Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

Two (and a bit) years on: Red Bull's 2024 political ructions have had the opposite effect

Feature
Formula 1
Belgian GP
Two (and a bit) years on: Red Bull's 2024 political ructions have had the opposite effect

BTCC newcomer fills final WSR BMW seat for rest of 2026

BTCC
BTCC newcomer fills final WSR BMW seat for rest of 2026

How BMW adapted its Spa trick to win the Sao Paulo 6 Hours

Feature
WEC
Interlagos
How BMW adapted its Spa trick to win the Sao Paulo 6 Hours

Cars, stars and the shootout winners from the 2026 Goodwood Festival of Speed

Feature
General
Cars, stars and the shootout winners from the 2026 Goodwood Festival of Speed

Rivals block KTM request to open MotoGP engines due to breakdowns

MotoGP
German GP
Rivals block KTM request to open MotoGP engines due to breakdowns

Vinales after German GP woes: “I need support from team but all I get is criticism”

MotoGP
German GP
Vinales after German GP woes: “I need support from team but all I get is criticism”

What we learned as MotoGP's title fight tightened in German GP

Feature
MotoGP
German GP
What we learned as MotoGP's title fight tightened in German GP

What would you like to ask Esteban Ocon?

Formula 1
Belgian GP
What would you like to ask Esteban Ocon?

Belgian Grand Prix: Marussia to press ahead with upgrade despite loss of Friday running

Marussia will run a significant upgrade to its MR01 for the rest of the Belgian Grand Prix weekend despite being unable to gather any data during Friday's two wet free practice sessions at Spa

The team brought a big package to Belgium, consisting of several new parts including new bridge wings, bodywork and tea tray, exhausts, flick-ups on the rear brake hubs, and a completely new concept rear wing.

It is the second big upgrade Marussia has been able to produce this year using McLaren's windtunnel, as part of its technical agreement with the Woking outfit, and the team hopes it could be worth as much as half a second in race trim.

But Marussia decided not to run some elements of the upgrade during Friday's sessions, including the rear wings, given the lack of information it was likely to gather and the potential for damage.

"It's all part of a package, so unless it's all on the car we're not learning much," team principal John Booth told AUTOSPORT.

"We will definitely run it all tomorrow now. There's no point in not doing so.

"It was a shame we couldn't find out more about them today, and see whether the aero data from the track correlates with what we expect from the upgrade, but hopefully we can find out more in P3."

Marussia's chief race engineer Dave Greenwood added that the latest upgrade was part of a deeper programme of improvement that he expected to pay dividends through the rest of the year.

"I think it's easy sometimes to look at the classification sheet and see the gaps and the positions at the end of the race and not think that there are improvements being made but that's not the case," he said. "But if you look at the underlying pace that's getting a lot better.

"We started the season around 4.5 per cent off the leaders in the race and it's somewhere around 2-2.5 per cent now, so that's a good improvement and going forward that will look even better when we have these upgrades and at the end of the year the gaps will be significantly less."

Previous article Christian Horner says 'accountants shouldn't run Formula 1' as RRA rows continue
Next article Red Bull adamant driver equality policy will stay

Top Comments