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Ferrari says mooted F1 team reshuffle will focus on quality control

Ferrari says changes at the Formula 1 team will revolve around its quality control department in the wake of reliability issues that plagued Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen in Malaysia

Vettel lined up at the back of the grid for last Sunday's Malaysian Grand Prix after engine problems affected his Saturday, and Raikkonen was unable to make the start due to similar issues.

A furious Ferrari president Sergio Marchionne said immediately after the Sepang trouble that the outfit would make urgent changes to prevent a repeat.

That prompted talk of a senior management overhaul, with some rumours suggesting that team principal Maurizio Arrivabene's place could be under threat at the end of the season.

Ferrari technical director Mattia Binotto has clarified, however, that the revisions to the team are simply aimed at improving the quality of its parts to ensure what happened in Malaysia does happen again.

"I think that to improve your performance you need to improve your car and your package, but you also need to improve your organisation," said Binotto at the Japanese Grand Prix.

"What we are considering is something that was already planned: it is to reinforce our quality [control] department. It is as simple as that.

"Our quality department is already somehow reinforced and that is the change of organisation that our chairman was meaning."

Although Ferrari's reshuffle is focused on quality control, Binotto said the team does not yet have a firm explanation for the near-identical failures that struck Vettel and Raikkonen in Sepang.

"It is true that the problems we had were completely unexpected," he added.

"It is a problem we didn't experience either on the dyno or the race track during the entire season.

"There were some quality issues with the parts - we failed an inlet manifold on the engine from the compressor to the cylinder heads.

"And it happened twice, because we had the same problem with Sebastian in qualifying and Kimi in the race.

"Obviously it happened twice in Malaysia, so certainly it could be some boudary conditions that affected the overall reliability in these occasions.

"It is something that we are analysing, and in parallel we reinforced the components, but it is something still we need to better understand."

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