Karthikeyan FP1 in India?gray41 wrote:I guess we'll see TATA appear somewhere on the car?
Karthikeyan FP1 in India?gray41 wrote:I guess we'll see TATA appear somewhere on the car?
In this case the race is easier for Lewis, he knows that tyre degration will be an issue so he drives in a calmer way and not fighting to much. Rosberg was in the front so he tried to defend his position putting more pressure on his tyres and consequently having more degradation.ringo wrote:I don't think the results would have been different. Lewis probably came to some kind of realization in that race, plus the handicap he was suffering after p3 disappeared. So we have to assume that Hamilton was performing at a his proper level when the glitch cleared up. We can't assume both cars were being driven in the same way.
Ross Brawn looks likely to keep his job at Mercedes, contrary to earlier speculation he will be replaced by McLaren's Paddy Lowe. Former technical director Lowe is currently on McLaren 'gardening leave', amid the widespread paddock perception that he will arrive at Brackley in 2014.
But while earlier it was rumoured he would replace fellow Briton Brawn in the top Mercedes job, team director and co-owner Toto Wolff is now hinting strongly that the 58-year-old will stay.
Asked by F1's official website what 'most useful lesson' he has learned in his short time so far at Mercedes, Austrian Wolff answered: "To understand what it needs to make Ross function -- or how he functions."
Amid talk Brawn faces the axe, Mercedes newcomer Lewis Hamilton recently spoke out in support of his boss, insisting "I signed with him (Brawn) being here and I'm very happy working with him".
Wolff said: "I am not at all surprised. Everybody has the highest esteem for Ross and I would be completely mistaken were I to question Ross' technical skills -- someone who has won seven or eight titles.
"Who am I in this respect?" he added. "I have been in formula one for only three years. So I completely agree with every word Lewis said."
Of course, Wolff's comments leave open the door for a change of role for Brawn, with Lowe perhaps arriving to be team boss and Brawn staying in a purely technical capacity.
But Wolff insisted that Brawn is doing a good job as boss.
"(He is) extremely structured," he said. "Accurate. Focused on sustainable results and not on short-term optimisation. An excellent manager who gives his people room.
"Ross is team principal and I don't want to change that," added Wolff.
"We need to get stability in the team as we have a mountain of work to do. From where this team is coming it is important to have as many good people as possible -- that is my focus in all these discussions."
I don't see a conflict. Wolf stated Brawn is team principal; Lowe will fill in the role of technical director or a function alike.Pup wrote:Looking more and more like Brawn is going to stick around. I wonder what that means for Lowe...
http://www.f1today.net/en/news/wolff-ro ... -team-bossRoss Brawn looks likely to keep his job at Mercedes, contrary to earlier speculation he will be replaced by McLaren's Paddy Lowe. Former technical director Lowe is currently on McLaren 'gardening leave', amid the widespread paddock perception that he will arrive at Brackley in 2014.
But while earlier it was rumoured he would replace fellow Briton Brawn in the top Mercedes job, team director and co-owner Toto Wolff is now hinting strongly that the 58-year-old will stay.
Asked by F1's official website what 'most useful lesson' he has learned in his short time so far at Mercedes, Austrian Wolff answered: "To understand what it needs to make Ross function -- or how he functions."
Amid talk Brawn faces the axe, Mercedes newcomer Lewis Hamilton recently spoke out in support of his boss, insisting "I signed with him (Brawn) being here and I'm very happy working with him".
Wolff said: "I am not at all surprised. Everybody has the highest esteem for Ross and I would be completely mistaken were I to question Ross' technical skills -- someone who has won seven or eight titles.
"Who am I in this respect?" he added. "I have been in formula one for only three years. So I completely agree with every word Lewis said."
Of course, Wolff's comments leave open the door for a change of role for Brawn, with Lowe perhaps arriving to be team boss and Brawn staying in a purely technical capacity.
But Wolff insisted that Brawn is doing a good job as boss.
"(He is) extremely structured," he said. "Accurate. Focused on sustainable results and not on short-term optimisation. An excellent manager who gives his people room.
"Ross is team principal and I don't want to change that," added Wolff.
"We need to get stability in the team as we have a mountain of work to do. From where this team is coming it is important to have as many good people as possible -- that is my focus in all these discussions."
If Brawn leaves I think whoever out of all the big names at Mercedes would do the best job of being Team Principal will be assigned that role and if it isn't Paddy Lowe then he'll become TD. Having said that whenever we think Mercedes may be getting rid of people at the top they bring more in, when Haug left a lot of Mercedes fans thought it was a good thing and that Mercedes had "Too many cooks spoiling the broth" but since then Lowe and Wolff have been recruited.Cocles wrote:Then you're suggesting Lowe would replace Bell? I could see Bell as a permanent technical liaison between Brackley and Brixworth. That said, it's easier for me to see Lowe in a temporary role beneath Brawn until Brawn retires in 2016 or later.
Not exactly, but I understand where you're coming from. Bob Bell has always been TD, but is focusing on engine integration at the moment, because it is so crucially important for the "works" teams. Geoff Willis is R&D while Costa handles current design.n smikle wrote:It seems to me though, that they have a rolling technical director position to maximise the input of the TD into each year's car.
Wolff claims Brackley staff lack identity
29 April, 2013
Toto Wolff has warned that the staff at Mercedes’ Brackley headquarters are under pressure to keep their jobs and collectively lack identity.
Some of the team’s British staff have been on site since Craig Pollock founded BAR in 1998.
The team then became Honda, then Brawn GP, and now Austrians Wolff and Niki Lauda have arrived to shake up the team following its first three years as Mercedes.
Wolff said one of the problems has been the staff’s lack of “identity”.
“I am trying to have them breathe it again,” he told the Kolner Stadt-Anzeiger.
“There are those who will respond, and those who will not,” he said.
Wolff denied, however, that he is preparing to take a “terminator method” to his shakeup plans.
“I’m no terminator,” he smiled, “but I would be wrong if I did not express my opinions and then take a success-oriented approach to my actions.”
The question is if we are going to see another awful second half of the season in 2013 as it happened in 2012. I dont think Lewis and Nico are happy with this perspective.FoxHound wrote:Interesting that Mercedes will be splitting their resources 50/50 from may.
Incredible given their competitiveness in 2013.
The prize is 2014. Risky business, especially given Hamiltons performances this year which are reminiscent of raikkonens last year. Consistent.