Formula One’s European
season opens this weekend with the 37th Spanish Grand Prix at the
Circuit de Catalunya, located to the north of Barcelona in Montmeló.
Hosting the race for the 17th time, Catalunya is a favoured testing
venue among the teams, and is a well known entity to the drivers who
have all banked considerable mileage at the track over the winter.
Following its return from Bahrain, the AT&T Williams team and its
drivers, Nico Rosberg and Kazuki Nakajima, have spent four days testing
aero and mechanical updates at Barcelona and is well prepared for making
the short journey to Spain again this week for round four of the FIA
Formula One World Championship. Once the Williams-Toyota FW30s complete
26 laps of the Spanish Grand Prix, the team will celebrate the first of
a series of landmarks this year having recorded 50,000 raced laps in
Formula One since Williams Grand Prix Engineering’s debut race in
Argentina in 1978.
Nico Rosberg:
"I’m looking forward to this weekend’s Spanish Grand Prix because we
know the circuit well as we’ve done a lot of testing there in the past.
The car performed well at Catalunya throughout winter testing, so it
should run well in the race. We had a promising test there last week; I
had two day’s preparation time with the car which should stand us in
good stead for the race. The only difficulty with Barcelona is that
track conditions are
constantly changing so you’re frequently having to adjust your set-up.
Malaysia is now firmly behind us and I’m hoping we’ll come away from
next weekend with a positive result."
Kazuki Nakajima:
"We have some aero updates on the car for Barcelona, which we spent last
week testing, and they should bring us some gains performance-wise.
Personally, I like the Circuit de Catalunya. I had a good result there
when I raced in GP2 last year and I hope I can do well in my debut
Spanish Grand Prix. My engineer, Xevi Pujolar, is from Spain, so it’s
technically going to be one of our home races, so I’m hoping I can get
him a good result!"
Sam Michael Technical Director:
"Barcelona
is a great test of aerodynamic efficiency, engine power and chassis
balance. It tends to highlight a car’s strengths and weaknesses, except
perhaps the brakes because braking loads in Barcelona are fairly minimal
compared to other tracks because there are numerous high speed corners
with high lateral corner loads on entry and exit.
We have tested at Barcelona throughout the winter, and as recently as
last week, during which time we’ve fine tuned set-up and brought some
aerodynamic and mechanical developments to the car. Bridgestone will
bring two tyres from the harder end of the compound range for this race
and strategy tends to lean towards two stops because the high speed
corners make a one stop option too difficult.
With the cars demonstrating good reliability now, our target for
Barcelona is to continue improving our performance and getting points in
order to build upon our position in the Constructors’ Championship, but
it will be a tough battle."
Circuit de Catalunya,
Barcelona
Regarded as one of the most technically challenging circuits on the
calendar, it is perhaps fortunate that the teams spend the majority of
their allocated test days collecting valuable data at Montmeló ahead of
the race. Unfortunately, however, track and weather conditions are
invariably disparate between testing and the Grand Prix weekend leaving
the drivers and their engineers with a relatively green track to contend
with from the outset.
Barcelona is a high speed, high downforce circuit, with fast, sweeping
corners
connected by even faster straights and will see the drivers reach speeds
of 305kph along the start/finish straight and fly into corners such as
Seat at 240kph. The engines will spend each lap of the 66 lap race at
57% full throttle, so top end speeds are important, most crucially on
the start/finish straight which will see the drivers flat out for over a
kilometre.
Barcelona’s erratic weather conditions, particularly the prevailing
winds, can de-stabilise the car’s aero balance, so the teams are
continually chasing the perfect set-up. With so many variables, the
outcome of the Spanish Grand Prix should never be predicted..
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KEY RACE DATA: RACE DISTANCE/LAPS 5.412kms 57 laps = 308.238kms
RACE DISTANCE / LAPS 4.655kms 66 laps = 307.104kms
RACE START TIME Local: 14.00, BST: 13.00
2007 FASTEST LAP F Massa, Ferrari: 1:22.680
2007 POLE SITTER F Massa, Ferrari: 1:21.421
2007 RACE WINNER F Massa, Ferrari
PIT-STOP SCHEDULE
1 stop: Laps 28 - 32
2 stops: Laps 19 – 26, 39 - 47
3 stops: Laps 16 – 19, 30 – 36, 44 - 50
WILLIAMS IN SPAIN Car Wins Poles Fastest 2006 2007 Starts Laps Laps 17 5 4 3 MW Q11/R9 NR Q11/R6
NR Q13/R11 AW Q18/DNF
AT&T WILLIAMS DRIVER PERFORMANCE STATISTICS 2008
NICO ROSBERG KAZUKI NAKAJIMA
GP RESULT FASTEST LAP PTS RESULT FASTEST LAP PTS
AUS Q7/R3 1:28.090, 5th 6 Q13/R6 1:29.639, 14th 3
MYS Q16/R14 1:36.782, 13th 0 Q22/R17 1:37.711, 17th 0
BHR Q8/R8 1:34.072, 6th 1 Q16/R14 1:35.433, 17th 0
WILLIAMS PERFORMANCE STATISTICS 1978 TO 2008 GPs Wins Poles Fastest Podiums Laps Laps Points Entered Laps Raced Led
489 113 125 129 295 49976 7,470 2,561.5 |