Posts tagged: Magny-Cours

F1 2008, Round 8 - France

Published

By Christine Blachford

This article was originally written for BellaOnline, but is republished here for posterity.

The French Grand Prix has been known in the past to be a relatively dull affair. Overtaking can be difficult at Magny-Cours, and the drivers are never very happy to be travelling to rural France after the decadence of Montreal.

However, we have yet to see a boring race this year, and France was no different. During qualifying, it looked as though it was going to be a Ferrari whitewash. They secured both of the top grid spots, with no one rivalling their times, and nearest competitor Hamilton suffering from a ten place grid drop – from the pit lane incident in Canada.

There was talk of rain, approaching the weekend, but throughout the three days of track action, we only experienced a couple of showers, nothing to upset any of the strategies.

The race got off to a clean start, with only a small incident between Button and Bourdais, that led to the Honda’s retirement a few laps later. Hamilton made a bold move on Vettel, but had to cut the chicane after missing the braking point. The stewards investigated the incident, and decided that he had taken the place from Vettel unfairly, and therefore handed out a drive through penalty. It was not McLaren’s weekend at all, after team mate Kovalainen had also started five places down on the grid after impeding another driver in qualifying.

Ferrari were pulling away at the front, but Raikkonen had a problem with his exhaust, that saw the lead switch to Massa. The errant exhaust was hanging off Raikkonen’s car and flapping around, but even through a pit stop, the team did nothing. The car survived the race, hanging on to second place, although there had been a hole melted in the side of the bodywork.

In the mid-field it was very competitive, with drivers out of position fighting with others. Nelson Piquet amazingly held up Hamilton for a great stretch of time, and later on overtook his team mate Alonso after the latter ran wide at the corner. This will hopefully have impressed his team enough to give him another chance. Trulli was the other notable performer, finishing in third and on the podium. It was just what the team wanted as a tribute to their ex-team Principal Ove Andersson who was recently killed in a rally accident.

Bernie Ecclestone has never been shy of admitting he wants the Grand Prix to move to Paris, and every year for the last few has appeared to be Magny-Cours last. However, they have a contract for next year, redevelopment plans are in place, and things are looking hopeful for a return there in 2009.



F1 Digest - France GP

Published

By Christine Blachford

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Audio preview

It's been a while since the French GP has been eagerly anticipated, but with such a mixed up grid, today was one of those days. Tune in to F1 Digest for a recap of all the action, plus driver reactions.

The Race

A race of some serious fighting, Raikkonen battling his machinery, Hamilton trying to get through the traffic, Trulli holding off Kovalainen.

Conclusions

Whilst Honda and Force India seem to be feeling pretty low right now, Toyota and Toro Rosso are flying high. The others fall into various moods in between.



Live Commenting: France - The Race

Published

By Mr. C.

It's raceday in France and we're just a little bit excitable this morning. When was the last time anyone said that prior to the French Grand Prix?

Today's grid was always going to be a mixed up affair given the 10-place drops imposed on Hamilton and Rosberg, but Kovalainen's unexpected 5-place penalty for impeding Webber really puts the silver cats amongst the pigeons. Two out of position McLaren's could see us witness a masterclass in overtaking this afternoon.

Also coming to McLaren's aid (and providing us some additional drama) could well be the weather. As Stuart pointed out in the comments earlier there was a little rain falling on the circuit earlier this morning and the clouds overhead aren't looking very friendly.

The woes of one team are benefiting many others, with both Renaults now joining two Toyota's and two Red Bull's in the top ten. The opening laps in the mid-field pack should be blink-and-you-miss-it stuff, as everyone tries to capitalise on McLaren's poor fortune.

The fight for the win will also be worth keeping an eye on. It looks to be a Ferrari walk-over up front, but which of the two drivers will take ten points?

A selection of useful links for today's race:



Live Commenting: France - Qualifying

Published

By Mr. C.

This mornings one hour practice essentially told us nothing in terms of who has pace and who's having problems. Without wanting to pick on the guy too much, you know something's not right when the first name on the timing sheet is Nelson Piquet Jr.

There did seem to be less off-track rallying action today, with the majority of drivers figuring out the quickest way around this place is to stick to the asphalt. The soft tyre appears to be causing headaches up and down the pitlane, with the quickest time being set on the harder of the available compounds. That'll probably be the story of qualifying this afternoon. Who can make the soft rubber last a single flying lap?

In terms of the midfield, Lewis Hamilton will be the man to watch. McLaren have a variety of strategies they can use to help Hamilton fight back from his 10-place penalty, from fuelling him light and fighting through the traffic, to going long and bagging as many points as he can. We'll have a better idea which way the team will go in less than two hours.

Keep an eye also on the BMW drivers. Yesterday Kubica's running was curtailed by a misfire while today the cars look a handful, but they'll be hoping to build on the win in Canada and may try something aggressive for tomorrows race.

Qualifying starts at 1pm in the UK (2pm local time). We're watching ITV's qualifying show and build up, which is available online and don't forget Bernie's idea of acceptable web coverage on f1.com too. Radio 5Live will also have commentary from 1pm.

As always, we're keen to know where you're watching and all your qually predictions.



Live Commenting: France - Free Practice 3

Published

By Mr. C.

Saturday dawns then, and seeing as this is the home country of the FIA's preferred forecasters Météo France, you'd expect this weekends predictions to be pretty accurate. However, no-one seems to know if it's going to be a wet or dry weekend. Stuart pointed out in the comments earlier, it's clear skies and bright sunshine at the moment, so we'll go with that.

The highlight of yesterday's running was Alonso's late flyer in FP2, netting him the top spot in the timesheets. The track is supposed to get slower as the day goes on, but evidently no-one informed the Spaniard. There's no doubt that the lap was designed to keep the big Renault cheeses happy, but until we see the real pace of the top cars here, it'll be hard to tell just how fast the guy is.

Kimi also managed to put in some very quick sectors yesterday, but never managed (or tried?) to hook up a complete lap. His weekends always go well when Friday's run as planned, so his will be the times we'll be watching this morning.

Yesterday's initial safety car test is expected to be augmented by a second run this morning, although if anyone has the faintest idea what the FIA learned from the first one please do let us know.

As it's FP3, we'll be following live timing online, and as ITV don't / won't / can't cover this session, it's TVlizer streaming or TVU access for us today. More information on our F1 on the Internet page.

Yell if you've got yourself some coverage and let us know where you're watching the action from.



Live Commenting: France - Free Practice 2

Published

By Mr. C.

After the worlds most uneventful first practice, we soldier straight onto FP2 in France. The weather down that way is still mild and the sun may break through shortly.

The only things worth noting from the mornings running is that Alonso made his engine go bang so close to the end of the session it almost looked to have been planned, while both McLaren driver struggled with front locking to the point that Heikki met first the gravel trap and then almost the wall.

Further back, things were business as usual although Vettel managed to punch above his weight, taking himself up to the dizzy heights of 8th, while Button languished near bottom of the order, with only the two Force India's for company.

The next 90 minute session should offer more information as to how the land lies this weekend. A quiet start to the day leaves teams with much to do, so from 1pm in the UK (2pm local) we'll be following all the action on live timing as well as watching ITV's online (and slightly unreliable) video coverage. Radio 5Live are offering us a better service this week and you can catch their commentary on Sports Extra.

Yell if you're around this afternoon. We were expecting less interest given that it's Friday and people should be working, but earlier proved that F1 fans are a damn dedicated bunch. Where are you and how are you watching?



Live Commenting: France - Free Practice 1

Published

By Mr. C.

It's Friday morning, and Formula One returns to the middle of nowhere for more racing action. Round 8 of the F1 Calandar and the destination is Nevers, France.

Depending on who you feel like believing, Sunday will either bring bright sunshine or thunderstorms, but either way, there's no arguing today's forecast - it's fine and dry.

Sébastien Bourdais is driving on home soil for the first time in F1 this morning, and based on previous outings from STR's newly updated machinery, he's going to need all the time available and more. We saw BMW changing their approach to Friday Practice last time out in Canada, hitting the pace almost immediately, and boy did that work out for them. Watching their weekend strategy unfold will certainly be compelling stuff, while no doubt Ferrari's confidence at this place will see them sit out large parts of the day.

Free Practice 1 is a 90 minute session, and earlier this week we we're led to believe that times from FP1 will be used to calculate the target for this afternoon's safety car test. As yet though this hasn't officially been confirmed, but we'll keep one eye on how this unfolds.

It's a 9am start for anyone following in the UK, or 10am in France. The two of us will be watching ITV's live stream and following the geeky stats online. Details of alternate resources to follow the action are listed on our Formula 1 on the Internet page.

Remember to keep the Allianz track guide close and don't forget you can find this and other useful resources in our Drop.io box.

Shout us if you're about, especially if you're supposed to be working.



F1 Digest - France Preview

Published

By Christine Blachford

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You either love or hate this track, and within today's F1 Digest preview, we experience both sides of the coin and see who falls on which side of the fence.

Vital Statistics

  • Date: 22nd June
  • Circuit: Magny-Cours
  • Length: 4.4km
  • Laps: 70
  • 2007 Winner: Kimi Raikkonen

Preview

It's very quiet out there in paddock land, mostly because the team's are really not digging the French circuit right now. Some say they are, but there isn't the usual excitement that a Grand Prix stirs up.



Inside Track - Magny-Cours

Published

By Mr. C.

Video preview

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Last year Bernie Ecclestone claimed there would be no more outings to the Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours, yet Formula One returns there once again. In honour of the track that, despite being almost universally loathed amongst paddock regulars, will not disappear, Sidepodcast takes a spin around rural France to see what's there to amuse our drivers this time out.

We also catch up with the sole French driver on this year's grid, Sébastien Bourdais. Hear his thoughts on his debut F1 season, the support of the fans and the French federation as well as racing in Magny-Cours. If one man (other than Bernie) can save France's place on the racing calendar, it's likely to be Le Seb.

Special thanks to Allianz SE, Toyota Motorsports GmbH, Red Bull Racing and RTV GmbH for the use of their video footage and photographs.



SECU Very Much

Published

By Mr. C.

Just over a week ago Christine pointed out on F1 Minute that revised safety car procedures would be tested out during the French Grand Prix weekend. Details were sketchy at the time, although she did say that it would likely involve the use of the standard ECU.

A regulations revision is needed in order to work around a side effect of rules introduced at the beginning of 2007, which, in an effort to remove the incentive for speeding back to the pits, sees the pitlane closed to anyone wishing to take on fuel. The problem of course is cars already running on fumes have no choice but to stop, and this has already ruined races for Kovalainen and Heidfeld this year.

Practice Makes Perfect

During this week's Renault podcast, the team's sporting manager Steve Nielsen divulged a few more details about what might happen next weekend in Magny Cours.

It's not all black and white for Fernando Alonso in Canada

Supposedly the original timetable for the trial saw a test-run planned at Monaco, but that was shelved in order to give teams more time to look at the ECU changes during this week's test in Barcelona. If all goes well, the suggestion is that in the event of an accident, a warning light will appear on driver's steering wheels immediately after the safety car is deployed. They then have a maximum of five seconds to acknowledge the warning and after that they must reduce their laptimes in accordance with a readout that's also displayed on their wheel.

Steve mentioned that two trials will take place in France. The first during the in-lap at the end of Friday Practice 2 and the second time during the in-lap of Saturday Practice 3. The target time drivers must remain within will be calculated during the first practice on Friday.

Nielsen Ratings

No penalties will be issued to drivers failing to keep to the specified time, but what isn't yet clear is what happens if no cars happen to be out on the track, if for example it's raining. Presumably the decision to split the trial over two days goes some way to mitigate the chances of that happening.

It's also worth adding that this information hasn't been confirmed as yet and Nielsen was quick to point out that plans may have changed, but that was as much as he knew at the time the podcast was recorded.

What's clear though is that nobody's going to rush headlong into this. Steve said he felt that if the trial was successful, the appropriate time to introduce the rules would be the beginning of next season, and as unanimity between the teams is required for the system to be implemented, we should expect the current regulations to remain as-is in the short term.

Confusions

If you ask me, the proposals sound more than a little convoluted. Not only for the drivers and the teams, but also for anyone trying to follow the action at the track or at home. How in the world we're supposed to figure out who has acknowledged the warning or who's not managed to keep within the limits is anyone's guess.

One also wonders, if everyone is spending so much time looking down at their steering wheel rather than looking where they're going, isn't that more dangerous than speeding through the scene of an accident in any case?



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