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Sunday, 12 February 2023

“Very fast” Cape Town track to produce a “spectacle of an event” with “more energy management and strategies” possible - Kelvin van der Linde.

PHOTO CREDIT: ABB FIA Formula E World Championship
AUTHOR: Junaid Samodien

South African racing driver Kelvin van der Linde, who recently made his ABB FIA Formula E World Championship debut in Saudi Arabia last month, said the Cape Town E-Prix is set up for a “spectacle” when the championship makes its debut in two weeks’ time.

Speaking during a virtual press conference, van der Linde said that aside from the iconic location in Cape Town, the fast track would make for exciting racing as more strategy would be involved.

“I think it's a great combination (the Cape Town E-Prix circuit), obviously very, very fast, which means, energy management is gonna be critical because the longer you're flat out for the more energy you need to recover. So, that naturally makes the racing better, as well because the more energy management is involved, and the more strategies are involved in the racing. So, I think, it's really set up for a spectacle of an event,” the South African said.

Kelvin became the first South African driver to participate in the ABB FIA Formula E World Championship when he stepped in for the injured Robin Frijns (who fractured his wrist) at ABT Cupra, in Diriyah, Saudi Arabia, and also Hyderabad, India, the latter took place this past weekend.

Kelvin van der Linde driving the ABT CUPRA (Mahindra M9Electro) in Saudi Arabia.
PHOTO CREDIT: ABB FIA Formula E World Championship
Reflecting on the fact that the Diriyah E-Prix (Saudi) was his first single-seater race of his career, he said that the Gen 3 cars were like “Gen 2 on steroids”.

“It's a monster! I have to say this car is extremely physical to drive. I completely underestimated it and to be brutally honest, I was probably unprepared for it. A lot of the drivers have complained that it's probably one of the most physical cars (Gen 3). I drove the Gen 2 car in Morocco, two years ago, and the first kind of feeling of the electric powertrain was, “wow” because I'd never driven anything with an electric powertrain before. The instant power, you have, and you're very close to the walls, the street circuit layout of Formula E obviously makes everything feel a lot faster when you're sitting inside the car and you're so low to the ground,” he said. 

“The first laps [in Diriyah], I was thinking, this is a big, big, big difference… especially, having never sat in a Formula car before; you don't have the same kind of peripheral vision like you do in a GT car. So, it was very difficult the first couple laps. And then on top of that, obviously the Saudi track is probably one of the most complex and most difficult on the calendar, but I think in the end I was surprised, and I was really able to adapt as quickly as possible”

Van der Linde gave some insight into how the ability to combine regeneration and braking to maximise power was key, saying this was where “Formula E races were won and lost”.

“The concept of Formula E is how effectively you can recover the energy which you “boost”, which is when you are on the power. When you are braking, you are using the front and the back motors to regenerate the energy, which goes through an inverter, and you use that again as power,” he said. “And essentially the teams that are able to regenerate the most effectively, are able to boost more – for longer periods of time. So when you're overtaking all of these kind of things coming to into play.”

“Naturally, the big manufacturers are a bit like Formula One. You have: Mercedes, Red Bull and Ferrari, they have a very big development curve. And then the customer teams, as we are with ABT Cupra, we're a customer of Mahindra. We have a limited workforce of people that are able to develop the software and essentially, Formula E is all about software development. The cars are all in contrary to Formula One or the cause in terms of body work, aerodynamics, they're all the same, but where the people are making the big differences in software development and naturally there, the more resources you have, the quicker your software development is, especially when you're coming to new tracks where you don't have any data from previous seasons, this naturally becomes even more complex because we have certain teams that have simulators back home that are running 24 hours while the race weekend is running. The customer teams are kind of just trying to keep up and, and do everything manually. So it's a big learning experience!”

Whether regular driver Robin Frijns will return in Cape Town after his injury at the season opener, or Kelvin van der Linde will contest his home race has yet to been decided. According to our sources, a decision is expected within this week.

“I'm in race mode, so since Saudi we've spent three to four days in the simulator, which I will do after this event as well. We have our post event simulator sessions (next week), and I'm gonna approach Cape Town, as if I'm racing,” he said. 

“It has to be your mindset even, if I were approaching that race as a reserve driver, that's my job title. My job title is to be ready in case one of our drivers get injured. So, naturally I'm gonna go to Cape Town, do all the preparations as if I were racing. I'll do all the simulator days, I'll do everything, whether I'm racing or not, I'm anyway planning to travel to Cape Town, to attend, the flight's all booked, everything is done.”

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