Wednesday, 14 May 2025 22:18

Aston Martin Formula One™ Team - Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix Preview

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Talking Points

Andy Cowell, CEO and Team Principal

Blink and you'll miss it. The 24-Grand Prix F1 season is a marathon but the campaign soon flies by, hurtling from weekend to weekend around the world at a relentless speed.

It's been a challenging start to the campaign for the team, but not one without plenty of learnings to build on. As we prepare to go racing at one of motorsport's most storied circuits, CEO and Team Principal Andy Cowell discusses our season so far, updates to the AMR25 in Imola and delving into the details in the pursuit of performance.

We're a quarter of the way through the 2025 season. What are your reflections on the campaign so far?

"We can't deny it's been a tough first quarter: raw car performance has not been at the level that we want it to be. However, we've learnt a lot about what's working and what’s not and that's not just regarding the car but the whole organisation.

"We've identified the areas we need to improve. Some of them are really quick wins and some are going to require time, effort, and determination to get us to the point where we can chase reliability and performance and therefore earn championship points regularly."

There's an old adage that you learn more when you're not winning than when you do. Is there some truth to that? Does that apply here?

"I'd say so. If you're successful, you're happy, and you don't spend as much time digging into the fine details as when you're enduring the pain of not picking points up at race weekends. It's when you're not successful that you delve deep into every single detail and put everything on the to-do list for improvement, and that pays off in the medium- and long-term.

"We want to be an effective, efficient, development machine and we need a more detailed, forensic, robust way of operating within the AMR Technology Campus, but without adding bureaucracy."

What is the team doing to find performance gains?

"Although we're not regularly picking points up at the moment, if we improve by one per cent we would be in contention for trophies – that's how fine the margins are, but that's also far easier said than done. The innovation required to close that small gap requires all of us to be exceptionally inquisitive, digging into the fine detail and looking for anomalies compared with expectation – and they're not going to be big, glaring anomalies, they're going to be fine little bits of detail.

"We've got to be obsessive. We've got to be single-minded, forensic, and detailed with our investigations into the information that's been gathered from the first six Grands Prix, and when comparing it with the information we've gathered from the wind tunnel, CFD, tyre models, driver-in-the-loop simulator, and all the areas where we're capturing a huge amount of information. We're digging into that to understand what's going on, to then come up with ideas that will enable the car to go faster around the racetrack."

It sounds like the team is far from giving up on 2025. What can we take from our work on the car this year that will benefit our 2026 challenger?

"The engineering methods we're currently evaluating and reviewing to apply to this year's car will also lay good foundations for 2026 and beyond. What we put in place now will be beneficial for years to come.

"Improvements to the organisation, our methods, and tools, which help the development of AMR25, will provide confidence when it comes to applying them to the '26 regulations. That in turn will unlock performance on the '26 car and by extension the '27 car, the '28 car and so on. That's perhaps the most important thing for our team."

The team is bringing updates to Imola. What can you tell us about them?

"We're bringing a new floor and top bodywork. With the current aerodynamic regulations, the floor is the biggest contributor to downforce and the top bodywork helps with the delivery of good quality airflow to the key areas of the floor, so the two work hand in hand. What we're expecting from the package is an improvement in aerodynamic load and an improvement in the consistency of that load on the car.

"We will run one car with the new spec and the other car with the existing spec at the start of the event and make a cross-car evaluation. It's beneficial to run two cars with different specs so we get a direct comparison with identical track conditions."

The new wind tunnel at the AMR Technology Campus has been online for a few weeks. What work have we done with this state-of-the-art tool?

"The wind tunnel was used to map the update package we've got for Imola. The package has been in the pipeline for several weeks, before the wind tunnel came online, but it's certainly been useful to have it for the final touches.

"We've also been using the first few weeks to familiarise ourselves with the wind tunnel. It's a highly complex, state-of-the-art facility that's going to be game-changing for us, so it's been important to take time to fully understand it so we can unlock all its potential.

"It's just one of a number of world-class tools we have at our disposal, and now we've got the exciting task of extracting all we can from them."

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