Autopedia
Advertisement
Sergio Perez 2012 Malaysia FP2
Sauber C31
Race Car
Category Formula One
Constructor Sauber
Designer James Key (Technical Director)
Matt Morris (Chief Designer)[1]
Pierre Waché (Head of Vehicle Performance)
Willem Toet (Head of Aerodynamics)
Seamus Mullarkey (Head of Aerodynamic Research)
Mariano Alperin (Head of Aerodynamic Development)
Predecessor Sauber C30
Successor Sauber C32
Chassis Carbon-fibre monocoque
Suspension (front) Upper and lower wishbones, inboard springs and dampers (SRE) actuated by pushrods
Suspension (rear) Upper and lower wishbones, inboard springs and dampers (SRE) actuated by pullrods
Engine Ferrari 056 2,398 ccm mid-mounted
Electric_motor {{{Electric motor}}}
Battery {{{Battery}}}
Power {{{Power}}}
Transmission Ferrari 7-speed Quick-shift carbon gearbox, longitudinally mounted, carbon-fibre clutch
Weight 640 kg (incl. driver, tank empty)
Fuel Shell V-Power ULG-66L/2
Brakes {{{Brakes}}}
Tyres Pirelli P Zero (dry), Cinturato (wet)[2]
Notable entrants Sauber F1 Team
Notable drivers 14. 25px Japan Kamui Kobayashi[3]
15. 25px Mexico Sergio Pérez[3]
Debut 2012 Australian Grand Prix
Races competed 20
Race victories 0
Podiums 4
Constructors' Championships 0
Drivers' Championships 0
Pole positions 0
Fastest laps 2


The Sauber C31[4] was a Formula One racing car designed by Sauber for use in the 2012 Formula One season. The car was driven by Kamui Kobayashi and Sergio Pérez. Technical director James Key announced that he was leaving the team just four days before the C31 was due to be launched at Jerez de la Frontera.[5]

The chassis was designed by James Key, Matt Morris, Pierre Waché and Willem Toet with the car being powered with a customer Ferrari engine.

Unlike previous cars such as the Sauber C29 and to a lesser extent, the C30, the C31 has much more visual sponsorship applied to the car such as Telmex, Telcel, Claro, Chelsea FC, Tequila Cuervo, Visit México, Oerlikon, NEC and Certina. Many of which are Mexican based companies brought from driver Sergio Pérez and reserve driver Esteban Gutiérrez.

Season review[]

Sergio Perez Canada 2012

Pérez during the Canadian Grand Prix.

The C31 achieved its first podium, with Pérez behind the wheel, at the Malaysian Grand Prix.

At the Spanish Grand Prix the Chelsea FC logo was added to the car.[6][7]

On June 10, Pérez achieved his second podium of the season at the Canadian Grand Prix with third place, while Kobayashi added a ninth place to help Sauber move up to sixth place in the Constructors' Championship.[8]

For the German Grand Prix the C31 achieved its best points haul of the season with Kobayashi coming in fifth position before a penalty pushed him up into fourth, with Pérez following him home in sixth, giving the team 20 points in one round. This was their best scoring round since returning to Formula One as a privateer team.[9]

At the Belgian GP Kobayashi started second and Pérez fourth (the best grid positions in Sauber's history). At the start of the race, Romain Grosjean caused a spectacular crash taking himself, Pérez, championship leader Fernando Alonso and Lewis Hamilton out of action. Kobayashi's Sauber was also damaged in the incident which knocked him right down the field and he finished the race in 13th place.

The Italian GP turned out to be a great weekend for the Sauber F1 team and they scored 20 points. Pérez scored second place (his third podium of the season), and Kobayashi ninth. Pérez had a strong race, overtaking drivers like Schumacher, Räikkönen, Rosberg, Massa and Alonso. The Sauber team had a great strategy with Pérez's car, starting on hard tyres and changing it to medium compound tyres by lap 30 of 53 (the opposite strategy to those who started at the front of the grid). Kobayashi started in 8th place and finished in 9th, scoring two points.

Conclusion

The Sauber C31 finished the 2012 season in a very respectable sixth place with 126 points (as much as a private team since 1993), two fastest laps (China and Monaco), four podiums (Malaysia, Canada, Italy and Japan) and 13 Q3. The car proved to be fast and very competitive, though inconsistent to find the set-up in some circuits and, above all, at the time of the race qualifications.[10][11]

Use in testing

The Sauber C31 has been used to test young drivers by the team. Former IndyCar Series driver Simona de Silvestro tested the C31 during her time with the team. She drove the car at the Fiorano Circuit, owned by engine supplier Ferrari and used by them to test. The car has also been used by the team to test young drivers Adderly Fong and Roy Nissany in a two-day test at the Circuit Ricardo Tormo. The car completed 99 laps at the circuit on both days with Fong driving on day one and Nissany driving on day two.

Complete Formula One results[]

(key) (results in bold indicate pole position; results in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant Engine Tyres Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Points WCC
2012 Sauber F1 Team Ferrari Type 056 P AUS MAL CHN BHR ESP MON CAN EUR GBR GER HUN BEL ITA SIN JPN KOR IND ABU USA BRA 126 6th
25px Japan Kamui Kobayashi 6 Ret 10 13 5 Ret 9 Ret 11 4 18 13 9 13 3 Ret 14 6 14 9
25px Mexico Sergio Pérez 8 2 11 11 Ret 11 3 9 Ret 6 14 Ret 2 10 Ret 11 Ret 15 11 Ret

Driver failed to finish, but was classified as they had completed over 90% of the race distance.

References[]

  1. "Sauber C31" (in de). Sauber F1 Team. http://www.sauberf1team.com/en/sauber_c31.cfm. 
  2. Noble, Jonathan (25 January 2012). "Pirelli tweaks tyre markings for 2012 F1 season". Autosport.com (Haymarket Publications). http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/97170. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Kobayashi and Perez to stay at Sauber in 2012". Formula1.com (Formula One World Championship). 28 July 2011. http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/2011/7/12364.html. 
  4. "Sauber". Formula1.com. 14 December 2011. http://www.formula1.com/teams_and_drivers/teams/7/. 
  5. Collantine, Keith (3 February 2012). "Sauber technical director James Key leaves the team". F1 Fanatic (Keith Collantine). http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/2012/02/03/sauber-technical-director-james-key-leaves-team/. 
  6. "Home | Official Site | Chelsea Football Club". http://www.chelseafc.com/page/LatestNews/0,,10268~2766183,00.html. 
  7. Chelsea (2012-04-30). "Chelsea join forces with Sauber F1 to increase global reach of the London club". Telegraph. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/teams/chelsea/9236184/Chelsea-join-forces-with-Sauber-F1-to-increase-global-reach-of-the-London-club.html. 
  8. "Canadian GP: Race". Sauber F1 Team (Sauber F1). 11 June 2012. http://www.sauberf1team.com/en/news.cfm?id=101O5LVU-Canadian_GP_-_Race. 
  9. "Vettel receives time penalty, demoted to fifth". Formula1.com. 2012-07-22. http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/2012/7/13629.html. 
  10. "Results". http://www.formula1.com/results/driver/2012/. 
  11. "2012 F1 qualifying data · F1 Fanatic". http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/statistics/2012-f1-statistics/qualifying-data/. 

External links[]


image (between 170-190 pixels)
Sauber

Founder

Peter Sauber

Notable personnel

Ruth Buscombe · Dirk de Beer · Jost Capito · Monisha Kaltenborn · James Key · Matt Morris · Steve Nichols · Tom McCullough · John Owen · Xevi Pujolar · Willy Rampf · Leo Ress · Andreas Seidl · Loïc Serra · Mark Smith · Julien Simon-Chautemps · Willem Toet · Mario Theissen · Frédéric Vasseur · Pierre Waché · Ben Waterhouse · Max Welti · Jörg Zander · Beat Zehnder · Christoph Zimmermann

Notable drivers

25px Austria Karl Wendlinger · 25px Germany Heinz-Harald Frentzen · 25px Great Britain Johnny Herbert · 25px France Jean Alesi ·25px Germany Nick Heidfeld · 25px Finland Kimi Räikkönen · 25px Brazil Felipe Massa · 25px Italy Giancarlo Fisichella · 25px Canada Jacques Villeneuve · 25px Flag of Poland Robert Kubica · 25px Germany Sebastian Vettel ·25px Japan Kamui Kobayashi · 25px Mexico Sergio Pérez · 25px Sweden Marcus Ericsson · 25px Monaco Charles Leclerc

Sportscars

C1 · C2 · C3 · C4 · C5 · SHS C6 · C7 · C8 · C9 · C11 · C291 · C292

Formula One cars

C12 · C13 · C14 · C15 · C16 · C17 · C18 · C19 · C20 · C21 · C22 · C23 · C24 · F1.06 · F1.07 · F1.08 · F1.09 · C29 · C30 · C31 · C32 · C33 · C34 · C35 · C36 · C37

Related

Alfa Romeo in Formula One · BMW in Formula One · Mercedes-Benz in motorsport

{{{Notables}}}


{{{Founder/s}}} {{{Corporate website}}} {{{Parent}}}
Smallwikipedialogo.png This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Sauber C31. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Autopedia, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.


Advertisement