Baku's record top speeds not expected by track designer
Formula 1 track designer Hermann Tilke says he was caught by surprise that the new Baku Formula 1 track produced record top speeds at the end of the straight.
Photo by: XPB Images
Valtteri Bottas was officially clocked across the start/finish line as going at 366.1 km/h during qualifying in Baku, as the result of a slipstream he had got off Max Verstappen's Red Bull.
However, as braking zone for Turn 1 is after the start/finish line, Williams' data showed that his car continued to accelerate after that reading and reached a peak of 378km/h shortly afterwards.
This figure is in excess of speed trap figures from F1's other high-speed venues, Mexico and Monza.
At last year's Mexican Grand Prix during qualifying, Felipe Massa was recorded at 364.3km/h through the speed trap, which beat the previous benchmark of 354.6km/h which Sergio Perez had delivered at Monza earlier in the season.
While Monza's low-downforce configuration has always helped produce top speeds, Mexico's result last year was the result of the less dense air reducing drag on the F1 cars.
However, Baku's top speeds are more a shock because of the tight and twisty nature of the track once the cars have left the 2.1km long straight.
In fact, Bottas's efforts may well set an unofficial record – with the previous benchmark understood to be Juan Pablo Montoya's 372.6km/h that he set at Monza in his McLaren in 2005.
Tilke told Motorsport.com that neither he nor the teams had expected Baku to be so quick, with original estimates being as low as 340km/h.
"Our computer programme for laptime and speed simulation stops at 340km/h, because you never know what teams will use in terms of wings and settings," explained Tilke.
"Some teams said it would be about 345km/h or 350 km/h, but in the end it was a lot more. I think it is a record in all of F1."
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