While
the Ferrari's new front wing continued to prompt distinctive showers of
sparks as it vibrated again the track surface, the revised car showed
promising pace, with Massa lapping the dusty track in 1m25.706s 18
minutes before the end of the session to claim the top spot.
His team-mate Fernando Alonso also showed well in third, 0.224 seconds off Massa's pace.
They
were split by champion Sebastian Vettel, whose Red Bull had been
quickest for the majority of the afternoon, until Massa's fast time saw
the German pipped by 0.088s.
Morning
pacesetter Lewis Hamilton, who will go into qualifying for a
three-place grid penalty for disregarding yellow flags earlier today,
was fourth quickest in the best of the McLarens, with his team-mate
Jenson Button sixth behind Mark Webber's Red Bull.
Force
India took 'best of the rest' honours in front of its effective home
crowd thanks to Adrian Sutil's seventh place, two positions ahead of
team-mate Paul di Resta, as they sandwiched Vitaly Petrov's Renault.
Sebastien Buemi completed the top 10 for Toro Rosso.
The
Mercedes were further back than usual in 19th (Nico Rosberg) and 21st
(Michael Schumacher) - the seven-time champion having missed some of the
session while an issue was resolved on his car.
There
were plenty of small incidents as the drivers explored the track's
limits, particularly at Turn 6, and one red flag after Jerome D'Ambrosio
went off at Turn 11 and ended up backed his Virgin into the barriers,
causing significant damage. He was unhurt and the session quickly
resumed.
Petrov
also had a spin in his Renault, while Pastor Maldonado dumped his
Williams in the Turn 9 gravel early on but was retrieved in time to
rejoin the session and complete 24 laps.
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