Williams has made a compromised start to the 2024 Formula 1 season as
  the result of a painful winter that has laid bare just how far behind
  the team had fallen in key areas.

  One of F1’s most successful teams is, it hopes, out of a long-standing
  malaise and is now in the heart of a revolution. One that has brought a
  lot of pain – some expected, some less so.

  It’s no secret that Williams has been battling with under-invested
  facilities and an outdated culture for many years, with claims of the
  team being 20 years behind its rivals.

  But the extent of that, or rather how desperate its situation looked
  ahead of the 2024, can only really be grasped now team principal James
  Vowles and chief technical officer Pat Fry have opened up about the
  depths of a difficult winter and the real impact it has had on its
  point-less start to the new season, costing Williams laptime and
  valuable cost cap resources.

  Cast your minds back a few weeks and the only car you hadn’t seen until
  the day before pre-season testing was the Williams FW46. It was late,
  and Williams had been quite open about that – and the fact it was
  taking “huge amounts of risk”.

  But this was not, it turns out, just a matter of Williams trying to
  massively overhaul a car design philosophy that had some specific
  performance weaknesses. It was much more fundamental with a greater
  impact than could have reasonably been imagined.

A CAR BUILT IN EXCEL?!

  Vowles has been banging the same drum about the team’s outdated working
  practices and systems since he joined early last year, and a key
  decision he made was for Williams to consciously make life harder for
  itself with its 2024 car.

  He and Fry believe it is impossible for Williams to compete for
  anything significant in F1 without making a massive step forward in how
  it operates as a team.

  The main winter example was Williams dramatically changing what Vowles
  calls the car’s technology base – basically how it designed and built
  the chassis: “Our chassis went from a few hundred bits to a few
  thousand bits. That's just one part of the car.”

  Alongside this Vowles wanted the development team to work more in
  tandem, pursuing a different approach between aerodynamic and
  mechanical items so that the philosophy of designing the car changed as
  well.

  He also banned the contingencies he discovered existed in building the
  2023 car – like using year-old parts that were modified to fit the new
  car, or metal parts instead of carbon, which it turns out was initially
  the case on last year’s FW45.

  The upshot of all that was what Vowles describes “tenfold increase in
  some areas with the amount of bits going through”, using the same
  limited infrastructure he has complained about for so long and that
  Williams is in the process of slowly investing in and improving.

  Vowles reckons that if Williams had stuck with its usual processes and
  committed to a simple evolution of the 2023 car, things would have been
  fine.

  But the impact of the big change he wanted to commit to was compounded
  by terrible systems that he had already seen have a negative impact on
  the team’s only real in-season upgrade of 2023 – resulting in what he
  calls an “extraordinary” cost, one “higher than I anticipated.

  It is not an exaggeration to say that up to and including at least the
  initial work on the 2024 Williams, its car builds were handled using
  Microsoft Excel, with a list of around 20,000 individual components and
  parts.

  Unsurprisingly, ex-Mercedes man Vowles - someone used to class-leading
  operations and systems – had a damning verdict for that: “The Excel
  list was a joke. Impossible to navigate and impossible to update.”

  Managing a car build is not just about listing all the components
  needed. There wasn't data on the cost of components, how long they took
  to build, how many were in the system to be built.

  “Take a front wing,” says Vowles. “A front wing is about 400 different
  bits. And when you say I would like one front wing, what you need to
  kick off is the metallic bits and the carbon bits that make up that
  single front wing.

  “You need to go into the system, and they need to be ordered. Is a
  front wing more important than a front wishbone in that circumstance?
  When do they go through, when is the inspection?

  “When you start tracking now hundreds of 1000s of components through
  your organisation moving around, an Excel spreadsheet is useless.

  “You need to know where each one of those independent components are,
  how long it will take before it's complete, how long it will take
  before it goes to inspection. If there's been any problems with
  inspections, whether it has to go back again.

  “And once you start putting that level of complexity in which is where
  modern Formula 1 is, the Excel spreadsheet falls over, and humans fall
  over. And that's exactly where we are.

  “There is more structure and system in our processes now. But they are
  nowhere near good enough. Nowhere near.”

  Missing that raw level of data makes it easier to understand how 20,000
  bits end up in limbo. In the scenario Vowles describes, an Excel
  spreadsheet is “useless”, with emails bouncing back and forth between
  people and departments chasing missing information. Vowles recalls
  hearing shop floor workers at Williams saying ‘I don't know where this
  component is’ and having to physically look around the factory for
  certain parts.

  Suddenly this same team having such a bad 2019 car build that it
  managed to miss the start of pre-season testing makes more sense.
  Vowles didn’t seem to fear the same fate this time but admits he had
  little confidence that the team would have everything it needed by the
  first race of the season.

  He is amazed at how Williams rallied and managed to produce what he
  reckons is more than any other team in a shorter period. But he also
  admits they did it to themselves.

‘NEVER KNOWN ANYTHING LIKE IT’

  This has been - to a greater or lesser extent - the reality at Williams
  for many years.

  It almost makes it a wonder it has managed to achieve what it has in
  recent years battling such organisational chaos. And how the winter of
  2019 was not a more regular occurrence.

  Vowles and Fry were new to this, hence their shock at living this
  reality for the first time - and recognising it needed to change.

  According to Vowles, the Excel spreadsheet was being migrated to a
  digital system at the same time the car’s “technology base” was going
  through its own colossal overhaul.

  Unsurprisingly, doing both in tandem was a nightmare. Williams was
  completely changing how things were stored digitally within the
  organisation and the quantity of parts being produced to be logged in
  this new system people were unfamiliar with.

  Delays led to workers having to sleep at the factory and effectively
  pull overnighters to get things ready. Vowles recalls the car was still
  just a big bag of bits by January, while Fry says: “If you go back to
  how we worked, whatever, 20 years ago, loads of bits would be late and
  someone will put their Superman underpants on over the outside of their
  trousers, rush round and save the day.

  “We're still kind of working in that mode, really.

  “Performance comes from sensible planning and optimising the bits
  that…I'm never gonna give anyone an easy time, but it needs to be the
  performant bits that we leave last, because we're finding more lap time
  in the windtunnel. Or if there's a suspension development that we push
  late.

  “We just need to be a little bit smarter about the way we go about
  things.”

  Fry reckons Williams’s process of making a car is inefficient, leaving
  everything “massively late” without a good performance-based reason for
  that being the case. Williams signed off the relevant aero surfaces
  quite early in the process yet was still somehow scrambling around for
  parts late on.

  That’s because the flawed processes caused a mountain of parts to pile
  up, delaying production. It wasted time, and wasn’t cost efficient
  either, which is relevant in F1’s budget cap era. Fry says what
  Williams managed to do this winter was “viciously expensive”

  “I've never seen anything like it,” Fry says. “Don't want to live it
  again. I'm sure James doesn’t want to live it again, either.”

  Vowles doesn’t. He wasn’t sure how Williams would make up for the
  limitations.

  “Unfortunately, it's through humans pushing themselves to the absolute
  limits and breaking,” Vowles says.

  “That’s how we make up for it. And that's why we can never go through
  this ever again.”

HOW IT HURT FW46

  As it happens, the early 2024 results do not necessarily reflect a team
  coming off a desperate winter. It looks like the team’s been remarkably
  stable given its results are near-identical.

  Williams is one point worse off after two races than a year ago but
  it’s still seventh in the championship – and first of the non-scorers!
  – by virtue of Alex Albon’s 11th place in Saudi Arabia.

  In fact, Albon finishing 15th and 11th in Bahrain and Saudi means
  Williams is very close to the 10th and 16th it scored in the same races
  a year ago. It has also cut its deficit to the front – from just under
  2% adrift of the fastest car at both circuits last year to 1.2 and 1.7%
  off in 2024.

  Albon sees something bittersweet in that. It’s encouraging for Williams
  but it wanted more. The car is better, certainly, and what it has aimed
  to improve with its new approach to development has paid off, so the
  foundations look decent. But still compromised.

  “We hurt ourselves,” says Vowles.

  “Do I think we had reliability issues at the beginning to test because
  we were underprepared because we were right up into the limit?
  Absolutely.

  “But has it brought performance? Yes. Could we have more performance if
  we're more structured, organised, and everything was delivered earlier?
  Absolutely.

  “There's a tremendous amount in the locker. We're not short of ideas
  and how to make the car faster. I'm short now of cost cap finances to
  make the car faster, and time.”

  This appears to have been a very necessary pain to experience. Vowles
  believes Williams is already better off for it in some areas, while Fry
  says that the lingering problems will definitely be addressed for the
  2025 car build. That’s why Vowles says everything they’ve revealed
  about the winter doesn’t worry him “for a second”.

  The belief is this can and will be fixed, partly through better
  processes, and partly because the team leaders are adamant there isn’t
  a problematic resistance to the cultural changes being enforced. It’s
  uncomfortable for some, they admit, but everything they are preaching
  is based around obvious ways to make the workers’ lives easier.

  IFRAME: [1]https://www.youtube.com/embed/WazUi6K4W6w?feature=oembed

  Vowles reckons it’s a three-year process to get a 1000-strong workforce
  to fully adopt a new culture. But before then he believes Williams has
  an opportunity “that does not exist anywhere that I know that’s
  competitive up and down the grid”.

  “It’s an opportunity that's not small,” he says.

  “It's millions of pounds of cost cap money. And it's tenths of
  performance in just having processes, structure and system.”

  Albon, who needs Williams to prove to him this year it is ready to
  become a top team on a timeline that works for his own career, is
  optimistic that Williams just has to “take its medicine, realise it’s
  for the best, and hopefully enjoy some success a bit later on into the
  year”.

  Beyond that, the expectation must be that this team will spend future
  winters getting things done on time and chasing performance instead of
  shooting itself in the foot.

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References

  1. https://www.youtube.com/embed/WazUi6K4W6w?feature=oembed
  2. https://www.the-race.com/formula-1/shocking-details-behind-painful-williams-f1-revolution/#/portal/signup