Saudi Arabian Grand Prix: Watch with F1 TV - all the details here

The Saudi Arabian Grand Prix is set to go ahead after a dramatic 24 hours - and you can watch with F1 TV.
Lewis Hamilton (GBR) Mercedes AMG F1 W13.
Lewis Hamilton (GBR) Mercedes AMG F1 W13.
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From just $2.99 per month or $26.99 per year, you can catch up on F1 (free practices, qualifying and the race), as well as F2, F3 and Porsche Supercup replays on demand, follow F1 live timings, or watch from the archives.

Watch F1 your way either on the go on your smartphone or at home with 20 live cockpit cameras and unedited team radio available.

F1 TV Pro provides fans with the insider view, allowing you to get all the action and see every angle, with unprecedented information on your screen and at your fingertips throughout every session and grand prix.

F1 TV Pro gives you the perspective of being a manager, sitting at a digital pitwall with live timings, tyre info, and expert commentary. Many fans create their own race set-ups using multiple screens including F1 TV for a fully immersive experience: just the way they want to watch.

Lewis Hamilton and George Russell finished third and fourth in the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix, Mercedes’ technical chief James Allison said the team hoped to get on top of the aerodynamic issues it is facing within ‘two or three’ races. 

Mercedes trialed different set-up and rear wing configurations on both W13 cars during the two 60 minute practice sessions on Friday in a bid to improve the situation, but the experiments did not fully address the problem.

“We tried a few more experiments to understand the bouncing issue here, some which made it worse, some which helped, but we don't yet have a solution to make the problem go away,” Mercedes’ trackside engineering director Andrew Shovlin explained. 

“We can reduce this slightly for [Saturday] as it's affecting the drivers in a few of the corners and costing time."

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