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

Why Red Bull and Verstappen struggled at Silverstone – and expect the same at Spa

Formula 1
British GP
Why Red Bull and Verstappen struggled at Silverstone – and expect the same at Spa

Steiner explains why teams are forgoing a profit share with MotoGP

MotoGP
German GP
Steiner explains why teams are forgoing a profit share with MotoGP

How Leclerc has changed his steering wheel software for the first time since joining Ferrari

Formula 1
British GP
How Leclerc has changed his steering wheel software for the first time since joining Ferrari

Why Vasseur's steady hand is exactly what fervent Ferrari needs right now

Feature
Formula 1
British GP
Why Vasseur's steady hand is exactly what fervent Ferrari needs right now

Top 10 F1 drivers of the 2000s

Feature
Formula 1
Top 10 F1 drivers of the 2000s

How the more technical F1 2026 regulations hinder customer teams

Formula 1
British GP
How the more technical F1 2026 regulations hinder customer teams

FIA looking into Red Bull and Ferrari's rotating F1 wings after Verstappen crashes

Formula 1
British GP
FIA looking into Red Bull and Ferrari's rotating F1 wings after Verstappen crashes

The pre-race tweak that hampered Hamilton's British GP

Formula 1
British GP
The pre-race tweak that hampered Hamilton's British GP

Raikkonen won't use KERS at Sakhir

Kimi Raikkonen has confirmed that he will not use KERS in Friday practice at Sakhir, although Ferrari will reinstate the system on his team-mate Felipe Massa's car

Ferrari opted out of KERS completely in China after previous reliability problems, but Massa in particular felt that the loss of the device had made the car even less competitive.

AUTOSPORT understands that Raikkonen's weight makes the KERS decision particularly marginal on his car. Ferrari is set to introduce a new lighter-weight chassis for him in the next race in a bid to improve this situation, with the chassis undergoing crash testing yesterday.

But despite this, Raikkonen says he will not return to KERS yet.

"I won't use it tomorrow," said Raikkonen. "The other car will run it tomorrow and then we will make a decision about which way we go. We want to look a little bit to compare the two cars and see what difference it makes."

McLaren has suggested that the long straight and heavy braking areas at Sakhir will make KERS more useful than at any other race this season, but Raikkonen is still unsure how much benefit the device offers.

"It is probably faster in quite a few places, but the car was not too bad in the last race after qualifying," he said. "We could have been faster with it there, but there is not much difference driving with or without for us."

Of the other teams using KERS, BMW's Nick Heidfeld is set to continue with the system in Bahrain, while Renault - which also opted against it at Shanghai - is likely to run KERS in Friday practice before deciding its plans for the rest of the weekend.

Previous article Heidfeld: Lack of updates hindering BMW
Next article Q & A with Fernando Alonso

Top Comments

Latest news