19/02/2016
NEWS STORY
Introducing his team's 2016 contender, Williams Chief Technical Officer, Pat Symonds admitted that whilst aiming to improve the low speed performance so lacking in the FW37, the team is introducing operational changes aimed at taking team forward.
"The FW37 was a pretty effective car so we concentrated on understanding the areas where we could improve it without losing the attributes which made it effective," said the Briton.
"It is no secret that the low speed performance of the FW37 didn't match its high speed performance so a lot of time was spent looking into why this was and subsequently making changes, which we hope will improve the situation. On top of this we looked at the normal physical obstacles to development that one always meets during the life of a car and tried to push those barriers back.
"We have very few changes to the technical regulations," he continued. "As always we are trying to improve safety and so the cockpit sides adjacent to the driver's head are not only higher but they are also significantly stronger.
Asked about the timescale of the design process, he said: "In mid-January 2015, before the FW37 had even run, we held a meeting to try and work our way through a concept ‘shopping list' and to narrow down the areas in which we hoped the FW38 would out perform its pre-nascent forerunner.
"As we started running the FW37 we could see more clearly the design directions we wanted to take with the next car and at the same time started laying out the basic architecture such that critical path items would hit their design release targets. The monocoque and gearbox, for example, fall into this category as both need considerable time, not just in design but also in structural analysis.
"Something spectators may notice more is that the engines will sound a bit sharper," he added. "Over the winter we can expect more power from improved combustion and this will in itself produce a bit more noise but perhaps more significantly the turbo wastegate is no longer plumbed into the main exhaust.
"This should not only produce an engine note that is around 12% louder than before but may also from time to time trigger some of the dramatic sounds we all associate with high performance turbo charged engines.
Asked how 2016 will pan out for the team, he said: "One can never tell because no matter how much effort you put in and no matter what the magnitude of your improvements all things in sport are relative. This means the outcome of the season is not just a function of your efforts but those of your competitors as well.
"At Williams we are honest about our mistakes and try to learn from them. Just as in the design of the car we always analyse strengths and weaknesses, so we do with the team. This has led to several operational changes for 2016 which, although not particularly visible from the outside, should see the team better able to cope with the many variant scenarios that racing will inevitably throw at them.
"One strength we take into 2016 is stability. It is easy to underestimate the power of this but with the same driver pairings and continuity in the engineering team we hope to be up to speed quickly – something particularly important with only 8 days of pre-season testing.
Any predictions?
"I have been in the sport far too long to fall into the trap of making predictions," he responds. "Over the last couple of years Williams has regained the competitive spirit it was so long famous for. I want to harness and augment that spirit and use it to drive us forward in a progressive manner while always keeping a strategic eye on the future and in particular the big changes due for 2017."
Check out our Williams FW38 gallery, here.