Blake
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MAGYAR NAGYDIJ 2006
Mass Dampers
First thing is first, Renault (and presumably, any other team that uses them) will be running their cars with Mass Dampers this weekend. The FIA has advised that teams who run these devices at Hungary will not be punished regardless of the result at the Court of Appeal hearing.
Whether or not this recommendation was given by the FIA, I suspect that Renault may have started using them again, anyway. They cannot afford to lose the championship on track. In my opinion, it would be better to keep scoring big points and then take the risk of an FIA penalty.
Alas, its a pointless argument for the moment, while they are still allowed to be used.
EDIT: STR have been told to remove them by the stewards as they believe they are now illegal, so perhaps Renault will follow suite, and wait to hear the results of the Court of Appeal hearing.
Jacques Villeneuve to Sit Out the Hungarian Grand Prix
JV will be sitting on the sidelines this weekend, as he apparently recovers from his accident at Hockenheim.
Hell be replaced by BMW Sauber test driver Robert Kubica. Robert will be the first Pole to race in F1.
Grand Prix Preview
Typically the most boring race of the season, the Hungarian GP comes at the most exciting point in the 2006 championship battle. The big question at the moment is whether or not Michael Schumacher can pull of Alonsos four-wins-in-a-row trick, by clinching his 5th win at the Dust Bowl.
Alonso, while he did win his first GP here, didnt get a good here in 2005. Despite being unlucky, he did admit that the car was off the pace here in 2005, so it will be interesting to see if Renault have a competitive package this weekend.
Incidentally, Michael Schumacher claimed pole position and finished 2nd at this circuit in 2005. So it is possible that we will see further Ferrari domination.
This will probably be a good race for McLaren, also, who have a car that seems to perform very well in high downforce circuits like this, and Monaco. Especially after the good pace that Räikkönen had at Hockenheim last week.
Williams and Honda could be in for good points, also.
The circuit itself is tight and slow (16 corners, with no real straights to speak of), and is very much like a go-kart track. This, unfortunately, leads to very little passing, and ultimately quite boring races.
Mass Dampers
First thing is first, Renault (and presumably, any other team that uses them) will be running their cars with Mass Dampers this weekend. The FIA has advised that teams who run these devices at Hungary will not be punished regardless of the result at the Court of Appeal hearing.
Whether or not this recommendation was given by the FIA, I suspect that Renault may have started using them again, anyway. They cannot afford to lose the championship on track. In my opinion, it would be better to keep scoring big points and then take the risk of an FIA penalty.
Alas, its a pointless argument for the moment, while they are still allowed to be used.
EDIT: STR have been told to remove them by the stewards as they believe they are now illegal, so perhaps Renault will follow suite, and wait to hear the results of the Court of Appeal hearing.
Jacques Villeneuve to Sit Out the Hungarian Grand Prix
JV will be sitting on the sidelines this weekend, as he apparently recovers from his accident at Hockenheim.
Grand Prix Preview
Typically the most boring race of the season, the Hungarian GP comes at the most exciting point in the 2006 championship battle. The big question at the moment is whether or not Michael Schumacher can pull of Alonsos four-wins-in-a-row trick, by clinching his 5th win at the Dust Bowl.
Alonso, while he did win his first GP here, didnt get a good here in 2005. Despite being unlucky, he did admit that the car was off the pace here in 2005, so it will be interesting to see if Renault have a competitive package this weekend.
Incidentally, Michael Schumacher claimed pole position and finished 2nd at this circuit in 2005. So it is possible that we will see further Ferrari domination.
This will probably be a good race for McLaren, also, who have a car that seems to perform very well in high downforce circuits like this, and Monaco. Especially after the good pace that Räikkönen had at Hockenheim last week.
Williams and Honda could be in for good points, also.
The circuit itself is tight and slow (16 corners, with no real straights to speak of), and is very much like a go-kart track. This, unfortunately, leads to very little passing, and ultimately quite boring races.
