пятница, 23 августа 2019 г.

Logistics equipment list

For Formula 1 teams one of the biggest battles of a race weekend or testing session will be over before a car even turns a wheel: the vast logistical effort required to get all of the team's equipment to the circuit - so vast, in fact, that F1 has its very own Official Logistics Partner, DHL. Indeed each team competing in the FIA Formula One World Championship now travels something like 160,000 kilometres (100,000 miles) a year between races and test sessions. Nor is the logistical effort as simple as merely getting people and equipment in place. Hotel accommodation must also be found and booked (a team can require anything up to 100 rooms), hire cars must be sourced and the team's facilities at the circuit - from the pit garage equipment to the drivers' motorhomes and the paddock corporate hospitality units must all be in place. Almost equally important, in this digital age, are the secure data links that connect the team to its base, enabling telemetry and other data to be sent directly back (which in turn allows engineers to study any potential problems, even while the race is running.) All in all, an enormous task. DHL Truck В© Sutton Images. No reproduction without permission. A Mercedes Formula One car is loaded into a DHL container В© Sutton Images. No reproduction without permission. Scuderia Toro Rosso trucks and Engineer quarters under construction. Formula One World Championship, Rd9, British Grand Prix, Monday Preparations, Silverstone, England, 30 June 2008 В© Sutton Images. No reproduction without permission. McLaren trucks in the paddock. Formula One World Championship, Rd 8, British Grand Prix, Practice Day, Silverstone, England, Friday, 19 June 2009 В© Sutton Images. No reproduction without permission. DHL signage and freight. Formula One World Championship, Rd16, Russian Grand Prix, Preparations, Sochi Autodrom, Sochi, Krasnodar Krai, Russia, Wedensday 8 October 2014. For the European rounds of the championship most of a team's equipment will travel by road, in the liveried articulated lorries so familiar from race paddocks across the continent. All of the race equipment required for the weekend will be loaded in these: cars, spare parts and tools. Tyres, fuel and certain other equipment are brought separately by technical partners and local contractors. For the non-European 'flyaway' races the logistical effort is considerably more complicated (the vast majority of Formula 1 teams being resident in Europe at the moment) as equipment has to be flown out on transport planes. Rather than use conventional aircraft containers, teams have created their own specially designed cargo crates, designed to fill all available space in the planes' holds. At present most of the teams use cargo planes chartered by Formula One Management (FOM) which fly from London and Munich to wherever the race is being held. In the case of successive flyaway races there is insufficient time between them to allow the teams' equipment to be brought 'home', meaning direct transit between the two races. This means that considerably more components have to be packed.В. As the number of races outside Europe continues to expand, so the logistical effort required to transport the teams and their equipment will expand alongside it. Already the amount of transport required for a season of Formula 1 racing has been described, only half-jokingly, as being not dissimilar to that needed for a medium-sized military campaign.

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