Lewis Hamilton surprisingly clocked Friday's fastest German Grand Prix practice lap in his modified McLaren at a cold and gloomy Nurburgring.
Red Bull's Mark Webber was quickest in the morning but the struggling world champion beat his time in the afternoon with one minute 32.149 seconds.
Webber's team-mate Sebastian Vettel and Brawn's Jenson Button were close behind as the track temperature finally rose.
Button leads the drivers' championship with chasing Vettel 25 points adrift.
The 22-year-old German, who won the last Formula 1 race at Silverstone and has claimed two races victories in 2009 to Button's six, was eighth early on after his Red Bull suffered electrical problems - but delivered the day's second-fastest lap in the afternoon.
Webber was fourth in the second session while Ferrari's Felipe Massa and Toyota's Jarno Trulli came in third and fourth in the morning, when track temperatures struggled to rise above 15 degrees.
Though practice is rarely, if ever, a true indicator of potential race or qualifying form, the aerodynamic tweaks that Ferrari have made looked to be working smoothly with Kimi Raikkonen sixth in the morning, just one tenth of a second behind Massa.
Hamilton, who sits 11th in the 2009 drivers' world championship just one season after becoming the youngest ever world champion in F1, was also driving in a car with fresh developments.
Although the Kers (Kinetic Energy Recovery System) failed early on, his McLaren ran with a new front wing, diffuser and top bodywork while Heikki Kovalainen - who did not run with all the updates - finished down in 18th and 13th.
"We managed to make a few set-up changes and it seemed to help a little bit but we can't underestimate the pace of the other guys," said Hamilton.
"We may be in the top 10 [in qualifying ] and if we do it's a fantastic job from the guys in the team. To see all the hard work they do come to the circuit and to be stepping in the right direction, they must be very proud."
McLaren engineering director Paddy Lowe also told BBC Sport: "It's always great to be at the top of the time sheets especially at Mercedes' home grand prix.
"The job now is to translate that into some points. Unfortunately, we did not have enough of the new parts to give the same package to Heikki."
Some teams have brought significant adjustments to their cars in Germany as they bid to reign in championship pace-setters Brawn and Red Bull at the season's half-way point.
Yet Fernando Alonso was 10th in the morning as his Renault, which has a revised front wing, spent time in the garage having the front suspension looked at, before he came in eighth in the second session.
Chasing his first GP win after 129 race starts Webber - second at the British GP and fourth in the drivers' championship - posted the quickest morning lap fairly early to top a practice session for the first time this season.
"There's similar conditions [to Silverstone], maybe even cooler here, so hopefully we can give Brawn a good run again," said Red Bull team boss Christian Horner.
"It's got its own little microclimate here, because the altitude's quite high, so anything can happen at any time.
"Both drivers are pretty pumped up and all those Schumacher fans seem to be turning into Sebastian Vettel fans, so here's got a lot of local fans.
"But Mark for me is a real dark horse here. It would be great to see him win a race. He needs to get that monkey off his back."
The third and final practice session is on Saturday at 1000 BST followed by qualifying at 1300 BST.
By Adam Feneley
Motorsport Engineering
www.motorsportengineering.blogspot.com
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