The Star Malaysia

F1 teams divided over testing in Bahrain

-

FORMULA One teams are divided over next year’s pre-season tests, with champions Mercedes keen on going to Bahrain but Williams and others opposed to leaving Europe on cost grounds.

The 2017 sporting regulation­s state that no testing of current cars can take place on any track outside of Europe without the agreement of a majority of the teams and the governing FIA.

While Barcelona has been scheduled for the two four-day tests in February and March, that could change.

“(Tyre supplier) Pirelli have asked FIA if they would support testing in Bahrain, which is outside Europe. So by regulation it requires a process to get there,” Mercedes technical head Paddy Lowe told reporters at the Japanese Grand Prix on Friday.

He said Pirelli needed to test the new wider 2017 tyres in hot conditions and were concerned about what might happen otherwise.

“We’ve seen what can happen, for example, in Indianapol­is 2005,” said Lowe, referring to the infamous US Grand Prix that saw only six Bridgeston­e-shod cars start after all the Michelin-provided teams withdrew on safety grounds.

“We need to run a 300km race with sensible numbers of tyres, so that’s not an inconsider­able risk and should be covered. So that’s why we particular­ly support that request,” added the Briton.

Williams technical head Pat Symonds said he was firmly opposed.

“The cost of doing a test outside of Europe is vast,” he told reporters.

“Depending on exactly how you do it and how much you have to ship back to the UK, how much you can ship on to the first race – we’re talking of a minimum of £300,000 (RM1.5mil), probably a maximum of £500,000 (RM2.5mil).

“A team like Mercedes, I’m sure that they can put contingenc­ies in their budgets to cover things like that. A team like Williams simply can’t, it’s a significan­t amount of our budget.”

Symonds said there was also the risk of sandstorms in Bahrain, and the first few hours can be spent clearing the track.

“I think Abu Dhabi would be a much better place, maybe even Malaysia. But as a team we’re opposed to the idea,” he added. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia