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AT&T Williams Post British GP Review
 
 AT&T Williams Post British GP Review
 

SYNOPSIS:
Nico Rosberg’s second fifth place in two races enabled the AT&T Williams team to move up another place in the Constructors’ Championship for the third successive Grand Prix and into the top half of the table.

In Friday’s practice sessions, the team analysed the various new aero parts, including a new floor, diffuser and front wing upgrade, all of which worked as anticipated. Friday’s schedule also involved mechanical set-up work and the usual tyre evaluations, which showed little difference between the hard and softer compound, with the prime perhaps having a slight advantage at Silverstone. Kazuki Nakajima ended the second session in P4, and Nico in P9.

NakajimaFor the second time this season, Kazuki progressed through to Q3 in qualifying, while Nico made his eighth appearance. Both drivers demonstrated encouraging pace in the top ten shoot out, which saw Kazuki set the fifth and Nico the seventh fastest time, traffic and a three lap heavier fuel load perhaps costing Nico one grid position.

For the race, both drivers continued the strong first lap form seen all season, Kazuki gaining a position off the line to run in fourth place, while Nico moved up to sixth by the end of lap one following his overtaking manoeuvre going into Stowe. The team chose to run a prime, prime, option strategy with the tyres and put Kazuki on a short first stint and Nico on a slightly longer one. Unfortunately, Kazuki was unable to pull out enough of a gap ahead of his first stop on lap 15 which had the effect of leaving him embroiled in traffic during his second stint, which subsequently ruled out a potential points-paying finish. Nico drove a strong first stint but a slower car after the first round of stops ultimately cost him track position to the Ferrari. At the flag, Kazuki crossed the line in P11, while Nico brought his FW31 home in fifth while also setting the third fastest lap time of the race just behind the Red Bull pairing.

Sam Michael, Technical Director Q&A

QQ: Did the new parts on the FW31 perform as you'd hoped at Silverstone?
Yes, they did. We had some mechanical changes on the suspension at Silverstone and various aero updates. Testing during Friday’s practice sessions showed they all worked as we expected.

Q: How does the FW31 now compare to the opposition?
We’re currently in fifth place in the Constructors’ Championship having been promoted up the table for the third race in succession. That's what matters and that shows where the FW31 is. Race-by-race performance can fluctuate and we were competitive at Silverstone, but the measure for any team is their place in the Constructors’ tables and we are presently fifth.

Q: How did the cool(ish) temperatures affect the pace of the FW31?
For us, the temperatures at Silverstone didn't have any real influence on our race. We would have preferred to have run the hard tyre throughout, but there wasn't a massive difference between the two.

Q: Kazuki was quickest in Q1 and lined up in fifth place on the grid. Was the British Grand Prix a breakthrough weekend for him?
Kazuki has been continually improving since Barcelona and it's pleasing to see him helping to move the team forward. The major difference is that he is now contributing directly to the set-up process over a race weekend.

Q: Kazuki was fourth until his first pitstop, but he finished the race in 11th. Why did he lose so many positions?
Kazuki was on a shorter first stint than the other drivers because we had to do more laps in Q3 to get a lap time than we had planned to. Unfortunately, that then makes it critical to build up a good gap to the driver behind during the early part of the race, but Kazuki wasn’t able to get the gap we needed him to. That caused him to then fell behind the chasing pack in the second stint.

Q: Nico finished the race only 0.8s behind Felipe Massa. Were you disappointed not to get fourth, or even third, with him?
If we could have run at our true pace in the middle stint, Nico would have been racing Barrichello for third place. As we weren’t able to do that, Massa managed to catch Nico, even though he was slower than him. Massa then simply ran longer before the second pitstop and beat us.

Q: Looking ahead, there’s now a three week break in the calendar before Germany. Time for a holiday?
No! The whole team has already started to prepare for the Nürburgring and will continue to do so for the next few weeks.

 

Championship Tables After 8 of 17 Races

Drivers
1 J Button 		64
2 R Barrichello	41
3 S Vettel 		39
4 M Webber 	35.5
5 J Trulli 		21.5
6 F Massa 	16
7 N Rosberg 	15.5
8 T Glock 		13
9 F Alonso 	11
20 K Nakajima 	0
Constructors
1 Brawn GP 	105
2 Red Bull Racing 	74.5
3 Toyota 		34.5
4 Ferrari 		26
5 AT&T Williams 	15.5
6 McLaren 	13
7 Renault 		11
8 BMW Sauber 	8
9 Toro Rosso 	5
10 Force India 	0

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AT&T Williams Post British GP Review
Posted by: Williams F1 (IP Logged)
Date: 23/06/2009 12:49

What do you think? You can have your say by posting below.
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Re: AT&T Williams Post British GP Review
Posted by: gpl (IP Logged)
Date: 23/06/2009 15:55

I don,t like the sound of this, at all



Kazuki Nakajima's stock is rising within the Williams team, technical director Sam Michael has revealed.

With key Toyota backing, the 24-year-old Japanese, with a famous father, is often overlooked in formula one and usually put in the shade by his star teammate Nico Rosberg.


But there are some in the paddock who rate Nakajima highly, and - at least until Sunday's 60-lap British grand prix - this faith was borne out by his performance at Silverstone.

He was quick in the practice sessions, and then faster than German Rosberg in Q1, Q2 and Q3, and fastest of the entire field in the initial low-fuel qualifying segment.

Nakajima lined up fifth on the grid but with a light fuel load, and ultimately could not keep up the necessary pace to make the strategy work and finished just eleventh.

But Michael, Williams' Australian technical boss, is increasingly impressed by Nakajima, and rumours at the British event indicated that the Grove team is keen to preserve its entire race lineup in 2010.

"Kazuki has been continually improving since Barcelona and it's pleasing to see him helping to move the team forward," Michael said.

"The major difference is that he is now contributing directly to the setup process over a race weekend.

"He is definitely improving," Sam Michael continued, "and he really helped the team with setup direction this weekend."

Re: AT&T Williams Post British GP Review
Posted by: crusty_bread (IP Logged)
Date: 23/06/2009 16:30

Its great that he is contributing to set-up but lets get some perspective here- he took a car which was arguably the second fastest and finished 11th. He was unable to set a fast lap on saturday without seriously compromising his strategy for the race, and he was unable to overcome this setback despite having a car faster than those around him.

Its good that he is improving, but he still has 0 points, and this is mostly of his own making. He will have to improve much more than this to rightfully deserve another chance next year.

Re: AT&T Williams Post British GP Review
Posted by: Francesc (IP Logged)
Date: 23/06/2009 16:33

Totally agree crusty

Re: AT&T Williams Post British GP Review
Posted by: gabal (IP Logged)
Date: 23/06/2009 19:32

And lets not forget Nico did only one run in Q1 when Nakajima posted his fastest time, I don't remember was this the case in Q2 too and in Q3 he had lighter fuel load. He showed great pace all weekend but lets put things into perspective. I'm more encoureaged by Sam saying he is contributing setup work as that i much more important for the team then him toping Nico in quallifying.



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