Haas F1 told to remove flexing T-wing
Haas F1 does not know if it can run its Formula 1 car’s T-wing over the rest of the Australian Grand Prix weekend, having been forced to remove it for second practice.
Romain Grosjean, Haas F1 Team VF-17
Motorsport Images
Television images repeatedly showed the device on the VF-17s of Romain Grosjean and Kevin Magnussen flexing significantly throughout the opening practice session.
It was removed before FP2 and Haas team principal Gunther Steiner said he was not sure if it would reappear.
“We ran this wing in the whole Barcelona test and never had a problem with it breaking or anything," said Steiner.
“In FP2 we had to take it off because of the moving, so we need to see what we do in FP3.
"On the data we can see the downforce is there. It is working, so we want to get it back on. But we need to see if we’re allowed to.
“On this racing car everything is so to the edge, everything helps – and you want to keep it on.”
Grosjean repeated his eighth place in the morning session without the T-wing, although he ended that second session four tenths slower than the Toro Rosso of Carlos Sainz.
Steiner said Grosjean could have gone quicker but the result meant the team was still in “good spirits”.
“I think this morning his lap was the best one he did,” Steiner added. “This afternoon we were a few tenths off on his fastest laps.
“It’s good, but it’s so close, as I continue to say - I think I’m annoying people.
“You can end up eighth, you can end up 15th or 16th. Everything is in it.”
While Grosjean’s form was encouraging, a water leak limited Kevin Magnussen’s FP2 running ahead of his Haas race debut.
Magnussen’s problem compounded a “frustrating” pair of sessions for the Dane, who suffered from a balance problem in FP1.
“I didn’t really get much out of it,” Magnussen said of his Friday. “We’ll investigate and, hopefully, find the issue.
“It’s good to see, though, that the car is competitive. That’s the positive to take from today.”
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