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Qualifying Results

Raikkonen takes pole, Hamilton 4th on the 2nd row. Kubica 5th, Davidson 11th, Button 14th, Barrichello 17th, and Coulthard 19th.
 
Easy for Raikkonen.  That Ferrari is so well set up.
 
Alonso had a job beating Hamilton.  In fact, he was slower in Session 1, and had to go out again in Session 2 to post a better time than Hamilton.
 
It looks like Massa had a transmission failure after hitting the kerb hard.
 
My prediction is a Raikkonen win, with Alonso and Hamilton in the top 5.
 
Here’s tomorrow’s grid, and the quali times.
 
1.  RAIKKONEN – Ferrari1m26.072s
2.  ALONSOMcLaren1m26.493s
3.  HEIDFELDBMW1m26.556s
4.  HAMILTONMcLaren1m26.755s
5.  KUBICABMW1m27.347s
6.  FISICHELLARenault1m27.634s
7.  WEBBERRed Bull1m27.934s
8.  TRULLIToyota1m28.404s
9.  SCHUMACHERToyota1m28.692s
10. SATOSuper Aguri1m28.871s
11. DAVIDSONSuper Aguri1m26.909s
12. ROSBERGWilliams1m26.914s
13. KOVALAINENRenault1m26.964s
14. BUTTONHonda1m27.264s
15. WURZWilliams1m27.393s
16. MASSAFerrarino time
17. BARRICHELLOHonda1m27.679s
18. SPEEDToro Rosso1m28.305s
19. COULTHARDRed Bull1m28.579s
20. LIUZZIToro Rosso1m29.267s
21. SUTILSpyker1m29.339s
22. ALBERSSpyker1m31.932s

Update on tyres

There are four compounds; Hard, Medium, Soft and Super-soft.  Each race, Bridgestone will bring two compounds.  Each team must use both compounds during the race, so at some point the each car will be on a less-than-perfect compound.  This could make tactics more interesting, with two long stints and one short one.  The tyres will be visibly marked so everyone will know which compound is being used at the time.
 
Tyres generally will be harder, and so slower.  There’ll be less grip, so more driver skill required.

FIA F1 Rule Changes

Here’s a summary of some of the rule changes made for this season.
 
Cars will face a 10 place penalty for each engine change.  Previously, a car could change engines twice before a race, and only lose 10 places.  Now, that will cost 20 places.
 
T-bar identification.  The number one driver of each team will sport a red T-bar camera housing (above the air intake), and the number two will sport a yellow T-bar.
 
Safety car = pit lane closure.  When the safety car is deployed, the pit lane will be closed until all cars are assembled behind the safety car.  Only then will Stewards declare the pit lane open.  Penalty for transgression, 10 seconds.  This does not apply for cars that only change to wet or extreme weather tyres (i.e. no fuel).  I’ve yet to work out why this rule has been introduced.
 
Lapped drivers may unlap during safety car laps.  I think this is a crazy rule change, and one made to increase the spectacle of F1, polluting the purity of the race.  Before the safety car comes in, lapped cars that are between leading-lap cars will be able to pass those lead-lap cars and the safety car, and rejoin the train at the back, effectively unlapping themselves.  In my opinion, this will lead to safety car deployment just to bring cars back into play for entertainment value, in other words, the best cars may no longer win.
 
I can just imagine a driver having the race of his life, one lap ahead of his competitors, only to have one car of a rival team stop at a dangerous point.  The safety car is deployed, and the track cleared.  Before coming in, the signal goes out that lapped cars may pass and rejoin at the back of the snake, putting all cars on the same lap as the leader.  Blatantly unfair on the leading drivers.  Bringing F1 down to the level of other impure ‘sports’ where ‘competition yellows’ are thrown a few laps before the end to close up the field.
 
After the infamous Shumi Monaco parking incident, the clerk of the course may extend the quali session if a car blocks the circuit.
 
Only a few days to go!

Aston Martin to go into F1?

Ford are selling Aston Martin to get some money in the bank after their recent huge losses. The buyer is reported to be David Richards' Pro Drive. They have hinted that they want to enter F1 in 2008, but it's not clear whether that will be as a team or as a supplier of some sort.

I'm mobile at the moment, so you'll have to google for links yourself.

BowenRacing is sponsored by ik Software at www.ik.com

F1 2007 Drivers and Teams

Here’s a list of teams and their drivers, with a few comments from me.  The number shown before the drivers names are their car numbers.
 
Vodafone McLaren Mercedes
1 Fernando Alonso
2 Lewis Hamilton
Vodafone manage to keep their logo on a World Champion.
McLaren Mercedes is the team I would most like to work for.  They are disciplined and professional, and I would be in my element there.  Alonso also has these qualities, but not to the same level.  He’ll either love it or hate it.
Hamilton is another Brit for me to support.  I am excited about him being in F1 this season, and especially because he’s at McLaren.
 
ING Renault F1 Team
3 Giancarlo Fisichella
4 Heikki Kovalainen
ING is a new sponsor to F1 and it’s nice to see financial companies sponsoring F1 teams.
I’m a fan of the Fins in F1 too.
 
Scuderia Ferrari ********
5 Felipe Massa 
6 Kimi Raikkonen
Boo!  Ferrari is still sponsored by a tobacco firm.  Dinosaurs!
Shame Kimi’s racing for Ferrari this year.  One of my favourite drivers in his earlier years, now with his lack of disciplined and red overalls I won’t be cheering for him this year.
 
Honda Racing F1 Team
7 Jenson Button
8 Rubens Barrichello
A team I can be cheering for this year.  Jenson, a Brit of course, and Rubens (an honorary Brit by virtue of his underdog status with Ferrari) make an interesting team.

BMW Sauber F1 Team
9 Nick Heidfeld
10 Robert Kubica
Boring!  Heidfeld is, sadly, an also-ran.  Kubica has potential, but I don’t think he’ll shine in this team.
 
Panasonic Toyota Racing
11 Ralf Schumacher
12 Jarno Trulli

Red Bull Racing
14 David Coulthard
15 Mark Webber
What can I say, Coulthard and Webber (drivers I like as drivers and as people) driving for a team I would love to work for.  I would love to see them do well.
 
AT&T Williams
16 Nico Rosberg
17 Alex Wurz
Frank is doing his usual job of bringing on a new-ish driver in Rosberg.  Watch this space for stories of contract disputes and dropping a driver just as he starts to shine.  It’s an odd match though, with Nico’s Dad Keki being opinionated and forthright, while Frank is the very model of diplomacy.
Good to see Wurz back again.
 
Scuderia Toro Rosso
18 Tonio Liuzzi 
19 Scott Speed
Torro Rosso is Italian for Red Bull Team 2.  Scott Speed is American for loud and slow.
 
Spyker F1 Team
20 Christijan Albers 
21 Adrian Sutil
A Dutch team, part sponsored by German consumer electronics company Medion, with a relatively unknown German Driver Adrian Sutil, and Ferrari engines.  Spyker deserves to have a more settled season this year.  Probably still a back-of-the-pack team though.
 
Super Aguri F1 Team
22 Takuma Sato
23 Anthony Davidson
Another team I have a soft spot for, not because of the team, but because I like Sato as a person, mainly because he’s always smiling.  I did like Davidson as a driver too, but his stint in the commentary box when Button won took the shine off a bit.  I hope he can put in some solid drives.
 
Test Drivers of note:
Pedro de la Rosa (McLaren Mercedes) – Fast, but out of luck when it came to drives this year.
Gary Paffett (McLaren Mercedes) – Another Brit, must be gutted he didn’t a drive this year.
Nelson Piquet Jr (Renault F1 Team) – another GP2 star.
Christian Klien (Honda), Franck Montagny (Toyota), Robert Doornbos (Red Bull), and Narain Karthikeyan (Williams) – more former F1 drivers relegated to test driver status.  Mind you, I’d sell my granny to be a test driver.
 
Next up:  FIA rule changes.

TV programme about McLaren airs today at 5.10pm

This from ITV's website:
F1: Chasing the Dream, which will air at 5.05pm on ITV1, takes you behind the scenes at Vodafone McLaren Mercedes as the team gears up for a tilt at the world title.

According to my on-screen TV guide, it starts at 5.10 for one hour.

BowenRacing is sponsored by ik Software at www.ik.com

F1 2007 Season Race Calendar

Only one week to go! Can’t wait.

Thought I’d post a few times before the first race, just to bring us up to date. This post is the race calendar. In a few of days I’ll post the driver line-up with comments, and a few days after that I’ll bring you up to date with some FIA rule changes.

Put theses in your diaries and cancel any prior arrangements.

18 March – Australia, Melbourne
8 April – Malaysia, Sepang
15 April – Bahrain, Manama
13 May – Spain, Barcelona
27 May – Monaco, Monte Carlo
10 June – Canada, Montreal
17 June – USA, Indianapolis
1 July – France, Magny-Cours
8 July – Great Britain, Silverstone
22 July – European, Nurburgring (Germany)
5 August – Hungary, Budapest
26 August – Turkey, Istanbul
9 September – Italy, Monza
16 September – Belgium, Spa-Francorchamps
30 September – Japan, Fuji
7 October – China, Shanghai
21 October – Brazil, Interlagos

We Won!

I’m hoping to post a little more frequently from now on, especially with the 2007 F1 season just a couple of weeks away.

Meanwhile, here’s the story of our race on 20th January 2007. It’s a long story (and a long race) but I hope you find it interesting, and it’s good for me to have a record of days like these. I’ve actually had this ready to post for some weeks, but a problem with Blogger.com prevented me from including the lap-times and photos, so I put off posting it until now.

On Saturday 20th January, Colin, Kaz and I won the Open Team Enduro kart race held at a 900m local kart circuit, helped to some extent by my wife Blanche (Race Director, let’s say). It was our first race together. This post covers the race in detail, as I remember it a few weeks later.

We hadn’t really expected to win. I know that’s a bad attitude, but Colin has never raced before, and although Kaz has raced at this circuit before, it was years ago and he only had one practice session when we met here a few months ago.

I’ve had plenty of practice on this circuit, but never raced here, and I don’t have much experience passing other cars; something a hoped this race would put right – and it did.

[Sorry, media missing] Before I go into the race in detail, I thought it would help to show you the post-race classification. You already know we won from the title of this post, but this list shows just how much overtaking and lapping we did.

There were 14 teams of three or four drivers each. We finished first (position 01), in car 12 (Team 12), on lap 115, after 1 hour 30 minutes. On the same lap were car Team 4 and Team 14. Next, and 4 laps down was Team 8.

We lapped the other cars between 4 and 38 times – 38! We lapped cars a total of 219 times in the 115 lap race, on a circuit nearly a kilometre long.

We decided to go for two stints each of 15 minutes to keep us fresh, although it would cost us time in extra stops.

Colin wanted to go out second, Kaz third (to get the glory of the chequered flag, we joked), so I would start the race. For safety, and to make the starting positions randon (and fairer), the race would start immediately after the practice.

For practice Kaz went out for the first five minutes, then Colin, then me.

Race control would run practice until the 15 minutes were finished, then waive Union Flags to start the race. I was trying to keep plenty of space in front of me for the start of the race, but in hindsight I should have just gone as quick as possible. I first saw the union flags about half way through a lap.

[Sorry, media missing] These are lap-by-lap charts showing the lap number, lap-time, and position at the end of the lap (in square brackets). The ^ symbol indicates a slow lap.

I crossed the line to start the race in 10th position. My wife Blanche has said that I’m not aggresive enough when overtaking, so in this race I had decided to go for every opportunity. It was great, I had never passed so many cars so often.

The plan was that when it was time for a driver change, the next driver would go to the pits, and the spare driver would go to the hairpin by the pit entry and hold out a board with the car number on. The problem was that that’s the most important corner on the circuit. It’s at the end of the technical part of the circuit, it’s an overtaking place, and you need to get it right for the long straight after it. Add to that the fact that most of the other teams were standing there too, and it was very difficult to see your board when it was time to come in.

Colin was ready in the pits and Kaz waving the board for a few laps before I saw him. After that, I did one more lap and pitted. Out I got, grabbed the seat liner, and Colin got in. Kaz adjusted the pedals (Colin’s a bit taller that I am), and Colin was off. Pretty slick!

“Are we winning?” I said confidently, having passed many cars. “No, we’re 4th” said Kaz. As you can see, I pitted after 18 laps, and we were leading, but when Kaz and Colin last looked at the monitor before calling me in, we were fourth (or third). I didn’t realise until posting this that I was leading at that point.

Let me clarify; my name is Colin, and my freind and fellow driver’s name is Colin. The other driver was Kaz. Confusing, I know.

[Sorry, media missing] So ‘other’ Colin went out for his first stint. Pit-stops take about 30 seconds in total, partly because the pit exit is partway down the longest straight and you lose a lot of time accelerating.

Colin was doing great! He was going past car after car. It doesn’t look like it from this lap list because he was lapping cars rather than making up places until lap 26.

This is when I made the first of three mistakes that day. “I’m going to give him some encouragement” I said to Blanche. “Don’t do anything to put him off” she said. I walked up the barrier and gave him two thumbs-up as he went round passed at the hairpin. I walked down to race control to see the race-position screen, then I heard Blanche shout “Colin (me)! (Other) Colin’s in the pits!” He’d seen my signal and thought it was time to come in. I ran back towards the pits and waved him out again. It cost us a place and 30 seconds. Sorry guys! As usual, Blanche was right.

Colin continued to lap many cars and made back the place I had lost us too. He missed the pit-board a couple of times too. When he came into the pits after 40 laps, we were 3rd.

It was a quick pitstop. We had got the hang of it now. I didn’t know before the day that they would have pit-boards, so I had made up a sign to hold out to bring the driver in. We ended up using this sign on the start-finish straight, and the pit-board at the hairpin, but it’s still hard to see them when you’re concentrating on passing other cars.

[Sorry, media missing] Kaz seemed very quick to me, especially into the right-left at the end of the start-finish straight. I’m sure the slow laps from 46 to 49 were not his fault. The marshalls did a great job with the yellow flags, and there were quite a few during the race. You can see from lap 45 that Kaz is no slouch.

By now, there were three teams clearly ahead of the rest; us (car 12), car 14 and Car 4.

Although he seemed fast, he seemed to have quite a clear track a lot of the time. He was making short work of overtaking back-markers. It wasn’t until his last flying lap (61) that he made up two race positions to put us in the lead.

[Sorry, media missing] I was up next for my second and final stint.

I’m a little shorter than Kaz and Colin, so in addition to the seat liner (booster cushion as Blanche calls it), I flip the pedal extensions over when I drive. I didn’t know it at the time, but there are three settings (or more) on the pedals; regular (no extensions), short-arse (that’s me), and dwarf! As I went out of the pits, I realised something was wrong because my left pedal was too close.

Going down the back straight I reached forwards to flip the pedal extension out of the way; I’d rather have to stretch than have my leg in that bent position. Doing this I must have moved the steering wheel because when I looked up I was about to drive off the track at over 50 mph.

I carried on for again for a lap. At the end of the back straight, the fastest part of the circuit, there’s a dip called Devil’s Drop where you almost (or maybe actually) take off. As soon as you land, you dab the brake for the fast right hander. I went to hit the brake but forgot it was about 2 inches (5 cm) further away than normal. That amount of extra travel for my foot makes a lot of difference when you’re already braking at the last moment, and I was heading off the track.

Braking harder to slow myself, and turning right into the corner put me into a 180 degree spin and I ended up going backwards into the barrier. That’s unusual for me. I think it only cost me about 4 seconds though (lap 65). That was mistake number two for the day.

A few laps later, I was using my new-found ‘take-every-opportunity-to-pass attitude’ when patience would have been better. Taking a late lunge into a slow corner, the car to to my right couldn’t see me and turned in. To avoid him, I went up on the kirb and spun 180 degrees again. Cars were now passing me on the apex, and I couldn’t get going again until they passed or I would have cause an accident. Mistake three for the day cost me 4-5 seconds on that lap, but another lesson had been learned. It actually cost me time on the next couple of laps too, as I re-took the cars that had passed me.

A few laps later though, I’m pleased to see three consecutive laps where my times were very good and consistent. I got the fasted lap of the race on lap 73 with a time of 41.64 seconds, then 41.76 and 42.13. That’s the sort of consistency I like to acheive in practice sessions. Then, unfortunately, it was time to pit. I had made up one race place, but we lost that again in the pits.

[Sorry, media missing] Colin had another good stint. He immediately gained a place and a few laps later took the lead. I’m sure he didn’t know it at the time, and I wasn’t going to give him any more hand gestures!

I think Colin had more than his fair share of traffic. He had a couple of laps in the 43s (his fastest of the race), but was slowed by traffic most of the time.

It was early in Colin’s session that I began to think “We could win this”.

We had perfected out pit-stops by now. The next driver would go to the pits and the spare driver would walk (run) down the start/finish straigt and hold out my sign, waving it like a lunatic to try to get the attention of the driver. Blanche (the only one not in a race-suit) would be at the hairpin with the pit-board to double our chances of the driver seeing a signal to pit. On lap 93, Colin came in and Kaz went out for the last time.

[Sorry, media missing] Team 14 and Team 4 had been our main competition all day. Still lapping slower cars, Kaz soon picked off Team 14 to put us in second place. A few laps later he passed Team 4 and we were winning. He was flying. His lap-times, as you can see, were quick and consistent.

Consistent was good, but quick was worring me. He had no way of knowing he was in the lead, so he was still going flat out. I didn’t know how many much time was left in the race either, but Kaz had a good margin over the second place team. I wished we had pit-to-car radio or proper pit-boards so I could tell him to ease off and not risk a spin. But, he didn’t make any mistakes, and he took the chequed flag.

We had won, on our first outing as a team. Hand-shaking and back-slapping all round.

[Sorry, media missing] Race control came out to hold the podium ceromony. “Team two, you were crap” said the MC, and the lap sheets were handed out. Then the third place team took to the podium (polite applause all round), then the second place team (more polite applause), then us on the top step.

I don’t remember much polite applause for us, and people started backing away as Colin shook the champagne bottle. Even crap champagne tastes good when you’re a winner.

[Sorry, media missing] Here are a few more figures to wrap things up. This shows the fastest lap of the race, by me, on lap 73. It shows the average lap time of all the teams, so we should be pleased with the times above.

It also shows the Top Average Speed, and Average Speed. I thought the Top Average Speed would be the speed at which the fastest car crossed the line, but it’s not. I’ve done the maths, and the Top Average Speed represents the average speed I was travelling for the whole fastest lap, including corners. This track has a series of slow corners, yet the average speed for the fastest lap is 48.4 mph! The speed of an average lap is 42.7 mph.

The Average Laptime of 47.16 seconds is all the laps completed by all the teams, averaged out. Comparing this with our lap-by-lap times, and the whole team did well.

[Sorry, media missing] Thanks to Colin, Kaz and Blanche for being such great team-mates, and thanks to you for reading.

Bowen Going Racing

Long time, no blog.  But if you have nothing to say, it’s best to say nothing.
 
The 2007 F1 season starts on 16th March, but my season starts on 20th January.  Colin, Kaz and me are racing as a team this Saturday at a circuit that shall remain nameless (unless they sponsor me).  It’s a 90-minute team endurance race, so we’ll be doing a 30-minute session each.  I’ll post after the race to let you know how we get on.

Merry Christmas – here is some news

Merry Christmas to you all, especially those who I know read my blog: Blanche, George and Kaz. I’d like to know who else reads this blog, so please leave a comment.

I’ve not been racing/karting lately, and there’s no F1 at the mo, but I wanted to bring you a couple of news items I heard about (just click the story title to go to the story).
Jenson cracks ribs karting – Ah, bless. Big girls blouse!
Schumacher can’t kart – His team came 12th out of 18.

Hope you all have a great Christmas!

Colin.