Autopedia
HRT through the Esses
HRT F112
Race Car
Category Formula One
Constructor HRT
Designer Jean-Claude Martens (Technical Director)
Paul White (Chief Designer)
Stephane Chosse (Head of Aerodynamics)
Predecessor Hispania F111
Successor None
Chassis {{{Chassis}}}
Suspension (front) {{{Front Suspension}}}
Suspension (rear) {{{Rear Suspension}}}
Engine Cosworth CA2012 2.4 L V8 Naturally Aspirated mid-mounted
Electric_motor {{{Electric motor}}}
Battery {{{Battery}}}
Power {{{Power}}}
Transmission 7 Speed Forward + 1 Reverse Speed
Weight {{{Weight}}}
Fuel Cepsa
Brakes {{{Brakes}}}
Tyres Pirelli P Zero (dry), Cinturato (wet)[1]
Notable entrants HRT Formula 1 Team
Notable drivers 22. 25px Spain Pedro de la Rosa[2]
23. 25px Flag of India Narain Karthikeyan[3]
Debut 2012 Australian Grand Prix
Races competed 20
Race victories 0
Podiums 0
Constructors' Championships 0
Drivers' Championships 0
Pole positions 0
Fastest laps 0


The HRT F112,[4] is the last Formula One racing car designed by HRT F1 Team for use in the 2012 Formula One season. The car was driven by Pedro de la Rosa and Narain Karthikeyan with Dani Clos and Ma Qinghua acting as test drivers.

Development[]

The car was expected to be launched on 21 February, but was delayed until March when it failed two of its mandatory crash tests, and was unable to take a third test as passing one of the tests it failed was a pre-requisite of this third test.[5] The car successfully completed its final crash test on 24 February.[6] The team initially attempted to have the car ready for the third test of the off season in Barcelona, but were unable to make the deadline. The car made its on-track debut at the circuit on 5 March, during a combined shakedown and filming day, with Karthikeyan completing the maximum allowable one hundred kilometres for a shakedown.[7] The car was launched with a white, gold and red livery, their third livery change in as many years.

The team faced further complications at the Australian Grand Prix when the chassis intended to be raced by Pedro de la Rosa was not finished before scrutineering on Thursday afternoon. The team requested the race stewards delay scrutineering of the car until Friday morning, with the FIA agreeing.[8] The car was completed on time and approved by the race stewards.[9] Although both cars took part in qualifying, neither driver qualified within 107% of the fastest time set in the first qualifying period, and they were blocked from starting the race for the second year in a row.[10] The team admitted they were expecting to miss the qualifying cut-off, with team principal Luis Pérez-Sala predicting that the car would not be fully capable of qualifying until the second or third race of the season.[11] It joined the Marussia MR01 in being the only cars that year not to use KERS, and also lacked a brake bias handle in the cockpit.

The car's pace steadily improved over the course of the season, however their main rivals Marussia and Caterham improved too, leaving it as the outright slowest car on the grid that season, only managing once to beat any of their rivals on outright pace, with de la Rosa edging out Timo Glock at Germany and Karthikeyan closing in on him in the closing laps. The car had very strong pace at Canada, bringing a new low-downforce rear wing which helped de la Rosa out-qualify both the Marussias and enabled him and Karthikeyan to match their pace in the race until they both retired with brake failure. They both out-qualified Charles Pic's Marussia at Valencia and were within 103.7% of the fastest Q1 time, a personal best for the season. De la Rosa out-qualified Karthikeyan at every race except Monza, Singapore and Brazil, and out-raced him at every race except Malaysia, though de la Rosa was eventually classified ahead as Karthikeyan was given a post-race time penalty for giving Sebastian Vettel a puncture whilst being lapped. After the summer break they suffered from increasing reliability issues due to the declining financial situation in the team which gave rise to rumours they were short of resources and were using components beyond their expected lifespan.

After HRT went in to administration in November 2012 both F112 chassis were purchased by Teo Martín.

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 HRT F1 Team Cosworth CA2012 P AUS MAL CHN BHR ESP MON CAN EUR GBR GER HUN BEL ITA SIN JPN KOR IND ABU USA BRA 0 12th
Pedro de la Rosa DNQ 21 21 20 19 Ret Ret 17 20 21 22 18 18 17 18 Ret Ret 17 21 17
Narain Karthikeyan DNQ 22 22 21 Ret 15 Ret 18 21 23 Ret Ret 19 Ret Ret 20 21 Ret 22 18

References[]

  1. 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. 
  2. Beer, Matt (21 November 2011). "Pedro de la Rosa signs for HRT from 2012". Autosport (Haymarket Publications). http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/96383. 
  3. "Narain Karthikeyan completes HRTs lineup for 2012". HRT F1. 3 February 2012. http://hispaniaracing.com/news.php?nid=622. 
  4. "HRT renews and extends its technical collaboration with Williams F1". HRT F1 Team. HRT F1. http://hispaniaracing.com/news.php?nid=548. 
  5. Elizalde, Pablo (9 February 2012). "New HRT car now set for final F1 test after failing two crash tests". Autosport.com (Haymarket Publications). http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/97464. 
  6. Elizalde, Pablo (25 February 2012). "HRT passes all Formula 1 crash tests but Barcelona presence not certain". Autosport.com (Haymarket Publications). http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/97693. 
  7. Autosport. 5 March 2012. http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/97856. 
  8. Noble, Jonathan (15 March 2012). "HRT requests a delay to the scrutineering of Pedro de la Rosa's car". Autosport.com (Haymarket Publications). http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/98036. 
  9. "@NobleF1: 16 March". Twitter. Twitter Inc.. 16 March 2012. https://twitter.com/NobleF1/status/180445848222707713. 
  10. "@adamcooperf1: 17 March". Twitter. Twitter Inc.. 17 March 2012. https://twitter.com/adamcooperf1/status/180963413852295168. 
  11. "FIA Friday press conference - Australia". Formula1.com (Formula One Group). 16 March 2012. http://www.formula1.com/news/headlines/2012/3/13110.html. 

External links[]



image (between 170-190 pixels)
HRT

Founders

Adrián Campos · José Ramón Carabante

Noted personnel

Colin Kolles · Geoff Willis · Luis Pérez-Sala · Daniele Audetto · Toni Cuquerella · Ben Agathangelou

Noted drivers

25px Flag of India Karun Chandhok · 25px Brazil Bruno Senna · 25px Japan Sakon Yamamoto · 25px Austria Christian Klien · 25px Flag of India Narain Karthikeyan · 25px Australia Daniel Ricciardo · 25px Italy Vitantonio Liuzzi · 25px Spain Pedro de la Rosa

Formula One cars

F110 · F111 · F112

{{{Notables}}}


{{{Founder/s}}} {{{Corporate website}}} {{{Parent}}}
Smallwikipedialogo.png This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at HRT F112. 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.