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Racing Engineering - GP2 Monza Preview PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 05 September 2007
Racing Engineering and their fellow GP2 series competitors have  this weekend a  date  with  one  of  the  tracks  with  the  most  history  in  the  motor  sport:,  the “Autodromo Nazionale di Monza” near Milan. The  races  at  the  Italian  Grand  Prix  will  mark  the  start  of  the  last  third  of  the season for the F1 feeder series, a season full of excitement and changes, with Racing  Engineering’s  Javier  Villa  usually  among  the  stars  of  each  weekend.
With three wins so far, Javi is already one of the favourites for each GP2 eventracing_engineering_14.jpg and at Monza his target will be to fight again for the top positions and to keep himself in the forefront of the overall standings. For his team-mate, Marcos Martínez, it will be a matter of continuing to build on the progress already shown on the difficult Istanbul Park at the wheel of the GP2 car. Here he finished his first race in the category showing big improvements in his knowledge of the GP2 Dallara, all very different to the F3 and World Series cars he has driven so far. With both drivers, Racing Engineering and its sponsors, Repsol and Telefónica, will go continue at Monza with their 100% Spanish team. A team with two young drivers  with  a  great  future  ahead  and  both  coming  from  Racing  Engineering’s own F3 program,  they  have already moved  into GP2 and are heading towards the premier motor sport category. The continuously improving results make them a good bet in each race and are encouraging the Spanish team and its backers to keep following the same path with the target of finishing the season among the top teams of the GP2 series. The very fast track at Monza’s park is still a “temple of speed” albeit the chicanes that have been added to its layout along the years has really changed its original character.  The  Italian  track  is  always  the  place  where  the  cars  reach  their highest  speeds  of  the  season,  which  linked  to  the  heavy  braking  for  the “variantes”  and  the surrounding  high  kerbs  make  for  quite  a  challenge  for  the teams when looking for a setup to cope with such opposite characteristics. If, on one hand, it is necessary to look for an aerodynamic configuration with minimal drag  and  a  chassis  with the maximum rigidity to be as fast as possible on the straights,  on  the  other  it  is  also  crucial  to  have  dampers  that  allow  the  car  to “jump”  the  kerbs  without  loosing  controlas  well  as  a  very  balanced  chassis capable  of  absorbing  the  huge  mass  transfers  due  at  every  one  of  the Monza hard  braking  areas.  A  really  complex   job  that  all  the  Racing  Engineering technical staff will face with determination from the free practice session due on Friday  morning  that  will  signal  the  start  of  the  ninth  race  meeting  of  the  GP2 2007 series.
Last Updated ( Wednesday, 05 September 2007 )
 
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