Williams F1 is grappling with a nightmare of its own making as Chief Engineer Dave Robson reveals the team’s overweight car has led to mounting frustration over missed results in 2024. Under the guidance of new boss James Vowles, the team made sweeping changes to its manufacturing processes over the winter, but the ambitious overhaul has backfired spectacularly. The car’s excess weight not only jeopardized their start to the season—with two cars barely ready for the first race in Australia—but also continues to cripple performance on the track.
Robson admits that while the long-term vision remains intact, the immediate setbacks are undeniable. “We’ve been kicking ourselves after every qualifying session this year,” Robson confessed. “If only the car had hit the weight limit, we’d be miles ahead on the grid.” Despite Vowles urging the team to focus on the bigger picture, the frustration is palpable. Hindsight reveals that the rushed and complex approach to the new chassis has cost the team dearly, with Robson even admitting that starting the redesign process earlier might have saved them from their current plight.
The issue, it turns out, isn’t the chassis itself, but the chaos that ensued from the new manufacturing methods. “We bit off more than we could chew,” Robson admitted, revealing that while the chassis was a technical improvement, the rest of the car suffered from hasty design decisions. The result? A car that’s heavier than anticipated, leaving Williams to rue what could have been.
As the team limps toward a planned major upgrade after the summer break, it’s clear that the weight of their own miscalculations is proving too heavy to bear.
Photo from Williams Instagram