Blog Sem Fins Lucrativos, somente com o intuito de divulgar a carreira do piloto Bruno Senna e o IAS. Carol Lo Re
sábado, 3 de julho de 2010
sexta-feira, 2 de julho de 2010
Bruno Senna fala das expectativas para a próxima corrida na Inglaterra
"Competir num circuito histórico com Silverstone é sempre muito especial. Tenho boas lembranças de Silverstone como quando venci aqui na GP2 em 2008 e também quando pude terminar no pódio na Fórmula 3. E voltar ao circuito agora em um carro de Fórmula 1 é ótimo. A pista é muito desafiadora para cada piloto e tem um monte de curvas rápidas. Você precisa de um carro com downforce e a aerodinâmica também é um fator importante. O novo setor da " Arena " é bastante interessante e algumas curvas rápidas foram criadas até você voltar novamente à pista antiga. Estou ansioso para o Grande Prêmio da Inglaterra e depois de Valência, onde pudemos novamente terminar a corrida com os dois carros, queremos fazer o melhor que pudermos. "
Fonte e Foto: HRT F1 Team
quinta-feira, 1 de julho de 2010
Video - Hamilton, Button & Senna’s McLaren
McLaren have put out a video showing Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button poking around their store of old Formula 1 cars and pulling back the covers on a 1988 MP4-4.
Both take turns sitting in the car which was driven by Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost, winning 15 of the 16 races they started. It feels a bit scripted in parts but on the whole it’s an interesting watch.
Hamilton was supposed to drive the car at the Goodwood Festival of Speed last year. But on the day before his run it broke down while being driven by Bruno Senna.
This year the Hamilton and Button will take turns driving the 1986 MP4-2C that Prost drove to the world championship, as well as the MP4-23 Hamilton won his title in two years ago.
http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk
Both take turns sitting in the car which was driven by Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost, winning 15 of the 16 races they started. It feels a bit scripted in parts but on the whole it’s an interesting watch.
Hamilton was supposed to drive the car at the Goodwood Festival of Speed last year. But on the day before his run it broke down while being driven by Bruno Senna.
This year the Hamilton and Button will take turns driving the 1986 MP4-2C that Prost drove to the world championship, as well as the MP4-23 Hamilton won his title in two years ago.
http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk
Bruno Senna apoia o leilão de caridade da Starcards
Com o apoio de Sutton Images, a Starcards promoverá o Leilão de Caridade com artigos autografados por pilotos da Fórmula 1. Os artigos serão leiloados online durante o GP da Inglaterra no endereço www.starcard.org . A receita ajudará o Hospital infantil "Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charit".O piloto brasileiro Bruno Senna da HRT apoiou a iniciativa. Clique na imagem acima para ampliá-la.
Maiores informações nos sites:
http://www.starcards.org/
http://www.gosh.org/about-
quarta-feira, 30 de junho de 2010
Bruno Senna acelera carro da última vitória de Ayrton na F1
SÃO PAULO - Bruno Senna vai pilotar neste fim de semana um dos carros mais importantes da vitoriosa carreira do tio Ayrton. Convidado pelos organizadores, o piloto da HRT F1 Team conduzirá a McLaren MP4/8-Ford no Festival da Velocidade de Goodwood, na Inglaterra. O modelo de 1993 - coincidentemente, ano da primeira edição do evento em Goodwood - venceu os GPS do Brasil, Europa (Donington Park), Mônaco, Japão e Austrália. Foi em Adelaide que o tricampeão conquistou a última de suas 41 vitórias na Fórmula 1.
Será a quarta vez que Bruno integrará a lista de inscritos em Godwood. Anteriormente, havia participado em 2005, com uma McLaren, em 2006 com uma Lotus e novamente com uma McLaren em 2009. "Não vejo a hora de acelerar o carro. Ele tem um valor sentimental e histórico enorme, por tudo aquilo que representou na história do Ayrton. Foi com ele que ganhou também a sexta corrida em Mônaco", lembrou Bruno.
Nesta quarta-feira, Bruno foi a Genebra (Suíça) buscar uma nova bicicleta que passará a utilizar em seus treinamentos físicos pelas estradas do sul da França. A partir da sexta-feira, iniciará as atividades na pista em subida de Goodwood, que receberá outros astros da Fórmula 1 como o líder Lewis Hamilton e o segundo colocado da temporada, Jenson Button. "Devo andar duas vezes por dia até domingo. O MP4/8 é praticamente original. A maior diferença são os pneus, que serão os Avon desenvolvidos especialmente para subidas de montanha", explicou.
Na Inglaterra, Bruno estará com um olho nos carros e outro na televisão. Depois de assistir à primeira fase da Copa do Mundo em Mônaco, onde também viu a vitória sobre o Chile nas oitavas-de-final na companhia de Felipe Massa e Lucas di Grassi, Bruno estará ligado no "mata-mata" das quartas-de-final entre Brasil e Holanda. "Será uma partida difícil, mas acredito na vitória da seleção no tempo normal. Vamos passar às semifinais, tenho certeza", concluiu.
Fonte: MF2 Serviços Jornalísticos
Foto: HRT F1/MF2
Geoff Willis Reflects On Hispania’s Season So Far
Hispania techinical chief Geoff Willis has been discussing the team’s late arrival to the grid at the beginning of the season, and how the Spanish outfit has moved on from Bahrain to the halfway point of the season.
“We started [preparations for 2010] quite late and the first race was a huge logistical challenge and more of a shakedown,” said Willis. “We’ve been steadily improving our organisation because hardly any of the team had actually worked together before and certainly not in an F1 context.
“I think overall we’ve had a reasonable period of reliability and have been pushing the car harder as the drivers have got up to speed. Most of our problems have been related to transmission hydraulics, which is a complicated part of the car. It is the first time that Xtrac has been involved as a supplier of the whole system.
“It’s tough considering that we don’t have testing and we therefore have to try and find fixes on the dyno. I think to date we have generally kept level with the other start-up teams which are developing the cars.
“I think the drivers have found their way around the car pretty well and from race two or three we have been more or less fixed on set-up and are getting slicker at operating the car and getting the best out of the race weekend.”
The testing ban was introduced as part of the FIA cost-cutting measure, led by former president Max Mosley. However, despite working for one of the smallest teams on the grid, Willis believes a complete season-long ban is not the way forward:
“From a purely engineering point of view, if we don’t have testing we have to compensate with rig testing and analysis,” he explained. “The money you don’t spend on testing you spend on that. The mistake, for me, is that while it was sensible to stop unrestricted testing, a better balance would have been to have certain fixed testing times common to all teams and wrap up a commercial operation around it.
“You have to remember that there are often fairly large gaps when there is no F1 in Europe and we could have one test in Spain, one in Italy, one in the UK, something like that. The downside is that to do that, unless the calendar was particularly sympathetic, would mean going back to requiring an additional test team.”
Hispania began the season in partnership with Dallara, but split with the chassis supplier at the end of May. Willis explained the problem of buying a customer chassis. “[They were] two different types of problem for us, the main one being that you need to understand how the car arrived at its current specification in order to know how to develop it. If you don’t develop you effectively go backwards.
“There are quite a few bits on the car that need bringing up to F1 level and quite a lot of detail bits and pieces on it to improve reliability and longevity of components. Then we have to add performance to the car and it’s important for us to choose the best things we can do to the car for the minimum amount of time and money.”
Willis also stated the teams development direction for the remainder of their debut season. ”In the short term we will be using hired wind tunnel time and will be doing a balanced programme of wind tunnel and CFD,” he said. “For in-season development right now, with the time pressures it’s almost certainly going to be a 100% CFD programme, which has its slight risks, but I think from where we are, is sensible.”
Willis thinks that Karun Chandhok and Bruno Senna are one of the main reasons for the progress the team have made this season, and is not too bothered about the introduction of the 107% rule next year. “You can clearly see we have been maintaining pace and if anything compared to the leading cars, closing up. We were 6.5% off the pace and now we are typically 4.8-5% off with qualifying time. The car is fundamentally the same, so I think that has come from the drivers. Both of them have worked well with the team and have a good working relationship.
“I think at one race [the 107% rule] would have been an issue,” he added. “But from an F1 engineering point of view the limit should actually be closer than that, more like a 5% rather than a 7% rule. I think you have to expect the teams to operate at a certain level, that’s what we want from Formula 1.
“Obviously we would be a little bit uncomfortable with 105% in our current position but it wouldn’t surprise me in the future. It’s just the nature of Formula 1. Go back 20 years and it was much more scattered.”
Willis also had praise for the team’s engine supplier: “It’s always good to partner Cosworth, we’ve got a very good relationship with them. We know the engine is competitive and they’ve helped us out a lot with the fact that we had such a short run-up into the season.
“I think now we’ve got to do a little bit more in terms of bench dyno and calibration, there’s some race modes that we cannot use because we haven’t done enough, that sort of thing, but overall a good, reliable engine with very few problems that weren’t self-inflicted. But we’ve not had repeats of those and that’s a good thing.”
http://www.thecheckeredflag.co.uk
Bruno Senna: the Hispania inquisition
I've been chatting with Brazil's favourite nephew, and asked a few pertinent questions.
How many times do you get asked about Ayrton every day?
Every 30 seconds on average! Ninety percent of the interviews I do, I get asked about Ayrton. I'm used to it. I think in a couple of years that will wear off. As much as I've answered the same questions over and over again a million times since I started racing, there are always different people reading the articles. Hopefully in a year's time I'll get some new questions.
Is F1 harder than you thought it was going to be?
Oh yes. F1 is really difficult. It's extremely competitive. But it's a friendly environment too.
Do you share hire cars with your team mate, Karun Chandkok?
Yeah quite a lot. We drove all the way from Barcelona to Monaco together actually, and I worked out how to make Karun shut up. All you have to do is go fast in the wet. When a car is aquaplaning he's very quiet.
That's a very smart watch you're wearing. What is it?
It's a Hublot Aerobang, and it's my favourite. I have a few Hublot watches as they're my sponsor, and this one is very hard to get off my wrist. My friends keep trying to steal it but they'll never succeed. It's the best freebie I've ever been given.
What's the weirdest thing you've ever received from a fan?
Some fans send me their own photos, and what am I supposed to do with them? They send me photos of their families, which I appreciate but if I did an autograph session a year ago I can't be expected to remember who they are. So I just get all these random photos of people I don't recognize.
What's the last tune you downloaded?
Kid Cudi with David Guetta - Memories. [sings] All the crazy shit I did last night....
What was the last film you saw?
Inglorious Basterds, though I didn't quite finish it. I was watching it on the plane and we landed early. Tarantino is really good.
What's the oldest VHS recording you own?
That would be the 1986 or 1987 F1 championship tape with Ayrton. But it's mouldy now, I can't watch it.
When was the last time you were in a fight, and what was it over?
I've never fought with my fists. But I fought with words maybe last weekend.
What's your dream car?
That's a complex question because you want different cars for different things. I think the McLaren F1 is pretty high on the list. I drove a Porsche 997 GT2 and that's a very nice car. The Porsche Carrera GT has the most lovely engine note, I love that car.
What's your fancy dress costume of choice?
I would go as a stick of chewing gum. In Brazil there's an advert for Trident chewing gum where a guy dresses up as a stick of gum.
What's your most treasured possession?
My PC.
You're allowed to invite three celebrities to dinner. Who do you invite?
Can they be girls? This is going to get me in trouble.... Sienna Miller, Scarlet Johansson, and the Victoria's Secret model Doutzen Kroes.
http://www.metrof1.com/
Foto Inédita de Bruno Senna - Livro Centenário do Corinthians
Em seu Twitter
Pessoal, segue em primeira mao a foto que foi publicada no livro do centenario do Corinthians.
Pessoal, segue em primeira mao a foto que foi publicada no livro do centenario do Corinthians.
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