Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes, Albert Park, 2018

F1 engines much closer on performance now – Bottas

RaceFans Round-up

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In the round-up: Valtteri Bottas believes Formula One engines are much closer in terms of performance in the fifth year of the V6 hybrid turbo rules.

Bottas explained why he found it hard to come through the field in the Australian Grand Prix:

The engine differences, they are not massive any more. For sure we still have a little bit of an advantage to Renault but it is not massive. And those cars they are not too bad in the corners.

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Comment of the day

Is this going to be the year we finally get to see what Romain Grosjean is capable of?

I consider Grosjean a good driver. He really turned things around back in ’12-’13 (aside from almost taking Alonso’s head off). He and Raikkonen gave Red Bull a run for their money at Nurburgring and was exciting to watch during those times.

He does whine a lot, but can’t say I wouldn’t do the same in his shoes. I believe he deserves a chance to show what he can do again, so I’m excited to see if this car’s got the goods – as long as it can finish.
@Rpiian

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On this day in F1

  • Today in 1993 Mario Andretti scored his final IndyCar win in the Phoneix 200

Author information

Keith Collantine
Lifelong motor sport fan Keith set up RaceFans in 2005 - when it was originally called F1 Fanatic. Having previously worked as a motoring...

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35 comments on “F1 engines much closer on performance now – Bottas”

  1. “I’ve had people say: ‘Why can’t you make the straight 100m longer?’ Because we don’t own the land!”

    When, or more importantly, why has anybody ever asked Tilke to make a straight longer?

    1. Comment of the Year!

    2. Who actually wants longer straights though? The problem isn’t the length of the straights, it’s that the cars can’t follow closely in the corners, so aren’t positioned closely when they get onto the straights. You wouldn’t need longer straights if the cars could follow each other efficiently.

      Take China as a case in point. It has a very long straight. It’s hardly exciting to see cars race each other in a long straight line.

    3. @strontium, probably the same people who ask Michael Bay why can’t he make his movies 30 minutes longer.

    4. @strontium Isn’t that obvious? To have more DRS zones!

      1. Multiple DRS zones on one straight @flatsix? Sounds like something that would actually happen in F1 😜

    5. How long have you been watching F1?
      Some of the best races have been at circuits with long straights, they’re pretty much opposite to Monaco and temporary circuits like Australia.

      Did you ever watch any racing from the old Kyalami circuit?
      Massive long straight on one side & then sweeping bends and corners on the other, with a long wide hairpin onto the straight. Racing was always good because teams could either go for a low downforce setup to take advantage of the straight, or a higher downforce setup to get benefits in the corners. That meant there was real overtaking, with the favour returned a half lap later.
      Some of the best races on the current motorsport calendars are those at circuits where teams need to make those same setup decisions or compromises, places like Spa.

  2. I hope everybody is well @ mclaren, nevertheless i´m eager to see how they´ll going to blame honda for that ;-)

    1. @zad2 They’ll just blame the old Honda parts left in the attic.

  3. the rear view mirror pieces is well done but should i get excited by this improvement?

    1. You may not but I did. I am making my own replicas out of matches and UHU.

    2. Hello, turbof1 from f1technical here. Just want to put some clarification here: yes, this is a technical piece which is bound not to be to every f1 fan’s liking. However, a lot of the fanbase does take an interest in that technical side.

      I believe Keith also put our article in his round up because there’s a lot of misconception about these rear mirrors, spread by other websites. So I am really glad he helps spreading that article because Vanja Hasanovic actually went to the length of cfd analysis.

      1. @turbof1 great to have you on here discussing with us. I’m one of those fans who’s incredibly interested in the technical side. For me, the interest started in the early to mid 2000s after constantly hearing teams talk about the updates that they’d brought to the race and how they made them faster I became curious about how they worked. The internet has been a great tool for finding out. Now I can’t get enough. Thanks for your articles, certainly well appreciated 🙂

  4. “I know people say that if there is only gravel, it is more of a penalty if you go off, which is true. But if you have a private track day and somebody goes off in their Porsche or AMG, then they are likely to be paying for new parts. €7000 is an expensive spin.”
    – I agree with him. Yes, a gravel trap would automatically solve all the problems regarding track limits, but the reason(s) behind the excessive usage of asphalt run-off areas is entirely understandable, and, therefore, justifiable. People sometimes seem to forget that circuits are used by other motorsport categories and for other purposes as well rather than just F1, so every track-user has to be taken into account.

    1. … like John Hugenholtz did when he was designing them.

    2. Well its true if the track day users are going around the same corners, but in my experience, we usually get a modified layout for track days and I’ve certainly seen evidence of modified layout on at least some of the Tilke circuits.
      Surely it would be possible to still have some gravel traps on those parts of the circuit that are exclusively for “race” days with the possibility of using those on a track day if the drivers of the private cars are prepared to risk the expense.
      For mine, that “reason” doesn’t wash – safety – yes I’ll accept that one, but track days – nope.

      1. Fully agree, use the alternative layouts (which already exist).
        Also I don’t care if Porsche and AMG owners who use the official F1 track and spin off have to spend some more money on body parts. It might actually be a benefit; most of the drivers who spin off during those track days are the dangerous types who rate their own skill level well above what they really possess.

        1. You’re completely missing the point.

          The tracks are businesses first and foremost. They must turn a profit. Trackdays ie. Mon-Fri running are one of their biggest sources of income. It’s not a case of ‘I don’t care if Porsche and AMG owners who use the office F1 track and spin off’, it’s a case of making money. These are the people who have money.

          Unfortunately, until we find a means of interchangeable run-offs, we’ll be more inclined to use asphalt. As Tilke mentions, it keeps the spectators closer to the action, and heavily favoured operationally.

          1. Not really,

            It’s rare that paying users of track days are offered anything other than the modified (and safer) layouts so it’s not a matter of “I don’t care”, it’s actually a case of “they’re prevented from going near those corners”.

            So commercially there’s no loss.

    3. As I’ve been saying for ages, just have a strip of grass then more tarmac. That stops people abusing track limits while also keeping it safe.

      1. I think this is definitely the happiest medium!

      2. @hugh11 I was about to say the same thing. It’s such a simple solution but is so effective

    4. that article was remarkably interesting despite how little it actually revealed about tilke and his/their processes. the instructive part is that everything is restricted by cost and external commercial pressure. as ever, it’s all about money. i can well imagine that a track like abu dhabi makes an absolute killing from track days so it’s very important to them to have tarmac run offs, even if they know it is at the expense of the grand prix being exciting/challenging.

    5. Why can’t they look at having an electronic solution to going off where the power is reduced slightly for a time? In such a technical advanced sport one would think this could be perfectly doable with GPS and/or even some near-field communication (NFC) gizmos placed under the tarmac. Even my phone have these technologies.

    6. Seen plenty of exotics at Cadwell that manage just fine.

  5. Three fire engines at mclaren, thanks to the past 3 years I read that as 3 engines are on Fire at Mclaren

  6. Am I the only one to think that apart from Lando Norris the 2018 F2 field looks really weak?

    1. @spoutnik George Russell?

      1. @mashiat true, I don’t know him well but heard some good indeed.

    2. I think it looks pretty strong. We have Norris, Russell and Aitken, as well as Sean Galeal, Nicholas Latifi, Maximillian Gunther and Antonio Fuoco, who’ve all had F1 experience.

      1. Ghiotto too

      2. @major-dev How about Gasly and Hartley?

      3. @major-dev indeed! Though I am not really impressed by Gelael and Latifi. I don’t know the others so I guess the battle could be nicer than I thought? We’ll see :)

  7. Grosjean is a decent driver to be there. Like him were Trulli, Kovalainen, Wurz and others in the past.
    He should have a couple of wins to his name but it’s not his fault F1 only sees 3 teams winning races for most of the time he raced.

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