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Haas to debut lower-drag wing after Bahrain woes

The Haas Formula 1 team will introduce a lower-drag rear wing at this weekend's Chinese Grand Prix after suffering with an overly high-downforce package in Bahrain.

Romain Grosjean, Haas VF-19

Romain Grosjean, Haas VF-19

Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images

Driver Kevin Magnussen had lamented a “hopeless” race at the Sakhir venue, in which he finished out of the points despite having qualified within touching distance of Max Verstappen’s Red Bull.

The Dane was a sitting duck on the straights in Bahrain, where running in higher-downforce trim left Haas vulnerable.

Hoping to address the shortcomings the VF-19 displayed in Bahrain, Haas has finally been able to bring a lower-drag rear wing concept to Shanghai that was not ready two weeks ago.

“We simply didn’t have that lower step, medium-downforce package [in Bahrain],” Magnussen said. “We didn’t have it.

“We have it this weekend. But it wasn’t ready. I didn’t expect to be needing it as badly as we were.

“It was okay in qualifying because you have DRS and the difference becomes less than in the race when you’re running without DRS and suddenly you need efficiency much more.”

One of the positives for Haas was that the Bahrain GP was followed by a two-day test, which afforded it an immediate opportunity to establish what had gone wrong in the race.

"To have a bad weekend when we have a test straight after is kind of lucky I guess,” Magnussen said. “We were able to kind of replicate it and directly learn the problems we had on the same track and a couple of days after.

"I think we found some interesting things that could be reasons. I don’t think it’s just one thing - I think it’s a combination of things that kind of went wrong and that wasn’t in the window, which often it is when you have such a bad weekend, unless you’ve broken something on the car.

“It was good to have that test and it seems the team found some interesting stuff. Hopefully we can be better if we find a similar situation again.”

In addition to the downforce problem, Magnussen revealed the VF-17 was dialled too much towards one-lap pace.

“Both on downforce level, tyre management, the whole set-up on the car was probably wrong for a long stint," he explained.

“It was very difficult but, as I said, I think we found some interesting things in the test.

“We know the car is good, it qualified sixth on Saturday. It was bad on Sunday but that can only be tyres and kind of the set-up.”

Teammate Romain Grosjean, whose Bahrain GP was ruined by an early clash with Lance Stroll, also said the team had found some “interesting” set-up parameters the team should have applied in the race.

“You shouldn’t qualify twice in the top 10 if you don’t have a fast car,” he said. “Right now what we need is a bit of luck on our side and make sure we go through the race with no incident or issue.”

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