Apr.14 - Red Bull has identified the problem that ended world champion Max Verstappen's Australian GP.

The Dutchman is not only behind Ferrari's Charles Leclerc in the drivers' standings, he is only sixth overall after two failures out of three races so far.

"We were able to clarify the cause of the fuel leak in Max's car," Dr Helmut Marko told Speed Week.

However, he admitted he isn't sure the team will be able to implement a short-term fix before Imola.

"The matter is very complex," said the 78-year-old Austrian. "The problem is absolutely different from that of Bahrain."

Verstappen, 24, was outwardly angry and also downbeat after Melbourne, but Red Bull team boss Christian Horner insists the title race is far from over.

"The encouraging thing for us is that we basically have a fast car," he said.

"Max will fight back. Of course Max was frustrated after his retirement, but we've got a little more than ten percent of the season behind us, so there's still a long way to go."


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18 F1 Fan comments on “Red Bull found cause fuel leak on Verstappen's car

  1. Swede

    Frothing fuel. Duhhhh.

    Get in with it. We've been forced to deal with crap Ethanol for 35 years now, and RB has how many hundreds of engineers?

    What rubbish. Esp Marko...

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  2. shroppyfly

    spoil the ship for a ha'porth of tar springs to mind, I told em to stop using German jubilee clips (which incidentally are made in china ) lol

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  3. CanadianEh

    "The matter is very complex...".

    Lets think about this. Functional operating systems continuously monitor major systems autonomously and report back through telemetry. Any mission-critical system typically has a Built-In-Test (BIT) functionality that can trouble-shoot to the system / module level. In other words BIT will get you to which card failed. Test-benches will parse out to the sub-component level on the failed card. Engineering will already have a pretty clear idea on what caused a failure by the time the chassis rolls to a stop. Rarely is it a software-only glitch.

    It would seem to me that Dr. Goebbels is sand-bagging. They'll be up-and-running for Imola. If they aren't, they need some new engineers.

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      • ReallyOldRacer

        The problem that Swede mentions was solved, even in road cars, over 25 yrs ago. RB's problem is not corrosion, but could be related to your observation, system pressure. More likely it simply has to do with their mission to reduce weight. Ineffective lightweight fittings? They won't say and we will never know. Let's go with a Blo' conspiracy theory. More fun that way. :)

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          • ReallyOldRacer

            Swede, my friend, the crappy rubber fuel lines on your motorbike bear no resemblance to a F1 car fuel delivery system. Nice bike but it's not a $12m racing car.

  4. Shroppyfly

    I reckon it just shook an injection pipe loose ,so easy to fix it's obviously a standard part used on the TRs aswell no big panic or its cracked an injection pipe either way a simple fix Imo. Now can we please have more sarcasm and piss-taking please..!!!

    Reply

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