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2009 Turkish Grand Prix Qualifying
By Vodafone McLaren Mercedes
June 6 2009
McLaren are left behind as teams make progress in Saturday. The team is in a weak position here in Turkey... Hamilton and Heikki will have their hands full for Sunday's race for sure.

 QUALIFYING

HEIKKI KOVALAINEN

MP4-24-03

P3 programme

19 laps/1m28.738s (15th)

Three runs this morning, evaluating both Prime tyre (three laps/1m29.264s and three laps/1m28.738s) and Option (four laps/1m28.857s) ahead of qualifying. Reporting similar locking and rear-end instability issues as yesterday, the team worked throughout the session to hone the balance to Heikki’s satisfaction.

“I was pushing to the maximum this morning,” he said. “But I flat-spotted the left-front on one run and was always trying to cope with the snappiness of the rear-end. Through Turn Eight, the car was very difficult to drive smoothly.”

 

Qualifying

Q1 1m28.199s (14th)

Q2 1m28.207s (14th)

Q3 -

Two strong runs of 1m28.199s and 1m28.629s in Q1 on the Prime saw Heikki move into the second session in 14th. Into Q2, he did two more runs (1m28.318s and 1m28.207s) to finish the session 14th overall.

“Our car doesn’t have enough grip for us to attack the fast corners,” Heikki said. “The others seem to gain grip through the weekend and are able to better use the Option tyre while we’re using the Prime and losing performance. Braking and acceleration are still very good but we’re just losing grip as the track temperature increases.

“The gap to the leaders is still too big so we need to do some more work back at the MTC to move closer to the front. We’ll never give up, but tomorrow’s race will be difficult.”

 

 

LEWIS HAMILTON

MP4-24-04

P3 programme

19 laps/1m28.563s (12th)

Three morning runs for Lewis too. He initially reported that the front felt well-balanced but, throughout the session, he continued working with his engineers to get the car’s rear-end to operate more effectively. He ran the following programme: four laps/1m28.563s/Prime; three laps/1m28.736s/Prime; three laps/1m28.944s/Option.

Lewis said: “The car felt great this morning – it was very well-balanced at the front but we still had to work to get the rear working properly. We anticipated this weekend would be a bit like Barcelona and that looks like being the case.”

 

Qualifying

Q1 1m28.318s (16th overall)

Q2 -

Q3 -

Struggling for grip on both the Option and Prime tyre, Lewis completed two runs, setting times of 1m28.318s and 1m28.402s to conclude the first qualifying session in 16th.

“Our car seems to have got slower relative to the others as the grip has gone down on the track,” said Lewis afterwards. “I pushed as hard as I could today but I just had no grip out there. We now need to make sure we don’t rush into making too many changes to the car for the forthcoming races: we’ll take our time, refine things and sort out the problem with our car. The team has done a fantastic job though: they really have been working night and day with the same determination and drive as ever. This is clearly going to be a challenging year for us, but I have no doubts that we’ll bounce back.”

 

 

MARTIN WHITMARSH

Team principal, Vodafone McLaren Mercedes

“At the risk of stating the obvious, today's qualifying session was a pretty disappointing one for us. Having said that, we didn't allow our pace yesterday to cause us to be unduly optimistic about our prospects for today and tomorrow, simply because we’d been aware for some time that our car wouldn’t perform particularly well on the Istanbul Park circuit’s higher-speed corners. Even so, with hindsight, perhaps we should have run Option tyres for Heikki’s second run in Q2 – some drivers did so and went faster as a result. On the other hand, other drivers stayed on Primes for their second Q2 runs and posted quick times on them. The fact is that, such is the level of competitiveness all through the field in modern-day Formula 1, it’s very difficult to get into Q3 if your car is in any way sub-optimal.”

 

 

NORBERT HAUG

Vice-president, Mercedes-Benz Motorsport

“A poor result which reveals our weakness in fast sections. Whilst we are with the frontrunners in the final sector, with its long straight and tight corners, we lost more than a second around the rest of the circuit. It looked better yesterday, but today we have to accept the reality. We all need to work very hard to make sure that our level of competitiveness will improve sooner rather than later and that we come back to where we used to be.”

 

Pos Driver Constructor Time
1 Sebastien Vettel Red Bull Racing 1m28.316
2 Jenson Button Brawn GP 1m28.421
3 Rubens Barrichello Brawn GP 1m28.579
4 Mark Webber Red Bull Racing 1m28.613
5 Jarno Trulli Toyota 1m28.666
6 Kimi Raikkonen Scuderia Ferrari 1m28.815
7 Felipe Massa Scuderia Ferrari 1m28.858
8 Fernando Alonso Renault 1m29.075
9 Nico Rosberg Williams F1 1m29.191
10 Robert Kubica BMW Sauber 1m29.357

11 Nick Heidfeld BMW Sauber 1m27.521
12 Kazuki Nakajima Williams F1 1m27.629
13 Timo Glock Toyota 1m27.795
14 Heikki Kovalainen Vodafone McLaren Mercedes 1m28.207
15 Adrian Sutil Force India 1m28.391

16 Lewis Hamilton Vodafone McLaren Mercedes 1m28.318
17 Nelson Piquet Jr Renault 1m28.582
18 Sebastien Buemi Toro Rosso 1m28.708
19 Giancarlo Fisichella Force India 1m28.717
20 Sebastien Bourdais Toro Rosso 1m28.918

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6 Jun, 2009 18:12 Report
McLaren Fans (IP Logged)
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2009 Turkish Grand Prix Qualifying
What do you think? You can have your say by posting below.
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6 Jun, 2009 18:32 Report
ernie.chang (IP Logged)
Unregistered User
Re: 2009 Turkish Grand Prix Qualifying
I think the conclusion that KERS has been a disaster is unavoidable. The boost potential does not compensate for three things: 1. Extra weight 2. Imbalance from the KERS equipment 3. The double diffuser gain in downforce.

Adding the diffuser to KERS has been difficult - McLaren and BMW results attest to it.

Perhaps if KERS gave more boost more of the time (it seems to be available for only one or two corners) and a greater increase would it make sense to continue the KERS experiment.

Interesting to pose choices like this to the teams, which put them at great risk but on the other hand, offers great rewards as well as Red Bull and Brawn can attest to.

Also interesting that the innovators were not the leading teams (McLaren, Ferrari, Renault, BMW) but the also-rans...the law of corporate competition holds even in F1.

Ernie Chang

ReplyQuote
6 Jun, 2009 22:17 Report
KABLE (IP Logged)
Unregistered User
Re: 2009 Turkish Grand Prix Qualifying
I think McLaren should stop spending money on the '09' car and just refine it as best they can and concentrate on design for the '10' car (when the final technical rules are concrete).

Brawn are looking at introducing KERS but looking at the other KERS team...i am not sure it would be worth the risk.

I hope BMW don't drop Kubica for this years performance. he is a top driver who has a bad car.

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