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Nearly the
whole team has now arrived at Suzuka, where
the 16th grand prix of the season will take
place this weekend. There are only two names
missing from the roll call: Felipe Massa was
busy last night at the National Museum of
Tokyo for the promotional launch of the 458
Challenge for the Japanese market (from next
year an Asia-Pacific series will rejoin the
Ferrari Challenge calendar) while Stefano
Domenicali will arrive in Japan today.
Fernando Alonso made a trip to the circuit
in yesterday afternoon and used the chance
both to make contact with his technical team
and to carry out his traditional inspection
lap of the track on a bicycle. In the
meantime yesterday the mechanics went
through their usual pit stop practice. They
have increased the training programme given
that it wasn’t possible to carry out what
was planned last week because of the frenzy
of activity between one flyaway grand prix
and the other. At a time of the season in
which the pit stops could be ever more
decisive it’s crucial to take the maximum
care over every detail. |
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The 2010
Formula 1 season is now reaching its climax, with only
four races remaining and it is not just the fact that
the fight for both the Drivers’ and Constructors’ titles
is balanced on a knife edge which makes it such a tense
time, as the teams prepare to tackle the Japanese Grand
Prix. In the same way that a driver who takes a bad line
through Suzuka circuit’s famous “Esses” section can
still feel the negative effects of this several corners
later, so too, a team that is not well prepared going
into this weekend’s Japanese Grand Prix, will feel the
effects of that in the following final three rounds.
Adding to the complication of the task from a logistical
point of view is that this last quartet of races all
take place a long way from home. It is a very different
challenge to the one faced during the European part of
the season.
After the Suzuka weekend there will be no chance to
return cars and equipment to Maranello in order to press
a theoretical “Reset” button on everything. It will be
necessary to stick closely to the pre-arranged programme
and all aspects that need to be managed on the car and
in terms of parts and equipment. Some components will
inevitably need to be flown back to the factory, either
to be repaired or to be updated, so an assessment must
be carried out to decide what work the race team can
handle itself, carrying out workshop duties at the race
track of the following venue. “It’s a very complicated
procedure, you need good management skills and you must
be on top of every situation,” affirms, Diego Ioverno,
Scuderia Ferrari’s Head of Track Operations.
“The main job, which has to be carried out on Sunday
night after each race outside Europe is to strip down
the race cars and carry out an initial check on all its
component parts. In fact, we do this in Europe too, but
it is more critical for the flyaway races. It is a
fundamental process, because it is possible that some
problems on the car did not show up on the telemetric
data during the race itself.”
Once this preliminary inspection is carried out, a
decision is taken as to which parts do in fact need to
return to Maranello. Everything else, including the cars
themselves, is packed and air freighted to the next
venue, where the rebuild job is resumed, sometimes using
components that have been flown out from the factory.
This is necessary, because in a season as closely
contested as this one, the Scuderia along with the other
teams in the title chase, are still updating their cars
for every race. It is not just the cars that have to be
prepared under different conditions, once Europe has
been left behind. “These flyaway events are a bit more
challenging in terms of how the pit garages are
prepared,” continues Ioverno. “Clearly, we do not have
the car transporters and trucks, which in Europe serve
as a workshop and parts department during a race
weekend. Therefore, here we have to find space in the
garages to create a workshop area, a parts storeroom and
so on. You also have to create space for the engineers
and drivers to hold their regular debriefing sessions.”
At circuits that have featured on the calendar in
previous years, this task is easier as the logistics
crew knows what to expect and all the circuits provide
each team with a scale drawing of the space that will be
available to them, so that some of the planning can be
done long before the race, back home in Italy.
If all the teams will miss the convenience of their
trucks this weekend, in another respect, Suzuka is more
than adequate, as it has very wide and spacious pit lane
for the pit crew to carry out their task that can be so
important to the final result on Sunday afternoon. It
has one anomaly, in that in some areas it slopes very
slightly downhill in the direction in which the cars
travel. One month ago in Monza, the verdict was that
Fernando Alonso took that famous win thanks to the
brilliant performance of the crew during his pit stop,
while two weeks later in Singapore, the tyre changing
routine failed to make the headlines. “In fact I think
then crew performed even better in the Singapore pit
stop,” reckons Ioverno. “In Monza, we were in second
place and managed to take the lead thanks to Fernando’s
pit stop. But in Singapore, he was in the lead before
the pit stop, so the guys had to cope with the greater
pressure of knowing that they could actually lose the
race for Fernando and in terms of time taken, it was
just two tenths longer than the Monza stop, but enough
to keep the lead ahead of the Red Bull. We should not
forget that Felipe also had a good pit stop, if not
quite as good as Fernando’s. However, you have to
consider that for strategic reasons, we brought Felipe
in on the first lap, which is complicated as most of the
guys have been on the start grid and so they had to rush
back to the garage in more of a hurry than usual, in
order to take up their positions for the pit stop. It
was similar to what we did with Fernando in Monaco,
except slightly easier as the Singapore track is longer,
thus giving you a bit more time.”
Suzuka is very different to the last two venues in
several ways, mainly because it has many high speed
corners. In theory, this means it is not that well
suited to the strengths of the F10, however, recent
races have shown the car to be versatile and adaptable
to most types of track and there will be further
technical updates arriving in Japan, aimed at making it
even more competitive. No updates are required on the
human side, because everyone in the team; drivers,
engineers and mechanics is very motivated to go for a
hat trick of wins if possible, with the main aim of
closing down even more the gap in both championships.
In the past, the Japanese Grand Prix used to be the
penultimate or final round of the World Championship and
on eight occasions, the Driver’s crown was assigned at
the end of the Suzuka race. This track has hosted the
event twenty one times, with the Mount Fuji circuit
accounting for the other four in its history. Ferrari’s
record in Japan is excellent, with a total of seven wins
out of the twenty five editions of the Japanese Grand
Prix, with six of them coming courtesy of Michael
Schumacher, with Gerhard Berger taking the Prancing
Horse to victory in the first ever Grand Prix held at
Suzuka back in 1987. As for our current drivers, Felipe
Massa has not raced here since 2006, his debut season
with the Scuderia: he took pole position and went on to
finish second and while this was a good personal result,
it was not a great day for Ferrari as a certain Fernando
Alonso won that day, which was enough to secure him that
year’s Drivers’ title. Two years later, Fernando also
won at Mount Fuji.
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