You business news CHAT Il-Vetrina contact us HELP

Granaries Search Members Area Classified Ads easy dino
dino-news

The news on this page are officially published. Only news that arrive to our offices in writing from the authorities are published.

Informazzjoni f'din il-paġna tiġi aġġornata biss mill-awtorita' kkonċernata.

News Categories
you
business
feelgood
clubs
property
entertainment
tourists
community
sports
Any news
Select:  2  A  B  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  Y 
2nd Winner is Mogwan
 
http://stress.maltaweb.biz/members/maltawebbiz/stress/_logo.jpg

Great Britain Prize Winner:
Mogwan @2100

The Second Stress Management (On-Site Massage) Voucher goes to Mogwan.

He should have received an email from Stress Management Services with information about collecting his prize. Mogwan has also made it to lead the main competition and he may now win an other prize at the end of the season.

An other winner will be announced following the race in Germany.

more information


Thanks to our sponsors Stress Management Services
    Reporter: michelbugeja @ rabatmalta.com
  26/06/2006  sports Source: formula1 @ maltaweb.biz
 
2005 FORMULA 1™ Petronas Malaysian Grand Prix Time Table
  Friday 18
March
04.00-05.00 Friday Practice 1

07.00-08.00 Friday Practice 2


Saturday 19
March
02.00-02.45 Saturday Practice 1

03.15-04.00 Saturday Practice 2

06.00 Saturday Qualifying

Sunday 20
March
04.00 Sunday Qualifying

08.00 Race
    Reporter: michelbugeja @ rabatmalta.com
  17/03/2005  sports Source: formula1 @ maltaweb.biz
 
2005 Regulations
  Qualifying
The 2005 race weekend will feature one qualifying session on Saturday afternoon and another on Sunday morning.

The first session will run from 1300 to 1400 on Saturday and will, as in 2004, be single lap qualifying, with the cars going out in the reverse order of their finishing positions at the previous race.

The second session, from 1000 to 1100 on Sunday, will also use the single lap format, with the cars going out in the reverse order of the qualifying on Saturday (i.e. the fastest car on Saturday runs last on Sunday).

The cars will run on Saturday with unrestricted fuel. They will then go into parc ferme after this qualifying session and for the Sunday qualifying session they will run with race fuel, having been allowed to refuel before the second qualifying session. They will not be allowed to refuel again before the race starts.

The times of the two sessions will be aggregated to determine the grid, with the shortest aggregate time in pole position.

Tyres
Drivers will have access to far fewer tyres in 2005 and will have to make a single set last through both qualifying sessions and the entire race. A tyre can only be changed during this time if it is punctured or damaged.

On Fridays, drivers will be able to test two different dry tyre compounds. Ahead of Saturday practice they must choose one of these for the remainder of the weekend. They will then be allocated three sets of this compound – one will be used in practice, one in qualifying and the race, and one kept in reserve in case of punctures or accident damage.

These changes will require harder compounds than in 2004 and will force drivers to drive with tyre preservation in mind. The knock-on effects will be slower lap times and much-revised race strategies.

Drivers will also have access to wet and extreme-weather tyres. These can only be used when the track is declared wet by the race director.

Engines
In 2004 engines had to last one race weekend. From 2005 they must last two – equivalent to a distance of around 1,500 kilometres (close to 1000 miles). If a driver requires an engine change ahead of qualifying, he will drop ten places on the grid for that race. If an engine is changed between the start of qualifying and the race the driver will be put to the back of the grid.

In both instances the driver concerned must use his new engine for the remainder of that meeting and the entire following grand prix weekend. If a driver fails to finish a race, he may start the next meeting with a new engine without penalty.

With even greater reliability required from the engines, these changes are likely to cut rev limits and power outputs, hence reducing car performance.

Aerodynamics
Aerodynamic regulations have been dramatically revised in a bid to reduce downforce and hence cut performance. The key changes are a higher nose and front wing section, a changed rear diffuser profile, and the bringing forward of the rear wing structure.

Initial estimates suggest that the changes could cut downforce by as much as 25 percent over 2004. Designers are likely to claw much of this back as their 2005 machines evolve, but slower laps times and trickier-handling cars would seem inevitable.
    Reporter: michelbugeja @ rabatmalta.com
  06/03/2005  sports Source: formula1 @ maltaweb.biz
 

Subscribe to RSS Feed
 
Bookmark and Share
Site Created by e-Volve DinoWeb © Hosting Information Get your own site
Tel: +356 7952 9151
Fax: +44 709 209 4244
Website: http://evolve.rabatmalta.com
Email: evolve@rabatmalta.com
E-volve Internet Services
44, Triq il-Kullegg,
Rabat Malta
Disclaimer
Internet Connections
Web Development
Portal System
Internet Consultancy