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| Bruno Senna's 10th place at Monza on Sunday earned him and the Williams F1 Team a world championship point. Our Chief Operations Engineer Mark Gillan explains, however, that the team had hoped for more from the 53-l |
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Mark Gillan, Chief Operations Engineer:
Q: How would you sum up the performance of the FW34 at Monza?
MG: Overall our ultimate pace was not quite as strong as we have seen in some races but
it was good to see both drivers pushing hard throughout the race. Both had good starts and
ultimately we finished a combined 14 places higher than we started, with Bruno securing a
point in 10th and Pastor just behind in P11, having started P22.
Q: How did the dry weather during Friday practice help the team's
preparations?
MG: For the first time in a while we had a completely dry weekend which allowed us to
complete the entire set-up and test programme in preparation for both qualifying and the
race. We evaluated different down-force levels, mechanical set-ups, fuel levels and tyres
on both shorter and longer runs.
Q: How did the knowledge that Pastor would receive a 10-place grid penalty
affect your approach to the weekend with his car?
MG: It didn't affect our approach in any way.
Q: Tyre wear was more of an issue at Monza than many people predicted. Did you
suffer from excessive wear rates on the inside shoulder, like other teams?
MG: Yes our inner shoulder wear was higher than expected during the weekend but we were
able to manage it during the race.
Q: You split tyre strategies during the race, Bruno doing one stop and Pastor
two. Which was the quicker strategy?
MG: Without the tyre wear limitation a one-stop strategy is quicker around Monza, but
Pastor also picked up a slow puncture during the first stint of the race which limited
what we could do strategy wise with him.
Q: How did the incident between Bruno and Paul di Resta compromise Bruno's
race?
MG: Bruno lost quite a lot of time during the incident and as tyre management was
crucial in the race this sort of track excursion was not good news and can impact lap
times throughout a stint.
Q: The Singapore Grand Prix comes next. What can we expect from the FW34 at the
Marina Bay circuit?
MG: We turn up to each race expecting to score points and are disappointed if we are
unsuccessful. Singapore is a long hard race and the start of the seven fly-away
races that end the season - the whole team are looking forward to the race and are keen to
deliver a good result.