spencerlert's posterous http://spencerlert.posterous.com Most recent posts at spencerlert's posterous posterous.com Sun, 29 Apr 2012 04:45:26 -0700 No frills India set to thrill http://spencerlert.posterous.com/no-frills-india-set-to-thrill-67251 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/no-frills-india-set-to-thrill-67251

Source: http://www.metrof1.com/blogs/metrof1/2011/10/no-frills-india-set-to-thrill.html

Jose Dolhem Martin Donnelly

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sun, 29 Apr 2012 02:45:28 -0700 McLaren to get seat on F1 board? http://spencerlert.posterous.com/mclaren-to-get-seat-on-f1-board-40788 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/mclaren-to-get-seat-on-f1-board-40788 McLaren is to get a seat on the board of the F1 holding company, according to a report today. If true it helps to explain why the team joined Ferrari and Red Bull in agreeing early to the terms of … Continue reading

Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2012/04/22/mclaren-to-get-seat-on-f1-board/

John Cannon Eitel Cantoni Bill Cantrell Ivan Capelli Piero Carini

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sun, 29 Apr 2012 00:46:06 -0700 Massa: The truth will emerge in Melbourne http://spencerlert.posterous.com/massa-the-truth-will-emerge-in-melbourne-1618 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/massa-the-truth-will-emerge-in-melbourne-1618 Ferrari’s Felipe Massa has been speaking about his team’s preparations for the 2012 Formula 1 season. Check out our Ferrari review for 2011! The Brazilian – who will take part in testing this week – believes that he will try many new ideas as they look to find a winning formula for the season ahead. [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/7bLVUyV2Wic/massa-the-truth-will-emerge-in-melbourne

Erik Comas Franco Comotti George Connor George Constantine John Cordts

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sat, 28 Apr 2012 22:45:44 -0700 Rosberg answers critics in emphatic style http://spencerlert.posterous.com/rosberg-answers-critics-in-emphatic-style-15883 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/rosberg-answers-critics-in-emphatic-style-15883

Nico Rosberg looks every inch the archetypal image of a grand prix driver - blonde, good looking, perfect smile, the lot. And in Shanghai on Sunday, at the 111th attempt, he finally delivered the most important part of the package - the perfect win.

It has been a long time coming.

This is the 26-year-old German's seventh season of F1 and while Lewis Hamilton, who was his team-mate when they were teenage karters 12 years ago, was a winner almost from the start of his Formula 1 career, Rosberg's route to the top step of the podium has been somewhat more torturous.

So torturous, in fact, that there have been times when some wondered whether he would ever follow his father Keke in becoming a race winner.

Nico Rosberg's dominant victory in China ensured he has become the first son of a living grand prix winner to follow in his father's footsteps - and only the third ever. The fathers of Damon Hill and Jacques Villeneuve were killed when their son were children.

Keke Rosberg also had to wait a long time to stand on the top step of the podium - his first victory came in his fifth season.

Like Nico, that was Keke's first year in a competitive car, and he ended it as world champion. It seems unlikely at this stage that Nico will follow his father in that sense, too, but after such a dominant win it certainly cannot be completely ruled out.

Nico Rosberg led from pole position to score Mercedes' first victory since the 1955 Italian Grand Prix. Photo: Getty

Watching Rosberg's assured driving as he drove away from team-mate Michael Schumacher in the early laps, and then proceeded to control the race, it seems strange to think that there have long been questions about his ultimate standing as a true world-class grand prix driver. But there have, and to some extent they remain still.

There is no doubt about the calibre of Rosberg's win on Sunday, but it remains difficult to be absolutely sure of his ultimate potential.

He is clearly very fast - but just how fast is not completely clear. Likewise, it remains to be seen whether he possesses all the other qualities that make up a great grand prix driver.

So far, for example, he has appeared to be the sort of driver who will deliver to the potential of his car - but not one who is able to transcend it occasionally, in the manner of Hamilton or Fernando Alonso.

In his debut year, he was generally marginally out-paced by Mark Webber, his team-mate at Williams at the time. And for the rest of Rosberg's career there before joining Mercedes in 2010 he was partnered with journeymen drivers and in uncompetitive cars.

Rosberg has dominated his Mercedes team-mate Michael Schumacher in qualifying since then, but it is clear to most that the seven-time champion is not the same driver he was before he retired in 2006 and spent three years on the sidelines. And until Sunday, Schumacher had generally matched Rosberg for race pace since last season.

The improved performance of Mercedes this year will finally give Rosberg the chance to go wheel-to-wheel with the top drivers on a consistent basis for the first time, so a clearer picture may well emerge.

A first win, especially one so impressive, will do wonders for his confidence, although he has never lacked for that.

Rosberg is a highly intelligent man, who was planning on a degree in engineering had he not become a Formula 1 driver. He is an individual character, and can be a prickly interviewee.

It may be that will change now he will no longer be faced with endless questions about whether he believes he can be a winner.

He could not have answered them in more emphatic style.

If Schumacher had thought Rosberg's 0.5 seconds a lap advantage in qualifying was a one-off based on a unique set of circumstances, he was soon disabused of that belief in the race as the younger German sprinted off into the distance, building a five-second lead in the first 10 laps.

That margin was the foundation for his win, but it was not as if Rosberg then spent the rest of the afternoon hanging on in front of faster cars.

After the first pit stops, Jenson Button was up into a de facto second place and in clear air, but Rosberg continued to pull away, although he was on the faster tyre. Button came back at him before the McLaren driver made his second stop, but only marginally.

Had the mechanic fitting Button's left rear tyre not suffered a problem with a cross-threaded wheel nut at his final stop, the Englishman would have rejoined about 14 seconds behind Rosberg with 19 laps to go.

Button's pace on the slower tyre suggests that he would have closed on Rosberg at that stage, but whether it would have been quickly enough is a moot point.

McLaren team principal Martin Whitmarsh admitted: "I think it would have been very difficult to beat him."

Where have a team who have gone backwards in the first two races found that pace from? Both Rosberg and Mercedes sports boss Norbert Haug had a simple explanation - set-up changes allowing better use of the tyres.

They had used them too much in the first race in Australia and not worked them enough in the second in Malaysia. Here in Shanghai they found a middle way.

Behind Rosberg was a fantastic scrap for second place, what Haug described as "one of the best races I have ever seen".

Recounting the story of Red Bull's race from ninth and 14th places on the first lap to fourth and fifth at the flag, team boss Christian Horner said he sounded "like a horse racing commentator".

The championship is clearly going to be very close and it is setting up what look set to be a superb season.

"We've had three very different races," Whitmarsh said, "and I think this is going to be a season where potentially we have 20 very different races.

"It's fascinating, really. I enjoy it and I'm sure people watching it enjoy it. Who's going to predict who's going to win in Bahrain?"

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/04/rosberg_answers_critics_in_emp.html

Antonio Creus Larry Crockett Tony Crook Art Cross Geoff Crossley

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sat, 28 Apr 2012 20:45:44 -0700 Predictions Championship update following Malaysian Grand Prix http://spencerlert.posterous.com/predictions-championship-update-following-mal-34012 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/predictions-championship-update-following-mal-34012 2010 winner Enigma has gone straight to the top of our Predictions Championship after two rounds, with penicheiro 2nd and Camilo Perdomo and Matthew Turnbull joint 3rd.

Source: http://www.anf1blog.com/2012/04/predictions-championship-update-following-malaysian-grand-prix-2/

Edgar Barth Giorgio Bassi Erwin Bauer Zsolt Baumgartner Elie Bayol

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sat, 28 Apr 2012 18:45:36 -0700 Webber ?will threaten? Vettel in 2012 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/webber-will-threaten-vettel-in-2012-94720 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/webber-will-threaten-vettel-in-2012-94720 Bernie Ecclestone has stated his belief that Mark Webber could be Sebastian Vettel’s biggest rival for the title this year. Check out our review of Red Bull in 2011! Webber failed to win a race last year of course, but Ecclestone is convinced that the Australian will improve, threatening his Red Bull team-mate along the [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/WvCtgq-iUMQ/webber-will-threaten-vettel-in-2012

Tom Bridger Tony Brise Chris Bristow Peter Broeker Tony Brooks

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sat, 28 Apr 2012 16:45:38 -0700 Kimi's back! http://spencerlert.posterous.com/kimis-back-1638 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/kimis-back-1638

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

Jim Crawford Ray Crawford Alberto Crespo Antonio Creus Larry Crockett

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sat, 28 Apr 2012 14:45:23 -0700 Kimi Raikkonen: ?In the end we were not fast enough to win? http://spencerlert.posterous.com/kimi-raikkonen-in-the-end-we-were-not-fast-en-19873 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/kimi-raikkonen-in-the-end-we-were-not-fast-en-19873 Kimi Raikkonen silenced the sceptics with a superb drive to second place in Bahrain, and at one stage looked like he might actually win. The Lotus driver started 11th and had the benefit of having two new sets of options … Continue reading

Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2012/04/22/kimi-raikkonen-in-the-end-we-were-not-fast-enough-to-win/

Menato Boffa Bob Bondurant Felice Bonetto Jo Bonnier Roberto Bonomi

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sat, 28 Apr 2012 12:45:20 -0700 Five-place grid penalty for Raikkonen http://spencerlert.posterous.com/five-place-grid-penalty-for-raikkonen-25721 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/five-place-grid-penalty-for-raikkonen-25721 Kimi Raikkonen has been handed a five-place grid penalty for a gearbox change ahead of this weekend's Malaysian Grand Prix.

Source: http://www.anf1blog.com/2012/03/five-place-grid-penalty-for-raikkonen/

Paul Belmondo Tom Belso JeanPierre Beltoise Olivier Beretta Allen Berg

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sat, 28 Apr 2012 12:11:15 -0700 Effective Acoustic Transcription Services http://spencerlert.posterous.com/effective-acoustic-transcription-services http://spencerlert.posterous.com/effective-acoustic-transcription-services There are usually several such professions where vital information have to be stored in the particular written or printed format money references. Legal transcriptions looks at transcription of those audios in support of court cases, legal investigation . . .. Legal transcription requires creating legal files from recorded data of court process and trials. Transcription service has become just about the most flourishing fields in today's scenario. This may not make a difference to you, but if discretion www.performancetelecom.co.uk and privacy are to you of course your service should offer you this. This could as well be beneficial transcription for the company.

MT's are usually indispensable partners on the health care system and medical experts in the pursuit of optimum patient care worldwide. Our name suggests it all and we deliver it within 24 hours or less depending on the length of the audio. Digital recordings will be e-mailed to a great audio/video transcription service wherever. Along came the kind writers which significantly increased efficiency and even were soon replaced with the computer as can certainly it. You can seek the services of work-at-home freelance transcript writers who are able to quickly turnaround typically the transcripts and send them back on email. So the best method to choose an email finder service provider is to short-list a couple of, visit their internet sites and study their key attributes of their digital transcribing services. The audio transcribing services also look into the recordings which were given to pick to formulate your speeches into word.

24/7/365 technological assistance and customer service support. Common video types includes: Quick time, Real Media and also AVI. Report back towards the client you have checked the sound quality and say whether you believe that it is good or terrible. If your transcription provider generally only pay lip service for your objections, ask them what they prefer to do. This can finished manually or getting a voice recognition software programs. The benefits within the anesthesiology transcription services provided by a reputable medical related transcription company are actually:

In clinical transcription, service providers present HIPPA compliant transcribing with complete customer happiness, highest ever facts accuracy and quickest turnaround time with the execution. Here are most of the tips you normally requires to select the most beneficial ones. Examples include recordings associated with seminars, teleconferences, interviews and classes that should be converted to content material. Listening to snatches on the few words every now and then, which is certainly what transcribers accomplish when they're inputing, often misses these intonations and unwanted interpretation can go on a saying. All solutions are fed to meet stringent authorized deadlines.

Transcription of recordings to match the needs of the police agencies. However, prior to their admission on this field of transcription they will likely need to attain training for you to polish their ability of transcription. Transcriptionists use latest technologies to look at dictations from a person's professionals and copy out them into formal documents. The legal transcribers who definitely are hired by visible offices or multinational companies will likely earn much excessive. Transcription services Ut don't make mistakes and maybe they are quite affordable, compared to the time period your company would need to spend on the particular transcription.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sat, 28 Apr 2012 10:45:25 -0700 Alonso sets the standard http://spencerlert.posterous.com/alonso-sets-the-standard-42159 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/alonso-sets-the-standard-42159

Fernando Alonso's face as he stood on the top step of the podium said it all - a mixture of extreme satisfaction, delight and disbelief.

"Incredible, incredible," he said in Spanish in his television interviews immediately afterwards, and that seemed as good a summing up as any of one of the most remarkable and thrilling grands prix for some time.

Alonso's victory was the 28th of his career and it moved him ahead of Sir Jackie Stewart in the all-time list of winners - he is now behind only Michael Schumacher, Alain Prost, Ayrton Senna and Nigel Mansell, whose 31 wins are his next target.

The Ferrari team leader's presence in such celebrated company is a reminder, as if one was needed, of what a great grand prix driver Alonso is and it was appropriate that his drive on Sunday was one that befitted such a landmark.


Fernando Alonso

Alonso moved up to fifth on the all-time victories list with his win in Malaysia. Photo: Getty

Arguably not the greatest qualifier, Alonso has produced some stunning races in his career, and the one in Malaysia on Sunday ranks up there with the very best.

The Ferrari in its current form has no business whatsoever being able to win a race. In normal, dry conditions, it is way off the pace of the McLaren, Red Bull, Mercedes and Lotus, and almost certainly slower also than the Williams and the Sauber.

And yet there was Alonso, up in fifth place from eighth on the grid by the end of lap one, challenging world champion Sebastian Vettel's Red Bull, which he moved ahead of thanks to stopping one lap earlier for wet tyres in the downpour that led to the race being stopped on lap six.

What won him the race, though, were the laps after the re-start.

He emerged in the lead on lap 16, helped by McLaren having to hold Lewis Hamilton in the pits as Felipe Massa came past.

After everyone had stopped for intermediate tyres, Alonso was 2.4 seconds ahead of Sauber's Sergio Perez - of whose stunning performance more later - and 6.2secs ahead of Lewis Hamilton in the McLaren.

At that point, most would have expected Hamilton - one of the greatest wet-weather drivers in history - to close in on the two cars ahead of him. Instead, Alonso pulled away from Perez, who himself pulled away from Hamilton.

This was, as BBC F1 co-commentator David Coulthard said, "Alonso at his brilliant best", as he built an eight-second lead over Perez in 12 laps.

Alonso is such a benchmark, so peerless, so utterly relentless and unforgiving when he senses a sniff of a win, that it seemed impossible at that stage that he would not win the race.

But then Perez began to come back at him - showing the differing characteristics of the two cars that have been apparent since the start of pre-season testing. The Ferrari is hard on its tyres and the Sauber is the opposite.

Closer and closer Perez got, first by fractions, then by full seconds until by lap 40 he appeared to have Alonso at his mercy.

Stopping a lap earlier than Perez for 'slick' dry-weather tyres put his lead back up to seven seconds, but on these the Sauber was even more superior.

Perez was within a second of Alonso by lap 48 - with eight to go - and what would have been a fully deserved victory by a man who from the beginning of his career last year has looked destined for great things seemed inevitable.

In order to see this content you need to have both Javascript enabled and Flash installed. Visit BBC Webwise for full instructions. If you're reading via RSS, you'll need to visit the blog to access this content.


F1 being what it is, a lot may well be made of the radio call that Perez received at about this point. "Checo, be careful, we need this position," he was told by his team, who use Ferrari engines. Was this simply a team that is known to be struggling for finance sensibly warning an excited young driver to make sure he didn't bin it when a valuable podium place was up for grabs? Or was it, as some will surmise, team orders in disguise, an order not to try to deprive the company on whose largesse they have depended in many more seasons than this one of a much-needed win? If it was a team order, Perez didn't seem to pay any attention - he continued to push hard until he made that fateful error. And team principal Monisha Kaltenborn dismissed any thoughts of a conspiracy.

"What we meant was get the car home," she said. "It was important to us to get the result - there was nothing else to it. There was no instruction."

Either of them would have been a deserving winner after two superlative drives - and there were other noteworthy performances down the field, too.

Bruno Senna showed something of his famous uncle's wet-weather skills with his climb up from last place at the restart to finish an impressive sixth.

And Toro Rosso's Jean-Eric Vergne, who narrowly missed out on a point on his debut last weekend in Australia, delivered in spades with a sure-footed drive in the treacherous conditions at Sepang.

The Frenchman was the only driver to stick with intermediate tyres in the early downpour, and he continued to perform impressively on his way to eighth place, just behind last year's rookie of the year Paul di Resta, who also looked good.

Senna, Vergne and most of all Perez clearly have bright futures ahead of them.

But ahead of them all was the man whose consistent excellence over a 10-year career not only they but everyone else in F1 has to aspire to.

"Great race for Alonso, top job, and also Perez," Jenson Button said on Sunday evening in Malaysia. You can say that again.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/03/alonso_sets_the_standard.html

Mark Blundell Raul Boesel Menato Boffa Bob Bondurant Felice Bonetto

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sat, 28 Apr 2012 08:45:18 -0700 2011 season review: http://spencerlert.posterous.com/2011-season-review-75257 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/2011-season-review-75257

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

Ivan Capelli Piero Carini Duane Carter Eugenio Castellotti Johnny Cecotto

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sat, 28 Apr 2012 06:45:41 -0700 Predictions Championship update following Malaysian Grand Prix http://spencerlert.posterous.com/predictions-championship-update-following-mal-53044 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/predictions-championship-update-following-mal-53044 2010 winner Enigma has gone straight to the top of our Predictions Championship after two rounds, with penicheiro 2nd and Camilo Perdomo and Matthew Turnbull joint 3rd.

Source: http://www.anf1blog.com/2012/04/predictions-championship-update-following-malaysian-grand-prix-2/

Michael Bartels Edgar Barth Giorgio Bassi Erwin Bauer Zsolt Baumgartner

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sat, 28 Apr 2012 04:45:17 -0700 McGregor talks up Winterfest http://spencerlert.posterous.com/mcgregor-talks-up-winterfest-94603 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/mcgregor-talks-up-winterfest-94603 Before he got too busy with 2012 preparations, I caught up with Cooper Tires USF2000 Championship powered by Mazda driver Thomas McGregor for a Mazda Road to Indy Q&A.  Hailing from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, he signed with Andretti Autosport in late October. The 2010-2011 Skip Barber Southern Regional Series champion chatted about his love of Eminem and [...]

Source: http://blog.indycar.com/2012/01/16/mcgregor-talks-up-winterfest/

Duane Carter Eugenio Castellotti Johnny Cecotto Andrea de Cesaris Francois Cevert

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sat, 28 Apr 2012 02:45:22 -0700 Racing for bonuses in Car Town http://spencerlert.posterous.com/racing-for-bonuses-in-car-town-79039 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/racing-for-bonuses-in-car-town-79039 Owning Scott Dixon’s ride in Car Town could earn a bonus if the Target Chip Ganassi Racing driver wins an IZOD IndyCar Series race.  The bonus, which includes other drivers, is part of Car Town?s 2012 Indy 500 Challenge. Featuring the new Dallara chassis, players can build and tune up their car for optimal performance on the popular Indianapolis Motor Speedway [...]

Source: http://blog.indycar.com/2012/04/12/racing-for-bonuses-in-car-town/

Larry Crockett Tony Crook Art Cross Geoff Crossley Chuck Daigh

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Sat, 28 Apr 2012 00:45:20 -0700 Reading between the lines in a phoney war http://spencerlert.posterous.com/reading-between-the-lines-in-a-phoney-war-94238 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/reading-between-the-lines-in-a-phoney-war-94238

The annual Formula 1 phoney war was in full swing at the second pre-season test at Barcelona's Circuit de Catalunya this week.

Fernando Alonso was talking down Ferrari's form, Lewis Hamilton was talking up McLaren's - as, intriguingly, was Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel. And the unlikely combination of Kamui Kobayashi and Sauber set the fastest time of the week.

As ever, the headline lap times were a poor guide to the order of the grid that can be expected in Melbourne at the first race in just three weeks' time.

But look behind the fastest laps, and there is usually a way of gleaning at least some sense of form ahead of the season.

Fernando Alonso

Fernando Alonso's Ferrari could yet to turn out to be a dark horse. Photo: Getty

I'll preface what follows with a major caveat - this has been one of the most difficult tests to read for some time. But here goes.

Red Bull, as ever, looked especially strong. Vettel was fastest of all on the first day of the test, and throughout the four days he and team-mate Mark Webber set consistently formidable-looking times.

On Wednesday afternoon, Vettel and Hamilton set out to do race-distance runs at more or less the same time. Both did 66 laps - the length of the Spanish Grand Prix, which will be held at the track in May.

Vettel did five pit stops; Hamilton four. Discount laps on which they went in and out of the pits and they both managed 55 flying laps. Vettel completed his more than two minutes faster than Hamilton.

If that was repeated in a race, Hamilton would be lapped by the end.

And the pattern was repeated on Thursday with Mark Webber and Jenson Button, although the margin was reduced to about half a minute.

Of course, this is very far from an exact scientific comparison.

They didn't use the same tyres as each other - although they don't necessarily have to in the race either.

We don't know what they were doing with fuel loads - although it would be counter-intuitive to start putting fuel in at pit stops because it would provide the team with data that was never going to be relevant to competition.

And it's an especially confusing situation because only the day before Vettel was saying how impressed he had been with the McLaren's pace on the longer runs.

But there was more - none of it especially happy ready for those hoping for a close season.
On the Wednesday, Vettel's fastest time of all was nearly a second faster than Hamilton's on the same type of tyres. Although both were set on very short runs - suggesting a qualifying-type simulation - that's still potentially meaningless as there is no way of knowing the level of fuel on board at the time.

Nevertheless, if you then look at the lap times both were doing at the start of their race-distance runs, they were about the same margin slower than each driver's fastest laps as you would expect given a full race fuel load.

That suggests that the headline lap times of those two drivers could be a reasonably accurate indicator of form - again worrying for McLaren.

Of course, this is only testing, and teams have updates to put on their cars before the first race - as Button pointed out. And everyone expects McLaren to be a close to challenger at the front come Melbourne. Nevertheless, few are under any illusions about Red Bull's strength.

"You're old enough, Andrew," one senior insider said to me during the test, "to know that Red Bull look very strong. McLaren and Ferrari are a bit behind. Force India look like they have a quick car, too."

He might have added that the new Mercedes looks quite decent as well.

But few teams are as difficult to understand right now as Ferrari - who have not done any race simulations to compare with their main rivals.

The messages coming out of the team have all seemed pretty negative.

There has been a lot of attention put on technical director Pat Fry's remark at the first test in Jerez that Ferrari were "not happy" with their understanding of the car.

Start raking through the time sheets, though, and you begin wonder what's behind all the negativity.

On headline lap times, Alonso was less than 0.3secs behind Vettel. And on both his days he started 10-lap runs with a lap in the region of one minute 24.1 seconds.

If you take 10 laps' worth of fuel off that time, you are left with a lap in the low 1:23sec bracket - again, not far off what Vettel managed. And you can bet the Ferrari was running with more than just 10 laps of fuel anyway; most top teams routinely test with 60-80kg of fuel on board.

In other words, the Ferrari actually looks reasonably fast, and an insider did admit: "The car is not as bad as a lot of people think."

If - and it's a big if - Ferrari can start to extract that potential before the first race of the season, Red Bull might just have a serious fight on their hands. And that's without even considering what McLaren might be able to achieve.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/02/reading_between_the_lines_in_a.html

Cliff Allison Fernando Alonso Giovanna Amati George Amick Red Amick

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Fri, 27 Apr 2012 22:45:11 -0700 Kimi Raikkonen: ?In the end we were not fast enough to win? http://spencerlert.posterous.com/kimi-raikkonen-in-the-end-we-were-not-fast-en-37095 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/kimi-raikkonen-in-the-end-we-were-not-fast-en-37095 Kimi Raikkonen silenced the sceptics with a superb drive to second place in Bahrain, and at one stage looked like he might actually win. The Lotus driver started 11th and had the benefit of having two new sets of options … Continue reading

Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2012/04/22/kimi-raikkonen-in-the-end-we-were-not-fast-enough-to-win/

Eddie Cheever Andrea Chiesa Ettore Chimeri Louis Chiron Joie Chitwood

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Fri, 27 Apr 2012 20:45:23 -0700 Rosberg shines after my Shanghai shenanigans http://spencerlert.posterous.com/rosberg-shines-after-my-shanghai-shenanigans-20144 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/rosberg-shines-after-my-shanghai-shenanigans-20144

I've just achieved a minor miracle here at Shanghai airport - managing to get changed in the tiniest toilet cubicle imaginable before checking in for my flight to Abu Dhabi, and ultimately Bahrain.

The reason it was so tough is that I had my two-weeks-away-from-home suitcase and my laptop bag and I was also trying not to drop my new maroon velvet jacket onto the toilet floor. I wouldn't want to get such a beautiful piece of clothing soiled now, would I?

If you don't know what I'm talking about, take a look at the video below and you can see our 'Sex and the City' opener from Sunday's first live race show of 2012.

In order to see this content you need to have both Javascript enabled and Flash installed. Visit BBC Webwise for full instructions. If you're reading via RSS, you'll need to visit the blog to access this content.



It was a fun morning's filming actually, the low point being Eddie Jordan's well-intentioned but rather unconventional offer of breakfast. You see, we filmed most of that opening skit on Friday morning and it required an early start.

I stay with the production team at most races while Eddie and David Coulthard often stay somewhere else (usually with softer beds and more powerful showers).

So at half six on Friday morning, the crew and I set off in the minibus from our hotel near the track and headed for the Shanghai rush-hour: four-lane highways criss-crossing the city, all of them busy, most of them full of stationary traffic.

Eventually we arrived at EJ and DC's place and they came down to join us. Eddie turned up, dumped his bag and immediately disappeared back into the hotel.

As we were wondering where he was and what he was doing, he returned with a small brown bag and proceeded to dish out a pilfered breakfast.

I am afraid to say I rejected the small piece of brown bread with a single limp rasher of bacon, squished in Eddie's grip and thrust in my face. But fair play to the crew and DC for accepting his offer.

I also blame our exhaustion for the fact we ended up going down the 'Sex and the City' route as it was suggested by Ian the cameraman on the bus as a joke, and suddenly Dave the incredibly creative VT producer had seized on it.

The shoot itself was fun. One of the things I've missed in the first two races is the time spent with EJ and DC. There just isn't the time on a highlights show to transmit long, involved opening pieces and so I relished being back with the guys doing what we enjoy.

It was fantastic to be back in the old routine, prowling the pit-lane hoovering up the stories. I particularly enjoyed showing Ross Brawn the footage of the 1957 Mercedes win in Monza, and sharing with you at home the story of the first pole position for Nico Rosberg's father Keke.

I think it's these kinds of things that add depth to our coverage, put the events in perspective, and also inject a human element into such a technical sport.

And what a race it was by Nico in the Mercedes. It was a real shame for team-mate Michael Schumacher, but while he and Jenson Button shared pit-lane problems, and the rest of the field indulged in some classic racing, Nico simply drove the perfect race.

Maybe a late overtake such as Jenson's in Canada in 2011, or defensive brilliance such as Sebastian Vettel's in Spain last year is a more exciting way to win a race. But the manner in which Nico did it demonstrated complete dominance by car and driver. That is what the F1 community strive to achieve every week.

I'm not sure what was in DC's mid-race cuppa, but remarkably on the F1 Forum, he was the one diving in to grab Nico, in true EJ style. Before we know it he'll be wearing mad shirts and getting members of the Beatles muddled up!

I'm now in the airport and our flight leaves in about 45 minutes so I'd better sign off. Incidentally every time a plane takes off the roof of this place rattles rather violently. I'm hoping it's just a design issue.

I don't know what has happened to the rest of our team, but on the bus, nine out of 11 people were fast asleep - so don't be in any doubt that they've been doing their bit for you today.

Before I sign off, a word on Bahrain.

There has been much said about the next grand prix on the 2012 schedule, including significant coverage of the issue across the BBC's news outlets.

We felt it was important in our show that we put the relevant questions to F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone not just on the decision to race but also the motivation behind it.

Whether it is the right decision to stage the race is not for me to answer. I've had many
people ask whether I am happy to go. Of course I have safety concerns personally - but we are journalists. The BBC's role, as part of a free media, is to chronicle the big stories and events and we take great pride in transmitting the most significant moments in F1 to your living rooms.

Next weekend is arguably one of the most important in the history of F1. All eyes will be on Bahrain so it's essential we are there too, to accurately and honestly reflect the events both on track and off.

Thanks for tuning in this weekend and for making us the number one trending topic on Twitter in the UK on Sunday morning.

But the real story was Nico Rosberg. After 111 races, the wait is finally over.

See you in the desert.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/jakehumphrey/2012/04/rosberg_shines_after_shanghai.html

Tom Belso JeanPierre Beltoise Olivier Beretta Allen Berg Georges Berger

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Fri, 27 Apr 2012 18:45:16 -0700 New F1 season could prove unpredictable http://spencerlert.posterous.com/new-f1-season-could-prove-unpredictable-87722 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/new-f1-season-could-prove-unpredictable-87722

The Formula 1 teams arrived in Melbourne's Albert Park to be greeted by grey skies, intermittent rain and blustery wind. But not even the weather could dampen the palpable excitement and nervous tension.

The start of the new season is just a few hours away and everyone from world champions Red Bull to lowly HRT is desperate to find the answer to the question they have been asking all winter. Where will they be come Saturday and Sunday afternoons?

The F1 teams like to keep outsiders guessing before the first race by saying they don't know where they are in terms of competitiveness, but usually this is little more than kidology.

Such is their capacity to analyse data with massive super-computers that usually they have a very good idea of their position in relation to their rivals, despite the well-known difficulty of predicting form from pre-season testing.

But this year seems different; they genuinely don't seem to know - so the usual anticipation ahead of the first race of the season is magnified.

Lewis Hamilton said that judging by the data that mattered from winter testing he felt McLaren were "in the top three or four".

Ferrari's Fernando Alonso has also bigged up his team's chances for the 2012 season. Photo: Getty

Meanwhile, a senior engineer from one of the teams who will be contesting what is expected to be a congested midfield battle told me he was pretty sure Red Bull and McLaren were out front but he didn't know "whether we will be third or seventh".

Some people's anticipation is more nervous than others', though.

For teams such as Mercedes and Lotus, there is a genuine sense that they have done a good job and moved forward over the winter.

In fact there is a growing sense in the paddock that Mercedes may even be able to give McLaren and Red Bull a run for their money, something team principal Ross Brawn was quick to dismiss as "unlikely".

For others, the desire to discover the true pace of their car is tinged as much with trepidation as anticipation.

Ferrari have had what Fernando Alonso described here on Thursday as a "tough" winter, struggling with "quite a complex car in terms of set-up and understanding it".

Alonso was doing his best to talk up the team's chances, saying: "Maybe we didn't reach our targets but it doesn't mean that we are slower than the other cars. That we will not know until Saturday."

Others are keen to play down the importance of this first race of the season.

Vettel said that Australia this weekend and Malaysia next would do no more than demonstrate a "trend" for performance over the season.

And Brawn said he "preferred to look at the first four races and the range of circuits we have and see how that looks".

But the statistics belie that point of view.

Albert Park might be a unique street circuit, with a dusty, low-grip surface, and the teams may only just be beginning to work with their new cars. But actually it has proven to be a rather good arbiter of the season to come - five of the last six winners of the Australian Grand Prix have gone on to become world champion that year.

Other themes are also emerging this weekend that will have importance to one degree or another as the season develops.

F1 wouldn't be F1 without a good technical conspiracy and this year looks like being no different.

Already during pre-season testing there have been eyebrows raised at the way some teams are trying to exploit exhaust gases for aerodynamic effect.

This practice was supposed to have been ended by rule changes that have restricted the positioning and angle of the exhaust pipes and put much stricter limits on engine mapping - both an attempt to rid the sport of so-called exhaust-blown diffusers that became such important tools over the previous two seasons.

But this weekend another potential controversy has emerged over the rear wings on several cars, particularly the Mercedes, Red Bull and the Ferrari.

These new devices - that some believe to be on the fringes of legality - seem designed to exploit the DRS overtaking aid in ways not originally intended.

The DRS was designed as a tool to make overtaking less difficult - if a driver is within a one-second margin of a car he is trying to overtake, he can use the DRS in a specified zone on the track to give him a straight-line speed boost.

Mercedes, Red Bull and Ferrari, meanwhile, have what appear to be extra slots on the rear wing that can work in conjunction with the DRS to either increase straight-line speed even further, or allow the teams to run extra downforce with no drag penalty.

The most noticeable feature of the 2012 cars, though, remains the noses - and specifically the ugly 'platypus' step on all but the McLaren and Marussia.

This is a result of a rule that has lowered the nose tips of the cars to increase driver safety, but not lowered the top of the chassis.

The result is a grid full of ridiculous and ugly-looking cars, and very few are troubling to hide their frustration at the situation.

"It is unfortunate," Brawn said, "and the teams should look at themselves and blame themselves.

"[Governing body] the FIA tried to do what they could and a number of teams wouldn't agree to the changes because they said they wanted to carry over their chassis, which we all know is a load of nonsense because nobody has carried over their chassis.

"We've ended up with a very odd feature on the cars which is not very endearing and I'm sure will get fixed for 2013."

The noses, of course, will soon be forgotten if the season is close and competitive. And that will only begin to become clear as this weekend unfolds.


Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/03/new_f1_season_could_prove_unpr.html

Joie Chitwood Bob Christie Johnny Claes David Clapham Jim Clark†

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert
Fri, 27 Apr 2012 16:45:16 -0700 Perez revels in success http://spencerlert.posterous.com/perez-revels-in-success-8517 http://spencerlert.posterous.com/perez-revels-in-success-8517 Fernando Alonso raced home to clinch first place in the Malaysian Grand Prix on Sunday, but you might argue that for all his joy at winning, there might have been someone just slightly happier at Sepang that day. Step forward Sergio Perez. The Mexican might not be a household name just yet but, aged 22, [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/-_7itVK0ToQ/perez-revels-in-success

Trevor Blokdyk Mark Blundell Raul Boesel Menato Boffa Bob Bondurant

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://posterous.com/images/profile/missing-user-75.png http://posterous.com/users/heO92Z9iE7PHc spencerlert spencerlert spencerlert