptonshire as it did at the point-and-squirt right-angles of Valencia, even Alonso at his most perfect will find it hard to fend it off.

Both this weekend and for the rest of the year.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/07/andrew_benson_the_season_so_fa.html

Kurt Adolff Fred Agabashian Kurt Ahrens Jr

Monday, 8 October 2012

Kligerman earns 1st victory with Talladega win

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/10/06/2395097/kligerman-earns-1st-victory-with.html

Juan Manuel Bordeu Slim Borgudd Luki Botha

Michael Schumacher: “It was hard for me to keep the motivation…”"

Michael Schumacher says he had options to stay in F1 before he decided upon retirement – and adds that he has no firm plans for what he is going to do when he stops racing after the Brazilian GP. “As … Continue reading

Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2012/10/04/michael-schumacher-it-was-hard-for-me-to-keep-the-motivation/

Peter Collins Bernard Collomb Alberto Colombo

Vettel achieves his second perfect result | 2012 Japanese Grand Prix stats and facts

Vettel achieves his second perfect result is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

Sebastian Vettel dominated the Japanese Grand Prix, scoring a perfect result for the second time in his F1 career. Here's the stats and facts from the race.

Vettel achieves his second perfect result is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/f1fanatic/~3/pYDMbcU2U68/

Carlo Abate George Abecassis Kenny Acheson

Korea highlights

Source: http://www.metrof1.com/blogs/metrof1/2011/10/korea-highlights.html

Anthony Davidson Jimmy Davies Colin Davis

F1 2012 Championship Standings after Singapore GP

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/6LLImcU_HSc/f1-2012-championship-standings-after_23.html

Eddie Cheever Andrea Chiesa Ettore Chimeri

Is Edmonton’s loss the Northwest’s gain?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/cYh6XaK4EFk/is-edmontons-loss-northwests-gain_27.html

Sebastien Bourdais Thierry Boutsen Johnny Boyd

Mears, Kvapil fastest at practice

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/10/05/2393346/mears-kvapil-fastest-at-practice.html

Alberto Colombo Erik Comas Franco Comotti

McLaren Animation: Tooned - Episode 6: Gone with the Wind (Video)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/ccPE3foJe0o/mclaren-animation-tooned-episode-6-gone.html

Tony Bettenhausen Mike Beuttler Birabongse Bhanubandh

Singapore F1 Race lights Up the Night

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/lIeAL_tzyJ8/singapore-f1-race-lights-up-night_25.html

Ian Burgess Luciano Burti Roberto Bussinello

Sebast-o-pole!

Sebastian Vettel took pole position for the Japanese Grand Prix, after Kimi Raikkonen spun off and disrupted the final runs in Q3. Mark Webber was second, underlining the fact that the Red Bulls have suddenly found form, presumably due to a new front wing, which arrived on Saturday and seemed to make a big difference. [...]

Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2012/10/06/sebast-o-pole/

Sebastien Bourdais Thierry Boutsen Johnny Boyd

Ferrari ‘Expected’ To Keep Massa for 2013

Ferrari are expected to retain the services of Felipe Massa for 2013, according to reports from BBC Sport. The Brazilian raced to the second step of the podium during the Japanese Grand Prix, a result which is believed to have swayed the decision of the team’s hierarchy. Massa has been under intense pressure all season, [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/AzRSrxsu5tw/ferrari-expected-to-keep-massa-for-2013

Colin Chapman Dave Charlton Pedro Matos Chaves

Vettel claims third Japanese Grand Prix win, while Alonso retires

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/I_i6b4lNJec/vettel-claims-third-japanese-grand-prix.html

Piers Courage Chris Craft Jim Crawford

Sunday, 7 October 2012

Kahne tops in Talladega qualifying

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/10/06/2393327/dillon-grabs-pole-for-talladega.html

Frank Armi Chuck Arnold Rene Arnoux

Sergio’s in Good Hands...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/ty309jg1hIA/sergios-in-good-hands.html

JeanPierre Beltoise Olivier Beretta Allen Berg

Vodafone VIP: Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton Digital Shoot (Pictures)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/v5lm7P0z6iI/vodafone-vip-jenson-button-and-lewis.html

Franco Comotti George Connor George Constantine

2013 Calendar confirmed by FIA, only 2 changes to the Provisional

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/PR8Wxn8TyvU/2013-calendar-confirmed-by-fia-only-2.html

Bill Cantrell Ivan Capelli Piero Carini

'The point of no confidence is quite near'


The wreckage of Jochen Rindt's car at Barcelona © Getty Images
An excellent insight into the world of F1 as it used to be can be found on the regularly-interesting Letters of Note website. It publishes a hitherto unseen letter from Jochen Rindt to Lotus boss Colin Chapman written shortly after Rindt’s crash at Barcelona which was a result of the wing system on Lotus 49 collapsing at speed.
“Colin. I have been racing F1 for 5 years and I have made one mistake (I rammed Chris Amon in Clermont Ferrand) and I had one accident in Zandvoort due to gear selection failure otherwise I managed to stay out of trouble. This situation changed rapidly since I joined your team. “Honestly your cars are so quick that we would still be competitive with a few extra pounds used to make the weakest parts stronger, on top of that I think you ought to spend some time checking what your different employes are doing, I sure the wishbones on the F2 car would have looked different. Please give my suggestions some thought, I can only drive a car in which I have some confidence, and I feel the point of no confidence is quite near.”
A little more than a year later Rindt's Lotus suffered mechanical breakdown just before braking into one of the corners. He swerved violently to the left and crashed into a poorly-installed barrier, killing him instantly.

Source: http://blogs.espnf1.com/paperroundf1/archives/2010/09/the_point_of_no_confidence_is.php

Tony Brise Chris Bristow Peter Broeker

Japanese Grand Prix: FIVE Predictions

The F1 roadshow now lands in Japan for its annual trip to the iconic Suzuka circuit. Known for its unpredictability, its hard to call what will happen when the lights turn green, but we’ve had a go anyway! CLICK HERE FOR OUR FIVE PREDICTIONS

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/iQ9YtCb_UiE/japanese-grand-prix-five-predictions

Jay Chamberlain Karun Chandhok Alain de Changy

Kligerman wins truck race

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/10/07/2396135/kligerman-wins-truck-race.html

Bill Aston Richard Attwood Manny Ayulo

Sergio’s in Good Hands...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/ty309jg1hIA/sergios-in-good-hands.html

Keith Andrews Elio de Angelis Marco Apicella

Dieter Zetsche invites Schumacher to stay with Mercedes family in non-racing role

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/HMrnYf7bWNs/dieter-zetsche-invites-schumacher-to.html

Hans Binder Clemente Biondetti Pablo Birger

Bernie Ecclestone - No plans to put the brakes on


© Getty Images
In an exclusive interview with the Guardian as his 80th birthday approaches, F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone speak out about a variety of subjects, from the future of the sport to Margaret Thatcher, Hitler, Saddam Hussein, democracy, football and what continues to drive him.
The way I feel at the moment, why stop? I do it because I enjoy it. And yesterday is gone. I don't care what happened yesterday. What else would I do? People retire to die. I don't get any individual pleasure because we don't win races or titles in this job. I'm like most business people. You look back at the end of the year and you see what you've achieved by working out how much money the company has made. That's it.

Source: http://blogs.espnf1.com/paperroundf1/archives/2010/10/bernie_ecclestone_no_plans_to.php

Karun Chandhok Alain de Changy Colin Chapman

Mercedes plans major upgrades (Coanda-effect exhaust layout) at Singapore

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/-wBZ2gtozZo/mercedes-plans-major-upgrades-coanda.html

John Cannon Eitel Cantoni Bill Cantrell

Hamilton looks for long-term success at Mercedes

Lewis Hamilton's move to Mercedes is the biggest development in the Formula 1 driver market for three years.

Ahead of the 2010 season, Fernando Alonso moved to Ferrari, world champion Jenson Button switched from world champions Brawn (soon to become Mercedes) to McLaren and Michael Schumacher came out of retirement to replace Button.

Now, the man who most consider to be the fastest driver in the world has taken a huge gamble by switching from McLaren, who have the best car this year and have won five races this season alone, to Mercedes, who have won one race in three years.

To make way for Hamilton, Mercedes have ditched the most successful racing driver of all time.

Schumacher's return at the wheel of a Mercedes 'Silver Arrow' was billed as a dream for all concerned, but with one podium finish in three years the German marque have abandoned the project.


Hamilton leaves a team that has won more races in the last 30 years than anyone else. Photo: Getty

That the announcement was made just five days after the latest in a series of collisions in which Schumacher rammed into the back of another driver after misjudging his closing speed simply rubs salt into the wound.

Hamilton will be replaced at McLaren by one of F1's most promising rising stars - Sauber's Mexican driver Sergio Perez, who has taken three excellent podium finishes this year.

That's quite a shake-up, and it raises any number of fascinating questions, the first and most obvious of which is why Hamilton would leave a team that has won more races in the last 30 years than anyone else - even Ferrari - for one that has won one in the last three.

The explanation for that lies both at his new and current teams.

Mercedes sold the drive to Hamilton on the basis that they were in the best position to deliver him long-term success. In this, there are echoes of Schumacher's move to Ferrari in 1996.

Back then, the Italian team were in the doldrums, having won just one race the previous year. But Schumacher fancied a project, and saw potential. It took time, but by 1997 he was competing for the title, and from 2000 he won five in a row.

The architect of that success was Ross Brawn, then Ferrari's technical director and now Mercedes' team boss. Brawn is one of the most respected figures in F1, and Hamilton is banking on him being able to transform Mercedes in the same way as he did Ferrari.

Undoubtedly, Brawn will have made a convincing case to Hamilton; he is a very persuasive and credible man. It is also worth pointing out that Mercedes - in their former guise of Brawn - have won the world title more recently than McLaren. Button succeeded Hamilton as world champion in 2009.

Mercedes believe that the new regulations for 2014, when both the cars and engines will be significantly changed, will play into their hands.

They are devoting a lot of resources towards that year, and are optimistic they will be in good shape - just as Brawn were, in fact, when the last big rule change happened for 2009.

And Mercedes have a technical team that, on paper, is immensely strong. In Bob Bell, Aldo Costa and Geoff Willis, they have three men who have been technical directors in their own right at other top teams all working under Brawn.

Part of this argument is predicated on the fact that new engine regulations always favour teams run or directly supported by engine manufacturers, on the basis that they are best placed to benefit from developments, and to integrate the car with the engine.

But this is where that argument falls down a little - McLaren may be a mere 'customer' of Mercedes for the first time next year, but they are still going to be using Mercedes engines in 2014, and on the basis of parity of performance.

The love affair with McLaren, who took him on as a 13-year-old karting prodigy, ended some time ago.

Since 2010, Hamilton has been complaining from time to time about the McLaren's lack of aerodynamic downforce compared to the best car of the time.

Through 2009-11, he grew increasingly frustrated at his team's apparent inability to challenge Red Bull. Hamilton is well aware of how good he is, and it hurt to watch Sebastian Vettel win two titles on the trot and not be able to challenge him.

That explains his ill-advised - and dangerously public - approach to Red Bull team boss Christian Horner at the 2011 Canadian Grand Prix.

This year, McLaren started the season with the fastest car for the first time since, arguably, 2005. But again they could not get out of their own way.

Pit-stop blunders affected Hamilton's races in Malaysia and China early in the season, and then a terrible mistake in not putting enough fuel in Hamilton's car in qualifying in Spain turned an almost certain win into a battle for minor points.

These errors badly affected his title charge and in early summer his management started approaching other teams.

His favoured choice was almost certainly Red Bull, but they weren't interested. They also approached Ferrari, where Alonso vetoed Hamilton. That left Mercedes.

It is ironic that his decision to move teams has been announced on the back of four races that McLaren have dominated.

Meanwhile, Hamilton's relationship with McLaren Group chairman Ron Dennis, the man who signed him up and who promoted him to the F1 team in 2007, has collapsed.

It was noticeable that after Hamilton's win in Italy earlier this month Dennis stood, arms-folded and stoney-faced, beneath the podium, not applauding once. Nor did Dennis don one of McLaren's 'rocket-red' victory T-shirts, or join in the champagne celebrations with the team once Hamilton had completed his media duties.

In Singapore last weekend, it seemed that McLaren still believed they had a chance of keeping Hamilton; at least that was the impression from talking to the team.

But did Dennis already know in Monza of Hamilton's decision to defect? Was Hamilton's sombre mood after that win a reflection of his wondering whether he had made the right decision?

Was Hamilton's ill-advised decision to post a picture of confidential McLaren telemetry on the social networking site Twitter on the morning of the Belgian Grand Prix, the weekend before Italy, the action of a man who had had enough and didn't care any more because he knew he was leaving?

When was the Mercedes deal actually finally signed?

Was it done before BBC Sport broke the story of it being imminent in the week leading up to the Italian race?

Or was it not inked, finally, until this week, on the basis that only now has the Mercedes board committed to new commercial terms with F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone?

In which case, was the gearbox failure that cost Hamilton a certain victory in Singapore, and effectively extinguished his title hopes for good, the straw that broke the camel's back?

In short, was Hamilton's decision based on cold, hard logic, rooted primarily in performance, in making more money, or founded on emotion as much as calculation. Or was it a combination of all those factors?

All these questions will be answered in time. Whatever led to Hamilton's decision, it is fair to say that it is an enormous gamble, one on which the next phase of his career hangs.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/09/hamilton_looks_for_long-term_s.html

Christijan Albers Michele Alboreto Jean Alesi

Saturday, 6 October 2012

Thinking the unthinkable

Bernie Ecclestone is the man who is credited with making Formula 1 what it is today. That is very true. Obviously the teams and drivers all played their roles – and the FIA, and the media. But it was Bernie who banged heads together and made things happen. If it had been left to others [...]

Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2012/10/03/thinking-the-unthinkable/

David Clapham Jim Clark† Kevin Cogan

Sergio’s in Good Hands...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/ty309jg1hIA/sergios-in-good-hands.html

Alex Blignaut Trevor Blokdyk Mark Blundell

2013 Calendar confirmed by FIA, only 2 changes to the Provisional

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/PR8Wxn8TyvU/2013-calendar-confirmed-by-fia-only-2.html

Luca Badoer Giancarlo Baghetti Julian Bailey

Kimi's back!

Source: http://www.metrof1.com/blogs/metrof1/2011/11/kimis-back.html

Walt Ader Kurt Adolff Fred Agabashian

F1 Fan Cast’s Highlights Of The Week

It’s been a big week of F1 action! Lewis Hamilton’s future has been decided, while Michael Schumacher has opted to retire at the end of the season. And some people say Formula One is boring! Here our best stories of the week all in one place:         Schumacher’s F1 Career Highlights (Video) [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/hkcX-66OrAA/f1-fan-casts-highlights-of-the-week

Francois Cevert Eugene Chaboud Jay Chamberlain

Red Bull under the spotlight


Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel celebrate with Red Bull boss Christian Horner on the podium © Getty Images
Sections of the international media have questioned Red Bull's strategic approach to the world championship. After Sebastian Vettel won the Brazilian Grand Prix from the team's points leader Mark Webber at Interlagos, Der Spiegel noted: "Red Bull gives (Fernando) Alonso wings". Not switching the places means that Spaniard Alonso can take his Ferrari to just second place this weekend in Abu Dhabi and be champion, whereas the alternative strategy would have set up Webber for a straight fight. "It is not easy for Webber to drive in a team that considers him a burden to be up against Vettel," said La Gazzetta dello Sport. Tuttosport noted that it seems "the Austrian team would be happier to lose than to see Webber beat Vettel". "No team orders at Red Bull. Another own goal," headlined La Repubblica. Joan Villadelprat wrote in his El Pais column: "Had Red Bull opted for Webber a few races ago, the Australian would probably now be champion." Red Bull, however, is unrepentant. Team owner Dietrich Mateschitz told Salzburger Nachrichten newspaper that "second under proper conditions can often be more valuable than a first". But there is a feeling that the team is not simply giving up the fight for the drivers' title. One columnist in Brazil's Globo wondered if Vettel's radio message in Abu Dhabi might sound something like 'So ... Mark is faster than you'. "I'm always in favour of leaving the fight on the track with equal chances for both sides," said Rubens Barrichello. "But I wonder if they would do that if the situation was in reverse. “Mark has done a great job this year and he has been told by his team what position he is in," said Lewis Hamilton. "Against adversity he has kept at it. I want to see Mark win." Webber believes that, if a strategy is deployed, it will only be on the "last lap" of the season this weekend. "Sebastian is part of a team," said Niki Lauda, who believes Webber should be backed fully by Red Bull. "If he does anything it should be helping Webber and not just on the last lap." Webber is quoted by Bild newspaper: "It makes sense. Otherwise it would mean that Ferrari's team orders would have paid off for Fernando." Red Bull team boss Christian Horner hints that sense will ultimately prevail. "We have already given too many presents to Fernando this year," he is quoted by Autosprint.

Source: http://blogs.espnf1.com/paperroundf1/archives/2010/11/red_bull_under_the_spotlight.php

Warwick Brown Adolf Brudes Martin Brundle

AUTOS: Vintage Indy Cars invade LeMay museo...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/wg3h3PlsG10/autos-vintage-indy-cars-invade-lemay.html

Menato Boffa Bob Bondurant Felice Bonetto

Simulation of the New Jersey track

Source: http://www.metrof1.com/blogs/metrof1/2011/10/simulation-of-the-new-jersey-track.html

Louis Chiron Joie Chitwood Bob Christie

Doctors use Formula One pit crews as safety model

American Medical News reports hospitals in at least a dozen countries are learning how to translate the split-second timing and near-perfect synchronisation of Formula One pit crews to the high-risk handoffs of patients from surgery to recovery and intensive care.
"In Formula One, they have checklists, databases, and they have well-defined processes for doing things, and we don't really have any of those things in health care."

Source: http://blogs.espnf1.com/paperroundf1/archives/2010/10/doctors_use_formula_one_pit_cr.php

Art Bisch Harry Blanchard Michael Bleekemolen

Singapore F1 Race lights Up the Night

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/lIeAL_tzyJ8/singapore-f1-race-lights-up-night_25.html

Jorge Daponte Anthony Davidson Jimmy Davies

Paul Ricard for French GP, Bangkok night race in 2014?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/dwIEOXuZpJA/paul-ricard-for-french-gp-bangkok-night.html

Mauro Baldi Bobby Ball Marcel Balsa

Friday, 5 October 2012

Raikkonen favourite to taste victory in Belgium

At Spa-Francorchamps

In this remarkable season of unpredictability and uncertainty, of seven winners in 11 races, of the most open title battle in years, Formula 1 is still waiting for one big result.

A victory for the revived Lotus team has looked inevitable since the start of the year. And as the world championship re-starts in Belgium this weekend following a month-long summer break, the expectation is that this could be their race.

The car, from the team formerly known as Renault that won two world championships with Fernando Alonso in 2005-6, has been fast all season. Its best result has been four second places. But the momentum seems to be with them.

Kimi Raikkonen's Lotus pushed Lewis Hamilton's winning McLaren all the way in Hungary five weeks ago. The Finn has a stunning record at the stunning Spa-Francorchamps track that hosts this race and Lotus have been working on a technical trick that could give them a key advantage on the demanding track that swoops and twists around the contours of the Ardennes mountains.

Kimi Raikkonen

Kimi Raikkonen has won the Belgian Grand Prix four times. Photo: Getty

The 32-year-old Finn seems to have a special affinity with the circuit regarded as arguably the biggest test for a racing driver anywhere in the world. He has taken four victories here - and either won or retired from every single race he has competed at Spa since 2004.

Raikkonen's all-action style, based on fast corner entry in a car with good front-end bite, seems perfectly suited to Spa's cascade of long, fast corners.

Two of his wins - for McLaren in 2004 and Ferrari in 2009 - came in years when his machinery was otherwise uncompetitive. The other two were dominant victories from the front in 2005 and 2007.

But Raikkonen's position as arguably the favourite for victory this weekend is not founded just on his renowned Spa specialism. He is widely expected to have the car to do the job.

Lotus have come agonisingly close to victory twice already this year - in Bahrain in April and at the last race, in Hungary at the end of July.

Both times it was Raikkonen who challenged only to just fall short, behind Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel in Bahrain and Hamilton in Hungary. But the Finn, who returned to F1 this season after two unproductive years in world rallying, has actually been Lotus's weaker driver for most of the year.

His team-mate, the Franco-Swiss Romain Grosjean, who is in his first full season, has generally had a marginal advantage - to the point that around the European Grand Prix in Valencia at the end of June there were murmurings of dissatisfaction with the Finn, who won the world championship for Ferrari in 2007.

Raikkonen ultimately finished second to Alonso in Valencia, but had been off the pace of Grosjean all weekend - indeed the younger man was pushing the Ferrari hard when his alternator failed late in the race.

When, following the race, Raikkonen expressed his frustration at it taking so long for Lotus to win, one team member privately expressed the view that he would be better focused on beating Grosjean before moaning about not winning yet.

Since then, though, Raikkonen has upped his game and in the race in Hungary he was fantastic, the middle stint there that lifted him from fifth place to potential victor one of the most impressive pieces of driving all season.

Had Raikkonen not made a mess of qualifying, and taken the front row slot he should have earned rather than the fifth place he did, he might well have won. The same can be said of Bahrain, where a decision to save tyres for the race left him down in 11th place on the grid and with too much to do.

Grosjean, too, must be considered a potential Spa winner. Despite making too many errors, he has been all confidence and commitment this year.

He has looked a different driver on his return to F1 in 2012 from the haunted figure who was demoralised by Alonso during his first half-season at Renault in 2009, after which he was dropped.

The high expectations for Lotus at Spa are partly based on the car's inherent qualifies - a factor in its general competitiveness this year has been strong performance in fast corners, and Spa is full of them.

As well as that, though, is that innovation mentioned earlier. In Hungary, and in Germany the week before, Lotus trialled a clever system aimed at boosting the team's straight-line speed without compromising its performance in other areas.

Like the DRS overtaking aid featured on all the cars, the Lotus system affects the rear wing to reduce drag.

It works by channelling air from scoops behind the driver's head to the rear wing, which this extra air then 'stalls', reducing the downforce the wing creates and therefore its drag, boosting straight-line speed.

What is not clear is when exactly the Lotus system comes into play.

Is it independent of the DRS, as some believe, and therefore active above a pre-set car velocity and usable at all times, including in the race when DRS use is restricted to a specific zone?

Or is it, as BBC F1 technical analyst Gary Anderson believes, linked to the DRS and simply an extra boost to the car's speed when that system is employed, like the system Mercedes have been using but without the inherent compromises that team have discovered?

Either way, it could be a significant boost to Lotus's chances in Spa. Lotus have yet to use the system outside free practice, and this weekend they will again try it out on Friday before making a decision whether to race it.

For all the talk of Lotus, though, a win for them is a very long way from a foregone conclusion. Red Bull, Ferrari and McLaren will be as strong as ever on a track that should suit all their cars.

In fact, it will be a particularly interesting weekend all round.

Which teams have made best use of the mid-season break to develop their cars?

Have Ferrari made the step forward in performance they seemed in Hungary to need if Alonso - unquestionably the stand-out driver of the season so far - is to hang on to his championship lead?

Can McLaren maintain the upward momentum they showed in Germany and Hungary after a brief slump?

Will Red Bull finally unlock the potential of what has looked, on balance, overall the fastest car?

The climax of one of the sport's greatest seasons, a hyper-intense period of nine races in three months, starts here.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/08/raikkonen_favourite_to_taste_v.html

Peter Collins Bernard Collomb Alberto Colombo

An Interview with Red Bull’s Mark Webber...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/r9dfi2hqkFQ/an-interview-with-red-bulls-mark-webber_21.html

Chris Amon Bob Anderson Conny Andersson

F1 2012 Championship Standings after Singapore GP

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/6LLImcU_HSc/f1-2012-championship-standings-after_23.html

David Coulthard Piers Courage Chris Craft

F1 2011 Launch Catch Up – McLaren, Mercedes, Red Bull, Sauber, Toro Rosso, Renault…

Catching up on the launches in one mega post.  Here in you’ll find quick interviews with senior members of the team and photos from the Red Bull, Sauber, Renault Lotus, Toro Rosso, Mercedes and McLaren launches. Apologies for being somewhat late, the whole blog isn’t running at full power until the season starts again. Red [...]

Source: http://f1fanatics.wordpress.com/2011/02/06/f1-2011-launch-catch-up-mclaren-mercedes-red-bull-sauber-toro-rosso-renault/

Hans Binder Clemente Biondetti Pablo Birger

2013 Calendar confirmed by FIA, only 2 changes to the Provisional

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/PR8Wxn8TyvU/2013-calendar-confirmed-by-fia-only-2.html

Larry Crockett Tony Crook Art Cross

No guns, handcuffs, balls, bells and whistles at US GP!

COTA today issued guidance for fans attending the forthcoming US GP, and while much of it makes sense (or is just plain funny), restrictions on photographic equipment may come as a surprise to many. Here for your interest is exactly … Continue reading

Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2012/09/28/no-guns-handcuffs-balls-bells-and-whistles-at-us-gp/

Erik Comas Franco Comotti George Connor

Vodafone VIP: Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton Digital Shoot (Pictures)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/v5lm7P0z6iI/vodafone-vip-jenson-button-and-lewis.html

Ivan Capelli Piero Carini Duane Carter