RE: F1 2013 at-a-glance

RE: F1 2013 at-a-glance

Wednesday 6th February 2013

F1 2013 at-a-glance

The majority of Formula 1 teams have now launched their cars for the year. Here are the runners and riders so far.



Last week, we watched as Jenson Button and Checo Perez pulled the wraps of McLaren’s car for the 2013 season: the MP4-28. It was the second of many launches that have taken place in the last few weeks, and now that the vast majority of cars have been unveiled (Williams will be the last, on the 19th), here’s a quick look at what else has been revealed.



Red Bull RB9
Adrian Newey described the RB9 as ‘evolutionary’ as he showed off his latest design for the first time; what that means is that this car is pretty similar to last year’s. Push-rod suspension has been retained – as opposed to Ferrari’s pull-rod design – as has a slim, stepped nose, now devoid of its cooling vent, and a small cross-section.  Once again, Mark Webber will partner world champion Sebastian Vettel, and both drivers feel they’re in with a shot of winning the championship. "I do believe I can have a crack at the championship again," says Webber. "That is my goal. It’s what I get up each day thinking about." Vettel, meanwhile, spoke of a "long year again, with tough challenges waiting for all of us."



Ferrari F138
Ferrari feel as though they’re on the back foot this year, with Stefano Domenicali admitting that their key objective is to deliver a competitive car from the off. However, development of the new car has been hampered by an underperforming wind tunnel at Maranello that’s resulted in all of the F138’s aerodynamic development taking place at Toyota’s wind tunnel in Cologne. The new car does, however, look to have a cleaner, lower rear end, which should help airflow over the back of the car, and the same pull-rod suspension as last year’s F2012.



Lotus E21
A minimum target of third in the constructors’ championship – one better than last year’s result – gives us an idea of Lotus’s ambition this year. Technical director James Allison says that detail changes to the team’s 2013 car should add up to a ‘significant’ amount of extra performance, which the team hopes will see them achieving that aim. Among the changes to the car will be more bodywork at the rear end, which will direct exhaust gases down to the gap between the car’s floor and the rear wheels, a technique that should increase downforce. Kimi’s verdict? "It won’t be easy to improve what we did already last year but that is the aim. Hopefully we can do it."



Mercedes-Benz W04
After launch plagued with PR niggles (see below), it wasn’t surprising to see Lewis Hamilton damning the new W04 with faint praise. "It doesn’t feel too bad at all," was his verdict. Meanwhile, there was plenty of talk of improving and moving forward from team principal Ross Brawn, who clearly feels that the team isn’t where it could – and should – be. He expressed confidence in the car, though, describing it as "a clear step forward in design and detail sophistication over its predecessor." That said, the new car looks extremely similar to last year’s, with the notable exception of a ‘vanity panel’, a new bodywork addition allowed by this year’s regulations which helps to disguise the step between the low nose and the higher driver’s compartment.



Sauber C32
Sauber unveiled not only a new car, but also two new drivers: rookie Esteban Gutierrez will partner Nico Hulkenberg in the team’s 2013 lineup, meaning it’s all change now that Perez has headed for pastures new and Kobayashi’s lost his seat. The car looks rather different, too, with narrower sidepods and a slightly more conventional nose that ‘fences in’ the step, channelling air up over the car and away from the more turbulent wheel area. There’s also been a change to the exhaust area, with the exits now situated in the bodywork as per McLaren and Ferrari, as opposed to last year’s car which guided exhaust gases down to the gap between the floor and the rear wheels a la Red Bull. Unlike McLaren, though, the team has stuck with push-rod suspension.



Force India VJM06
"From the ground up, everything’s new." That’s how Force India’s technical director Andrew Green describes the VJM06. What’ll also be new is Paul Di Resta’s partner for 2013 – though as yet, we don’t know how that’ll be. The team’s in the somewhat unusual situation of heading into the first period of testing with just one driver on the books, which is something of a gamble. But team boss Bob Fearnley says that what matters to him is getting the car right. However, what the team’s second driver can achieve coming into the process so late will be crucial to Force India’s success in 2013. 



Toro Rosso STR8
2012 was a tough year for Red Bull’s ‘youth’ team, which finished in ninth place, making it last among the established constructors and a whopping 54 points behind eighth-placed Williams. However, team boss Franz Tost has put his faith in drivers Daniel Ricciardo and Jean-Eric Vergne to achieve his target of a sixth-place finish in 2013. Also key to achieving that aim will be the arrival of new technical director Jamie Key, who comes in from Sauber having designed the car that took Sergio Perez to three podium finishes last year.



Caterham CT03
Caterham’s new driver Giedo van der Garde, who tested for the team in 2012 while also driving for Caterham’s GP2 outfit, will join Charles Pic to compete in the new CT03 in 2013. This’ll be the first season that Caterham races without a Grand Prix winner in its midst, then, which could hamper the team’s development. Tony Fernandes doesn’t seem to think so, though, stating his continuing aim to break away from the "bottom three" – or, now that we’ve lost HRT, the bottom two.

 



Marussia MR02
This will be the first year that Marussia’s car features KERS, and the team is describing the car as a massive technical leap forward. Like Caterham, Marussia will be pushing to bridge the gap between the faster teams this year, and now there’s no HRT, they’ll be looking to avoid the bottom spot by the time the season closes. They’ll be hoping young Brit Max Chilton has what it takes to help them do that; he’ll partner Brazilian Luiz Razia to complete an all-rookie lineup. Things haven’t started perfectly for the team, though, with a car failure landing Chilton in the gravel trap just over an hour into the first session.



PR Win of the season so far...
...had to come in the form of Lotus’s superb ‘Kimi wheel’ – described, tongue firmly in cheek, as the steering wheel that’ll be fitted to Kimi’s new car. Note the buttons marked, ‘Ice Cream’, ‘Tweet’, ‘Jenson’, ‘Jump’ and ‘Smile’, as well as dials to adjust ‘Finishing Position’ and ‘Translate (Anti-Mumble)’.  Lotus’s PR bods, however, might be more keen on the ‘Mute’ button that’s cheekily been thrown in at top-left. Nice.

...and PR Fail...
It’s not been a rosy start to Mercedes’s F1 campaign. First up, Nico Rosberg’s W04 went up in flames while testing at Jerez after just 14 laps, with an electrical fault seemingly to blame.  The next day, Lewis Hamilton’s car lost rear brake pressure, causing him to plough straight on at Turn 6 – weirdly, also on his 14th lap. So, crucial to the team’s season will be whether either Merc can make it onto lap 15 in the first race.

Author
Discussion

Trusty Steed

Original Poster:

290 posts

194 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
Would it be wrong to say WRC is far more exciting?

stephen300o

15,464 posts

228 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
Trusty Steed said:
Would it be wrong to say WRC is far more exciting?
Yes.

DMC2

1,831 posts

211 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
That steering wheel is comedy gold.

ButtonIt

385 posts

178 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
Let's not have any more F1 vs WRC (or any other motorsport for that matter). Please leave this for us F1 enthusiasts to enjoy talking about!!


Muzzer79

9,892 posts

187 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
Trusty Steed said:
Would it be wrong to say WRC is far more exciting?
Totally. confused

At least you can watch F1 on TV..... wink

jmesgotav8

99 posts

150 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
Trusty Steed said:
Would it be wrong to say WRC is far more exciting?
Just leave me alone.

I know what I am doing

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
Trusty Steed said:
Would it be wrong to say WRC is far more exciting?
I love WRC but because of no TV coverage F1 pips it for me. However to see both live WRC all the way.

ButtonIt

385 posts

178 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
Anyway....

I'm glad that the Marussia's have sorted their KERS out. They were embarrassingly slow and nigh on dangerous at points last year. Hopefully the lower teams have developed more so there's not three distinct groups. It would be great to see more variation in the results.

Everyone loves the underdogs, you can tell by the attention that Sauber, Force India and Williams got with their podiums last year. It shouldn't be a "given" that the Ferraris, Red Bulls and McLarens will take up the top six spots in some order or another.

I also hope Webber can stick it to the German a bit more, he's not got long left in the sport at this level. It would be good for him to not play second fiddle quite so much. If we go back about three years or so, the pair of them were a LOT closer than last year...

Anubis

1,029 posts

179 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
Where is McLaren? confused

ButtonIt

385 posts

178 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
Anubis said:
Where is McLaren? confused
There was a PH special on it last week

ItsJustARide

108 posts

157 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
ButtonIt said:
I also hope Webber can stick it to the German a bit more, he's not got long left in the sport at this level.
With you on that one. Not just stick it to the German but more importantly to that very ungracious Helmut Marko.

Scrof

197 posts

154 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
Anubis said:
Where is McLaren? confused
Here:

http://www.pistonheads.com/news/default.asp?storyI...

smile

steveb8189

473 posts

191 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
I still don't get this Red Bull / Torro Rosso thing...

Why does the Red Bull have Infinity written on the side and the Torro Rosso has Red Bull on it?

McSam

6,753 posts

175 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
So McLaren are switching to pullrod suspension at the front? The comment in the Sauber section suggests that but I don't see it mentioned anywhere in either article.

Dion20vt

252 posts

162 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
Really looking forward to the 2013 season! Any idea if the BBC has lost anymore coverage?

detomaso

1,354 posts

248 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
The MB has a lot more changes from the cockpit back, quite different to last years and more in line with the front runners.


ButtonIt

385 posts

178 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
steveb8189 said:
I still don't get this Red Bull / Torro Rosso thing...

Why does the Red Bull have Infinity written on the side and the Torro Rosso has Red Bull on it?
Torro Rosso is owned by Red Bull (It's the Spanish translation). With Infiniti paying BIG bucks to have their logo splashed down the side of the Championship winning cars I would Imagine Red Bull wanted to take advantage of advertising "real estate" on the lesser cars, after all, the Red Bull team already carries the Red Bull brand, to the causal observer "Torro Rosso" could mean anything. If you're going to subsidise a whole second team then you may as well grab all the advertising space wink

muthaducka

381 posts

184 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
I for one can't wait until the new season starts. Plenty of title contenders. I want to see more of Kimi / Lotus on the podium / mic. Webber should have all the tools to be in with a chance, it's got to happen for him at some point (bit like Chelsea winning the Champions league, it took a while), maybe this year.

Alonso was soo good last year, out performing his car by some margin. I'm not a big fan (he suffers from twartyvagitas) but I do admire his determination and skill.

steveb8189

473 posts

191 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
ButtonIt said:
steveb8189 said:
I still don't get this Red Bull / Torro Rosso thing...

Why does the Red Bull have Infinity written on the side and the Torro Rosso has Red Bull on it?
Torro Rosso is owned by Red Bull (It's the Spanish translation). With Infiniti paying BIG bucks to have their logo splashed down the side of the Championship winning cars I would Imagine Red Bull wanted to take advantage of advertising "real estate" on the lesser cars, after all, the Red Bull team already carries the Red Bull brand, to the causal observer "Torro Rosso" could mean anything. If you're going to subsidise a whole second team then you may as well grab all the advertising space wink
Thank you! smile

998420

901 posts

151 months

Wednesday 6th February 2013
quotequote all
McLaren should give Jenson a button marked "Kimi"