Grand Prix 2014 Australian Grand Prix Practice, Qualifying & Race Discussion

24 years old. Apprenticeship fully served, and finally arrived in one of the two seats that you've been working towards sitting in for years; that of the quadruple reigning champions. And to start with, your home Grand Prix. All you need is for the car and engine combination to maintain its previous stratospheric standards...

At time of going to press, testing has shown little sign that Daniel Ricciardo's dream will be realised. Although, it has to be said, at time of going to press, testing has not been quite as indicative as it could have been. We don't know who is going to be fast and we won't know until the lights go out in Melbourne.

Ricciardo's team-mate, paradoxical pantomime villain and quadrakaiser Sebastian Vettel is going for his tenth race win in a row, although early suggestions are that his assault on double figures might not be as straightforward as some of the previous nine. At Jerez, getting to double figures in terms of laps was a struggle..

Ricciardo will have to make sure he performs well this season to make sure he keeps the dream seat ahead of Daniil Kvyat, presuming the young Russian puts Jean-Eric Vergne's F1 career to sleep in a dignified and respectful ceremony.

Lotus, meanwhile, have very little money, necessitating the parachuting in of Scrooge El Duck as their driver to back up 2012's other panel-beater Romain Grosjean. Their nose looks rather different to anything else out there, and is closest in design to Williams' 2004 walrus nose. Which doesn't save the fears.

McLaren and Mercedes will back up their silver cars with a British World Champion, a Mercedes engine and a plethora of team principals. Button is, of course, the Melbourne specialist. They've got some running in at Jerez; it is unknown whether either are quick, but neither are stationary.

Fernando Alonso's Ferrari hegemony is about to be challenged by Kimi Raikkonen's arrival. Raikkonen won in Australia last year, so he's got form, and this race will be the first to tell us if Ferrari team radio this year will be a story of two passionate racers abusing their engineers, or two old men moaning about their backs.

Sauber's driver line-up is the most boring thing in Formula One since the US Grand Prix of 2005.

Nico Hulkenburg gets ready for his third consecutive last year before he is signed by a big team. A poor Force India will lead to the Hulk crying himself to sleep, while team-mate Sergio Perez comforts him with stories about how McLaren isn't all it's cracked up to be.

Williams have an interesting partnership; Felipe Massa released from the suffocating stranglehold of the Alonso anaconda and partnered with an almost-ripe pretender in Valteri Bottas. They have a new old livery, a new sponsor and new hope. Williams-Mercedes still doesn't sound right.

And, hey, the 2014 Australian Grand Prix has to be the best chance for Marussia and Caterham to actually score a point; only 9 of the other teams' engines need fall apart and 6 of them are made by Renault! Race finishing expert Max Chilton could be the beneficiary. Although he could actually finish 11th if there are only 10 finishers.

So, all that's left to talk about is Melbourne itself. Despite the rugby and cricket last year, the Grand Prix itself has been quite Pommie friendly in the last several years! The yellow lines at the edge of the track bordered by green walls have been a sign of F1 starting for a number of years, and there has been good racing backed up by poor reliability. And, boy, do we expect poor reliability...
 
The Pits We may be about to have precedent set by someone other than Lewis Hamilton. Surely this will be fairly straight forward. If they don't have the necessary data to punish him or if it ambigous, then it will completely undermine the rules the teams have just spent the past year preparing for.
 
I think the emphasis of Charlie Whiting's comments earlier in the weekend were more on the overall 100kg limit than the instantaneous fuel flow rate, but I doubt he'll be able to escape with anything less than the equivalent of a stop/go penalty if he has gone over the limit.
 
Ted Kravitz @tedkravitz
We're hearing Ricciardo has been disqualified for using more than 100kg/hr of fuel in race. Will post FIA confirmation ASAP

Bugger.
 
That's a shame for him (but a small victory for my disastrous start to FF1...) but Red Bull will still be leaving very happy with the progress they made and the Aussies got to have a party, even if it was short lived.
 
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My twitter feed says its a DQ.

Not surprised its happened. Just a shame in this day an age of live telemetry we have to wait until after the race to find out.
 
Well, for Red Bull, this sounds like a pretty major software error; for them to allow a fuel flow greater than the maximum permitted is just inexplicable!

Well, that explains Ricciardo's pace during the race and qualifying then!
 
The Artist..... Ricciardo still completed the race within the 100kg limit as far as I'm aware, there were just times where he exceeded the 100kg/hour instantaneous fuel flow limit. So his average fuel consumption will have been the same as everyone else's in the race.
 
I'm not saying he didn't break the rules, but the rule he broke won't have made much difference to his (average) race pace. Consuming more than the 100kg would mean he could have run faster in the race, whereas spending a bit of time above 100kg/hour but keeping to the 100kg overall limit only means there were times where he could run faster but these had to be offset by running slower at other times.
 
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Should Ricciardo's disqualification be confirmed that would make it 5 merc engines in the top-six then. Sounds a bit ominous for the rest.
 
sushifiesta, I disagree. Peaks with more than 100kg/h could mean faster accelaration. When accelatering fuel flow is higher than when decelarating. He would have definitely gone faster with higher fuelflow peaks.

Saying it wouldn't matter is a bit like saying that when the average racespeed is 170 km/h it doesn't matter a lot if they go faster than 200 km/h on the straight.
 
And the fact is that the report stated that his car consistently broke the limit suggests that it was throughout the race!(I would guess the same may be true in qualifying as well!)
 
The race wasn't spectacular but there were some really impressive drives from so many drivers. Magnusson, Ricciardo, Kvyat and if it wasn't for Bottas' mistake I'd have his drive as drive of the race, he recovered so much ground twice! Of course Rosberg was superb. Go Berg!!!

Loved the podium (gutted for Ricciardo if he gets dsq)!

Can't wait to see what a race with Hamilton, Vettel and Massa will bring and despite being a Hamilton and Rosberg fan that gap is too big.

Special big up to Maldonado for leaving Williams because they weren't good enough for him. Great move, twat :)
 
I love Kamui but he's been involved in too many of these type of accidents and was way too aggressive brake failure or not. Massa thinks he should be banned for a race.
 
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