Haas F1 Team tested at Barcelona for eight days over a 12-day span. How did it go and how did it prepare you for Australia?
“The first four days were very good. We made good progress and we were on a roll. Then came the second week of testing. On the first and second day, we only made a few laps, partly because we had a fuel issue with the electronics and turbocharger. Then on the third day, we had a problem with our brake-by-wire system. Our guys sorted everything out overnight. On the last day, we had a very good day of testing and were back where we left off the first week. It was a roller-coaster ride. At the moment, we are as ready as we can be for Australia, but you’re never ready enough. No matter what, we will do our best.”
Was there a silver lining in the troubles you faced during testing in that it made the team understand the car better?
“Absolutely. That’s what testing is for. The good thing is, we had a front wing failure on the very first day and we fixed it within hours and were out on the track again. We had a problem with the brake-by-wire system, but our guys fixed it overnight. We had an electronics issue and had to work through the night to fix it. You’re never happy when you don’t go on the track, but we always found fixes to our problems, and Barcelona was the place to do it. We don’t want that in Australia.”
You said all along you wanted experienced drivers. How has the collective experience of Grosjean and Gutiérrez helped develop the VF-16?
“They both had the same feedback of the car and how it was behaving. When we sent Romain out on the day we experienced the brake system problem, he said, ‘Something is wrong with the brakes, guys.’ It was very difficult to locate the issue because it was electronic, but we believed him because for him to make two mistakes, we knew something was wrong. On the last day, we left Romain in the car an hour longer than planned after lunch so we could finish some setup work. Then we put Esteban in and he confirmed the work we did before. So, we’ve got a basic setup for both drivers which will be very similar in Australia. They both gave us their input and drove us forward.”
In addition to getting a gauge on the car you built, you needed to get a gauge on the personnel you’ve assembled. How are they doing?
“They put in so much effort. It was more than just the two weeks of testing. These guys put in two weeks working day and night before testing to finish the car. We’ve had day and night shifts the last four weeks, and they’ve worked well together. They didn’t get stressed out and they never panicked. I can’t thank them enough for the work that they did over the past few months.”
Obviously, a lot was learned at Barcelona, but there wasn’t much time between when the cars arrived back at the factory before they had to leave again for Australia. What did you do to make the most of that time?
“During the five days that the guys got back from Barcelona and before they leave for Australia, they not only have to rebuild one car, but finish a second car. They are working very hard, and it’s why we’re on schedule.”
With the season-opener now upon us, what has been the biggest challenge to get ready for this moment?
“It’s just the amount of work that goes into getting everything ready. It’s taken so much effort from so many people. I think everybody saw how prepared we were in Barcelona with our equipment ready on the first morning of testing. We want to be just as prepared for Australia, and that is achieved by the hard-working people at Haas F1 Team.”
What are your goals for Australia?
“Our goal is to have both cars finish, to show that we can compete and be proud of what we are doing.”
How did you determine your tire selection and strategy for Australia?
“We aimed to determine tire strategy during the test, but it’s very difficult because the conditions will be different in Australia. We picked the three different types of tires for Australia based on feedback from our experienced team members who have worked in Formula One for a long time. How exactly we will use them and how they drop off will be determined over our three practice sessions in Australia. The decision on what tire strategy we use during the race will be made before qualifying.”
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Haas F1 Team tested at Barcelona for eight days over a 12-day span. How did it go and how did it prepare you for Australia?
“The first week went very well. There were a few good surprises, a few less fun but, generally, the team has been impressive. The Formula One world has been impressed by the fact that we were in Barcelona and able to go out and do some good laps. The car felt good and it looks like everyone’s been working together for a long time. The team spirit is really good. There’s a lot of experience here and everyone is listening to each other, which makes it nicer. I was very happy with winter testing and the way everything is going ahead of Australia.”
You’ve been a part of many preseason tests. How did this one go?
“There are always up and downs and things you need to do. There’s some boring stuff and some fun stuff. Eight days is not a lot of testing, but coming from scratch, where we started, it’s been impressive. Everyone is looking forward to going to the first race.”
How satisfying was it to have so much input into developing a new car for a new team?
“It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience, being part of a new team and driving the car out of the garage for the first time, especially with Haas being an American team. It’s been a unique experience. It’s good to be able to give your advice, give your feedback. All the engineers have been listening a lot. Everyone is an important piece of the puzzle and we’re all trying to do our best. Team spirit is important in a sport like Formula One.”
How would you describe the VF-16?
“It’s a good car with a really good baseline. It felt very similar to the simulator, which is good as well. It’s probably going to help us work twice as fast. I felt comfortable straight away in the car. There are a few things we can still adapt and get better but, in general, I was very happy with the way the VF-16 has been working.”
What are your goals for Australia?
“It’s early to set goals but, of course, we want to score points as early as possible in the season.”
Explain a lap around the Albert Park Circuit.
“Going down the main straight and heading into turn one, you always get the sun in your eyes. It’s quite a nice corner, right inside corner, fourth gear with a little bit of inside curb then outside curb. Turn three is a bit of a tricky corner. You have to be careful on exit and well placed for the next left, which is turn four. Turn five, if you’ve got a good car, it’s flat out. Turn seven is then a right inside corner in third gear. It’s quite a good corner as well, with a bit of a tricky curb on exit. Turn nine requires big braking. Total application is very important because you’ve got the backstraight and you’re very close to the wall on exit.
“Then you have my favorite corners between (turns) 11 and 12 and 13. It’s high speed, sixth gear probably. It’s a good feeling. Going into (turn) 14, you have lots of braking as you’re carrying quite a bit of speed in there. (Turn) 15 needs just a bit of a lift off (the throttle), right inside corner, pretty cool to drive. You then need to be well positioned for the last braking point into the left-hand side, where it’s quite tight. The last corner you want to stay flat out, but it’s a bit of a tricky one with a bump in the middle.
“I enjoy Albert Park. It changes a lot during the weekend. It’s not a permanent circuit, so the grip is changing a lot. The race start is quite late, but it’s one of my favorite grand prix. It’s not an easy track to get on with. It’s very hard on fuel consumption as well. For the first race of the season, it’s going to be interesting.”
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Haas F1 Team tested at Barcelona for eight days over a 12-day span. How did it go and how did it prepare you for Australia?
“It’s been quite an experience. The team worked very hard day and night. The first week was very positive and we managed to get a lot of laps in. The second week was quite challenging. It was important to keep focused. Preparation is always the period when you experience all the problems, yet you find solutions in order to get ready for Australia.”
You’ve been a part of many preseason tests. How did this one go?
“In general, better than expected. As a new team, we managed to put the car on track and, on the first day, we managed to do a very good amount of laps. Most importantly, we got to know the car, which is the biggest question mark after months of preparation. When I saw the car for the first time on paper, I was imagining how it would feel. Then finally, I arrived at Barcelona. I went out for my installation lap and after two or three corners, I could already say something about the car. It was a very interesting moment.”
How satisfying was it to have so much input into developing a new car for a new team?
“It’s been a different experience to be part of the team integration from when the conversations started with Gene (Haas) and Guenther (Steiner) back in the summer. Obviously, I’ve always tried to give an input from my experience and to try to be part of what was going on with the development of the car – to be aware, to be close to the team, to be close to the designers so I could best prepare myself. It’s a whole new adventure and it’s an honor to be a part of it.”
How would you describe the VF-16?
“I love driving it. It’s very enjoyable. I’ve had cars in the past which were difficult to fine tune in order to get a good feeling where you can anticipate, where you can push the car to the limit. The VF-16, straight away had a good feeling. As a baseline, that’s always a good sign. It’s a great car.”
What are your goals for Australia?
“First of all, we need to find out how competitive we are. I hope we are as competitive and as good as the car feels, but we need to maximize and optimize what we have. Our target is clear – to achieve points. It is quite ambitious as a new team, but that’s what we’re targeting and we’ll work very hard to achieve it.”
Explain a lap around the Albert Park Circuit.
“It’s a combination of a street and permanent circuit. It’s a bit bumpy in certain arears. You arrive into turn one, right-hand corner. You have to react very quickly because you have the curb and then straight after you have a left-hand corner which opens up. You try to go on power there and you start to slide a bit, which makes it very nice. Then turn three is a slow-speed corner where you have to prepare for turn four. The line for turn four is important to set up for turn five, as it’s a very high-speed corner and you have the walls around it, so it’s very exciting to drive. Then you arrive into turn six and turn seven, where you brake with a little bit of load. It’s a fairly medium, high-speed corner which you go usually in fourth gear. You then go into a section where you are flat out. You arrive into the chicane. It’s a very tricky part to arrive and get a good line on entry, because the following straight is long and there’s a section where you arrive into a very high-speed corner, a very high-speed chicane, which is iconic of Melbourne. I enjoy this corner. Then on the backstraight, you arrive into the last part of the circuit, the last sector, which usually is pretty straightforward. There’s a 90-degree corner, then a medium pit corner, and you arrive into the last hairpin. In the last corner, you’re trying to go from a very low speed. You pick up the throttle and start to glide a bit onto the last corner, trying to get on power as early as possible for the main straight.”
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Albert Park Circuit
- Total number of race laps: 58
- Complete race distance: 307.574 kilometers (191.118 miles)
- Pit lane speed limit: 60 kph (37 mph)
- This 5.303-kilometer (3.295-mile), 16-turn Albert Park Circuit has hosted Formula One since 1996, with last year’s Australian Grand Prix serving as the venue’s 21st grand prix. However, this is the 32nd Australian Grand Prix, with the inaugural Formula One race taking place in 1985 on the Adelaide Street Circuit, which was won by Keke Rosberg.
- Michael Schumacher holds the lap record at Albert Park (1:24.125), set in 2004 with Ferrari.
- The Albert Park Circuit comprises public roads encircling Albert Park Lake, a man-made body of water just south of Melbourne’s central business district. The roads were rebuilt prior to Formula One’s debut at the track in 1996, but because the surface only sees racecars about once a year, grip is hard to come by, especially in the initial practice sessions. It’s a street circuit that some say behaves more like a natural road course.
- On average, the temperatures in Melbourne in March incrementally fall each day, with highs decreasing from 24 degrees Celsius (75 degrees Fahrenheit) to 22 degrees Celsius (71 degrees Fahrenheit) over the course of the month. Daily low temperatures range from 11 degrees Celsius (51 degrees Fahrenheit) to 14 degrees Celsius (57 degrees Fahrenheit). The median cloud cover is 72 percent, and the average probability of rainfall on any given day is 45 percent. Relative humidity ranges from 40 percent (comfortable) to 91 percent (very humid), with a dew point varying from six degrees Celsius (dry) to 14 degrees Celsius (comfortable). Typical wind speeds vary from light to moderate.
- DYK? Albert Park hosted races in the 1950s on a 5.03-kilometer (3.125-mile) configuration of the current circuit. During this time, however, the race ran in an anti-clockwise direction, as opposed to the current clockwise direction of the track’s layout.
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- Jan. 8, 2016: VF-16 passes FIA-mandated crash test.
- Jan. 12, 2016: Sea freight leaves for Australia.
- Feb. 4, 2016: Grosjean has first day in simulator.
- Feb. 5, 2016: Gutiérrez in simulator.
- Feb. 9, 2016: Grosjean has seat fitting.
- Feb. 10, 2016: Gutiérrez has seat fitting.
- Feb. 15, 2016: Haas F1 Team first to set up at Circuit de Barcelona – Catalunya for preseason testing.
- Feb. 16, 2016: Successful fire-up of the car’s engine – the Ferrari 061.
- Feb. 20, 2016: The VF-16 turns its wheels for the first time at Barcelona with Grosjean at the helm. The installation lap around the 4.655-kilometer (2.89-mile), 16-turn circuit comes during the team’s production day.
- Feb. 21, 2016: The VF-16 publicly debuts via a digital launch on the team’s social media platforms and Website.
- Feb. 22, 2016: First day of preseason testing at Barcelona. Grosjean completes 31 laps with a best time of 1:28.399.
- Feb. 23, 2016: Gutiérrez takes wheel of the VF-16 for the first time in preseason testing at Barcelona. He completes 79 laps with a best time of 1:25.524.
- March 4, 2016: Preseason testing at Barcelona ends. Haas F1 Team logs a total of 474 laps (2,206.47 kilometers, 1,369.86 miles) during the eight days of track time spread over 12 days (Feb. 22-25, March 1-4).
- March 10, 2016: Air freight packed up and sent to Australia.
- March 14, 2016: Cars and equipment arrive at Albert Park Circuit.
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- Pirelli is bringing three tire compounds to Australia:
- P Zero White medium – less grip, less wear (used for long-race stints)
- P Zero Yellow soft – more grip, medium wear (used for shorter-race stints and for initial portion of qualifying)
- P Zero Red supersoft – highest amount of grip, highest amount of wear (used for qualifying and select race situations)
- Two of the three available compounds must be used during the race. Teams are able to decide when they want to run which compound, adding an element of strategy to the race. (If the race takes place in the wet, the Cinturato Blue full wet tire and the Cinturato green intermediate tire will be made available.)
- There are three qualifying sessions on Saturday to set the starting field for the race on Sunday: Q1, Q2 and Q3. Drivers who make it to Q3 must start the race on the tires they used to score their best time during Q2.
- What does this mean? It’s all about strategy. If a driver uses the P Zero Red supersoft to earn his best time in Q2 to advance into Q3, that’s what he has to use to start the race. And while the tire allowed him to maximize his qualifying effort and theoretically give him his best possible starting position, the tire will not last for anywhere near as long as his counterparts on either the P Zero Yellow soft and especially the P Zero white medium. A driver on a softer compound tire will normally have to pit earlier than his counterparts on a harder compound tire due to the increased rate of degradation. And depending on how early a driver pits, he could opt for a two-stop strategy or even a three-stop strategy over a single-stop strategy.
- Example: If a driver qualifies on the P Zero Red supersoft in Q2 to advance to Q3 and runs one lap in the race on those tires, he can then pit and run the remaining 57 laps on either the P Zero White medium or the P Zero Yellow soft. (Mind you, this is not a sound strategy, but it is a strategy nonetheless.)
- A driver can use all three sets of Pirelli tires in a race. For example, if they used the P Zero Red supersoft to advance from Q2 to Q3, they would start the race on those tires and attempt to make some lightning-quick laps to gain a margin over their counterparts before pitting for the P Zero White medium. Then depending on circumstances that unfold during the race, another pit stop could be made for the P Zero Yellow soft, allowing the driver to better attack during the race’s closing laps.
- Pirelli provides each driver 13 sets of dry tires for the race weekend. Of those 13 sets, drivers and their teams can choose the specifications of 10 of those sets from the three compounds Pirelli selected. The remaining three sets are defined by Pirelli – two mandatory tire specifications for the race (one set of P Zero Yellow softs and one set of P Zero White mediums) and one mandatory specification for Q3 (one set of P Zero Red supersofts). Haas F1 Team’s drivers have selected the following amounts:
- Grosjean: one set of P Zero White mediums, five sets of P Zero Yellow softs and seven sets of P Zero Red supersofts
- Gutiérrez: two sets of P Zero White mediums, four sets of P Zero Yellow softs and seven sets of P Zero Red supersofts
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Haas F1 Team isn’t the only entity making its debut in Australia. A new qualifying format for Formula One is also debuting. It’s an elimination-style format broken into three sessions and it works like this:
- Q1
- Lasts 16 minutes, with all 22 drivers participating
- After seven minutes, the slowest driver is eliminated
- In 90-second intervals thereafter, the next slowest drivers are eliminated until the checkered flag falls
- Seven drivers get eliminated, with 15 drivers moving on to Q2
- Q2
- Lasts 15 minutes, featuring the 15 fastest drivers from Q1
- After six minutes, the slowest driver is eliminated
- In 90-second intervals thereafter, the next slowest drivers are eliminated until the checkered flag falls
- Seven drivers get eliminated, with eight drivers advancing to Q3
- Q3
- Lasts 14 minutes, featuring the eight fastest drivers from Q2
- After five minutes, the slowest driver is eliminated
- In 90-second intervals thereafter, the next slowest drivers are eliminated until the checkered flag falls
- Two drivers will remain in the final 90 seconds, creating a shootout for the pole
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In its inaugural season, Haas F1 Team’s stated goal is to finish races and score some points. With 11 Formula One teams, there will be 22 cars in each grand prix. To score points, a driver must finish 10th or better. The breakdown is as follows:
- 1st = 25 points
- 2nd = 18 points
- 3rd = 15 points
- 4th = 12 points
- 5th = 10 points
- 6th = 8 points
- 7th = 6 points
- 8th = 4 points
- 9th = 2 points
- 10th = 1 point
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