Motorsport Store | Formula 1 News - April 2005 |
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29 April: Spanish Grand Prix Preview - Williams BMW The BMW WilliamsF1 Team heads to Barcelona next week for the fifth round of the 2005 season, the Spanish Grand Prix. Despite the teams' familiarity with the circuit as a testing venue, the race at the Circuit de Catalunya is one of the most demanding on the Formula One calendar. The region's erratic weather conditions provide a continual challenge to the cars' set-up while prevailing winds can compromise aerodynamic efficiency. Having won over one third of the Spanish GPs held at the Catalunya track, the BMW WilliamsF1 Team is looking forward to drawing upon its experience in Barcelona next weekend. The team is also hoping that progress at the Silverstone test this week, combined with further aero developments for the cars, will provide a solid foundation to help drive the FW27s to a successful result. Mark Webber: Nick Heidfeld: Sam Michael (Technical Director, WilliamsF1): We will have some further aerodynamic improvements on the cars since the last GP, mainly around the front of the car, and Michelin have two good compounds that we have tested. All of these steps should help us to move the FW27 further up the grid. Qualifying and the start are the most important things to get right. Strategy will be interesting as well because overtaking is so difficult on this track. Mario Theissen (BMW Motorsport Director): It will be Mark Webber's turn to run with a new engine at the Spanish Grand Prix, while Nick Heidfeld will continue with the BMW P84/5 he used in Imola. Since the introduction of the current regulation stipulating that the teams' engines each have to last for two GP weekends, some key data has become more stable. As a general rule, we have been reducing maximum revs by 1,000 rpm for free practice on Friday. The evidence suggests that this does not have any noticeable effect on tyre choice. During the race, however, we can call on maximum engine output at any time and make decisions according to the situation in hand. In simple terms, this means that it is not worth pushing an engine to the limit if the driver is stuck in traffic. This allows us to preserve the engine's reserves of power for situations where there is greater potential for success. Generally speaking, the peak output of one of these engines will diminish during its service life. However, this loss of power is only in the region of ten bhp, and therefore not serious enough to affect the outcome of a race. We are delighted to see the huge increase in interest in Formula One among the Spanish public, due primarily to the success of Fernando Alonso. The organisers report that all 115,000 tickets have been sold for the race Sunday. Stats and facts: Circuit/Date Circuit de Catalunya / 8th May 2005 Formula BMW driving lesson and tennis tournament for a good cause: On the Wednesday prior to the Spanish GP (4th May), tennis aces Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario (33, Spain, 13 Grand Slam victories) and RBS ambassador, Andrew Murray (17, Scotland), will be given a driving lesson by Nick Heidfeld in a Formula BMW car on the Valencia circuit between 13.00 and 14.00 hrs. On Thursday (5th May) the roles will be reversed at a tennis tournament in aid of the Northampton Intensive Care Unit. From 09.00 to 12.00 hrs, at the Open Club Sanchez-Casal in Barcelona, Sanchez-Vicario and Murray will be challenging BMW WilliamsF1 Team drivers Heidfeld and Webber, as well as Marc Gené, Giancarlo Fisichella, Christian Klien, Felipe Massa, Jacques Villeneuve and Alexander Wurz on the court. History and background: The first race on a wet Circuit de Catalunya was on 29th September 1991, won by Mansell in a Williams Renault. Since the official inauguration of Formula One in 1950, Spain has played host to 34 Grands Prix. The first two Spanish GPs were held in Pedralbes. Subsequent venues were Jarama (9), Montjuich (4) and Jerez (5). Since 1991, Formula One has been staged each year at the Circuit de Catalunya to the north of Barcelona. 2005 marks the 15th Spanish GP to be held there. The city of Barcelona (population approx. 1.8 million) lies in the northeast of Spain. The economic and cultural hub of Catalonia, it is also home to several universities and higher education institutes and boasts numerous museums and cultural monuments. One of the city's most renowned sons is the art nouveau architect Antonio Gaudí (1852-1926), whose works include the still unfinished Church of the Sagrada Familia. 2005 Spanish Grand Prix - Main Page Latest Formula 1 News from Williams BMW: Williams confirm Wurz and Rosberg for 2007 (02/08/2006) More news from BMW Williams F1
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