F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Mercedes drivers 'not aware' that engines were turned down

Valtteri Bottas and Lewis Hamilton were unaware that their Mercedes engines were marginally turned down for Sunday's Abu Dhabi GP to safeguard against a potential MGU-K failure.

Red Bull's Max Verstappen cruised to a dominant win in Formula 1's season finale at Yas Marina, with Bottas and Hamilton trailing the Dutchman by over a 15-second margin at the checkered flag.

Ahead of Sunday's race, Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff alluded to MGU-K reliability concerns following several failures of the component that had recently hit Racing Point and Williams

Wolff suggested that Mercedes had "taken a bit of performance out" of its engines. But that was news to Bottas and Hamilton after the race.

"Honestly, I wasn’t aware that the engine was turned down," said Bottas. "I can’t really say much. I don’t know if it was how much it was. So, I don’t know.

"Red Bull was obviously quicker and for the first time this year they have such a gap on the race pace against us so… not much more to say."

Hamilton was also unaware of any power output changes, but admitted that they would have made sense in light of the MGU-K issues encountered recently by Racing Point and Williams.

“When we go back now we’ll ask about it because I wasn’t aware of that personally, I arrived late Thursday night," said the seven-time world champion.

"HPP and Mercedes have done an amazing job this year. If you look at my reliability for example it’s managed to finish every race so it’s been really fantastic.

"There have been issues with other engines that Mercedes have done for example for the Force India [Racing Point] and with the Williams. So we definitely have work to do.

"If they have done something then it would make sense for sure."

On Sunday evening, Mercedes' head of trackside operations Andrew Shovlin confirmed the manufacturer's engine had been set to a more "conservative" mode although the change may have not been perceived by the drivers.

"It’s not fully understood yet but there have been failures related to the K on Mercedes engines in the last couple of events," Shovlin explained.

"I would say that rather than being acutely aware of a specific problem, we are operating the power unit in a way that’s as conservative as we can be in order to try and avoid a problem.

"When you don’t understand exactly the string of issues all you can do is just be a bit cautious. So during the race we were trying to reduce the duty marginally.

"The drivers wouldn’t have necessarily been aware of it. It was just something we were trying to manage in the background."

Gallery: The beautiful wives and girlfriends of F1 drivers

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via Facebook and Twitter

Michael Delaney

Recent Posts

Cadillac confirms ‘substantial upgrade package’ for Austria

After Cadillac’s Sergio Perez recently hinted that fresh performance gains were on the way, the…

4 hours ago

Domenicali suffers for Alonso: ‘I hope he'll be here for a long time’

Fernando Alonso has spent much of his Formula 1 career tormenting rivals. But these days,…

5 hours ago

Formula E sheds urban identity - embraces F1 tracks in Season 13

The ABB FIA Formula E World Championship has revealed its highly anticipated 21-round calendar for…

7 hours ago

Hirakawa in the saddle with Haas in Austrian GP FP1

Toyota protégé Ryo Hirakawa's Formula 1 journey will take another step forward this weekend as…

8 hours ago

Stewart offers Matra and France their 'Jour de Gloire'

On this day in 1968, Jackie Stewart delivered the first triumph to a French constructor…

9 hours ago

FIA approves major changes to future Formula 1 engine rules

The World Motor Sport Council has officially ratified major updates to Formula 1’s future power…

10 hours ago