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    jbroomy
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    About Me: I always want to write something witty here, but my wit is always confused with something worse --------------------------... and Auto Racing in general mostly here, but I get distracted by shiny sporting objects as well and give them an airing too
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    About Me: I always want to write something witty here, but my wit is always confused with something worse --------------------------... and Auto Racing in general mostly here, but I get distracted by shiny sporting objects as well and give them an airing too

    F1 '08 - The Final Preview

    Tuesday, March 11, 2008, 08:09 AM EST [F1 2008]

    The 2008 Formula season kicks off in Melbourne, Australia this weekend, to start a season that has more than the normal number of unknowns clouding anyone's predictions. I'm not going to run through the drivers one by one, as bc525 already covered that one (check out his Jan 25th blog). Instead I'm going to cover the talking points ahead of the season.

    1) The Spygate Fallout - For those of you living under a motorsport rock, 'Spygate' was the discovery that the McLaren team had had access to confidential Ferrari documents and designs, and had been using them on it's own car. The initial ruling was that McLaren were docked all of the constructors points - the reason their cars will carry numbers 22 and 23, rather than 3 and 4 - reflecting their real performance. The fallout continues to rumble on, various members of the McLaren team being called to court and rumours that team principal Ron Dennis is on the way out. The teams 08 car was subject to FIA checks to make sure that the Ferrari data wasn't still being used. On initial models of the car a few elements were ruled too similar, but what these elements were is probably only known to the FIA and McLaren. Looking at the off-season test times McLaren don't seem to been effected too badly, but F1 tests are notoriously mis-leading.

    2) Alonso's Annoyed - After having a season where the world seemed against him at McLaren Fernando Alonso has made a prodigal son like return to Renault - the team he won two drivers titles with. Last season was not a good one for Renault. There many be all sorts of reason for it - sub-standard drivers, the loss of tyre partners Michelin etc, but they were below par. On Alonso's return a budget increase for the team was promised. Again, judging by the test times Renault are in top regions of the time sheets again.

    3) Super Aguri Saved? - Despite an outstanding season for the tiny team last season their main 2007 sponsors, SS United, pulled out of their deal with team, meaning that for a while the team's existence was seriously threatened. They had to cancel tests and the futures of their drivers were in doubt. Until this week, when the UK based Magma Group have brought the team. The team's new car hasn't been tested so it's practice runs in Melbourne will be the first time the cars has run timed public laps. Coupled with the fact that it's a Honda customer car, and Honda are, well, rubbish, it may well be back to nil points.

    4) And this week the name is..... - Jordan, no Midland, no Spyker, no it's, erm... Force India. OK, OK so apart from sounding like the sub-continents's answer to Mighty Morpin' Power Rangers it might not be all bad. The new owner wants to bring some stability back to the team after a few years when they changed names like underwear. The team are also free from the customer car grumbles that plague fellow back-markers Super Aguri and Toro Rosso, and have a driver pairing that could suprise a few. Adrian Sutil is a young guy, who despite being unknown has one feather in his cap. 2007 Monaco GP, it's practice it's raining and Sutil bests the whole field in a poor car - imagine him in a good one. He's partnered by Giancarlo Fisichella, who may well have been World Champion by now, had his career not coincided with Michael Schumacher, and Fernando Alonso, and Kimi Raikonnen. They may well score a few lucky points this season, but far more important is that come March 2009 we're still writing about Force India and not 'Generic Rich Businessman's Plaything F1 Team'.

    5) Traction Control - Is no more. Hooray! Basically TC stops the drivers lead foot from spinning the car into the nearest barrier. There'll be no more super clean starts, look for buckets of wheel spin and complete choas. Also look for drivers to be more careful on the accellorator out of corners as too much oomph too soon will have them pirrowetting off the track. This means that different drivers could come to the fore, whoe driving styles suit the new technology, or at least have been able to adapt fastest and best. There are worries this could be more dangerous, but consiering that it will also lower speeds slightly and most F1 tracks have run-offs the size of small African nations it's nothing to worry about.

    6) The Standard ECU - I'm have no idea what an ECU does, but I know what it stands for - Electronic Control Unit - so it controls the, well, electrics. And now all the teams have to use the same one, but what they've done with it is different. Many teams have spent large chunks of testing trying to get the best performance out of it. Oddly, especially considering the Spygate fiasco the maker of this ECU seems odd. It's McLaren. Or actually a subsiderary company owned by McLaren. Yes, and the next COT design is going to be by GM.

    7) Things that go Vroom in the night - Racing at night is the in thing around motorsport this year. MotoGP has just come out of Qatar after it's first night race, and other than having a carbon footprint only ecplised by China it went well, no one couldn't see and drove (or should that be rode) straight on at a corner, no-one's visor was obscured by a mass suicide of moths. And now F1 wants a go - in Singapore. I'm not sure it's going to work. it's on a street track, famously dangerous for proximity of cars to wall, and now they want to do the first race at a track (it's got a bridge as well, and I mean a bridge over a harbour, not a bridge over the track) in the dark. Bernie's gone mad!!

    8) More Street Circuits - Along with Singapore comes Valencia. Another street circuit, around a harbour, seems they're in fashion as well. Considering people have been complaining how dangerous Monaco's twisty Armco fringed track is for a few years to add two more Monaco's seems an odd move. Actually considering how awful Montreal was last year, perhaps the lads at the Molson Race in Toronto should phone up the FIA.  

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