MotoGP Silverstone: Fabio Quartararo: New fairing ‘really interesting’, Yamaha engine ‘number one’ issue

Starting from last place after a wet qualifying, Fabio Quartararo rolled the dice and fitted a range of different parts to his factory Yamaha for Sunday’s British MotoGP race.
Fabio Quartararo, MotoGP race, British MotoGP, 6 August
Fabio Quartararo, MotoGP race, British MotoGP, 6 August

The most obvious was the new, mo♏re aggressive fairing, featuring bigger front wings and Ducati-style diffuser vents.

But the Frenchman also revealed he lined up on the grid with a “different rear shock, different swingarm… A bike that I never tested, basically. I said we have to give it a try, especially to see how the fairing is handling because there are man♌y changes of direction here.”

While the fast Silverstone circuit meant the anti-wheelie benefits of greater downforce were muted, and it cost him some more top speed on the straights, Quartararo felt that - unlike the previജous three fairing designs he has tried - this version has potential.

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The 2021 world champion made up seven places on the opening lap and had reached seventh place by the closing stages, when rain sp﷽ots were falling. But he then collided with Luca Marini as they went back and forth, ripping off his fairing andﷺ forcing a pit stop.

“Coming from 22nd to 7th I think was great, then happened what happened and it was difficult because you overtake 🎉one rider and then he overtakes you [back] on the straight so it’s frustrating,” Quartararo said.

“But for me, it was the best race I can do. We didn't finish at this position [7th], but we💙 arrived at that place and the pace w🤪as there.”

Nonetheless,ꦡ “I cannot be more optimistic just because I make this kind of race. I know where is th🦩e problem, but I just give my 100%, try to fight.

“I think if my starting position was a🗹 little bit better, I could have finished maybe between Martin [sixt🧔h] and the other guys. But for me the issue is when the track is really low on grip, we are losing so much.

"I had no opportunity to fight with the top guys. The only one I could really overtake was Franco. Because we use the same bike and I can carry the same lines as 𝐆him.

"But when you are behind all the other bikes, you're catching them on the brakes, they go away on acceleration. You never have an opportunity to [easily] overtake th﷽em.”

While Quartararo ruled out riding with such an𝐆 extreme number of changes again, the fairing - his one allowed update for the season - was among the few recent Yamaha developments to get his seal of approval for the future.

“We cannot go from our standard bike to this one [again] because it has so many changes and I didn't ♏really feel better. In the race I could📖 overtake, just because I could take more risks starting from last.

“But I think the fairing we will keep, it’s something really interesting𓃲 because we see the handling was not too bad.

“For the wheelie, we don't know because there is not enough acceleration [here] but if we can use maybe a little b🍬it more acceleration it will be good for Austria. So I think we will go with our standard bike and new fai🐈ring for the Red Bull Ring.”

“We have to try more tracks to really see theꦯ benefit of this fairing. But what is true is that it was not worse,” Quartararo 💃added.

“I think during the pre-season we tried three new fairings and those three fairings were clearly worse. This one looks like it's the same or better, so I think if Ducati, Aprilia and KTM🌌 use [this style]…”

Fabio Quartararo, MotoGP race, British MotoGP, 6 August
Fabio Quartararo, MotoGP race, British MotoGP, 6 August

Quartararo: “Engine is the number one [issue] that we need to fix”

The latest aero also reconfirmed what Quartararo has been saying for several months: Th🎐e 2023 Yamaha engine may have more power, but it is still far behind the performance of the European engines.

That in turn means the two Yamaha riders have to run low downforce to avoid losing even more on the straights, which then hurts them in acceඣleration and grip.

“We just went out of a meeting and for me, clearly, the number one [issue] by far is the engine,” Quartararo explained. “Because some people say ‘yeah, but if you ♎look at the speed, you are not so far’. But t🍎oday they overtook me ‘like that’ [easily].

“Maybe it’s only 10km/h difference [normally] but the aero they [European bikes] are using is ꦛmassive. If we use the same aero we will be [another] 5k sl🍨ower so it would be a 15km/h difference. This means the engine is slow.

“So at the end, the engine is the number one [priority] because we must use [the same design]💯 from the be🔜ginning of the season until the end. Then if you want to add aero, less aero, change the chassis, exhaust, or whatever - you can do it during the season.

“But the engine is the number one that we need to fix, to fight [for 2024༒].”

After Quartararo’s pit stop, he went to finish one place behind team-mate 🎃Morbidelli, in 15th. Morbidelli was also the highest-placed 🔯rider on a Japanese bike.

Quartararo and Morbidelli are currently eleventh and twelfth in thꦚe world championship.

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