The new regulations that were
introduced into Formula One racing this year have created a number
of new challenges for the teams. In particular, the art of second
guessing what the opposition might be doing in the race in order
to produce the best possible race strategy for your own team.
It is nothing new for teams to use special
computer programs to calculate setup and race strategy both before
and during a race weekend. However, the uncertainty created by the
one lap qualifying and having to start a race with the same fuel
and tyres that the car finishes qualifying with, has created a whole
new twist to planning race strategies.
In fact, it has created what is effectively
a new job, that of a race strategist, a man upon whom the Ferrari
team counts upon to lower the odds of making wrong decisions - sometimes
with only a matter of seconds to make them.
That race strategist at Scuderia Ferrari-Marlboro
is Luca Baldisserri, an electronics engineering genius who now has
the job along with his team of three other men in analyzing as many
as 1,000 different data parameters from which Technical Director
Ross Brawn can base his decisions.
Work on a race begins the week before during
testing where fuel, tyre and aerodynamic information amongst other
things from the latest testing session is gathered and fed into
the statistical program that is based on the information gathered
from the previous year's race. "It takes a couple of days to
prepare the strategy for the coming race."
"As we are using the same car and we
have a good idea what compensations to make from improvements we
have made since 2002. We can arrive in Brazil with a fairly accurate
idea of what we need to do to the car to optimize performance,"
points out Luca.
However, the new regulations have made the
task of choosing the right race strategy considerably more complicated
and the shortened practice time before the race, plus the less sophisticated
section timing available now that there is no digital TV and circuit
loop, have made that task even more difficult.
"We have to manually enter all the section
times from the TV now that we do not have "live" timing
any more. The track time we have to calculate tyre wear rates, full
tank runs and aero set-up changes etc., and factor those parameters
into the program, is also much less," explains Luca, the team
obliged to run two different testing programs with each car during
free practice in order to optimize the amount of information they
can gather.
The team are working on a live link to the
factory where Luca and his team would normally be working from during
a race weekend, but for the first few races of the year he has to
be at the race to make sure things run more smoothly.
The new regulations have added to the number
of parameters that have to be monitored and data bases that have
to be established, which now even takes into account individual
driver performances during one lap qualifying, so that the team
can have an idea if it's the fuel load or the driver himself that's
contributing towards a slow of quick lap time.
The difficulty of gathering so much information
during a race weekend is the speed at which it can be entered and
analyzed, the Ferrari team currently working closely with Genoa
and Modena universities to create a program that will analyze the
data more speedily and efficiently in the future and take the guesswork
out of racing. |