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Preview
bulletin Bahrain Grand Prix
March 17, 2006
The event
The Gulf state of Bahrain will play host to the opening
round of this year's FIA Formula One World Championship
while the traditional hosts of the opening race, Melbourne,
busy themselves with the Commonwealth Games. The race
will be the debut for the team's new recruit, Nico Rosberg,
who in preparation has recorded close to 7,000km of
testing over 27 car days since his appointment as a
team driver last November. In addition, Alex Wurz, the
team's recently appointed test and reserve driver, will
take up his Friday testing role for the team on the
Sakhir circuit. The race is also the debut for a fundamentally
new car from a fortified design team as well as representing
the team's new partnerships with Cosworth and Bridgestone.
Between the races
Following the end of the winter testing ban, the WilliamsF1
Team commenced testing, initially with the interim FW27C
chassis before the 2006 race car, the FW28, debuted
at the end of January. Since November 28, the team has
completed 42 days of testing at three circuits across
Spain and covered a total of nearly 17,000kms. Mark
Webber, Nico Rosberg, Alex Wurz, Narain Karthikeyan
and Andy Priaulx all contributed to the team's intensive
development preparations with the five drivers jointly
recording 126 days of track time.
Making the car go fast
Reflecting both a response to the widespread regulation
changes for 2006 and to progress a clear design philosophy,
the FW28 is a clean sheet design with little reference
to its antecedent. The primary points of distinction
aerodynamically are the zero keel layout of the front
suspension geometry and the decambered rear wing tips,
while from a drive train perspective, the new Cosworth
CA V8 is clearly a step change not just in technology
but also in an engineering partnership. Closely allied
to the engine is a seven speed semi-auto seamless shift
gearbox, now fully validated and race fit. Of course
all onboard technology is reliant on the critical medium
of the tyre, and here again a significant change has
been made in the shift to Bridgestone rubber and the
regulation alteration to re-sanction tyre stops for
the 2006 season.
Bahrain from a technical perspective
With the desert as its backdrop, Bahrain presents its
own very particular challenge. Drifting sand poses one
of the greatest variables over the weekend, with tailing
cars sandblasted by those in front. As a consequence,
heavy duty air filters are essential, despite compromising
absolute aerodynamic efficiency. Grip levels are also
affected by sand drifting onto the track, making the
surface slippery off-line. All of this conspires to
make good, stable set-up an important confidence variable
for the driver.
5.412km in length, the Sakhir
circuit comprises three long straights, joined by a
complex mix of 15 slow and medium speed turns. The large
number of resulting braking events, from speeds of up
to 315kph down to first gear in some corners, demands
strict brake wear management by the drivers and, critically,
sufficient cooling capability. With 62% of each lap
spent in full throttle, Bahrain is also one of the most
testing tracks for engine reliability that the teams
will experience all year.
Key race data
| Race distance / laps |
308.238km / 191.539 miles
/ 57 laps of 5.412km / 3.363m |
| Local race start time |
14:30hrs |
| 2005 fastest lap |
1:31.447m |
| 2005 pole sitter |
F. Alonso, Renault |
| 2005 race winner |
F. Alonso, Renault |
| 2005 winning tyre |
Michelin |
| Previous winners |
2004 M Schumacher, Ferrari |
Williams in Bahrain
|
Car starts
|
Poles
|
Fastest laps
|
Wins
|
2004
|
2005
|
|
4
|
|
|
|
JPM Q3/R13RS Q4/R7
|
MW Q5/R6NH Q4/R dnf
|
Williams performance statistics
1978 TO 2006
| GPs entered |
Wins |
Poles |
Fastest laps |
Podiums |
Laps raced |
Laps led |
Points |
| 460 |
113 |
125 |
128 |
294 |
46,605 |
7,467 |
2511.5 |
Quotes
Mark Webber
"Usually the first race of the season is at home
in Australia, so the start of this year's championship
has a very different feel about it for me, and it's
certainly a much quieter start than I'm used to! After
all the pre-season testing and guessing games, I don't
think there'll be a driver on the grid who's not looking
forward to getting down to what it's all about, and
that's pitching yourself against everyone else. Race
weekends are absolutely brilliant, we have our practice
sessions, qualifying and the race and there can be no
excuses at the end of it. You just have to get the maximum
result possible for your team and yourself. The first
race always has an extra buzz because it delivers the
answers to those unresolved questions from pre-season
testing. I'm looking forward to seeing where we're at
and to see what the first part of the season may bring
for Williams. Bahrain can't come quick enough!"
Nico Rosberg
"After so much testing, its going be good to finally
race and it will be very interesting to see where we
are compared with the others teams. I'm very confident,
though, as the recent tests have been going well for
me and I feel very much at home in the car. I am looking
forward to my first Formula One race, especially because
it's on a track that I really enjoy and one that I have
had great success at having won the GP2 Championship
there last year."
Sam Michael, technical
director,
WilliamsF1
"The first race is one of the most exciting for
everyone, mainly because we all want to know how competitive
everyone is. This year, in particular, has been even
harder to predict due to the change to V8 engines. From
our perspective, the FW28 has been competitive in testing
and is well prepared for racing.
The Bahrain circuit has long
straights and slow speed corners and this drives the
importance of a good aerodynamic efficiency (i.e., load
to drag ratio) to a higher level, even more so in 2006
with the V8 engine. While Bahrain is still a high downforce
circuit, minimising drag is important and we should
see around 315kph on the pit straight. Both times we
have raced in Bahrain there was plenty of overtaking,
so it is clearly a track that presents plenty of opportunities
for exciting racing.
Once again, we have a new practice
and qualifying system that will significantly alter
race strategy. There will be less practice mileage,
but much more running in qualifying with a new, unlimited
laps knockout system. The first two segments will be
run on low fuel and everyone will be balancing how many
new sets of tyres they have to use to make it through
to the next round, which is bound to be exciting the
first time we do it! In fact, if all the cars are on
the track at the same time there will be a car about
every four seconds.
We have been working hard over
the winter on gearbox reliability and also on the new
V8 engine with Cosworth. Tyre issues have undergone
considerable change, with tyre changes allowed during
the race again. This has reduced the importance of wear
rates and changed the tyre development direction that
we have followed with Bridgestone.
Finally, our drivers are all
well prepared. Mark is as fired up as usual and putting
a lot of effort in, while Nico has covered the greatest
distance out of all our drivers over the winter so he
couldn't be better prepared for his first season in
Formula One. Alex has contributed an enormous amount
to our programme over the winter and we will be relying
heavily on him during race weekends to evaluate tyres
and set-up change on Fridays."
Simon Corbyn, head of F1 Race
engineering, Cosworth
"Cosworth has made significant progress with the
development of the new CA2006 V8 engine since the initial
dyno tests. Ambitious performance and reliability targets
have been set throughout the V8 programme and everyone
at Cosworth has been working flat out to achieve these
goals. We have worked closely with Williams and have
established a great relationship with the team during
the demanding winter test programme. Bahrain will be
the first opportunity to really see how Cosworth and
Williams stand relative to the competition with the
new generation V8s."
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