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VIDEO: Gone in 2.05 seconds

2013 Malaysian Grand Prix

Among all the hyperbole to have followed since Sebastian Vettel’s controversial win at the Malaysian Grand Prix one thing you may have forgotten were claims that Red Bull broke the pit stop record for changing a set of wheels.

Red Bull themselves have released a statement claiming they bettered the old mark no less than five times. Five! The previous record stood at 2.31 seconds and was set by McLaren at last year’s German GP.

Now, the record stands at just 2.05 seconds, and was set during Mark Webber’s second pit stop at Sepang. Red Bull, though, say the stop wasn’t perfect and that a stop completed in less than two seconds may be seen this year.

Amazing!

[Pic: Red Bull/Getty Images]

Gone In 2.05 seconds

Apr 3, 2013

  • Infiniti Red Bull Racing sets new pitstop world record.

With no shortage of talking points in Malaysia lots of stuff that would usually make headlines passed by unnoticed. For instance, despite the slippery surface and the concentration-sapping heat in Malaysia, we broke the record for the fastest ever pitstop. In fact, having reviewed the data, we’re pretty sure we beat the previous mark on five separate occasions during the race.

McLaren have held the record since last year’s German Grand Prix, where they changed four wheels for Jenson Button in 2.31s. We went under that in Malaysia with Seb’s first stop being 2.13s. Mark’s first stop, two laps later was also 2.13s. The crew then lowered the new benchmark to 2.05s when Mark came in again, and his two subsequent stops were 2.21s and 2.26s.

These times are all taken from the car data which each team uses to record the stationary times. TV do their own rough-and-ready calculations, and sometimes we take timings off video as well, though for real precision the common practice in the pitlane is to use the car’s own datalog – but whichever metric you prefer, those are all pretty quick. It’s basically a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it blur of tyres, wheel-guns and improbably balletic mechanics.

What you won’t hear, however, is anyone using the word ‘perfect’. There’s always a quicker stop out there, and it’s possible this season we’ll see the magical two-second barrier breached at some point. However, rather than chasing individual times, improving consistency is always the thing coveted by the crew: breaking records is merely the consequence of doing that well.

Car data recorded the following stationary pit stop times (Malaysian Grand Prix 2013):

Sebastian Vettel Stop 1 (Lap 5): 2.13 seconds
Mark Webber Stop 1 (Lap 7): 2.13 seconds
Mark Webber Stop 2 (Lap 19): 2.05 seconds
Mark Webber Stop 3 (Lap 31): 2.21 seconds
Mark Webber Stop 4 (Lap 43): 2.26 seconds

5 replies on “VIDEO: Gone in 2.05 seconds”

@lloyd You’re lucky to be acknowledged at a tyre shop in less than 1 minute 😉

I mentioned it to my legions of followers on Twitter during the Australian GP, but I overheard a Mclaren mechanic saying that he thought they’d have a sub 2s pit stop this year. At the time I thought it was a stretch, but not any more.

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