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F1 2021 testing: New drivers, cars and rules on show as Lewis Hamilton begins title defence in Bahrain

FORMULA ONE cars will roar back on track as preseason testing gets underway in Bahrain from Friday morning.

This season there will be only three days of testing, rather than the usual eight days, and they will be held at the Sakhir circuit, rather than in Barcelona.

Daimler AG Mercedes

Lewis Hamilton will join the 19 other racers in Bahrain this weekend for pre-season testing[/caption]

THE FORMAT

The sessions will take place from March 12-14 will all ten teams and 20 drivers taking part.

F1 world champion, Lewis Hamilton, will start his title defence from Friday afternoon when he gets behind the wheel of this year’s W12.

Each of the three days will see the Bahrain GP track opened for a total of eight hours, starting at 10am local time (7am GMT) until 2pm (11am) for a lunch break.

The drivers will be strapped back in for 3pm (12pm) until 7pm (4pm GMT).

Most teams will split the driving allocation fairly across their drivers although Williams will give a day to their development driver Roy Nissany.

Getty Images – Getty

Max Verstappen is already in Bahrain preparing for Friday’s first testing session[/caption]

ANY NEW DRIVERS?

There will be debuts for Yuki Tsunoda, who has joined AlphaTauri after impressing in Formula 2 last season.

Mick Schuamcher, the son of seven-time champion Michael will also make his full F1 appearance alongside fellow Haas rookie, Nakita Mazepin.

Two-time world champion Fernando Alonso is also making his comeback after a two year absence.

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WHAT ELSE IS NEW?

Aside from the three debutants and Alonso’s return, the Renault team has been rebranded as Alpine.

Racing Point, who used to be Force India, have become Aston Martin F1, bringing the British car brand back to F1 for the first time in 60 years.

While the calendar is still subject to change, there are two new races planned for the Netherlands and Saudi Arabia.

Rex Features

Testing kicks off on Friday and runs throughout the weekend ahead of the 2021 season[/caption]

ANY RULE CHANGES?

A lot of the car design rules have been carried over from last year to save costs.

This year a cost cap is in place to reduce the amount teams spend on their cars.

While the big teams can spend over £300million developing their cars, that has now been reduced to £104m.

The idea is that by reducing that spending gap, it will make the smaller team’s more competitive, but let’s see.

There are some car regulations which have reduced the downforce by around ten per cent, so this year’s cars are thought to be slower.

But that allows them to race closer together and in turn improves the show.

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