A lap of the Nurburgring with Alex Wurz

Eurosport - Mon, 06 Jul 15:46:00 2009

Former F1 ace Alex Wurz gives the lowdown on the Nurburgring that hosts this weekend's German Grand Prix.

FORMULA 1 Nurburgring - 0

Powering along the start-finish straight at the Nurburgring you reach 181mph in sixth gear, before braking hard for the entrance to the Mercedes Arena, which is a tight right hand hairpin that sees you drop into first gear.

This is immediately followed by a long 180-degree left hander and a 90-degree right hander, which swings you back round onto the straight. Powering up through the gears on the approach to the fast left of Valvoline Kurve, you brake from speeds of 165mph in fifth gear to 110mph in third gear to negotiate the sweeping bend.

A short burst on the throttle takes you to the second gear Ford Kurve, this bumpy right hander is taken at 65mph. On the exit you accelerate downhill up to 185mph in sixth gear as you approach the hairpin, which is taken at 60mph in second.

It is crucial to take a good line through the hairpin so that you can push hard and early on the throttle on the exit. Up the hill towards the Michelin Kurve you reach speeds of 175mph, lifting slightly for the left-right flick of the chicane, before braking hard for Michelin, dropping down to 85mphin third for the 90-degree left-hander.

A similar right-hander, which is one of the most crucial corners on the circuit, follows and takes you onto the back straight. Taken flat-out, the fast, sweeping straight, with a slight right kink, sees you reach 190mph in seventh gear as you approach the Veedol-S chicane, the main overtaking opportunity at the circuit. This is another tough braking point as you drop from the highest speed at the Nurburgring to 60mph in second to negotiate the chicane where you have to drive aggressively over the curbs in order to carry the speed through the corner.

Accelerating out, a short burst on the throttle sees you reach 140mph in fourth before dabbing the brakes for the final corner. Taken at 75mph and using the whole curb as you exit, the right-hander flicks you back onto the start-finish straight to begin another lap.

Eurosport

Not already a Yahoo! user ? to get a free Yahoo! Account