Sunday, May 2, 2010

F1: Hakkinen To Become Hamilton's Manager, Ferrari Rejects 'Subliminal ...

RUMOURS have intensified this week that Mika Hakkinen could soon become Lewis Hamilton's manager.

Following the McLaren driver's professional split with his father Anthony, 25-year-old Briton Hamilton has been perusing offers from potential managers.

1998 and 199 world champion Hakkinen, 41, already works with a young F3 driver at his own manager Didier Coton's Monaco based Aces Group, and said last Sunday: "Perhaps I will come back to F1 as a manager."

The Italian sports daily Tuttosport now reports that the formalisation of a deal between Aces/Hakkinen and Hamilton could be made in the very near future.

Hamilton's career is currently handled by McLaren, but team boss Martin Whitmarsh is pushing his driver to appoint a "dispassionate, independent" manager.

Hakkinen won his two world championships with McLaren and retired in 2001.

(GMM)

Ferrari Rejects 'Subliminal' Cigarette Reports

FERRARI has rejected reports that it is running illegal subliminal advertising on the livery of its 2010 formula one car.

A report in the British newspaper The Times this week said the UK government has been urged by health experts to investigate the 'barcode' branding on the F10 that resembles the cigarette packaging of Ferrari's sponsor Philip Morris.

In a statement issued by Ferrari, the Italian team insists there has been "no (Marlboro) logo or branding on the race cars since 2007, even in countries where local laws would still have permitted it".

(GMM)

McLaren most reliable team, Sauber at bottom of pile

Apr.30 (GMM) Drivers' and constructors' championship leaders McLaren are also winning the race as F1's most reliable team.

The British outfit, whose Jenson Button leads the drivers' table by 10 points over Mercedes' Nico Rosberg, completed every single lap with both MP4-25 cars at the initial Bahrain, Australian, Malaysian and Chinese grands prix.

In second place, a 100 per cent record for Ferrari was tarnished only by Fernando Alonso's engine failure in the closing stages in Malaysia.

Red Bull is third with a 92.4 per cent finishing record in 2010, despite the RB6 appearing to have suffered from several reliability glitches so far.

In fact, Sebastian Vettel's wheel nut problem in Melbourne was the team's only DNF, while teammate Mark Webber has completed all four races within the top 9.

Similarly, only one Mercedes car - Michael Schumacher's in China - has failed to reach the chequered flag, but the German team is fourth in the list with a 89.2 per cent record due the stoppage occurring early in the race.



Williams' single DNF culminates in a 86 per cent reliability record because Nico Hulkenberg was taken out on the first lap in Australia.

Renault is sixth of the ten teams with 75.1 per cent, for while Robert Kubica has finished every race with the R30, rookie Vitaly Petrov's first race finish was in China.

In Bahrain the Russian damaged the suspension by hitting a kerb too hard, in Melbourne he spun into the gravel, and in Malaysia he had to stop with a gearbox problem.

Impressively, the new team Lotus also has a 75 per cent finishing record, even though Jarno Trulli was not actually a classified finisher at Sepang because he was ten laps behind.

And in Melbourne, the Italian's T127 was not even on the grid due to a pre-race hydraulics problem.

Toro Rosso's Jaime Alguersuari has finished all the races, but teammate Sebastien Buemi was taken out on the first lap in both Australia and China -- first by Kamui Kobayashi and then Vitantonio Liuzzi.

Force India is now increasingly mentioned as a serious F1 competitor, but its reliability record so far in 2010 is just 65.9 per cent.



Liuzzi crashed in China and had a throttle problem in Malaysia, while Adrian Sutil had a Ferrari engine problem in Melbourne.

HRT's F1 career started badly with only one car crossing the line in the opening two races.

But the Dallara-built cars of Bruno Senna and Karun Chandhok both finished in Malaysia and China, giving the Spanish team a 65.2pc finishing record.

Virgin and Sauber are at the bottom of the pile, with Virgin achieving a mere 33.8pc reliability record with only Lucas di Grassi able to cross the line in Malaysia by aggressively saving fuel.

Sauber is last, with only Pedro de la Rosa recording a race finish in Melbourne for a reliability record of just 25.5 per cent.

"We've suffered too many reliability issues on both the chassis side and with our engines," team founder Peter Sauber said on Thursday.

"That's very unusual -- we've always been one of the best teams in this respect over the years.

"We've closely analysed all the chassis-related problems and already put measures into effect. Our engine partner Ferrari is doing the same," he added.

(GMM)

Slow Economy Brings Certain Collector Cars Within Reach

Getty Images Pontiac GTO: Accessible for collectors on a budget.

In the last few days I have happily wasted time leafing through the catalog for this weekend’s Sporting Classics of Monaco auction. The event is out of range in every way for me and for the average car nut. But it got me thinking of the collector-car market and where one can find a deal.

While the economic downturn drove down prices for antique cars, Monaco is about the worst place to go discount shopping. The sale that RM Auctions put together included brands like Ferrari, Jaguar, Aston Martin and Mercedes-Benz that were among those least affected by the recession. Indeed, prices of some European sports cars seemed to appreciate even faster during the recent hard times. But this it is a bargain-hunter’s market for fans of American muscle cars or other models that have yet to take off.

Cars like the Pontiac GTO, Ford Mustang Boss and Plymouth Hemi ‘Cuda, essentially hopped-up versions of mass-market models, cracked the million-dollar mark a few years ago as demand from seemingly crazed collectors and speculators reached new heights. But when the economy sagged, prices for such cars fell like stones, driven by the same supply-and-demand rules we learned in Introduction to Economics. Compared with 1960s Ferraris hand-built in batches of less than 100, U.S. muscle machines that rolled off assembly lines by the thousand will never be truly rare.

But that shouldn’t stop you if you like driving and looking at them. There would be a lot less heartbreak in car collecting if people would just buy what they like and stop trying to turn old cars into investments. I cringe every time I hear the word “investment” in a discussion about cars because you are almost always better off buying stock.

I’ll never forget the teacher at my high school who avoided driving his 1978 Chevy Corvette, a special Indianapolis 500 pace-car edition, because low mileage would make it appreciate faster. Today, some 30 years after he made the comment the car is worth what? Maybe $20,000 if he’s lucky.

If the collecting bug ever bites hard enough to send me shopping for an interesting old car I think I’ll look for a “sleeper” –  something with potential that others haven’t yet discovered. I’m sure some of my favorite 1980s cars like the DeLorean and the Magnum P.I.-style Ferrari 308 GTS will eventually hit their stride, but I wouldn’t keep them in the garage while I waited.

Ferrari.com Speak Chinese

As reported by Ferrari

Maranello - In occasion of the opening of the Expo of Shanghai Ferrari for the first time in its history is launching a Chinese version of its official site. This will be the fourth language that visitors can choose from. It is further proof of the importance that the Chinese market represents for Ferrari and comes straight after the historic world premiere of the 599 GTO at the Beijing Auto Show and contemporaneously with the presentation of the Hybrid concept, the Hy-Kers, at the Expo’.

The website is dedicated specifically to its clients, enthusiasts and fans whose native language is Chinese, not only in China, in Asia but all over the world. It aims to foster an even closer relationship between the Prancing Horse and the Chinese public, and boost the number of Ferrari web users in China by eliminating any language barriers.



Photo: Ferrari
Enthusiasts, clients and fans can navigate the site content, enjoy live news updates from Maranello and experience Prancing Horse emotions, activities and products at close hand. They’ll discover interactive areas, exclusive images, complete information on all the cars, the F1 Scuderia, News, Community and the Ferrari Store. Thanks to the Maranello Experience, they can even enjoy a virtual tour of the entire company thanks to video clips and other images. The site also allows users to select and personalise the cars in the current range.

Ferrari sold its first car in China in 1993 but it has had a commercial presence since 2004 and last year over 200 cars were sold. Today, Ferrari has 10 dealerships in the country covering Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Hangzhou, Chengdu, Chongqing, Nanjing, Dalian and Qingdao. In 2008 the Ferrari owners’ club was established and in 2005 Corso Pilota Ferrari driving courses started to enable Chinese clients to improve their knowledge of their cars and their own skills behind the wheel.


Topics: ferrari, saab, web site, news

Ferrari that came back from the dead

They found her in pieces, lying among piles of abandoned washing machines and broken refrigerators after police smashed an organised-crime ring and swooped on a scrap yard in the sleepy municipality of Besenzone in northern Italy. It would be several days before David Cottingham would receive the news.

The discovered body, missing for eight years, was that of a Ferrari motor car, hand-built half a century earlier to take part in a race that bills itself, with good reason, as La Corsa Piu Bella del Mondo ("The most beautiful course in the world"). This Vignale Spyder 166 MM took its initials from the Mille Miglia, the "Thousand Miles" race which, for more than 80 years, has obsessed the world of motor sport with its irresistibly heady mix of social glamour, stylish design and unrelenting speed – a dangerous combination that has claimed dozens of lives.

From a verdant site in rural Hertfordshire, Cottingham, a 66-year-old physicist, nurtures vintage Ferraris back to life. He has dedicated a good portion of his existence to this particular Vignale Spyder, bringing the car back from the dead not once but twice, after it had passed through the hands of multiple owners, from Italian gangsters to eccentric German collectors. When it was found in the scrap yard at the end of 2007, he was informed by a German-based Ferrari historian and immediately set about his greatest challenge.

And this Thursday, Cottingham will be at the start line of the Mille Miglia at Brescia, at the foot of the Alps, to watch this extraordinary vehicle – which he refers to as "0314" after its chassis number – take part in the event in which it was originally designed to compete. "It's such a powerful little car," he says. "I was so happy with the restoration because this is what I do: make the cars look absolutely as they were when they left the factory. But the proof of my labours will be when it works properly in the Mille Miglia."

Oliver Wheeler, the amateur sports-car racer who will be behind the wheel for the 1,000 miles next week, has been testing its capabilities at the Millbrook circuit at Bedford. "I've never seen anything prettier or driven anything more challenging," he says. "It's grating, complaining, almost looking over its shoulder saying, 'Can't you drive me?' The steering wheel is a great big diameter with a liquorice-thin piece of wire and it takes an enormous amount of bicep to turn the wheels at that kind of speed. You have to be concentrating every moment or you are going to end up in salad, but it will be incredible to be driving this car through Italian passes at night. With the V12 engine we will be making noises that people haven't heard for a long time – it will be a bit like flying a Spitfire over Britain."

The day this Vignale Spyder left the Ferrari factory was 19 May 1953. Enzo Ferrari and his team had only begun hand-making cars six years earlier in Maranello, the town outside Modena where this most famous of sports-car marques has always been based. The 166 MMs, built for the Mille Miglia, were the first Ferraris to be built for competition. Cottingham, whose company DK Engineering carries the motto "Passion for Ferrari", first visited Maranello in 1978 before the introduction of modern production methods. "Enzo Ferrari was still alive and sat in his little office next to the racing department, which was still quite basic. Meeting him was a bit like having an audience with the Pope."

Enzo Ferrari once said that "the Mille Miglia created our cars and the Italian automobile industry", and in the years after the Second World War, winning the competition was the dream of every racing driver. The race, in typical Italian fashion, had its origins in an argument over respect. In response to a perceived slight by the Milan Automobile Club, which was seeking to advance its race track at Monza, the Automobile Club of Brescia, which had staged the inaugural Italian Grand Prix at its Montichiari circuit in 1921, dreamt up its own prestige event: a figure-of-eight route encompassing 1,000 Roman miles (at 1,617 yards slightly shorter than a statute mile) and going from Brescia to Rome – as a gesture to the Fascist government – and back to Brescia. The first race in 1927, at which 25,000 soldiers were deployed to control the roadside crowds, took 21 hours to complete. The Corriere della Sera reported admiringly that "an express train could not have done better".

But an event so dedicated to speed, taking place at night as well as day along roads lined with screaming spectators, was destined for tragedy. When the great Sardinian Clemente Biondetti achieved the first of his record four Mille Miglia victories in 1938, the winning time was down to under 12 hours, but the race was overshadowed by a Lancia Aprilia going out of control on the Bologna ring road and killing 10 people, including seven schoolchildren.

The Fascist government banned the Mille Miglia from the public roads but, two years later, Mussolini was persuaded to allow an event on a truncated circuit. It was won by the Prussian nobleman and serving Nazi officer Fritz Huschke von Hanstein, who had fitted his BMW 328 with number plates bearing the insignia of the SS.

Despite the devastation to Italian roads and industry during the war, the Automobile Club of Brescia was determined to revive the great race and, by 1947, had done so, using a slightly modified route that took in Turin before returning to Brescia and the traditional start and finish line in Viale Rebuffone.

Enzo Ferrari's new 166 MM, built for an event that was rivalled only by the 24-hour race at Le Mans, achieved overall firsts in the 1948 and 1949 events and was first in its class in the three following years. Only 48 of the hand-built cars were made, just seven with the Vignale bodywork and convertible Spyder design.

The car that Wheeler will be driving next week was assigned to the young gentleman driver Edoardo "Lualdi" Gabardi, a Ferrari privateer who had the back-up of the factory but was able to pay for that support out of his own funds. After competing in a succession of hill-climb events, the car passed to Primo Pezzoli, who competed in the 1954 Mille Miglia with his co-driver Giacomo "Noris" Moioli. But like many other cars that year, the Vignale Spyder failed to finish the course, and the race was won by the Formula One champion ' Alberto Ascari in a Lancia. "It's gruelling every year and loads crash," says Cottingham sympathetically.

The year after the Spyder's failed attempt came the greatest performance in the history of the Mille Miglia as Britain's Stirling Moss, aided by his navigator Denis "Jenks" Jenkinson, smashed the course record forever. Leaving Brescia in their Mercedes Benz 300 SLR at 7.22am, they were back 10 hours and seven minutes later, travelling at an average speed of more than 99mph. Even now, Cottingham, who has raced Ferraris himself, is awestruck at the achievement. "At some stretches they were going at 150-160mph on public roads; imagine that! Imagine doing 1,000 miles at more than a 100mph average, it's just mind-boggling."

Pezzoli drove the Vignale Spyder in several hill-climb races in Italy but the Mille Miglia, in its traditional race format, came to a fateful end in 1957, with yet another tragedy. Alfonso de Portago, a young Spanish aristocrat who was also an international swimmer, water-polo player and bobsledder, blew a tyre in his Ferrari and came off the road at Guidizzolo, killing himself, his co-driver and 10 spectators.

The Vignale Spyder was sold to a succession of Italian owners until, in 1961, it came into the hands of German collector Helmut Frevel, who made his living from investigating sunken ships. "He was a very interesting man," says Cottingham. "He found ships with buried treasure. He bought the car in Italy but raced it all over the world." In 1963, Frevel's deep-sea adventures took him to South Africa, in search of the British ship Grosvenor, the richest East Indiaman ever to be lost at sea, wrecked on a reef in 1782. The German took the Spyder to Pretoria with him. Four years later, he shipped the car back to Freiburg in Germany, where it was to remain – like buried treasure itself – wrapped up in storage for 23 years.

Bought by another collector, the German industrialist Peter Glaesel, it was sent to England by transporter in 1990 to be restored by Cottingham at the company he runs with his wife Kate and three sons, Justin, Jeremy and James, all five of them dedicated Ferrari enthusiasts.

David Cottingham, whose customers include the radio presenter Chris Evans (who owns a fleet of Ferraris), gave up his job as a scientific researcher in the Kodak laboratories to follow his passion. "I started building cars when I was 16 years old and every evening I would be home from my nine-to-five job at Kodak and in my garage restoring cars. I started racing Jaguars in the 1960s when I was 21. Then I turned my hobby into a business."

He dedicated himself to the revival of the Spyder. "The car was worn-out because it had been sitting for a long time. We spent a year restoring it and the result was perfection. You put new moving parts in but just restore everything else, taking the body skins off the frame, reshaping and reattaching them; it's total restoration." The Glaesel family put the car back on the road, racing it at Silverstone among other circuits.

Coincidentally, in 1977, the year DK Engineering was founded, the Automobile Club of Brescia decided to revive the Mille Miglia, in recognition of a global movement towards classic-car collection. No longer was the event a simple test of breakneck speed; the competition was one of precision driving, examining skills of navigation and consistency. In 1999, Walter Fink, another German owner of the Spyder who had purchased the car from the Glaesels, finally drove the Ferrari 166 MM around the complete 1,000 mile circuit it had been designed to race.

The following year, Fink's wife Sandra also mastered the course with a girlfriend as her co-driver. Exhausted by their achievement, they turned in for the night at the Hotel Majestic in Castenedolo, outside Brescia, leaving the car outside in the car park. When they woke, it had disappeared. "I was incredulous and thought it would reappear," recalls Cottingham of the theft. "What often happens in Italy when cars are stolen under those circumstances is that it's a bit like the car has been kidnapped; they demand a ransom from the insurance company or the owner. That's what we all expected to happen but it didn't reappear." Until the police raid eight years later.

"We ended up paying loads of money for it but we were really happy to have it back. We negotiated the purchase for a client," says the restorer. "It was great that the chassis wasn't damaged because they could have cut it in two, they could have done anything. The body was stripped of paint, but apart from a few dents it was in pretty good condition."

Thirty years of travelling the world gathering vintage Ferrari parts ensured that Cottingham could carry out another perfect restoration. "What we didn't have, I sourced from my various contacts throughout the world. All the suspension and steering is original and correct stuff, indistinguishable from what was on the car when it was stolen. It has been a big effort for me, maybe my last total job, because I will be 67 in July. But I always say that..."

Cottingham estimates that over the years he has restored 150 Ferraris in all, but with none other does he have a relationship quite like the one he has with the 1953 Vignale Spyder 166 MM.

The evening before this year's Mille Miglia, after Holy Mass is said in Brescia's Duomo Vecchio, the participants and race-followers will attend a spectacular gala dinner at Villa la Tassinara, overlooking Lake Garda. Then, late on Thursday night, under the proud gaze of David Cottingham the master restorer, the Ferrari that was born three times over will attack the Mille Miglia one more time.

The Mille Miglia takes place from Wednesday to Sunday; for more information: 1000miglia.eu/inglese/home.html

Alonso warns of Ferrari onslaught at Spain GP

LONDON, Britain - Fernando Alonso has given his Ferrari team a perfect - and totally-insured - thumbs-up sign, predicting that next weekend they will launch a ferocious bid to win the Formula One world title this year.

The 28-year-old Spaniard, who left Renault for Ferrari this season, has revelled in his new surroundings with the scarlet scuderia and said that he is convinced he can challenge for his third title.

And, be believes, he can launch that championship bid on home soil when he leads Ferrari into the first European event of the year, the Spanish Grand Prix, at Barcelona.

He said: "I think that with all the potential that we have, with the super team that I have, this is just the beginning -- and I have a real chance to fight for the world championship.

"That is something I couldn't even think about last year, after four races, but this time it is so different for me. I am enjoying it all again. I have felt that special bug from winning a race, or winning a title, and that for me is the most positive thing about the start this year."

Alonso won the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix on his Ferrari debut and has been competitive, if less impressive, in the three following races in Australia, Malaysia and China. But, he said, he has enjoyed every moment in his new surroundings after two difficult seasons with Renault.

He said: "It is obvious that the championship always starts with the first race, but it is also true that the opening Grand Prix is just a contest that confirms the good sensations, or otherwise, that you have experienced during the pre-season testing.

"When that part of the season is over and we start the European season, it is the real time to show who can fight for the title - and who can't. The opening races are really atypical. There is changing weather, different conditions and not much stability.

"So, now, back in Europe, back in Spain, we arrive at the moment of truth - now is the time to show who is ready for the title battle and which teams can develop their cars and performances faster than their rivals. It is the start of a nice fight, for sure!"

As if to symbolise his readiness for the fray and his confidence in emerging triumphant, Alonso has insured his thumbs - thanks to a special 10 million Euros (S$ 18 million) deal with his personal sponsor Spanish banking giant Santander.

The Spanish bank said in a statement: "Alonso's thumbs are a big symbol as, apart from being essential when driving a Formula One car, they represent a sign of victory -- and that everything is under control and well protected."

Alonso is delighted not only with the deal, but the confident and positive signal that it has sent to his and Ferrari's fans. And he has eased worries about the team's engines after suffering early-season problems in China.

He said: "The car is fine. For one reason or another we haven't managed to score as many points as we wanted, but I think we are going to have a good car again in Barcelona. I'm not worried.

"As for the engines, we have found the problems that we had. I know there have been things written, about the valves and the air-consumption system of the engine, but as usual they were not accurate, or true.

"We have been quiet about it, because we have found the problems and we'll try to do the rest of the season with an engine that's 100 per cent reliable. Then we will see if we can win the races and the championship, too." -AFP

Serepisos sells spare Ferrari

Cash-strapped Wellington property tycoon Terry Serepisos has sold one of his Ferrari convertible sports cars.

Last Tuesday's sale of a 2001 Ferrari 360 Spider came days before a Wellington City Council deadline for Mr Serepisos to tackle a rates bill, estimated at $2 million.

He declined to say whether he had met the deadline, but indicated there would be developments this week. Yesterday, he said the Ferrari sale had nothing to do with his cash-flow situation.

"It's a beautiful car and it needs to be driven. It was just sitting in my garage doing nothing. What's the point of owning a beautiful car if you're not driving it? I've got another one, I don't need two Ferraris."

The Dominion Post revealed last month that Mr Serepisos ran up the $2m debt over the past year, though he made some payments.

Subcontractors said they were owed hundreds of thousands of dollars. Mr Serepisos has disputed many of the claims.

It is understood the council set a deadline of last Friday for him to make inroads into the rates bill.

Registration records showed the Ferrari's new owner, Bayleys Wellington co-owner Mark Hourigan, took ownership on Tuesday.

Mr Hourigan, who was busy washing his new car in Lower Hutt yesterday, declined to comment, saying on Friday: "Mate, I don't want to talk about it."

Mr Serepisos is well known for his love of luxury cars. His garage has housed a XJR supercharged Jaguar and two Lamborghinis – a silver Diablo Roadster and a black VT Diablo.

The Spider cost about $250,000 in 2001, he said. He would not say what he sold it for. A similar model was recently priced at $169,000.

In the television show The Apprentice, he can be seen driving a 2007 Ferrari F430. He said he still owned that car "and some others".

Sir Robert Jones told the Sunday Star-Times at the weekend that Mr Serepisos' appointment to the TV show was "shocking" and his excuses for not paying his bills was "childish". "He's a harmless little fellow, he likes getting into the paper and there is nothing wrong with that."

Sir Robert's comments came as it was revealed that Mr Serepisos approached the National Business Review – compiler of the NBR Rich List – to increase his net worth. It was valued at $100m in the 2007 and 2008 Rich List, but he said wanted to be quoted at $140m last year.

Mr Serepisos hit back at Sir Robert yesterday, saying: "He's a Wellingtonian, but what has he ever done for the city except abuse people? Has he ever put his hand up?

"He shouldn't be throwing stones when he lives in a glasshouse. I could go on all day about Bob."

He said he was "working closely" with council officials on his rates debt. "A lot will happen this week."

Recent attention on his business affairs was "unwelcome and unnecessary". "This is a storm in a teacup, it's all going to blow over."

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Fiery end to a $900K Ferrari

By Low Wei Xiang

AN INFERNO caught the attention of those near the junction of Stamford Road and Victoria Street yesterday.

Click on thumbnails below to view more photos. Story continues after photos. (Photos: Stomp)    

A yellow Ferrari F430 Spider convertible, worth an estimated $900,000 burst into flames around noon, according to witnesses.

A Stomp contributor, who goes by the name of Peter, was surprised to see a thick plume of black smoke outside the window of his third-floor office at Stamford Court yesterday.

The 30-year-old, who works in the manufacturing industry, told my paper: 'The smoke was higher than my office building.'

One of Peter's colleagues, who declined to be identified, took photos of the scene and posted them online.

According to the colleague, an acquaintance owned the car.

The colleague said the vehicle's driver 'knew the car was going to explode' but did not have time to 'park behind the building'.

The driver evacuated the vehicle and fled the scene, said the colleague.

When contacted, the Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF) said it received a call from a member of the public at 11.56am.

A fire engine reached the scene by 12.05pm and the fire was put out within 10 minutes.

Witnesses whom the police spoke to could not identify the missing driver.

An SCDF spokesman said nobody was injured, and the cause of the fire was under investigation.

He added that the SCDF has seen an average of six cars catching fire each month in the past six months.

weixiang@sph.com.sg

For more my paper stories click here.

Alonso spoiling for a fight

LONDON, April 30- Fernando Alonso has given his Ferrari team a perfect - and totally-insured - thumbs-up sign, predicting that they will launch next weekend a ferocious bid to win the Formula One world title this year.

The 28-year-old Spaniard, who left Renault for Ferrari this season, has revelled in his new surroundings with the scarlet scuderia and said that he is convinced he can challenge for his third title.

And, be believes, he can launch that championship bid on home soil when he leads Ferrari into the first European event of the year, the Spanish Grand Prix, at Barcelona.

He said: "I think that with all the potential that we have, with the super team that I have, this is just the beginning -- and I have a real chance to fight for the world championship.

"That is something I couldn't even think about last year, after four races, but this time it is so different for me. I am enjoying it all again. I have felt that special bug from winning a race, or winning a title, and that for me is the most positive thing about the start this year."

Alonso won the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix on his Ferrari debut and has been competitive, if less impressive, in the three following races in Australia, Malaysia and China. But, he said, he has enjoyed every moment in his new surroundings after two difficult seasons with Renault.

He said: "It is obvious that the championship always starts with the first race, but it is also true that the opening Grand Prix is just a contest that confirms the good sensations, or otherwise, that you have experienced during the pre-season testing.

"When that part of the season is over and we start the European season, it is the real time to show who can fight for the title - and who can't. The opening races are really atypical. There is changing weather, different conditions and not much stability.

"So, now, back in Europe, back in Spain, we arrive at the moment of truth - now is the time to show who is ready for the title battle and which teams can develop their cars and performances faster than their rivals. It is the start of a nice fight, for sure!"

As if to symbolise his readiness for the fray and his confidence in emerging triumphant, Alonso has insured his thumbs - thanks to a special 10 million Euros deal with his personal sponsor Spanish banking giant Santander.

The Spanish bank said in a statement: "Alonso's thumbs are a big symbol as, apart from being essential when driving a Formula One car, they represent a sign of victory -- and that everything is under control and well protected."

Alonso is delighted not only with the deal, but the confident and positive signal that it has sent to his and Ferrari's fans. And he has eased worries about the team's engines after suffering early-season problems in China.

He said: "The car is fine. For one reason or another we haven't managed to score as many points as we wanted, but I think we are going to have a good car again in Barcelona. I'm not worried.

"As for the engines, we have found the problems that we had. I know there have been things written, about the valves and the air-consumption system of the engine, but as usual they were not accurate, or true.

"We have been quiet about it, because we have found the problems and we'll try to do the rest of the season with an engine that's 100 per cent reliable. Then we will see if we can win the races and the championship, too."

Ferrari launches site in Chinese

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Ferrari Chinese website

Tomorrow Ferrari.com will speak Chinese. In occasion of the opening of the Expo of Shanghai Ferrari for the first time in its history is launching a Chinese version of its official site. This will be the fourth language that visitors can choose from. It is further proof of the importance that the Chinese market represents for Ferrari and comes straight after the historic world premiere of the 599 GTO at the Beijing Auto Show and contemporaneously with the presentation of the Hybrid concept, the Hy-Kers, at the Expo’.

The website is dedicated specifically to its clients, enthusiasts and fans whose native language is Chinese, not only in China, in Asia but all over the world. It aims to foster an even closer relationship between the Prancing Horse and the Chinese public, and boost the number of Ferrari web users in China by eliminating any language barriers.

Enthusiasts, clients and fans can navigate the site content, enjoy live news updates from Maranello and experience Prancing Horse emotions, activities and products at close hand. They’ll discover interactive areas, exclusive images, complete information on all the cars, the F1 Scuderia, News, Community and the Ferrari Store. Thanks to the Maranello Experience, they can even enjoy a virtual tour of the entire company thanks to video clips and other images. The site also allows users to select and personalise the cars in the current range.

Ferrari sold its first car in China in 1993 but it has had a commercial presence since 2004 and last year over 200 cars were sold. Today, Ferrari has 10 dealerships in the country covering Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Hangzhou, Chengdu, Chongqing, Nanjing, Dalian and Qingdao. In 2008 the Ferrari owners’ club was established and in 2005 Corso Pilota Ferrari driving courses started to enable Chinese clients to improve their knowledge of their cars and their own skills behind the wheel.

Mark Webber Q&A

you said you lost your passport. Have you found it? How did you get through so many customs checks without it?Colin Harrold, UK

I haven't found it. I only had to get through one border control on the way back from China, and that was in Glasgow. I flew to Dubai, then to Rome, then drove to a different airport in Rome, then a private plane to Nice, then a private plane to Glasgow and a helicopter to my house.

I certainly did have to fill in a bit more documentation up there. But thank God a bit of common sense did prevail. I certainly got punished for losing it in terms of headaches, but they let me in, which was nice of them.

To improve overtaking, do you think a reversed grid based on championship points would work?Alex, UK

It would be a pretty good spectacle but in terms of the DNA of F1, it is totally not the right direction for me. That's just like a handicap system.

We saw Lewis have a reasonable run through in Malaysia from the back but some of the other guys didn't have so much joy because they don't have an F-duct.

We saw Lewis got stuck up behind Adrian Sutil and that was as far as he got without strategy becoming involved. And that's at one of the best tracks in the world for overtaking.

So, yes, I'd be the first to admit if Valentino Rossi and Casey Stoner start at the back of the MotoGP grid it's going to be interesting to watch them come through.

But week-in, week-out I don't think that's the way forward. I think we need to look at other ways to address overtaking and have the fast guys start at the front and racing each other.

What do you think of Australia's chances at the World Cup this summer?Roger Clarke, Reading, United Kingdom

They've got a tough group . If they can get through that, and finish second and England win their group they'll play in the next round. I'd like to watch that.

Before a race, the drivers drink a lot. Do you never have to go to the loo in the race?David Vlieghe, Belgium

I have certainly been busting to go the loo in the car, certainly in the early parts of a grand prix, but that means I've made a bit of a mistake clearing my hydration.

Generally, you would try to get rid of a lot of the stuff you've been drinking the previous night and that morning, so you're well hydrated but haven't got a full bladder because a full bladder also makes you weak abdominally.

I've never been to the toilet in the car, although I know of other drivers who have.

Obviously you have a close relationship with Red Bull chief technical officer Adrian Newey. What is it that sets him apart from other teams designers? How does he design fantastic car after fantastic car?Lee smith, UK

His record speaks for itself. We know how many grands prix and world championships he's won with cars that have made F1 incredibly boring, through the Mansell era, and some of the Williams and McLarens.

Ferrari's Bar Code, and a Visit to the Ferrari Factory

Ferrari is the last team left that has a sponsorship contract with a tobacco company, but like all other teams, it ceased putting that sponsor’s logo on its car years ago. Now it is under fire from anti-tobacco activists who claim that the team’s bar code and the red color of the car evoke the sponsor — Marlboro — in everything but actual type. (Take a look at my video below to see how prevalent the color red is for Ferrari, even on their road cars.)

“Leading doctors are demanding an immediate government inquiry into ‘subliminal’ tobacco advertising on Ferrari’s Formula One cars, and the company’s $1 billion relationship with the maker of Marlboro cigarettes,” said an article in The Times of London yesterday.

The sponsorship deal with the manufacturer, Philip Morris, runs out in 2011.  When I visited the Ferrari factory in Maranello on Tuesday, I was told unofficially that the deal was likely to be extended. Today, Ferrari has come out with a statement rebutting the subliminal-ad claims:

Today and in recent weeks, articles have been published relating to the partnership contract between Scuderia Ferrari and Philip Morris International, questioning its legality. These reports are based on two suppositions: that part of the graphics featured on the Formula 1 cars are reminiscent of the Marlboro logo and even that the red color, which is a traditional feature of our cars, is a form of tobacco publicity.

Neither of these arguments have any scientific basis, as they rely on some alleged studies which have never been published in academic journals. But more importantly, they do not correspond to the truth. The so called barcode is an integral part of the livery of the car and of all images coordinated by the Scuderia, as can be seen from the fact it is modified every year and, occasionally even during the season. Furthermore, if it was a case of advertising branding, Philip Morris would have to own a legal copyright on it.

Here is a video report I made at the Ferrari factory on Tuesday:

One Hot Car: Ferrari F430 Spider in Raging Inferno


Ferrari F430 on fire One Hot Car: Ferrari F430 Spider in Raging Inferno

What is it about beautiful supercars set afire that inspire such emotion. When I was a kid, I had big picture over my bed of a Lamborghini Countach engulfed in a ball of flame from an exploding gas station. While I hated to see my ultimate dream car perishing under fiery execution, there was something absolutely enthralling about the manmade-meets-natural beauty of the scene. Hot fire and hot cars just create incredible visuals. Oh, and the whole “One Hot Car” was a part of that picture, which is why, no matter how cheesy, I included the homage in the title.

The same type of visual can be seen in this bright yellow Ferrari F430, which went up yesterday in Singapore. The Singapore Civil Defense Force responded to put out the flames, but not before some crippling fire damage (and incredible pictures) were done. [via WCF]

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

What F1's future means for the car you drive

Your car engine could be affected by F1's proposed plans

BMW, which pulled out of F1 at the end of last season, already plans to use this type of engine in its new 3-series, scheduled for production in 2012. Mercedes is following suit with its range, while Renault predict that, by 2015, more than three-quarters of the engines they produce will be small-capacity turbos.

All very appealing in its own right, but F1's involvement is key here, for it will help the road-car manufacturers popularise the new technology, making it more acceptable and attractive - in much the same way as semi-automatic gearboxes, pioneered in F1, are now increasingly common and desirable in road cars.

OK, so far so good. This is the point where I get a little more technical, so please bear with me.

Negotiations between F1's power-brokers are continuing, but the new engines will be somewhere between 1.5- and two-litre four-cylinder units, using modern turbocharging and fitted with powerful electric motors that will be charged by energy that would otherwise be lost in areas such as the brakes or the turbo. These electric motors will then supply power back to the wheels.

Unlike the Kers power-boost and energy-recovery systems used by some teams in 2009 but abandoned for 2010 on cost grounds, these new 'hybrid' systems will be fully integrated into the engine architecture.

There have been recent reports, incidentally, saying that the engines will have a 1.5-litre capacity. My sources tell me that is not accurate - they are likely to be either 1.6- or 1.8-litres.

Using powerful energy-recovery systems opens up all sorts of possibilities on the sporting side, as the power-boost could be used, for example, to provide push-to-pass buttons, which drivers could use only a specific number of times in a race.

Further enhancing road-relevancy, it looks increasingly likely that Ferrari will be successful in their aim to have the new formula include a technology called 'gasoline direct injection'. This is when the fuel is injected directly into the cylinders' combustion chambers. This is much more expensive than the traditional route - injecting the fuel through an inlet port - but it improves power and efficiency.

And because filling a car up is central to the everyday user's experience, refuelling, which is banned in F1 this season, may well be reintroduced.

That's the technical bit over. Now for the politics.

The introduction of these new engines in 2013 has been the subject of high-level talks for a number of months, and a number of opposing views have had to be reconciled.

In terms of the big picture, there was pressure from some quarters for F1 to be as 'green' as it could possibly be, perhaps going as far as trying to develop a zero-emission engine that could be used in road cars in forthcoming decades.

But there were three major problems with that approach:

First, the fact that internal combustion engines will be around for several decades to come as they remain the most energy-efficient solution;

Second, the cost, at a time when F1 is trying to reduce the size of budgets;

Lastly, the risk of making developing new technologies the sport's raison d'etre.

Do that, the argument goes, and you risk the accountants who work for the major car companies deciding to pull the plug at some point in the future, claiming: we don't need you to do that - we can do it ourselves and not spend millions on you flying your racing cars around the world.

F1, it was agreed, exists in its own right as the world's premier motor sport. Any new rules have to recognise that, while also staying relevant to road-car engine technology.

On top of that, F1 will always have a problem trying to present itself as 'green', for the simple fact that any engine that produces the 700bhp or so required to keep it as the pinnacle of motorsport is, by definition, going to have reasonably high carbon-dioxide emissions and therefore not be environmentally friendly.

As it happens, though, considering their performance, even current F1 engines are paragons of efficiency. Here are a couple of facts that might surprise you:

The problem, though, is that because an F1 engine is so powerful, it still uses about 160kg (210 litres) of fuel in a grand prix. To most people, that would sound like a lot for 200 miles. The 2013 engines could reduce that to 90kg - still a lot of fuel, but a huge improvement.

Developing these new engines will cost many millions of pounds at a time when the global economy is still struggling, car sales are down, sponsorship revenue is limited and F1 is working hard to reduce budgets.

And while the car manufacturers have a vested interest in developing these engines, a way has to be found to ensure engine builders such as Cosworth - which supplies four of the 12 teams this year - can develop a budget plan to do so. The smaller, privateer teams must be able to afford to run them, too.

Cosworth is confident F1 is heading towards a workable solution. Commercial director Mark Gallagher says: "Everything we've seen suggests F1 will think very carefully before introducing regulations that will incur great expense. The new regulations are likely to be innovative but not at a huge price. We're confident we'll be able to deliver within that."

The prize here is huge. On a global level, a future generation of super-efficient road-car engines dramatically reduces greenhouse gas emissions, with F1 speeding their take-up in the general population.

As far as F1 is concerned, if the sport can shed its image of profligacy with resources - in this case, fuel and money - while embracing and helping to develop and refine road-relevant, future technologies, new manufacturers could be attracted into the sport.

My sources tell me, for example, that Volkswagen and Hyundai - neither of whom have ever been involved in F1 - have had talks about entering the sport on that basis.

So while the fine detail is yet to be resolved, one thing is clear - smaller capacity turbo engines with integrated energy recovery are the future for F1. And for the car you drive on the road.

Ferrari F40

Ferrari F40

In the current market, getting bidders to visit a exclusive resident spot in Malibu, California has become very difficult for listing agents. One agent has recognized this and is offering an incentive that may be difficult for a wealthy enthusiast to turn down.

If you drop $4,399,333 for his client’s 6,000 sq-ft home, he will throw in a rare Ferrari F40. Only 213 units of the 200 mph F40 supercar made it to the United States and according to Michael Sheehan, a Ferrari historian, a F40 can still fetch around $350,000. He said a low mileage F40 can demand nearly $600,000.

The odometer reading on the Ferrari F40 on the car in Malibu right now? 734 miles – making it one of the lowest-mileage F40s available on the open market.

- By: Kap Shah

Source: Wheels

Report: Women Make Up 20 Percent Of Ferrari Sales In China : Auto News


2008 ferrari f430 scuderia 55647_42

Women in China buy four times as many Ferraris as women in North America, thanks in part to newfound prosperity and a glut of female entrepreneurship.

Of the 220 Ferrari cars sold last year in China, 44 were bought by women. In an interview with GoAuto, Ferrari CEO Amadeo Felisa stressed the importance of the Asia-Pacific market. “We don’t see big possibilities (to increase sales) in Europe and we don’t see big possibilities in the U.S.,” he said “But for sure we have not exploited the potential we have in Asia-Pacific as well as the Middle East and East Europe.”

Felisa also stressed that Ferrari would adapt their production to meet the needs of the Chinese market, but it would not oversupply the market with cars. Ferrari spokesman Antonio Ghini once said that “… we will produce one less car than the market demands”, and this maxim has unquestionably helped Ferrari maintain its mystique and cachet among the uber-wealthy of the world.

Classic Car News: Italian Ferrari In Mint Condition

Classic Car News: Italian Ferrari In Mint Condition

Image of classic Ferrari TipoA classic blue Ferrari is “expected to sell for £1 million” at Bonham’s Auction this weekend in Monaco, according to Metro.co.uk. The blue Tipo 166/195 Inter Cabriolet is one of just 30 custom made models produced, which makes it even more precious to anyone looking to own a piece of classic history.

Although Ferrari had become the dominant force in international sports racing long before the introduction of the 166 model, the Tipo claimed victory in three of the world’s most prestigious events, including Mille Miglia, Targa Florio and Le Mans 24-hour race – making 1949 a phenomenal year for the Tipo cabriolet and Ferrari marque.

The classic Ferrari that’s up for auction this Friday in Monte Carlo could be the “perfect drive for a British owner, because the steering wheel is on the right hand side”, reports Metro.co.uk. If you have a need for speed as well as a love for vintage motors then you’re in for a treat. The two-seater blue classic was turned into a convertible and the 166 engine replaced with a more powerful 195, V12 version.

Philip Kantor of Bonham’s said “all these cars were made to order for those who bought them so they are all completely unique”. So if you’re looking for individuality this classic Ferrari could be just what you’re looking for, with matching orange leather seats and steering wheel.

Bonhams.com has reported that “many Ferrari’s are historically important but few are of greater significance than the Commendatore’s first car built for road use, the Tipo 166 Inter. This superbly presented example warrants special interest and the closest inspection”.

Competitive quality classic car insurance is of great significance to Sureterm Direct, so call free on 0800 999 2030 or click here for a classic car insurance quote.

Ferrari F1 barcode a 'smokescreen for cigarette adverts'

Don Elgie, chief executive of Creston, which owns the advertising agency DLKW, said he thought that the bar code was subliminal advertising — where a brand is so recognisable that consumers can be reminded of a product without actually seeing it.

John Britton, a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and director of its tobacco advisory group, said: “The bar code looks like the bottom half of a packet of Marlboro cigarettes. I was stunned when I saw it. This is pushing at the limits. If you look at how the bar code has evolved over the last four years, it looks like creeping branding.”

Gerard Hastings, director of the Centre for Tobacco Control Research, said: “I think this is advertising. Why a bar code? What is their explanation?”

Frank Dobson, who was Health Secretary between 1997 and 1999, also called for an inquiry. Mr Dobson, now a backbench Labour MP, said: “The tobacco firms were working out years ago how they could advertise if there was a ban on tobacco advertising.”

Spokesmen for Sir Liam Donaldson, the Chief Medical Officer, and the Department of Health refused to comment. A spokesperson for the BBC, which has a contract to broadcast Formula One, said: “We are confident that Formula One, and as a result our coverage of Formula One, is fully compliant with regulations.”

In September 2005 Philip Morris, the maker of Marlboro, extended its financial backing for the Ferrari team until 2011, despite the ban on cigarette branding on cars racing in the European Union. The contract is understood to be worth $1 billion over ten years and Philip Morris said Ferraris would not carry Marlboro branding where there was a ban.

A spokesman for the Italian car maker said: “The bar code is part of the livery of the car, it is not part of a subliminal advertising campaign.”

Asked about the Philip Morris contract he said: “$100 million [a year] is not a correct figure. We do not disclose the figure — the figure you mention, it is lower.”

Ferrari is the only Formula One team with a tobacco brand in its formal title, Scuderia Ferrari Marlboro. Its logo also has the bar code and its drivers, Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa, wear overalls bearing the bar code next to the Ferrari logo on each arm.

Philip Morris said: “We are confident that our relationship with Ferrari does not violate the UK 2002 Tobacco Advertising and Promotion Act. The Formula One Grand Prix in the UK does not involve any race cars, team apparel, equipment or track signage carrying tobacco product branding. The same is true for all other Formula One races across the world.”

Monday, April 26, 2010

Fastest Ferrari yet

Mon, 26 Apr 2010 14:37

Ferrari has unveiled its fastest ever roadster, the 599 GTO, a limited edition vehicle of which 599 will be produced. It is the most high profile of dozens of luxury cars being launched during Beijing Auto Show.

The 599 GTO is the fastest consumer car in history, with a top speed of over 335km/h.

The limited edition car was unveiled to the public for the first time at the Beijing Auto Show, in the country which has the second-most billionaires in the world, after the United States.

Ferrari GTO spy video

Ferrari chief executive Amedeo Felisa at the Beijing Show said: "We expect to be stable, more or less, in Europe and the United States but we expect China and Asia Pacific to be the region where we can evolve."

The world's top luxury car makers all have huge displays vying for attention in the world's biggest car market.

Ferrari chief Amedeo Felisa details the 599

Aston Martin entered China in 2007, and says sales are so strong it will become their number one market in Asia within 18 months.

Analysts say there is plenty of scope to increase as luxury cars make up just 5 percent of auto sales in the country, compared to roughly three times that in the United States.

Rolls Royce, the maker of some of the world's most expensive cars, sold around 100 vehicles here last year and say they expect to triple that number in 2010, making this their number two market behind the US.

The Phantom can be customised with a variety of options from a gold-plated version of its famous Spirit of Ecstasy hood mount, to engraved door plates, and thousands of colour options for the interior.

Rolls Royce Asia Pacific regional director Paul Harris said: "It's a market where we need to be, its a market where we see potential, its a market where we have much customer demand, and basically we are where our customers want us to be."

China is developing its own car industry, aimed largely at the emerging middle class, but lacks its own high end vehicles.

So the world's fastest and most luxurious car makers are racing to get a piece of this booming market.

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Looking for a Ferrari? Tour de France rider George Hincapie may have a Ferrari ...

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Hincapie, 36, lives part-time in Greenville, S.C. He will compete May 16-23 in the Tour of California and the participate in the Tour de France for the 15th times, beginning July 3 in Rotterdam, The Netherlands.

During a wide-ranging, exclusive interview, Hincapie was asked about his Ferrari.

The Weekly Driver: A lot of guys when they’re position to get a nice cars, think about a vintage Porsche, a Lamborghini and, of course, a Ferrari. How about you?

George Hincapie: (Laughing) It kind of just happened. But I hardly ever drive it. In fact, I probably won’t end up keeping it. I’ve been home for about two weeks and I’ve driven it like three times.

You know, when we’re training (and racing) hard, you don’t really drive. And it the winter, the weather is bad so I don’t like to take it out in the bad weather. But it’s a great car. I love it.

Q: What year is it again?

GH: 2006. I’ve just saw it and got it. I’ve always wanted one. My son’s name is Enzo . .  so it was a car for me.

Q: In the time you’ve had the Ferrari, if you had to, can you guess how many miles you’ve put on it?

GH: Not many. Maybe 200. Maybe not that many. I’ve had it for I think nine months. I’ll keep it a little longer.

Related Car News and Reviews

Ferrari 599XX breaks Nurburgring 7-minute barrier

April 27th, 2010 by Car and SUV

The Ferrari 599XX has become  the first ever production-derived sports car to break the 7-minute barrier on the classic Nürburgring Nordschleife 20.832 km circuit, lapping in a time of 6 min 58.16 sec.

The new record was set on 21 April 2010 with Ferrari road car test driver Raffaele de Simone behind the wheel, beating a time of 6 minutes 58.5 seconds set by German Touring Car Driver Florian Gruber in another Ferrari 599XX. These times are both faster than Ferrari 312T Formula One car driven by Niki Lauda in a time of 6 minutes 58.6 seconds that put the Austrian legend on pole position for the 1975 Grand Prix , the best ever time for an F1 car on the Nürburgring Nordschleife circuit.

With 154 corners, notorious sections such as Flugplatz, Berwerk and Caracciola Karussell, the Nürburgring Nordschleife plunges through the pine forests of the Eifel Mountains, providing drivers with few reference points and leading Sir Jackie Stewart to christen the track ‘the green hell’ and that he would never do more laps than were absolutely necessary. It remains the ultimate test of a car’s all-round performance ability and, unlike most race tracks, the track produces cars that also perform well on the road. As the home of German motorsport and an international legend, Ferrari have long used the track for racing and testing. It is, therefore a Mecca for Ferrari fans, as shown by the fact that a Ferrari Store was opened at the track in 2009.

The 599XX, which inspired the 599 GTO, is an extreme berlinetta designed for track but not official competition use, and is a veritable technological laboratory incorporating a number of innovative solutions. Some of these will remain the exclusive preserve of the 599XX while others have already filtered down to the 599 GTO, introduced at the Beijing Motor Show. These include the wheel doughnuts derived from F1 which serve two purposes – to reduce turbulence and thus drag, and improve brake cooling.

Powered by a development of the V12 engine used by the 599 GTB Fiorano, the 599XX features Ferrari’s High-Performance Dynamic Concept, a novel integrated design and chassis set-up that uses sophisticated electronics to govern the mechanical limits of the handling for maximum performance.

On the aerodynamics front, the car sees the introduction for the first time of the Actiflow™ System that increases downforce and/or cuts drag depending on the car’s trim during cornering. This, together with other careful detailing, ensures that the 599XX boasts extraordinary levels of downforce – up to 630 kg at 300 km/h.

Fundamental to the performance of the car was the development of specific components undertaken together with our technical partners: Brembo for the carbon-ceramic brakes, Michelin for the tyres and Shell for the fuel and lubricants.

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Beijing Autoshow opens to public

 

The Beijing Autoshow has finished its two days of media previews, and is now open to the public.

From the fastest-ever Ferrari and local-made electric cars, world automakers have lined up their finest creations to woo customers in the world's largest market.

Given the gloom that has been affecting market sectors of the auto world, car shows in China are increasingly figuring in every automaker's timetable.

An unprecedented fleet of nearly 1,000 cars, with 89 global debut models, will go on display at the Beijing Autoshow.

A model poses beside an IAT Cross Wind II electric vehicle at the Beijng Auto Show. (AFP/Frederic J. Brown) A model poses beside an IAT Cross Wind II electric vehicle at theBeijng Auto Show. (AFP/Frederic J. Brown)

Ferrari Italia takes its place in history

endors around the Maranello factory offer tourists a short drive in a Ferrari, modern or older: €80 for 10 minutes in a California, €100 for a pricier F430 Scuderia.

And if you really want to stand out in this Ferrari town, one vendor offered a blast in a Lamborghini Gallardo.

There were no examples of the 2011 458 Italia, the all-new Ferrari V-8 sports car that replaces the much-beloved F430. Not surprising, since the Italia is not in full production yet; it won't be available until July in North America.

However, there is a 458 Italia gracing Ferrari's Galleria museum - and in a deserved spot already.

2011 Ferrari 458 Italia

Sure, there are a few exotics with similar power and price tags to the 458, but the Lamborghini Gallardo is the 458 Italia's undisputed arch-rival. Built 45 minutes away in northern Italy, the Gallardo also offers a low and lusty design, mind-blowing power and a similarly audacious price of $270,000 or so.

Having just recently sampled Lamborghini's new 2011 Gallardo 570-4 Superleggera at full scream on a race track in Spain, it was fascinating to note the many similarities between it and the all-new 458 during a preview drive of the new Ferrari in and around the mountains surrounding its Maranello birthplace, although the two have completely different personalities.

Power is remarkably identical: using European figures, we're talking exactly the same horsepower and torque for both the 458 and Gallardo Superleggera: 570 and 398, respectively. Hmm, could this have been the result of some MacLaren-style peeking over the fence at your Ferrari neighbours? Perhaps, although the 458 is no secret, having officially been unveiled last fall. But the Lambo's massive grunt comes from a 5.2 V-10, while the Ferrari has a 4.5-litre V-8.

The figures are a truthful hint to their differing routes to enthusiast heartstrings. The Ferrari is the high-tech, high-rpm, Formula One-inspired route to performance heaven, while Lamborghini has staked a more immediate, traditional and brasher territory in the Italian super-car wars.

The Ferrari seems more technologically advanced in every way. It sports a more understated, but aerodynamically efficient, body, with an integrated rear spoiler and air intakes in the headlights and rear bodywork but not on the body sides and has a much more modern dual-clutch transmission compared to the rougher single-clutch unit used in the Lambo and the 458's F430 predecessor.

The 458 Italia also marks a historical turning point for the F1-inspired company. It will be the first Ferrari not to offer a manual transmission.

"The manual gearbox is now dead, literally," said Joanne Marshall, communications director for Ferrari in Maranello, since Ferrari has integrated the latest-generation electronic differential into the new dual-clutch transmission. "Not only for performance reasons, but also for emissions."

Sniff, rest in peace, that "clink clink" of metallic gear changes - you may not have moved Ferraris any faster than these new manual and automatic transmission permutations, but the distinct feeling and sound held an appealing sense of authority in one's driving, enough so to be copied by various rivals.

Marshall says the company now sells less than 5 per cent of its products globally with a manual. Combine those sales figures with Ferrari's stated goals for increased fuel economy and hybridization of all its cars in the next four years, and the end of the manual Ferrari era seems near.

In the end, however, Ferrari is about performance above tradition, so there are clear advances with this transmission. The seven-speed Getrag in automatic mode jumps up the gears very quickly, and relatively smoothly, so that you're in sixth almost by the time you unwind the steering wheel.

This no doubt helps achieve the official combined rating of a surprisingly reasonable 13.3 litres/100 km, although it also deprives the 458 driver of revs, which this car really needs to truly sing.

That's not only because its power peak of 570 hp is right up at this car's mind-blowing 9,050 rpm redline, but also because there's an occasional harsh metallic resonance at sub-5,000 engine speeds that tells you this car is happier when being worked hard. Even the torque peaks at a lofty 6,000 rpm, with 0-100 km/h runs and top speeds of less than 3.4 seconds and more than 325 km/h, respectively. That's as specific as Ferrari will be, at least officially, although they admit to a recent 3.3-second run at the firm's Fiorano test track.

Regardless of the numbers, above 6,000 rpm is where the true joy lies. Smash your foot to the floor, and the ferocity with which this engine flies up to its tach's upper third is startling, its flywheel seemingly as light as fresh popcorn. It wasn't easy to get to redline on this mostly twisty route, nor will it be on open straights if you value your drivers' licence, so this car demands some track time to truly get to know it properly.

2011 Ferrari 458 Italia

Getting to know its insides takes a while as well, as Ferrari has done away with any type of control stalk besides the shift paddles. This means that the turn signals, wiper and washer controls are right on the lovely flat-bottomed steering wheel, along with buttons to start the engine, soften the suspension, or toggle the F1-inspired manettino dial between comfort and increasingly hard-edged performance settings for the transmission, exhaust and stability control system.

It's likely the busiest steering wheel in the business now. But it also does its most important job impeccably well: steer the car exactly to the inch of pavement where you want it.

Five minutes out of the parking lot of Ferrari's headquarters made it clear that the all-new aluminum chassis and front suspension has given the 458 radically quick steering, with response as immediate at 20 km/h as during a brief blast to 220.

At high speeds, black winglets integrated into the front nose deflect downward by up to two centimetres, helping to both push air underneath the car, while adding some additional down-force. These "flexible" wings were used and soon outlawed in F1.

2011 Ferrari 458 Italia

At the end of the day, we parked the 458 next to the "family tree" wall at the Ferrari factory, which depicts the company's entire half-century of road cars. With shadows looming, the Italia lined up nicely against a life-size depiction of the F430, Ferrari's best-selling model of all time, its worthy successor shining just a little brighter.

globedrive@globeandmail.com

2011 FERRARI 458 ITALIA

Type: Mid-engine, two-seat exotic coupe

Base price: To be announced

Engine: 4.5-litre, direct-injection V-8, DOHC

Horsepower/torque: 570 hp/398 lb-ft

Transmission: Seven-speed, dual-clutch automatic

Drive: Rear-wheel-drive

Fuel economy (litres/100 km): 13.3 overall; premium required

Alternatives: Aston Martin DBS, Audi R8 5.2 V-10, Lamborghini Gallardo

LIKE: Eye-popping style that's understated by Ferrari sports-car standards;dripping with Formula One inspiration: looks, interior, under the hood; Enzo-like super-car performance from Ferrari's "entry-level" coupe; super-quick steering as responsive at 20 km/h as at 220 km/h; soulful wail above 6,000 rpm, right up to 9,000 rpm redline

DON'T LIKE: Lack of any stalks puts too much on steering wheel, like high beams and turn signals; having the navi up means you can't see stereo settings; missing some basic standard items: iPod input, cup holders, CD player; responsive steering could be overly quick at high speeds; needs a track to fully enjoy

VIR: Bennett Racing race report

Bennett Racing Accomplishes First Mission by Completing Maiden Run in GRAND-AM Rolex Series With 15th Place Run at Virginia International Raceway

ALTON, Va. (April 24, 2010) - The mission was clear for Bennett Racing and co-drivers Skip Bennett and Mike Skeen in their debut race in the GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series presented by Crown Royal Cask No. 16, the Bosch Engineering 250 at Virginia International Raceway.

That mission was to learn everything they could about themselves, their team and their bright yellow No. 56 South River Marina & Mercruiser Ferrari F430 Challenge. After two hours and 45 minutes and 77 laps around the twisting 3.27-mile, 17-turn VIR road circuit on Saturday afternoon, it was mission accomplished. Skeen and Bennett combined to bring the lone Ferrari in the field home in 15th place in the GT class, exactly the position where Skeen qualified it on Friday.

"It was definitely a great experience," Skeen said. "The pit stops were better than I expected being the first time out for all these guys--they did an awesome job. I think we were pretty much running the pace that we expected. I won't lie. It was a little bit disappointing that we couldn't keep up a little better because the racer in me wants to do battle at the front of the pack. All of us are used to being at the front in the other forms of racing that we've done, but we know that takes time. We've got to develop the car more. We didn't have the straight-line speed to keep up, and that part of it was disappointing. But at the same time, we exceeded our rational expectations."

Skeen started the car 15th following a best lap at 1:54.288 (103.002 mph) from the15-minute qualifying session on Friday afternoon. He drove a trouble-free first stint in the race and came onto pit lane just prior to the 45-minute mark in the race to turn the controls over to team owner/driver Bennett, who pedaled the Ferrari for a clean middle stint before giving way to Skeen with slightly more than an hour remaining in the race.

"They're definitely pros," said Bennett of his on-track competition. "Hands down, these guys are pros and they want to finish the race. There's a lot of respect out there. I'm a slower driver in a slower car and there were absolutely no problems at all. Do I think I'm a pro now? No. Do I think I can do better? Absolutely. Do I think the car and the team will do better? Absolutely, but you've got to remember that to do better than what we did, there's a lot to do."

Both drivers pointed out that-for starters-the car needs to be roughly 200 pounds lighter. Bennett remarked that a few changes to the chassis are in order, as the car needs to pick up roughly four seconds to compete at the front of the GT field. However, Skeen noted that the team needed this race to learn where the car's shortcomings were.

"For the beginning stint, I was right behind the (No. 40) Dempsey Racing Mazda," Skeen said. "In my second stint, there were several caution periods where we ended up being amongst the leaders in GT going to green, so we had some chances to mix it up-albeit a lap down-with the leaders. We did get a chance to see and feel where the other cars are gaining and losing speed. For the most part, we were off sequence pit strategy wise with the guys that were a position ahead or a position behind us. We didn't have a whole lot of position battles on the track."

One area where Bennett and Skeen came away extremely satisfied was the ability of their volunteer crew on pit road. Just as it was the first time in a Rolex Series race on the track for the drivers, it was also the first time the crew worked together in the pits. The drivers couldn't have asked for better service.

"Our crew was tremendous," Bennett said. "I watched a lot of the other crews and our guys looked better and they were faster. I'm not trying to blow smoke. This is a fact. When Mike came in for a gas-and-go under a yellow, he wasn't the first guy into the pit, but he was the first guy out of the pit. That gave us a lap back. Our pit guys were awesome."

"One of the coolest things was in one of our team meetings (on Friday)," Skeen added. "We were sitting around in the back of the transporter and we've got a guy from South Africa, we've got a couple of guys from Georgia, a guy from the Czech Republic, Virginia, North Carolina and guys have been on a bunch of different teams. One of them spoke up and said, 'I've only known you guys for five days. We've only worked together a few times and already this team is really, really gelling.' We've got great camaraderie, it's a big family and everybody has got a lot of respect for each other."

With the Bosch Engineering 250 now in the rearview mirror, the team's focus shifts to making improvements to the car ahead of its next scheduled Rolex Series appearance in the Sahlen's Six Hours of The Glen on the weekend of June 4-5. Bennett expects to share the car with co-drivers Mike Davidson and Jonathan Allen for their first attempt at a Rolex Series endurance race, while Skeen will be competing in an SCCA Trans-Am Series event at Miller Motorsports Park in Utah that weekend.

Chris Cobetto, another of the team's drivers, will get some seat time in the car later this season. The team plans to make four Rolex Series starts this season: at VIR, the Watkins Glen enduro in June, and sprint races at Daytona International Speedway and New Jersey Motorsports Park in July. All of this is being done with an eye toward competing in the 2011 Rolex 24 At Daytona next January.

"The car is now going to go to UUC Motorsports in Georgia and they're going to do a couple things," Bennett said. "We're going to continue with our plan, which is to get four races under our belt to get the car sorted out so we can do Daytona in January. We could definitely use some sponsors to help us, as it will take a lot of time and a lot of money to get the car where we want it to be. We have to do some significant things to the car. We know what they are and we know what they're going to mean when we get them accomplished."

Just like the team's mission in its debut this weekend.

-source: bennett motorsports

The 599 GTO is Ferrari's fastest road car yet

Ferrari is boasting that its new 599 GTO is the fastest road-going after it secured an impressive lap time of 1’24”.

Only a limited run of 599 of the mid-front engined V12 berlinetta cars will be made with the model being closely based on the 599XX, the experimental car destined exclusively for track but not competition use.

New materials and technologies mean the overall weight has been reduced by 100 kg and the car boasts an aerodynamic package that doubles the downforce of the 599 GTB Fiorano. The 670 CV V12 engine was derived from the 599XX’s but is made for road use. The car also has new generation carbon-ceramic (CCM2) brakes.

The 599 GTO’s engine is derived from the 599XX, albeit with certain modifications necessary for it to comply with Euro 5 and LEV2 standards. Specifically, that meant adding a one catalyser per cylinder bank and an exhaust silencer. The new car is powered by a 65-degree V12 with a bore of 92mm and a stroke of 75.2mm. It has a six-litre displacement and, with an output of 670 CV at 8,250 rpm, has a power output of 112 CV/litre and a weight-to-power ratio of just 2.23 kg/CV. Torque peaks at 620 Nm at 6500 rpm and fuel consumption and CO2 emissions have been reduced to 17.5 l/100km and 411 g/km respectively.

Specially selected materials and geometries have ensured that the engine sound inside the car is carefully controlled to balance the intake sound with the exhaust, giving the driver plenty of feedback. The sound filtering through to the cockpit is now eight decibels louder. Ferrari says the silencer assembly retains the thrilling 12-cylinder soundtrack while ensuring an excellent level of acoustic comfort.

The 599 GTO features the latest version of the Ferrari F1 gearbox with 60 millisecond shift times, thanks also to the new multiple downshift feature when keeping the Down paddle pulled when braking hard.

Compared to the 599 GTB Fiorano the steering wheel angle has been reduced 15%, and response times by 20%. The result is sharper turn-in with a smaller steering wheel angle.

The 599 GTO’s aerodynamics have benefited significantly from Ferrari engineers’ experience in F1 and with the 599XX which allowed downforce to be greatly increased without impacting on drag. Thanks to solutions transferred from the track car to the road-going version, the GTO generates downforce of 144 kg at 200 km/h.

The 599 GTO’s cabin reflects its sporty character. Bare aluminium has been used for the floor and there are numerous carbon-fibre features. The standard version of the car offers a cordura and 3D technical fabric trim with matching stitching and Alcantara. Alcantara and leather trim is also available on request. The ergonomics of the F1 gearbox console have been completely redesigned to ensure that the controls are within even easier reach of the driver. The entire interior is trimmed in matte carbon-fibre and technical fabric.

Author: Alison Bell, April 23, 2010
Filed under: Latest news, ferrari

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Luxury car makers target China's super-rich

Luxury car makers target China's super-rich

BEIJING — An extra-long Rolls Royce and the fastest ever Ferrari road car made their debut in Beijing on Friday as dozens of luxury car makers lined up to woo super-rich consumers in the world's biggest market.

Rolls Royce sold two models -- the more expensive of the two bearing a price tag of nine million yuan (1.3 million dollars) -- in the first few hours of the Beijing Auto Show, where nearly 1,000 vehicles have gone on display.

"Chinese are hard-working and they like to reward themselves, and the pinnacle product to reward yourself with is a Rolls Royce," said Paul Harris, the carmaker's Asian regional director.

But rich Chinese will be disappointed if they had hoped to get their hands on one of the limited edition 599 GTO Ferraris at the show.

The legendary Italian sports car maker has made just 599 of the cars, which can reach 335 kilometres per hour (200 miles per hour) -- making it Ferrari's fastest consumer car.

All of the cars, whose price tag Ferrari will not publicly divulge, have already been sold, including 20 in China, said Amedeo Felisa, the company's chief executive.

Luxury car sales in China have soared in recent years to become one of the fastest-growing segments of a market that sped past the United States in 2009 to become the world's biggest.

Automakers sold 13.64 million vehicles last year as increasingly well-off Chinese consumers continued to snap up cars, helped by government incentives such as lower taxes.

"A lot of people are getting rich very, very quickly and they are willing to spend on the most luxurious goods, whether that is watches or luxury cars," said Raymond Tsang of consulting firm Bain & Company.

China has the second-highest number of dollar billionaires in the world after the United States, according to Forbes magazine, and luxury carmakers say they expect strong sales growth in the years ahead.

British sports carmaker Aston Martin entered China in 2007 and said sales were so strong it would become its top market in Asia in 18 months.

"It's the fastest-growth market for us and it has the biggest potential," said Matthew Bennett, Aston Martin regional director.

"These are car enthusiasts who love to drive, which is a very select group of people in China. They love the car, they love the brand and they like to drive."

Rolls Royce, which has made an extra-long vehicle for the "chauffeur driven" Chinese market, said it expects sales to more than triple in 2010 to 300-400 cars, making China its number-two market in the world.

Its customers were "phenomenally successful" entrepreneurs who sometimes pay for the luxury cars in cash.

"Two months ago a customer came in with cash in the back of the car," said a Rolls Royce marketing executive based in Chengdu.

"People want to buy something to show their wealth."

The Chinese market has been a saviour for foreign carmakers as sales in developed countries slumped during the financial crisis and remain sluggish.

Ferrari, which sold more than 200 cars in China last year, said the Beijing launch of the 599 GTO underlined the importance of the Chinese market to its brand.

"For us, China is very important in our strategy, especially for the future," chief executive Felisa said.

"This region is one where we continue to evolve and develop our product."

The auto show, covering an area equivalent to nearly 40 football pitches, also features 65 concept cars and 95 alternative-energy vehicles.

The exhibition opens to industry participants on Sunday but media were given a sneak preview of the line-up on Friday.

Friday, April 23, 2010

The future of Ferrari and Maser


Ferrari plans

22 April 2010 - 10:00

The future of Ferrari and Maser

Maserati has declared that it'll make an Italian rival for the Jaguar XFR and BMW M5. Well, that's not quite what it said. It said it will ‘extend luxury market coverage by entering the high-end E-segment, offering a new product package with specific contents in order to exploit Maserati "DNA"'.

There. Bet you're glad you've got your old TG pals standing by to translate dry industry jargon-speak into a mouth-watering, tyre-smoking prospect for saloonatics.

Having dropped the bombshell, Maserati remained annoying schtum, beyond indicating that the car will come in a couple of variants costing between £50k and £65k. As for timing, we know only that the intention is to launch in or before 2014.

Before that there will be an all-new Quattroporte, the company said. And sometime after 2015, the GranTurismo and GranCabrio will be titivated, so Maserati will maintain a four-car range: new big saloon, very big saloon (that's the Quattroporte replacement), coupe and cabrio.

You might be wondering why on Earth Maserati has revealed its plans. Well, today the entire Fiat-Alfa-Lancia-Abarth-Ferrari-Maserati band of brothers has been opening up the locker marked ‘secret' to a group of important men in suits from stock markets round the world. The idea is to talk up the share price, and be able to get hold of the capital they need to do all this development.

So, just because we like keeping the best until last, here's what Ferrari is up to:

An all-new replacement for the 612 Scaglietti arrives next spring. Here's hoping it'll be less of a controversial looker than the current car.

Then in the second half of next year, the 458 Spider arrives. Wey and indeed hey.

For 2012 there's a heavily revised 599GTB. In fact, Ferrari says that all models will be on sale for four years, then get a mid-life going-over so they can continue for another four years before the full replacement. That's why Ferrari says the California will be modified in 2013.

Meanwhile, on top of the four main series (612 and Cali as the granturismos, 458 and 599 as the supercars), there are the heart-stopping specialty cars: GTO this year, an all-new Enzo in 2012, and a 458 Scuderia in 2013.

Now just because you couldn't have predicted all of those upcoming Ferraris, don't tell us you didn't just get a bit of a tingle reading that they're actually coming.

Paul Horrell, Consultant Editor of TopGear magazine

TAGS// Maserati, Ferrari, Fiat, Ferrari 599, Ferrari California

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REACTION: McLAREN, MERC, FERRARI, RENAULT

Jenson Button topped a McLaren 1-2 in China with Nico Rosberg completing the podium ahead of Fernando Alonso and Robert Kubica.

McLarenJenson Button: "This was my best victory in Formula 1. Every race you win becomes your best, but this was an extremely special win in very tough conditions. And it's especially satisfying because it was a really dominant victory for the whole Vodafone McLaren Mercedes team. We scored a one-two today, and the reason we did so was that every single element within the team worked perfectly. From the strategy calls to the pitstops, you need to get everything just right if you're going to win in conditions like these. And today we did indeed get everything just right. It's not luck that brought us out on top today. We made the right decisions - the guys on the pitwall and back in Woking made the calls brilliantly, and I couldn't have asked for better support. My first few months with Vodafone McLaren Mercedes have been extraordinary - I really feel a real part of the team now - so today's result gives us great excitement, encouragement and enthusiasm as we head to Barcelona, and the start of the European season. We hope to be even stronger there."

Lewis Hamilton: "First of all, congratulations to Jenson - he did an incredible job and made an excellent tyre choice in what were very tricky conditions this afternoon. It was very tough at the start - it started to rain right away, and it was a difficult call to decide to pit for intermediate tyres. I made a very late call when I thought I'd heard a comment over the radio, and pulled into the pits when I was halfway round the final corner! Unfortunately, it wasn't the right choice - the tyres started graining almost immediately and I needed to stop again, this time for dry tyres. But, after that, I got my head down and made up a lot of positions before the rain got heavier. I want to thank the team for making not only some pretty impeccable strategy calls, but also for executing some fantastically slick pitstops. I think the team was operating right at the top of its game today, and I want to thank all the guys for such an incredible effort. Towards the end of the race, my tyres really weren't in good shape. So, while I was able to get past a lot of cars, I wasn't able to catch Jenson. But we both had an absolutely fantastic afternoon, and I think the whole team deserves this incredible one-two result. I hope the spectators and viewers enjoyed it, too! We know we still have to make some improvements to our car, but two wins from four races and the lead of both world championships only make us even more determined. The team is very strong at the moment, and it's just fantastic to be a part of that. We're confident of making an even bigger step for the Spanish Grand Prix next month, and I want to pass on my thanks and encouragement to all the men and women working so hard in Woking and Stuttgart: your efforts are enormously appreciated, and today's result could only have been achieved with all your incredible efforts."

Mercedes GP:Nico Rosberg: "It's fantastic to be on the podium for the second race in succession. It was an eventful race and we made very good choices which put us in contention for the result today. Following advice from Jock and the team, I decided to stay out on slicks and give it a go when the first showers hit. I was out there just thinking please stop raining! But it was the right call and it was a nice feeling to be leading the race for a while. When it started raining again, I suffered quite badly from tyre degradation on the intermediates and Jenson was able to get past. We didn't seem to quite have the pace on inters but third place is great and we've made a step in the right direction this weekend. There's more to come from the team so it's really good to be heading into the European season with some strong results and second place in the Drivers' Championship."

Michael Schumacher: "Today was one of those races that you do not want to remember, just like the whole weekend really. It was not good for me and not good from me. You have to take it as another experience and accept it even if it is frustrating that I was not able to get my tyres together better. My strategy in that respect was not very impressive as in the last 10 laps my tyres were just gone and seemed to be more slicks than intermediates. I was one of those drivers who had gone onto the last set quite early and we should have done that differently and positioned the tyres better. In general I had some good and tight fights which was fun but with my last stop being probably too early, in the end I just couldn't do anything and my fights were quite hopeless then. Congratulations to Nico who made it to the podium and at least one of us scored good points. I am looking forward to going home now but let's see if we manage to!"

FerrariFernando Alonso: "In a race like this, anything can happen. We did five pit stops to change tyres, which is definitely unusual: all in all, I think we took the right decisions at the right time. In a race like this you only understand at the end what would have been the best thing to do, as neither on the pit wall nor in the car do we have a crystal ball! I made a serious mistake at the start as my reflexes let me down and I left early. It's never happened to me before and I am very disappointed with myself. Luckily, despite the penalty, I managed to finish fourth. The passing move on Felipe? If he was not my team-mate, there wouldn't be so much talk about it and for me it was a normal move and it definitely won't compromise our relationship. We have a great potential and we must hope we get some normal races like the one in Bahrain. The start of the championship has gone well: we have shown we are competitive on all the tracks and we have what it takes to win the title. Clearly, we have to up our points tally and improve our qualifying performance. McLaren deserve the top spot, because even though they might not have the best car they have got the most out of it every time."

Felipe Massa: "This was a very complicated race and clearly I can't be happy with the result. Of course, two points are better than nothing, but in the upcoming races we have to do better and that means working on the development of the car. Right from the start, it was difficult to make the right choice in terms of what tyres to use because of the changeable weather. As for the passing move Fernando made, I ended up on a puddle of water coming out of the hairpin and slightly lost control of the car: he managed to get inside me, passing me going into the pit lane. I lost some places because of it, as I had to wait for his stop to be finished. In the closing laps, I was struggling a lot with the tyres, but Michael was suffering worse than me and I managed to pass him. We have seen how the situation can change radically from one race to the next: we need to work as hard as possible to try and get the most out of the potential at our disposal."

RenaultRobert Kubica: "It was an exciting race today and it's good to have scored some more points. At the start of the race I made a bad start and lost a lot of positions, but we made the right decision to stay out on slicks when it started to rain and I was able to move up through the field into third place. However, the critical moment of my race was when the safety car came out, which ended my hopes of a podium because I lost the big lead I had to the cars behind me. So although I'm happy to finish fifth, I still feel a bit frustrated to have missed a podium."

Vitaly Petrov: "I'm happy to finish my first race in Formula 1 and to score my first points. It was a difficult race and it wasn't easy to make the right decisions today. In the beginning, when it started to rain, some drivers came in for intermediates, but we decided to stay out on slicks, which was the right decision. Then I kept talking on the radio with the team to decide when we would change to intermediates, and again we got the timing right. When I changed to my second set of intermediates, I knew it would be important to look after the tyres, but we didn't know if it would continue raining or if the track would dry out. But I kept pushing, the engineers told me that I had good pace, and in the final laps I had some good overtaking moves, especially with Schumacher and Webber, to gain some more places."