Rubens Barrichello was joined in the press conference by Karun Chandhok, Kamui Kobayashi and Nico Rosberg, to preview the 2010 Malaysian Grand Prix.
With rain on the horizon, the weekend ahead should be a fascinating encounter as Formula One reaches round three of nineteen.
DRIVERS: Rubens BARRICHELLO (Williams), Karun CHANDHOK (HRT),  Kamui KOBAYASHI (BMW Sauber), Nico ROSBERG (Mercedes)
Q:  Karun, obviously a very steep learning curve for you this year. Tell us  about it.
Karun CHANDHOK: It is not ideal. I don’t think  anyone in F1 has gone straight into qualifying without testing or a  single lap of free practice. Bahrain was far from ideal. It is going to  be very tough. With the car we didn’t do any winter testing. We are two  months behind the programme, but we will keep chipping away and see  where we end up. Melbourne was a step forward. We got one car to the  finish and that was a step in itself. The more miles we do, the more we  learn about the car. These guys were lucky to be pounding around  Valencia, Barcelona and Jerez in the winter time and we didn’t get that  opportunity, so unfortunately we are testing in public in front of all  you guys and all these cameras and it is not easy, but these are the  cards we have been dealt with, so we will do the best job we can.
Q:  What are the effects of the finish in Melbourne? What sort of things  did you learn?
KC: First of all, morale-wise it was good  for the boys. The mechanics on my car worked two nights straight in  Bahrain, two nights straight in Melbourne. They just went back to shower  and came straight back to the circuit. It was a fantastic effort from  the guys in the garage. It is good for them to have put in all that work  and see a car get to the finish. For them it is a morale boost. For us  as a team we learnt a lot. We have never done the long runs with these  tyres before. We learnt a lot about what the car is like on 160-170kgs,  whatever it was. There is so much to learn. For me it was a bit strange  as I have never been lapped before in my life in normal circumstances  and it was quite difficult. It had drizzled or rained at the beginning  of the race, so going off-line was quite tricky. I didn’t want to get in  any of these guys’ way, so I tried to get out of the way but it was a  very strange race.
Q: Where do you think the pace is going to  come from? Is it from you, from just learning how to use the tyres, the  engine, just the chassis, the set-up, the experience?
KC: All of the above. I think we are both rookies in the team, so we have  got a lot to learn obviously. Qualifying in particular is quite critical  in F2 and learning about how you have got to bring the tyres in for the  one lap and get the tyres to the optimum temperature and pressure for  your qualifying lap.  In GP2 we did not have tyre warmers and so the way  you went about was a bit different. In Melbourne, for example, that was  my mistake. I was too slow on the out lap, just building the tyres up  gently, and I dumped four tenths to myself just between lap one and lap  two of the first sector because I did not know how to get the tyres in  for lap one. Just small things like that. There is a lot to learn as  drivers for the team. It is not rocket science. We need downforce. That  is the big thing in F1 and we are a long way behind these guys in terms  of downforce levels. Mechanically as well I think the first step was to  get the car finished and now we are trying to develop it.
Q:  Kamui, you had two-and-a-half tremendous races last year and then the  two races so far this year. Tell us the difference between the two as  they were fantastic races last year for Toyota, but so far this year it  hasn’t been fantastic.
Kamui KOBAYASHI: I think the last  two races for me were very really bad luck. In the first one I had a  problem with the hydraulics which I was not really expecting from the  winter test. In the last race I think the front wing failed, but also  for me it was quite difficult. Last year the last two races for me were  great. I had no testing, like only eight months and I expected it to be  really hard but the car had good potential. I spent two years as a test  driver, so it was very easy to communicate with everybody and really  easy to get there. This year it’s a new team and we have to work hard.  At the moment I am not showing the performance myself as I didn’t finish  race,  but the most important thing in the future is to finish the  race.
Q: In testing the car looked very good. Do you think you  are showing the true pace of it at the moment or is there more to come?
KK: Yeah, I think that’s our problem at the moment and we try to find a  reason. The winter test was a great performance. We are not always  looking for the top. A good place to be will be the second group on the  top and this year is our best target. I think the winter test was a good  shape and I think we are quite frustrated at the moment. In Bahrain the  situation was a little bit difficult. We were struggling, especially on  the bumps, and the car was really difficult to drive. But in Melbourne  it was a good improvement for us. The position was difficult but  pace-wise it was much closer with the guys in the second group, so I  think it was a good step for us to improve. I think this week will be  another step that we need to improve.
Q: Do you think this  race will be better for you? It is a circuit you know, isn’t it?
KK: This is a circuit I know very well. I think I had two races at this  circuit with GP2 Asia which was a good experience.
Q: Nico,  in spite of two good finishes so far the team keeps saying it is not  quite on the pace yet. Is it something that you know about or are not  certain why?
Nico ROSBERG: We know that we are not quite  where we want to be yet, but I think that was to be expected in some  ways. With Mercedes coming in and everything the team needs to grow. We  have massive potential. A really strong group of people and strong  support from Mercedes-Petronas, so I am very confident that very soon we  will be able to close the gap.
Q: Tell us about the challenge  of this circuit. What is important here?
NR: The track  here in Malaysia is one of my nice favourite tracks. It is really nice  to drive. There are lots of different combinations of corners and it is  very challenging. It is going to be tough for the drivers because of the  heat. It is one of the most challenging races for a driver’s fitness in  the year but that’s why I did all my training in the winter, so I  should be fine.  Car-wise it is also quite demanding with the  temperatures but I think we made some good progress on the set-up in  Melbourne which should help us here also, so I am looking forward to a  good weekend.
Q: What is it like being the team-mate of the  most successful Formula One driver of all time?
NR: It has  been a great experience for me as it is just interesting working with  him. Until now the partnership with him has been very good. Everything  has been open, very relaxed, so I am able to learn a few things and for  me it has been a great opportunity.
Q: Rubens, you have done  all 11 Malaysian Grands Prix. Tell us from your point of view the  challenge of this circuit.
Rubens BARRICHELLO: Much the  same. It is one of my favourites. I think it has great types of corners.  You go from very high speed to some low speed, quite technical corners.  It is an aerodynamic driven track and you have to have a balance on the  braking for you to get a fix on the corner ratio before you get back on  the power, so it is quite nice. It is not easy to set up the car which  makes it even more interesting. To get to a reasonable level is okay,  but to get it really well set up for you to be really happy is not easy,  so it is quite exciting.
Q: A new team for you this year. How  are you finding Williams which is a very established team?
RB: A bunch of fighters, good people, good working method. We are working  well together, a lot of fine tuning things to get to the bottom of it  but working well together. I am delighted to be working with them. They  are very open. There is a lot of freedom inside, so obviously they are  getting to know Cosworth and Cosworth are getting to know them. It has  been a good job. We are far away from where we think we can be but so  far it is going in the right direction.
Q: Where do you feel  you are in the hierarchy? Obviously, you feel as though you should be  higher up.
RB: I think there is the top four doing better  than us and then there is us Renault and Force India closely behind. It  was fantastic to see Robert (Kubica) doing so well and going right up  the front and keep up the pace as in qualifying we are pretty much the  same. I think we can knock on the door of big points every time before  we can put some new upgrades on the car and then really start to show  what we are capable of.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q:  (Frederic Ferret  L’Equipe) Nico, where do you think your car can  match the best cars on the grid?
NR: It’s going to be  mainly aerodynamics, that’s where the main progress has to come from.  One of the things is obviously the McLaren invention or whatever that  is, which all the teams are looking at, at the moment, and then there’s  also some mechanical things we believe that we can do better and those  developments will be coming very soon. I was in the factory about two  weeks ago and they presented the developments to me and it’s looking  very promising, so for me it was really encouraging and I look forward  to seeing how it goes.
Q: (Santhosh Kumar  Deccan Chronicle)  Rubens, you are inching towards 300 Grand Prix appearances. As the most  experienced driver on the grid, what is your impression of Karun  Chandhok and do you have any advice for him?
RB: It’s  like he said, I think he’s probably the very first driver to going  straight into qualifying in Formula One history, so I think he’s done  quite well. It must have been such an adventure of a rollercoaster,  going into that qualifier not knowing the car and how quickly it would  go. I think that so far there’s no bad stuff. You cannot see how fast  either he or Bruno (Senna) are going because the car is not showing what  they can do, because at the moment, you would like to see their car  going throughout the one and a half hours (of practice). They would have  time to sit down and talk about the set-up. Right now they are trying  to fix the problems before getting the set-up, so it’s just keep the  feet on the ground and do the work.’ Honestly, I can say that I haven’t  been in a situation like that. I’ve been young, like them, but I had  cars that although they had reliability problems, I was able to run and  get to know them. There was testing beforehand, so for them it must be a  lot more difficult. For me, Formula One is a lot easier now. I can just  concentrate on racing, that’s why I’m still thinking that I can do  another 300  not!
Q: (Ted Kravitz  BBC Sport) Rubens and  Nico, you’ve effectively swapped seats. What would you say was the one  difference from your previous teams to your current one, and if you  could give each other one piece of advice about taking the other one’s  seat, what would it be?
RB: I haven’t thought of that.
NR: It’s true. We even have the same engineers. We have, literally,  swapped seats. Differences? It’s difficult, there’s not a big  difference. Yes, you see some small differences in the way that the  working environment is and the ways of going about things, but Williams  is strong in some areas, we’re stronger in others, so it’s not a night  and day difference. And advice is a bit more difficult, isn’t it?
RB: When I come to a new team, I come with the experience of the whole  lot, I don’t come with the experience of Brawn last year, how they do  this or that. Obviously you leave the team and you have some of the  experience of what they were planning to have this year and you tend to  speak out and tell the team what you know about it and how to attack. So  my philosophy is to learn the team and then try to say, look, this  never worked in a team like Ferrari or Brawn and it never will’, so we  tend to go from there. But the Williams team is very well based. They  were winners from the past and it’s just a question of time before they  win again. Again, on the Brawn side, I’ve had a happy time there, so  there’s no bad advice as such. Maybe tell Jocky (Clear) not to punch the  helmet before the race as he goes (thump) good luck’. The sound isn’t  great inside the helmet.
NR: He hasn’t done that to me yet,  but I will tell him after this.
Q: (Chris Lines  Associated  Press) Karun, you’ve started so far behind in terms of preparation and  we look at all the new teams and there seems to be a mini-competition  between them. Are you so far back that you can’t even hope to catch up  to those guys or do you feel that you have a chance by getting back to  Europe, developing the car?
KC: We’ll wait and see. At the  moment, this weekend, I think it’s highly unlikely that we will be in a  position to chase either Lotus or Virgin in terms of performance. As I  said before, at the moment there’s no real performance upgrades on the  car. There are bits coming out of Europe all the time but they’re just  bits to try and get the car more reliable. It’s performance bits at the  moment, they will only come once we go back to Europe. We’ve got a good  team of people on board. Obviously Geoff Willis has come as technical  director, we’ve got Toni Cuquerella who has come from BMW, the engineers  as well, we’ve got a lot of people who have come from either BMW or  Williams or Renault, so there’s people with recent F1 experience in the  team. Rome wasn’t built in a day. We need to put the structure in place  and get everyone working in the same direction. They’ve all got their  ideas of how these respected teams did things. They now have to put it  together and make sure it’s unified in a way that Hispania would do  things. Like I said, there’s good enough people there to steer a  development programme. I’m not here to drive around at the back of the  grid for the rest of the season. I wouldn’t have signed with Colin  (Kolles) and the team if I didn’t think there was potential to at least  fight with the other new teams. The first half of the season is going to  be tough but hopefully we can start to fight to be best of the new  teams in the second half of the season. Relative to the existing teams, I  think the gap is quite big at the moment. You look at qualifying in  Melbourne, it was nearly two seconds between the top of the new teams  and the last of the existing teams. That’s quite a big gap to bridge.  Whether that gap will be closed during the season we shall wait and see.  I doubt it but we can certainly try and close the gap and try, and I  hope to be the best of the new teams in the second half of the season.
Q:  (Chris Lines  Associated Press) Kamui, your front wing came off three  times in Australia; has that been sorted out?
KK: I think  the front wing has three times… there was no problem with the front  wing but the first one was because of my mistake at the beginning(of  free practice). I hit a pylon at the fast corner. I think we tried to  repair it and maybe there was still a problem with it and maybe some  mis-communication in the team and we didn’t change the complete kit of  the front wing. I think that was the problem with the second wing. And  the last wing was maybe because of some contact with someone. It was not  really a big crash, or whatever, but maybe I touched the front wing  just a little bit and suddenly after some corners, I think it was after  the start with (Vitaly) Petrov and then turn three with Tonio (Liuzzi)  and this was our only chance, and after turn five the wing was on but  suddenly I lost the front wing on the straight. For me there was nothing  to do. We just have to make a stronger front wing.
Q:  (Frederic Ferret  L’Equipe) Rubens, Michael says that he needs some  time to find the rhythm again to fight against you all. As a former  team-mate and an experienced driver, do you have an explanation why he’s  struggling to find the pace again?
RB: Well, give him  the time, that’s all I can say. I don’t know. I haven’t stopped for  three years and come back. I will sometime. I will give myself a chance!
Q:  (Ralf Bach  R & B) Rubens, are you surprised that Nico is the  quicker driver at the moment in the Mercedes team or are you surprised  that they allowed him to be quicker?
RB: Why is the  question for me? Why don’t you ask them? Well, honestly I am surprised,  surprised in the way that you stop, you come back to a new Formula One  that is all different and people improve and different cars and so on.  But I am surprised. I think Nico is doing a super job.