Advertisement
F1: Palmer confused by 'worst weekend' of career
By alley - Apr 18, 2016, 4:31 AM ET

F1: Palmer confused by 'worst weekend' of career

Renault Formula 1 rookie Jolyon Palmer has described his Chinese Grand Prix weekend as the worst of his entire racing career.

After qualifying 19th at Shanghai on Saturday in what he called a "catastrophically bad" performance, Palmer finished last as all 22 drivers completed the race. So far, Palmer and the team are at a loss to understand where the performance of the RS16 has disappeared to following a solid start in Australia.

"I'm down on aero, but we could only see it in qualifying," Palmer told Autosport. "There were also some damaged parts in qualifying as well, and we managed to fix half the problem for the race, but I'm missing that aero.

"The safety car [after a tire blew on Daniel Ricciardo's Red Bull on lap three] was definitely not good for the strategy. But I think we need to understand what's going on with the car first and then focus on the strategy.

"Overall, for me personally, I think the whole weekend was maybe my worst ever as a racing driver. It's been very bad."

Palmer was at least pleased to complete a grand prix distance after a hydraulic failure meant he could not even take the start of the previous round in Bahrain.

"It's good experience, but a tough experience because it's looking pretty bad," he said. "I'm sure we'll recover and then it'll be useful experience. And I'm still learning. To do a race trying different strategies, using three different compound of tires, degradation on different axles...

"There's more stuff I'm learning and I've only done two grands prix in my life, so there are positives, but at the moment the negative is that the pace is pretty bad and that's obviously what the whole result comes down to."

Palmer has vowed to leave no stone unturned this week on a visit to the factory with the aim of understanding the issues before the next race in Russia.

"I will be pouring through data myself and in the simulator, but basically trying to analyze myself what's going on," he said.

 

Originally on Autosport.com

Comments

Comments are disabled until you accept Social Networking Cookies. Update cookie preferences

If the dialog doesn't appear, ad-blockers are often the cause; try disabling yours or see our Social Features Support.