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== History ==
== History ==
=== The early years and the continuation of pre-WWII supercharged engines (1946–1950) ===
=== The early years and the ccjeoioçqvhçnevchfievhufffffffffvliheifoqhfueoihgvefio thiscshit is a son of a fuking bitch nigga ontinuation of pre-WWII supercharged engines (1946–1950) ===
Formula One was first defined in 1946 by the Commission Sportive Internationale (CSI) of the FIA, forerunner of FISA, as the premier single seater racing category in worldwide motorsport to become effective in 1947. This new "International Formula" was initially known variously as Formula A, Formula I, or Formula 1 with the corresponding "Voiturette" formula being titled Formula B, Formula II, or Formula 2.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/archive/article/december-1947/16/formula-races-1948|title=Formula Races - 1948|date=7 July 2014|website=motorsportmagazine.com|accessdate=28 March 2018}}</ref> When the 500c formula was internationally recognised as Formula 3 in 1950 it was never titled as "Formula C" so the three International Formulae were then "officially" titled Formula 1, Formula 2 and Formula 3.<ref>[http://www.conceptcarz.com/view/racing/racingClassCars.aspx?racingClassID=4 Formula One] Retrieved from www.conceptcarz.com on 28 April 2009</ref>
Formula One was first defined in 1946 by the Commission Sportive Internationale (CSI) of the FIA, forerunner of FISA, as the premier single seater racing category in worldwide motorsport to become effective in 1947. This new "International Formula" was initially known variously as Formula A, Formula I, or Formula 1 with the corresponding "Voiturette" formula being titled Formula B, Formula II, or Formula 2.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/archive/article/december-1947/16/formula-races-1948|title=Formula Races - 1948|date=7 July 2014|website=motorsportmagazine.com|accessdate=28 March 2018}}</ref> When the 500c formula was internationally recognised as Formula 3 in 1950 it was never titled as "Formula C" so the three International Formulae were then "officially" titled Formula 1, Formula 2 and Formula 3.<ref>[http://www.conceptcarz.com/view/racing/racingClassCars.aspx?racingClassID=4 Formula One] Retrieved from www.conceptcarz.com on 28 April 2009</ref>


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'{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2012}} [[File:Ferrari Formula 1 lineup at the Nürburgring.jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|Some [[Scuderia Ferrari]] Formula One cars from between 1950 and 2002]] {{Formula One|related}} [[Formula One]] automobile racing has its roots in the European [[Grand Prix motor racing|Grand Prix]] championships of the 1920s and 1930s, though the foundation of the modern Formula One began in 1946 with the [[Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile]]'s (FIA) standardisation of rules, which was followed by a World Championship of Drivers in 1950. The sport's history parallels the evolution of its [[Formula One regulations|technical regulations]]. In addition to the world championship series, non-championship Formula One races were held for many years, the last held in 1983 due to the rising cost of competition. National championships existed in [[South Africa]] and the [[United Kingdom]] in the 1960s and 1970s. == History == === The early years and the continuation of pre-WWII supercharged engines (1946–1950) === Formula One was first defined in 1946 by the Commission Sportive Internationale (CSI) of the FIA, forerunner of FISA, as the premier single seater racing category in worldwide motorsport to become effective in 1947. This new "International Formula" was initially known variously as Formula A, Formula I, or Formula 1 with the corresponding "Voiturette" formula being titled Formula B, Formula II, or Formula 2.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/archive/article/december-1947/16/formula-races-1948|title=Formula Races - 1948|date=7 July 2014|website=motorsportmagazine.com|accessdate=28 March 2018}}</ref> When the 500c formula was internationally recognised as Formula 3 in 1950 it was never titled as "Formula C" so the three International Formulae were then "officially" titled Formula 1, Formula 2 and Formula 3.<ref>[http://www.conceptcarz.com/view/racing/racingClassCars.aspx?racingClassID=4 Formula One] Retrieved from www.conceptcarz.com on 28 April 2009</ref> In the beginning, the formula was largely based on pre-[[World War II]] regulations defined by engine capacity. The regulation expected to bring a new balance between [[supercharged]] and [[normally aspirated]] cars. Non-supercharged 4.5-litre pre-war Grand Prix cars were allowed to race against the pre-war 1.5-litre supercharged '[[voiturette]]s', while pre-war supercharged 3-litre Grand Prix cars were banned. The first race under the new regulations was the [[1946 Turin Grand Prix]] held on 1 September, the race being won by [[Achille Varzi]] in an [[Alfa Romeo (Formula One)|Alfa Romeo]] [[Alfa Romeo 158/159 Alfetta|158 Alfetta]]. Championships for drivers or constructors were not introduced immediately. In the early years there were around 20 races held from late Spring to early Autumn (Fall) in Europe, although not all of these were considered significant. Most competitive cars came from Italy, particularly Alfa Romeo. Races saw pre-war heroes like [[Rudolf Caracciola]], [[Manfred Von Brauchitsch]] and [[Tazio Nuvolari]] end their careers, while drivers like [[Alberto Ascari]] and [[Juan Manuel Fangio]] rose to the front. === The era of factory Italian and Mercedes front-engine cars (1950–1957) === :''See [[1950 Formula One season|1950 season]], [[1951 Formula One season|1951 season]], [[1952 Formula One season|1952 season]], [[1953 Formula One season|1953 season]], [[1954 Formula One season|1954 season]], [[1955 Formula One season|1955 season]], [[1956 Formula One season|1956 season]] and [[1957 Formula One season|1957 season]].'' [[File:Alfa-Romeo-159-(1951).jpg|thumb|[[Juan Manuel Fangio]] drove this [[Alfa Romeo 158/159 Alfetta|Alfa Romeo 159]] to the title in 1951]] The [[Grand Prix motorcycle racing|Motorcycle World Championships]] was introduced in [[1949 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season|1949]]. In 1950, the FIA responded with the first ever official World Championship for Drivers. The championship series, to be held across six of the 'major' Grands Prix of Europe plus the [[Indianapolis 500]], was in effect a formalization of what had already been developing in Grand Prix racing during the previous years. [[Italy|Italian]] teams of [[Alfa Romeo (Formula One)|Alfa Romeo]], [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]], and [[Maserati]] were best positioned to dominate the early years. Other national manufacturers – such as the French manufacturer [[Talbot]] or the British [[British Racing Motors|BRM]] – competed, although less successfully. A number of private cars also took part in local races. The Italian and German factory teams in those days often employed 2 to 3 drivers whose nationality was the same as the team's and at least 1 foreign driver; for example the Alfa Romeo team in 1950 consisted of [[Formula One drivers from Italy|Italian drivers]] [[Giuseppe Farina]], [[Luigi Fagioli]] and [[Piero Taruffi]]; and [[Formula One drivers from Argentina|Argentine driver]] [[Juan Manuel Fangio]]. Alfa Romeo dominated all before them in the [[1950 Formula One season|1950 season]], winning every race bar one in the championship with the pre-war "Alfetta" 158s. The sole exception was the Indianapolis 500, which was part of the championship, although not run to Formula One regulations and rarely contested by the European teams. The race would never be important for Formula One and was no longer part of the championship after 1960. [[Nino Farina]] won the inaugural championship, [[Juan Manuel Fangio]] taking it in 1951 with the Alfa-Romeo 159, an evolution of the 158. The Alfetta's engines were extremely powerful for their capacity: In 1951 the 159 engine was producing around {{convert|420|bhp|abbr=on}} but this was at the price of a fuel consumption of 125 to 175 litres per 100&nbsp;km (2.26 to 1.61 mpg imp/1.88 mpg to 1.34 mpg US).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ddavid.com/formula1/alfa158.htm |title=Grand Prix Cars - Alfa Romeo 158 |publisher=Ddavid.com |date=7 August 1938 |accessdate=2010-10-04}}</ref> [[Enzo Ferrari]], who had raced the Alfettas before the war, and his engine designer Aurelio Lampredi, were the first to understand that the 1.5-litre supercharged engine was a dead end: Any increase in power meant more fuel to carry or more time lost in the pits for refuelling, For the last races of 1950 Ferrari sent his 1.5-litre supercharged 125s to the museum, and fielded the new V12 4.5-litre normally aspirated 375s. With a fuel consumption of around {{convert|35|L/100 km}} the 375s offered fierce opposition to the Alfettas towards the end of the [[1951 Formula One season|1951 season]]. Alfa Romeo, a state-owned company, decided to withdraw after a refusal of the Italian government to fund the expensive design of a new car. Surprisingly, Alfa Romeo involvement in racing was made with a very thin budget, using mostly pre-war technology and material during the two seasons. For instance the team won two championships using only nine pre-war built engine blocks. No Alfa Romeo, a supporting cast of privateer [[Lago-Talbot]] entries and an almost undriveable, unreliable [[British Racing Motors|BRM]] would make Ferrari effectively invincible. The [[Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile|FIA]] was in an embarrassing position as it had already announced that current Formula One regulations would last until 1954 before switching to 2.5-litre atmospheric engines. Major manufacturers were already working to develop cars for the future regulation and it was obvious that nobody would develop a new car for only two years. The promoters of the World Championship Grands Prix, mindful of the lack of serious competition for the Alfettas, eventually all adopted [[Formula Two]] regulations for two years. However, Ferrari's dominance went on with the light 4-cylinder powered 500s, bringing Italian [[Alberto Ascari]] his two championships in the [[1952 Formula One season|1952]] and [[1953 Formula One season|1953 seasons]]. Ferrari's Formula One cars continued to race very successfully in non-Championship Formula One and Formule Libre races through this period. Ironically, during this period the only World Championship race for which Formula One cars were eligible was the Indianapolis 500. In 1952 Ferrari entered four Formula One 375s with Alberto Ascari as lead driver, but with little success. Discounting the Indianapolis 500, the World Championship was entirely based in Europe until 1953 when the season opened in Argentina. Since then there has always been at least one race outside Europe. As planned, the World Championship races returned to Formula One regulations for the [[1954 Formula One season|1954 season]], now based on a new 2.5-litre atmospheric engine regulation. This successfully brought more entrants to the field. [[Lancia in Formula One|Lancia]] and [[Mercedes-Benz]] came to the formula, hiring the best drivers of the era: Ascari for Lancia, Fangio for Mercedes. Featuring [[desmodromic valve]]s, [[fuel injection]], [[magnesium]] and exotic alloys parts, "streamlined" bodywork and other advanced features, the brand new Mercedes began the 1954 season with Fangio taking pole position at the "Grand Prix de l'ACF" at [[Reims-Gueux]] with the first lap over {{convert|200|km/h|mi/h|0|abbr=on}} in Formula One before winning the race after a duel with other Mercedes driver [[Karl Kling]], who finished second. The Mercedes cars swept the next two seasons with Fangio winning all but three of the races. However, at the end of the [[1955 Formula One season|1955 season]] Mercedes vanished as swiftly as they had come. They had proven the superiority of their technology, but the crash of one of their sportscars that year at [[Le Mans 24 Hours|Le Mans]], killing 83 people, was also a significant factor. The company would not return to Formula One for forty years.<ref>{{cite news|title=Le Mans disaster claims 77 lives|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/june/11/newsid_3726000/3726535.stm|publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation|date=11 June 1955|accessdate=20 November 2006}}</ref> After Le Mans, four of the year's remaining Grands Prix were cancelled. The Monaco Grand Prix saw a spectacular incident when Ascari and his Lancia crashed into the harbour after missing a chicane. Ascari was pulled out of the water alive and apparently well. However, there was speculation over an undetected internal injury when four days later Ascari was killed at Monza while testing a sportscar. After Ascari's death, Lancia followed Mercedes out of the category, passing their engines, cars, information and technology to Ferrari. The [[1956 Formula One season|1956 season]] saw Fangio make good use of the Lancia-born Ferrari to win his fourth championship. Driving for Maserati, he took his fifth championship in the [[1957 Formula One season|1957 season]], a record which would not be beaten for 46 years.<ref>{{cite news | title = Drivers: Juan-Manuel Fangio | url = http://www.grandprix.com/gpe/drv-fanjua.html | publisher = grandprix.com | accessdate = 2006-11-20}}</ref> Ferrari developed a new engine for 1957, the V6 "Dino" engine, it was competitive by 1958 and Mike Hawthorn became the first British F1 World Champion, though his victory was short-lived, he died the following winter. === British independent specialist teams and the rear-mid engine revolution (1958–1961) === :''See [[1958 Formula One season|1958 season]], [[1959 Formula One season|1959 season]], [[1960 Formula One season|1960 season]] and [[1961 Formula One season|1961 season]].'' [[File:Mike Hawthorn 1958 Argentine GP.jpg|thumb|[[Mike Hawthorn]] in a [[Ferrari 246 F1]] in the [[1958 Argentine Grand Prix]]]] Although the basic formula remained unchanged in 1958, races were shortened from around 500&nbsp;km/300miles to 300&nbsp;km/200 miles and cars had to use [[Avgas]] instead of various fuel mixtures using [[methanol]] as the primary component. 1958 saw the introduction of an International Cup for F1 Manufacturers<ref name=FIA_1974>International Cup for F1 Manufacturers, FIA Year Book of Automobile Sport 1974, Grey section, pages 120-121</ref> with points allocated on an 8, 6, 4, 3, 2, 1 basis to the first six cars in the race (i.e. unlike in the Drivers' Championship, there was no point for fastest lap). Furthermore, points were only awarded to the highest placed car of each make, i.e. if a make finished 1st and 2nd they would receive only eight points and the 3rd placed car would receive 4 points. Indianapolis, which was included in the World Championship of Drivers, did not count towards the International Cup for F1 Manufacturers.<ref name=FIA_1974/> With Fangio retired, [[Mike Hawthorn]] in a Ferrari took the {{F1|1958}} Drivers' Championship – becoming the first English driver to earn a title. The British [[Vanwall]] team took the maiden Constructors' Championship that [[1958 Formula One season|season]], but ruined their Drivers' Championship aspirations by taking points off one another. [[Stirling Moss]], despite having many more wins than Hawthorn, lost the championship by one point. It was high sportsmanship that cost Moss the 1958 title. When Hawthorn was threatened with disqualification at the finish of the Portuguese Grand Prix for going in the wrong direction (to restart his car following a spin), Moss argued to stewards on Hawthorn's behalf. The points granted Hawthorn were the difference in the championship. This season also saw a woman driving in Formula One for the first time with [[Maria Teresa de Filippis]] racing a private Maserati at the Belgian Grand Prix.<ref group="note">Women had driven in Grands Prix prior to Formula One, e.g. [[Hellé Nice]].</ref> 1958 was a watershed in another crucial way for Formula One. Against a small field of Ferraris and Maseratis, [[Stirling Moss]] won the [[1958 Argentine Grand Prix|Argentine Grand Prix]] driving a mid-engined [[Cooper Car Company|Cooper]] entered by the private team of [[Rob Walker Racing Team|Rob Walker]], and powered by a 2-litre [[Coventry-Climax]] Straight-4. This was the first victory for a car with the engine mounted behind the driver in Formula One.<ref group="note">The mid-engined [[Auto Union]]s had been successful in Grand Prix in the 1930s.</ref> It was also the first World Championship GP win for a private entrant (excepting the Indianapolis 500 where all the entries were technically private entrants using bought-in chassis). The next Grand Prix in [[1958 Monaco Grand Prix|Monaco]] was also won by the same Cooper car, this time driven by [[Maurice Trintignant]] and facing more substantial opposition. Powered by undersized engines, the Coopers remained outsiders in 1958 but as soon as the new 2.5-litre Coventry-Climax engine was available, the little British cars went on to dominate Formula One. The [[1959 Formula One season|1959]] season was effectively the start of the mid-engined revolution, and this season saw fierce competition between the works Cooper of [[Formula One drivers from Australia|Australian]] [[Jack Brabham]] and [[Stirling Moss|Moss]] in the Walker team's Cooper. The Getrag-modified [[Citroën]] [[Traction Avant]] transaxle proved to be the Achilles heel of the Coopers, so Walker switched to a transaxle manufactured by ex-Maserati engineer Valerio Colotti. The special transmission turned out to be more unreliable than the standard part, and Brabham took the title with Moss second. For [[1960 Formula One season|1960]] while Enzo Ferrari adopted a conservative attitude, claiming "the horses pull the car rather than push it." It was probably disinformation: at the same time Ferrari was preparing for 1961 by designing mid-engined F2 and F1 cars. The Italian front-engined red cars were not only being effectively beaten by the British teams, but thoroughly outclassed- the British rear mid-engined cars had considerably better road holding than the front-engined cars. Although down on power, the British cars' superior handling and lesser demands on tyres more than made up the power deficit. It was obvious to everyone that rear-mid engined cars were the way to go at that point in time. [[Team Lotus|Lotus]] and [[British Racing Motors|BRM]] introduced mid-engined machines. Walker's team switched to a Lotus 18 chassis. Moss gave Lotus its first Formula One victory at Monaco but his season was ruined by a serious crash at Spa, Belgium. Brabham took a second title with his Cooper, but Moss returned in time to win the final race of the season, the U.S. Grand Prix at Riverside, California. The mid-engined revolution rendered another potentially revolutionary car obsolete. The front-engined [[4WD|four-wheel drive]] [[Ferguson Research Ltd.|Ferguson]] [[Four-wheel drive in Formula One#Ferguson P99 (1961)|P99]] raced in British Formula One races in {{F1|1961}}, winning the non-Championship [[Oulton Park International Gold Cup]]<ref>Christian Moity, La Ferguson P 99 Climax (1961-1964). La preuve par quatre. Auto Passion n°136 May–June 2001 p. 42-49</ref> under heavy rain. But the car was too heavy and complex compared to the new breed of mid-engined machines. By 1961, British specialist teams such as Lotus, Cooper and BRM, and later McLaren, Tyrrell and Williams- organizations created purely for producing, developing and competing purpose-built open-wheel racing cars had overtaken the industrial manufacturing powers such as Ferrari, Mercedes, Maserati and Alfa Romeo. The only major automotive manufacturer with a full works effort was Ferrari- which was really a manufacturer that made road cars to fund its racing in F1 and endurance racing. Whereas the big continental manufacturers, with lots of money to spend built the whole car including the drivetrain systems themselves, (excluding BRM), the British teams, with only limited amounts of money only built their chassis; they bought their engines and gearboxes from independent manufacturers such as Coventry-Climax and later Ford/Cosworth engines, and Hewland gearboxes. The only British team that was also a manufacturer of road cars like Ferrari was Lotus; but even so, that company grew considerably but never to the size of Mercedes or Alfa Romeo. From 1957 to 1961, Formula One had transformed from a scattershot industrial manufacturer sideshow of technology to a seriously competitive business for team owners and engineers wanting to come up with new technologies to out-do the opposition and also to sell their technology to big manufacturers or other interested parties. People like Cooper and Lotus founders John Cooper and Colin Chapman proved that competitiveness and developing new automotive technology was about fresh thinking, not industrial might. These British teams were regularly beating manufacturer teams like Ferrari, whom company founder [[Enzo Ferrari]] referring to these new British teams as ''garagistes''- Italian for garage teams- which is effectively how all these British teams operated- their cars were built in small sheds or garages. In {{F1|1961}}, in an attempt to curb speeds, Formula One was downgraded to 1.5-litre, non-supercharged engines (essentially the then-current Formula Two rules), a formula which would remain for the next five years. Forced induction was still an option, but limited to 750cc and no one seriously considered the option, as supercharging had proven limiting to fuel consumption. Ferrari could have used its already proven V6 powered mid-engined [[Formula 2]] cars, but preferred to go one step forward by designing a very sophisticated car powered by a 120° V6, which was their first ever rear-mid engined car, the [[Ferrari 156 F1|156]]. The considerably more powerful and efficient engine Ferrari had led to the Maranello outfit dominating the 1961 season as the British teams scrambled to come up with a suitable engine. American Phil Hill won the 1961 title in a works Ferrari. His teammate, Wolfgang von Trips of [[Formula One drivers from Germany|Germany]], died along with 14 spectators in a horrific crash on the first lap of the Italian Grand Prix at Monza. Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, the Formula One World Championship was merely the tip of the iceberg when it came to races run to Formula One regulations. The total number of races run to Formula One regulations remained about the same as it had been before the introduction of the World Championship. Many famous races, such as the [[Pau Grand Prix|Pau]] and [[Syracuse, Italy|Syracuse]] Grands Prix, the [[BRDC International Trophy]], the [[Race of Champions (Brands Hatch)|Race of Champions]] and the [[Oulton Park Gold Cup]], were not part of the World Championship, but nonetheless continued to draw the top drivers and teams to compete. === Anglophone drivers and 1.5-litre engines (1962–1967) === :''See [[1962 Formula One season|1962 season]], [[1963 Formula One season|1963 season]], [[1964 Formula One season|1964 season]], [[1965 Formula One season|1965 season]], [[1966 Formula One season|1966 season]] and [[1967 Formula One season|1967 season]].'' [[File:John Surtees.JPG|thumb|upright|[[John Surtees]] ([[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]) at the [[1964 British Grand Prix]]]] In 1962, the Lotus team ran the [[Lotus 25]] powered by the new Coventry-Climax FWMV V8 engine. The car had an aluminium sheet [[monocoque]] chassis instead of the traditional [[spaceframe]] design. This proved to be the greatest technological breakthrough since the introduction of mid-engined cars, but the Lotus was unreliable at first. [[Jim Clark]] finished second that year leaving the title to [[Graham Hill]] and his new V8 powered [[British Racing Motors|BRM]]. As soon as the car and the engine became reliable, the era of the [[Team Lotus|Lotus]] and of [[Jim Clark]] began. Clark won the title twice in three years, {{F1|1963}} and {{F1|1965}}, the latter being the only occasion to date of a driver winning both the Championship and the [[Indianapolis 500|Indianapolis 500-Mile Race]] in the same year. For 1964 Lotus introduced the new [[Lotus 33]] and Ferrari made considerable technological and financial effort to win the title. Ferrari used no less than three different engines in the season—the existing V6, a V8 and a [[flat-12]], while Lotus was struggling with the teething troubles of a new car. The title went to [[John Surtees]] and Ferrari. Surtees' title was especially notable, as he became the only driver ever to win the World Championship for both cars and [[motorcycles]]. The [[1965 Mexican Grand Prix]], the last race of the 1.5 litres Formula One, saw Richie Ginther giving Honda its first victory at the end of a season that was otherwise disappointing for the Japanese newcomer. This was the first victory by a Japanese car and, as of today, the only one by a car powered by a transverse engine. {{F1|1966}} saw a 'Return to Power' as Formula One changed the engine rules once again, allowing engines of 3.0-litre normally aspirated, or 1.5-litre [[supercharged]] or forced induction. 1966 was a transitional year for most teams, however, the year did see the first use of [[composite material]]s, a technology which would later revolutionise the sport. The [[McLaren M2B]], designed by [[Robin Herd]], used an aluminium-wood laminate known as [[Mallite]] for much of its monocoque, although the car's design did not make best use of the new material. Given the shift to 1500cc forced induction, it is surprising that any teams did not seriously consider fielding turbocharged versions of their 1500cc naturally aspirated engines right from that point, Coventry Climax had considered it for their FWMW flat 16, but the company had decided to end its Formula 1 racing activities and the idea stopped there. It would be Eleven years before a team exploited the 1500cc forced induction option again. Ferrari was the great favorite with a 3-litre version of his well tested powerful sports car V12 design, but the new cars were very heavy, probably in an excess of self-confidence. An enlarged V6 held some promise but Surtees left mid-season after a dispute with team manager Eugenio Dragoni at the 24 Hours of Le Mans sportscar race. Coventry-Climax, formerly supplier to much of the field, pulled out of the sport leaving teams like Lotus to struggle with enlarged versions of obsolete Climax engines. Cooper turned to a development of an otherwise obsolete Maserati V12 that was originally designed for the Maserati 250 F in the late 1950s, while BRM made the choice to design an incredibly heavy and complex [[H engine|H-16]]. The big winner was Jack Brabham, whose eponymous racing team took victory two years running with a light and compact spaceframe chassis powered by the aluminium-block stock-derived [[Repco]] V8 unit. With SOHC heads and no more than 330&nbsp;bhp,<ref group="note">Probably {{convert|285|bhp|abbr=on}} at its beginning and {{convert|330|bhp|abbr=on}} at final stage of development.</ref> the Repco was one of the least powerful of the new 3-litre engines but unlike the others it was light, reliable and available right from the start of the new rules. 1966 was Jack's year, while {{F1|1967}} went to his teammate, [[New Zealand]]er [[Denny Hulme]], as Jack tried new parts on his car. In 1967 Lotus introduced the [[Lotus 49]], powered by the Ford-Cosworth [[Cosworth DFV|DFV]] V8 engine that was to dominate Formula One for the next decade. Like the Repco the Cosworth was light and compact but it was a real racing engine using 4-valve DOHC heads and delivered much more power. Cosworth had aimed for {{convert|400|bhp|abbr=on}} and exceeded this when the engine first ran. The DFV was designed to be fully stressed (an idea pioneered by the [[Lancia in Formula One|Lancia]] D50).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ferrariownersclub.co.uk/happenings/2006/october/ferrari_fangio/report.asp |title=Fangio Ferrari 50 - Ferrari Owners' Club |publisher=Ferrariownersclub.co.uk |accessdate=2010-10-04 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110221000829/http://www.ferrariownersclub.co.uk/happenings/2006/october/ferrari_fangio/report.asp |archivedate=21 February 2011 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> This allowed Chapman to design a monocoque that ended just after the driver's seat while the Brabham were still using a very classic tubular frame that supported the engine, the gearbox and the rear suspension wishbones. The newborn DFV suffered from frequent failures due to excessive vibration from the flat-plane crank, forcing [[Keith Duckworth]] to redesign several parts and allowing Hulme to win the World Drivers' Crown on reliability. 1967 also saw a remarkable result by [[Rhodesia]]n driver [[John Love (racing driver)|John Love]] with a 2.7-litre four-cylinder Cooper-Climax. Love, who was in his forties and although seen as one of the finest drivers in Southern Africa was not a major star, led and finished second in that year's South African Grand Prix. Love's obsolete Cooper was originally designed for the short races of the [[Tasman Series]]; to run a full Grand Prix, Love added two auxiliary fuel tanks. Unfortunately the auxiliary tank's fuel pump failed and forced him to refuel after having led most of the race.<ref>John Love, L'homme de Kyalami. Automobile historique (To be completed)</ref> By the late 1960s, overseas races outside Europe formed about a third of the championship in any year. The core of the season remained the European season run over the Northern Hemisphere summer, with overseas races usually falling at the start or end of the season, a pattern which has continued to this day. There were also a number of non-championship races run outside Europe; the South African Grand Prix was occasionally one of these. British and English-native speaking drivers dominated the racing scene in the 1960s. Britons Graham Hill, Jim Clark, John Surtees and Jackie Stewart won 7 championships combined in that decade- Australian Jack Brabham won 2 championships, New Zealander Denny Hulme won a championship in 1967 and American Phil Hill won a championship in 1961. === The DFV engine, 12-cylinder engines and the arrival of sponsorship, safety and aerodynamics (1968–1976) === {{see also|Hunt–Lauda rivalry}} :''See [[1968 Formula One season|1968 season]], [[1969 Formula One season|1969 season]], [[1970 Formula One season|1970 season]], [[1971 Formula One season|1971 season]], [[1972 Formula One season|1972 season]], [[1973 Formula One season|1973 season]], [[1974 Formula One season|1974 season]], [[1975 Formula One season|1975 season]] and [[1976 Formula One season|1976 season]].'' [[File:Lotus-49c-2.jpg|thumb|The [[Lotus 49]], the first F1 car to appear in a sponsor's livery, at a demonstration run in 2005]] In 1968, Lotus lost its exclusive right to use the DFV. McLaren built a DFV-powered car and a new force appeared on the scene when [[Ken Tyrrell]] entered his team using Cosworth-powered French [[Equipe Matra Sports|Matra]] chassis driven by ex-BRM [[Jackie Stewart]] as lead driver. Clark took his last win at the 1968 season opening South African Grand Prix. On 7 April 1968 the double champion was killed at Hockenheim in a Formula Two event. The season saw three significant innovations. The first was the arrival of unrestricted [[sponsor (commercial)|sponsorship]], which the FIA decided to permit that year after the withdrawal of support from automobile related firms like BP, Shell and Firestone. [[Team Gunston]], a South African [[Privateer (motorsport)|privateer team]], was the first Formula One team to paint their cars in the livery of their sponsors when they entered a private [[Brabham]] for [[John Love (racing driver)|John Love]], painted in the colours of [[Gunston]] cigarettes, in the [[1968 South African Grand Prix]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.wheels24.co.za/FormulaOne/sa-was-ahead-of-the-curve-50-years-of-sponsorship-in-f1-20180320|title='SA was ahead of the curve' - 50 years of sponsorship in F1|website=wheels24.co.za|accessdate=4 October 2018}}</ref> In the next round at the [[1968 Spanish Grand Prix]] Lotus became the first [[Factory-backed|works team]] to follow this example, with [[Graham Hill]]'s [[Lotus 49]]B entered in the Red, Gold and White colors of [[Imperial Tobacco]]'s Gold Leaf brand. The second innovation was the introduction of wings as seen previously on various cars including the [[Chaparral Cars|Chaparral]] 2F sports car. Colin Chapman introduced modest front wings and a spoiler on Graham Hill's [[Lotus 49]]B at the [[1968 Monaco Grand Prix]]. Brabham and Ferrari went one better at the [[1968 Belgian Grand Prix]] with full width wings mounted on struts high above the driver. Lotus replied with a full width wing directly connected to the rear suspension that required a redesign of suspension wishbones and transmission shafts. Matra then produced a high mounted front wing connected to the front suspension. This last innovation was mostly used during practice as it required a lot of effort from the driver. By the end of the season most teams were using sophisticated wings. There was several case of wings, struts, or even suspension collapsing. Lastly, the third innovation was the introduction of a full face helmet for drivers, with [[Dan Gurney]] becoming the first driver to wear such helmet at the [[1968 German Grand Prix]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.allamericanracers.com/gurney_grand-prix/eagle_f1-photo.html |title=Eagle Eye: The Eagle Gurney-Weslake F1 Effort |publisher=Allamericanracers.com |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120428145632/http://www.allamericanracers.com/gurney_grand-prix/eagle_f1-photo.html |archivedate=28 April 2012 |accessdate=9 January 2016}}</ref> Lotus won both titles in {{F1|1968}} with [[Graham Hill]] with Stewart second. Unfortunately, 1968 was the year that former double World Champion [[Jim Clark]] died in a Formula 2 race in Germany. This was a tragedy for the sport and many of its fans and within the next few years many of the drivers campaigned for more safety at races to stop more deaths happening. The 1968 Matras most innovative feature was the use of aviation-inspired structural fuel tanks but the FIA decided to ban the technology for 1970.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://atlasf1.autosport.com/news/safety.html |title=Safety Improvements in F1 Since 1963 |publisher=Atlasf1.autosport.com |date= |accessdate=2010-10-04}}</ref> For 1969 Matra made the radical decision to withdraw its works team and build a new car using structural tanks for the Tyrrell team, even though it would be eligible for only a single season. The 1969 season started with cars using larger and more sophisticated wings than the previous year. When both Lotus cars broke their wings' struts and crashed at the Spanish Grand Prix, the FIA banned wings for the next race at Monaco. They were reintroduced later in the season but were to be restricted in size and height, and attached directly to the chassis in a fixed position. Safety became a major issue in Formula One and the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa did not take place as the drivers boycotted the circuit after safety upgrades were not installed as demanded. Stewart won the 1969 title easily with the new Matra MS80, a spectacular achievement from a constructor and a team that had only entered Formula One the previous year. It remains the only title won by a chassis built in France. 1969 also saw a brief resurgence of interest in [[four wheel drive]] with a record of four such cars on field at the British Grand Prix. [[Johnny Servoz-Gavin]] became the one and only driver to score a point with a 4WD, finishing sixth with the [[Matra MS84]] at the Canadian Grand Prix, although the front wheel transmission was actually disconnected.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.forix.com/8w/4wd69.html |title=8W - How? - Four-wheel drive in 1969 Grand Prix racing |publisher=Forix.com |date= |accessdate=2010-10-04}}</ref> Wide tyres and [[downforce]] had proved to be better means of increasing grip, and the technology was largely abandoned. Jacky Ickx finished second in the championship for [[Brabham]], competitive again after dropping its Repco engines in favour of the DFV. For 1970 Tyrrell were asked by Matra to use their V12, but decided to retain the Cosworth instead.<ref>François Hurel, V8 Cosworth. L'élément moteur. ''Autohebdo''. 1 March 2006 N° 1535 p. 26-31</ref> As Matra was now a Chrysler affiliate and Tyrrell derived much of its income from Ford and Elf (associated with Renault) the partnership ended. Ken Tyrrell bought [[March Engineering|March]] 701 chassis as an interim solution while developing his own car for the next season. The new wedge-shaped Lotus 72 was a very innovative car featuring [[variable flexibility suspension|variable flexibility]] [[Torsion beam suspension|torsion bar]] suspension, hip-mounted radiators, inboard front brakes and an overhanging rear wing. The 72 originally had suspension problems, but once resolved the car quickly showed its superiority and Lotus's new leader, the Austrian [[Jochen Rindt]], dominated the championship until he was killed at Monza when a brake shaft broke. He took the {{F1|1970}} title posthumously for Lotus. 1970 saw the introduction of slick tyres by Goodyear. Ferrari's new flat-12 engine proved to be more powerful than the Ford-Cosworth DFV; but slightly heavier. Their performance started to improve at the end of that season, and Belgian [[Jacky Ickx]] won 3 races- but this proved to not be enough to overhaul Rindt's points total; Ickx later said he was happy to not have won the championship that year. After Rindt's death the Lotus team had a desultory 1971 season with its two new and inexperienced drivers - [[Emerson Fittipaldi]] and Reine Wisell. The team spent a lot of time experimenting with a [[gas turbine]] powered car, and with four wheel drive again. After Jack Brabham's retirement, his old team went into a steep decline. Using their own chassis heavily inspired by the Matra MS80 but with conventional tanks, [[Tyrrell Racing|Tyrrell]] and Stewart easily took success in {{F1|1971}}. Focussing again on the type 72 chassis, now fielded in [[John Player Special]]'s black and gold livery, Lotus took the {{F1|1972}} championship by surprise with 25-year-old Brazilian driver Emerson Fittipaldi becoming the then youngest world champion. Stewart came second, his performance compromised by a [[stomach ulcer]]. In {{F1|1973}}, Lotus teammates Fittipaldi and [[Ronnie Peterson]] raced each other while Stewart was supported by [[François Cevert]] at Tyrrell. Stewart took the Drivers' title, but then at the final race of the season, the United States Grand Prix at Watkins Glen, Cevert crashed during Saturday practice in the notorious esses and was killed instantly. Stewart, temporary hire [[Chris Amon]] and Tyrrell withdrew from the race effectively handing the Constructors' title to Lotus. At the end of the season Stewart made public his decision to retire, a decision that was already made before the U.S. Grand Prix. McLaren, having fully recovered from the death of their founder, ended the 1973 season with three wins and several poles. The new M23, an updated interpretation of the Lotus 72 concept, appeared to many as the best design on the field. Fittipaldi made the choice to leave Lotus for McLaren that offered him true lead driver status that Chapman refused to him. The 1974 season went to pre-season favourites McLaren and Fittipaldi, but was a far closer result than expected. Ferrari bounced back from a dismal 1973 season with its first true monocoque cars, the [[flat-12]] powered 312 B3s driven by young Austrian [[Niki Lauda]] and the experienced Clay Regazzoni. Despite the failure of the new Lotus 76, Peterson managed to win Grands Prix with the four-year-old 72. Brabham driver Carlos Reutemann was also able to win with the new BT44 and young talent Jody Scheckter ended most of the races in the points, including winning the Swedish Grand Prix with the M23-lookalike Tyrrell 007. Lauda's season fizzled out after a crash on the first lap of the German Grand Prix. Only the last race of the season decided the Drivers' title between Fittipaldi, Regazzoni, and Scheckter. By this time the innovations introduced by the Lotus 49 and 72 had changed car design. Fully stressed engine and variable flexibility suspension was now the norm, most cars had wedge shaped bodywork and airboxes towered over driver's heads. The main innovation of this era came in 1975, when the Ferrari 312T appeared, its transverse [[gearbox]] allowing better weight distribution. Ferrari won the Constructors titles in {{F1|1975}}, {{F1|1976}}, and {{F1|1977}}. Lauda took a relatively straightforward first Drivers' title in 1975. The main surprise of the season came when the tiny [[Hesketh Racing|Hesketh]] team won the Dutch Grand Prix with [[James Hunt]]. Despite entering only one car and refusing sponsorship the team finished 4th in the Constructors' Championship. That year also saw [[Lella Lombardi]] score the first points by a woman in Formula One for 6th place at the Spanish Grand Prix. [[File:LaudaNiki19760731Ferrari312T2.jpg|thumb|[[Niki Lauda]] practicing at the [[Nürburgring]] during the [[1976 German Grand Prix]]]] For 1976, Fittipaldi made the surprising decision to drive for the [[Formula One drivers from Brazil|Brazilian]] [[Fittipaldi Automotive]] team of his brother [[Wilson Fittipaldi Júnior|Wilson]], sponsored by [[Copersucar]]. James Hunt, who knew that Hesketh's future was doomed by its lack of sponsorship (Lord Hesketh had tried to obtain major backing once he realised Hunt was a likely title contender and that he could no longer afford to run the team out of his own pocket), signed for McLaren. In 1976 Lauda's second successive title seemed inevitable until he crashed on the second lap at the [[Nürburgring]], suffering severe burns as well as lung and blood damage. He was given the last rites but unbelievably was back in his Ferrari six weeks later. He lost the championship by a single point to James Hunt in heavy rain at the final round at [[Fuji Speedway|Fuji]] in Japan when he pitted his car and refused to continue, declaring that the risk was too great and that from now on he would refuse to race under extreme conditions. The most radical innovation of 1976 was the 6-wheeled [[Tyrrell P34]]. The P34 was a good car, often finishing third or fourth and winning the Swedish Grand Prix, but it was not superior to the best 4-wheeled cars. 1976 also saw the Lotus team fitting brushes or plastic skirts under its rather uncompetitive 77; McLaren and Brabham also experimented with air-dams and splitters in an attempt to cause low-pressure areas under the car but found no significant effect on performance, in fact nobody knew what was in Chapman's mind. The incident at Fuji damaged Lauda's relationship with Enzo Ferrari and Lauda officially became the second driver of the Scuderia with [[Carlos Reutemann]] as leader. Lauda signed for Brabham before the end of the 1977 championship, having taken the title easily before Enzo Ferrari refused him a car for the end of the season. His second title was mostly built on regularity and reliability. Despite his conflict with the "Commendatore" and his second driver status Lauda enjoyed immense respect from the Ferrari team, which did its best to give him a good car. There was in fact a very competitive field that year but no single challenger to the Austrian emerged and points taken away from Ferrari were shared between many teams and drivers. Surprisingly, the new [[Walter Wolf Racing|Wolf]] team, born from the ashes of [[Frank Williams Racing Cars]] and Hesketh, made excellent use of its legacy with Jody Scheckter finishing second to Niki Lauda. === Ground-effect era (1977–1982) === :''See [[1977 Formula One season|1977 season]], [[1978 Formula One season|1978 season]], [[1979 Formula One season|1979 season]], [[1980 Formula One season|1980 season]], [[1981 Formula One season|1981 season]] and [[1982 Formula One season|1982 season]].'' 1977 also saw two radical technical innovations that would change the future of Formula One. The purpose of Lotus's experimentation in 1976 was revealed with the [[Lotus 78]], which brought [[ground effect in cars|ground effect]] to Formula One for the first time, using wing-profiled sidepods sealed to the ground by sliding [[lexan]] skirts. Generating radically increased downforce with significantly less drag,<ref group="note">Reportedly, the internal name of the project that gave birth to 78 was "Something for nothing", Lotus external consultant [[Peter Wright (racing car designer)|Peter Wright]], one of the designers of the 1970 [[March 701]], brought the idea.</ref> the Lotus 78s driven by [[Mario Andretti]] and [[Gunnar Nilsson]] won five Grands Prix in 1977. [[Renault F1|Renault]] unveiled the second when their [[Renault RS01|RS01]] made its first appearance powered by a 1.5-litre turbocharged engine, derived from their [[Sports car racing|sportscar]] unit. Although supercharged engines were successful in the 1950s and the regulations allowing for turbocharged engines had existed for 11 years, no Formula One team had built one, feeling that the fuel consumption and [[Turbocharger#Lag|turbo lag]] (boost lag) would negate its superior power. Motor engineer [[Bernard Dudot]],<ref>Bernard Canonne & Christophe Wilmart, 1906-2006 100 ans de Grand Prix. Rétroviseur November 2006</ref> who had observed the turbocharged [[Offenhauser]] engines used in [[Champ Car]] racing in the USA, pushed for this choice. The entry of Renault also brought Michelin's [[radial tyre]]s to Formula One. Goodyear, who enjoyed a monopoly before the entry of [[Michelin]], was still using the [[cross ply]] design for racing. Goodyear saw the entry of Michelin as a serious threat and made a notable effort in research and development to develop its own radial tyres. Tyrrell's 1977 season was disastrous because [[Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company|Goodyear]] was too busy to continue to develop the unique small tyres required by the P34. Without continuing development, the tyres became less competitive and the six-wheeled concept had to be dropped. [[Michelin]] eventually left F1 after the 1984 season. [[File:2001 Goodwood Festival of Speed Brabham BT46B Fan car.jpg|thumb|The [[Brabham BT46#Brabham BT46B – the "fan car"|Brabham BT46B]] "fan car"]] For {{F1|1978}} the new [[Lotus 79]] made a more radical and mature use of the ground effect concept. Many other teams began experimenting with the technology, but Lotus had a [[Head start (positioning)|head start]] and [[Mario Andretti]] won the Championship in the "Black Beauty", becoming the first driver to win both the American [[American Championship Car Racing|IndyCar]] championship and the Formula One title. [[Brabham]] outbid Lotus in generating downforce with [[Brabham BT46|BT46B]] "fan car", a revival of the "sucker car" concept used by [[Jim Hall (race car driver)|Jim Hall]]'s [[Chaparral 2J]] in the [[Can-Am]] series in the early 1970s. The car exploited a loophole in the regulations, but the team, led by Bernie Ecclestone who had recently become president of the Formula One Constructors Association, withdrew the car before it had a chance to be banned after winning its only race with [[Niki Lauda]] at the wheel at the [[1978 Swedish Grand Prix|Swedish Grand Prix]]. Late in the season Ronnie Peterson crashed into the barriers in the first lap at Monza and his Lotus burst into flames. James Hunt heroically pulled him out of the car and the medical prognosis was initially good but the Swede died the next day because of an [[embolism]]. Hunt would retire after the following season's Monaco Grand Prix. For 1979 [[Equipe Ligier|Ligier]], the up-and-coming [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] team and surprisingly [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]], despite the handicap of the Flat-12 that obstructed wind tunnels, produced wing-cars designs that were more effective than the [[Lotus 79]]. This forced Lotus to hastily introduce the new 80 that overplayed the ground effect concept (it was originally intended to run with no drag-inducing wings, merely ground-effect sidepods) and never proved competitive. Renault persisted with the turbo engine, despite frequent breakdowns that resulted in the nickname of the 'Little Yellow Teapot', and finally won for the first time at Dijon in {{F1|1979}} with the [[Renault RS10|RS10]] that featured both ground effect and turbo engine. [[File:Renault RS10 1979.jpg|left|thumb|The [[Renault RS10]], the first turbocharged car to win a Grand Prix, had ground-effect aerodynamics permitted in 1979]] The new technologies introduced by Renault and Lotus became entangled in the [[FISA–FOCA war]] of the early 1980s. Turbo engines were complex machines whose layout limited the ground effect 'tunnels' under the car. They were an emerging technology and so they were difficult and expensive to develop and build and make reliable. It was mostly manufacturer-supported teams, such as Renault, Ferrari and [[Alfa Romeo]] which took that route. In contrast, the cheap, reliable and narrow Ford-Cosworth [[Cosworth DFV|DFV]] engine, still used by most teams more than a decade after its introduction, lent itself well to highly efficient ground effect aerodynamics. These two groups were represented by two political bodies – the sport's governing body [[Federation International du Sport Automobile|FISA]], headed by [[Jean Marie Balestre|Jean-Marie Balestre]]; and [[Formula One Constructors Association|FOCA]], headed up by [[Bernie Ecclestone]]. The first group supported a strict limitation of ground effect to gain full advantage from their powerful turbos while the other relied on unrestricted ground effect to balance their horsepower deficit. There were also financial considerations. Faced with large constructors with unrestricted budgets, the smaller constructors wanted a larger share of Formula One's income to remain competitive. The battles between FISA and FOCA during the first years of the 1980s overshadowed the events on track. [[Jody Scheckter]] took Ferrari's last title for 21 years in {{F1|1979}}, but attention there was already being focused on young Canadian [[Gilles Villeneuve]]. [[Alan Jones (Formula 1)|Alan Jones]] and [[Keke Rosberg]] brought success to Frank Williams at last in {{F1|1980}} and {{F1|1982}}, while young Brazilian [[Nelson Piquet]] won titles for [[Brabham]] team owner Ecclestone in {{F1|1981}} and {{F1|1983}}. [[Patrick Depailler]] was killed in {{F1|1980}}, probably due to high lateral acceleration causing a black out in Hockenheim's fast Ostkurve. The double blow struck to Ferrari in {{F1|1982}}, of the death of Gilles Villeneuve and the crippling injury to teammate [[Didier Pironi]] only a few weeks later, helped bring this crisis into the spotlight, and helped both sides settle the dispute for the good of the sport. The old fashioned DFV helped make the UK domestic Aurora Formula One series possible between 1978 and 1980. As in South Africa a generation before, second hand cars from manufacturers like [[Team Lotus|Lotus]] and [[Fittipaldi Automotive]] were the order of the day, although some, such as the [[March Engineering|March]] 781, were built specifically for the series. In 1980 the series saw South African [[Desiré Wilson]] become the only woman to win a Formula One race when she triumphed at Brands Hatch in a Williams. After several years in darkness [[McLaren]] merged with [[Ron Dennis]]'s Formula Two Project-4 team. The [[McLaren MP4/1]] (McLaren Project-4) introduced the first [[carbon fibre composite|carbon fiber composite]] chassis in 1981, an innovation which, despite initial doubts over its likely performance in a crash, had been taken up by all the teams by the middle of the decade. The use of carbon fibre composite in place of aluminium honeycomb produced cars that were significantly lighter, yet also far stiffer which improved grip and therefore cornering speed. Significant skepticism regarding the use of carbon fiber chassis remained, but [[John Watson (racing driver)#Move to McLaren and championship challenge|John Watson's 1981 crash]] in the MP4/1 showed that the new technology was sufficiently safe, with the violent accident leaving Watson unscathed, where similar previous incidents had resulted in death or serious injury. <!---Subjective and not at the right place: Ironically, despite all of the controversy swirling around the privateers, the 1970s in Formula One provided some of the most colorful and competitive grids ever found in the sport. The cheapness of the Ford-Cosworth DFV encouraged many private entrants to buy or build their own cars to run in the seasons with varying degrees of success. While names like [[Ensign (racing team)|Ensign]], [[Penske]], and [[Theodore Racing|Theodore]] came and went without making much of an impression, other teams, such as [[Hesketh Racing|Hesketh]], [[Shadow Racing Team|Shadow]], [[Walter Wolf Racing|Wolf]], or [[Arrows Grand Prix International|Arrows]] enjoyed more success, and even challenged the established giants of the sport from time to time.---> === 1.5-litre turbo-charged engines (1983–1988) === :''See [[1983 Formula One season|1983 season]], [[1984 Formula One season|1984 season]], [[1985 Formula One season|1985 season]], [[1986 Formula One season|1986 season]], [[1987 Formula One season|1987 season]] and [[1988 Formula One season|1988 season]].'' The {{F1|1983}} title, won by Piquet for the Brabham team of Bernie Ecclestone, champion of the non-manufacturer teams' rights, was the first-ever won by a turbocharged engine. By 1983, the dispute between FISA and FOCA had been resolved and although FOCA emerged with the stronger hand, the teams had seen the writing on the wall. Renault had proven in 1979 and 1980 that turbo-charged engines were a more efficient means of getting more performance from the powertrain with the FIA regulations. The turbo cars were faster on almost all of the high speed (Hockenheim, Österreichring, Monza, Silverstone) and high-altitude tracks (Interlagos, Kyalami), but by 1982, the turbo cars were fastest just about everywhere. The 1982 season made it obvious to all the competing Formula One teams that turbocharged engines were the way to go if anyone wanted to be competitive in Formula 1. By 1983, the reliability of the turbo-charged engines had been ironed out and made more reliable, and in 1984, only [[Tyrrell Racing|Tyrrell]] still struggled on with the old DFV engines. 1983 also saw the last non-championship Formula One race: The 1983 [[Race of Champions (Brands Hatch)|Race of Champions]] at [[Brands Hatch]], won by reigning World Champion Keke Rosberg in a Williams-Ford/Cosworth in a close fight with American [[Danny Sullivan]]. Safety issues finally helped resolve the dispute; after nearly 50 years, the power achieved by the turbocharged cars could finally match the 640&nbsp;hp (477&nbsp;kW) produced by the supercharged 1937 [[Mercedes-Benz W125]], without a huge consumption of special fuel. By {{F1|1986}}, some engines were producing over {{convert|1350|bhp|abbr=on}} in short bursts in qualifying. [[BMW]]'s {{convert|1000|bhp|abbr=on}} [[dynamometer]] was incapable of measuring the output of their qualifying engines - [[Paul Rosche]] estimated that it might be as much as {{convert|1400|bhp|abbr=on}}. First fuel consumption and then turbocharger boost were restricted to 4-bar in 1987 and 1.5-bar in 1988. By 1988, the turbos were only slightly more powerful than the lighter 3.5-litre naturally aspirated cars that had been introduced the previous year. The thirsty turbo engines briefly saw refuelling introduced into the sport, but this was banned for 1984. [[File:Williams F1 FW11 Crop.jpg|thumb|The [[Williams FW11]] won the Constructors' Championship in {{F1|1986}}, the only year before 2014 in which every car in the field had a [[Turbocharger|turbocharged]] engine]] With controversy at last left behind, the Formula One teams flourished through the remainder of the 1980s and into the 1990s. Despite the overwhelming dominance of two teams—McLaren and Williams—this period is regarded (perhaps ironically) as one of the brightest spots in F1's 50-year history. [[Niki Lauda]], coming out of retirement for a hefty sum in {{F1|1982}}, pipped his teammate [[Alain Prost]] to the title in {{F1|1984}} by a mere half point, the closest ever finish in Formula One history. That half point in itself was controversial in that it came at the rain-shortened Grand Prix of Monaco, which resulted in half points, too. Prost won that race, but rookie [[Ayrton Senna]] made the stronger impression in his [[Toleman]] car, finishing 2nd and rapidly closing on Prost (while the young German [[Stefan Bellof]] in the inferior non-turbocharged Tyrrell raced from the back of the field to 3rd and might even have taken the win, running faster than both Prost and Senna and with Senna reputed to have terminal suspension damage after an earlier incident even though later that year Tyrrell were disqualified from the championship losing all of their points from both the Drivers' and Constructors' championships). It was the start of a rivalry between the two men that would continue for nearly a decade. But in the early years, Prost held the advantage, driving for the McLaren team with the [[Porsche]]-built [[Techniques d'Avant Garde|TAG]] turbo engine which took three world titles in a row. {{F1|1986}} provided another close finish. The [[Honda Racing F1|Honda]]-powered Williams cars of Nelson Piquet and [[Nigel Mansell]] looked untouchable, but too often they took points from each other, allowing McLaren's Prost to stay in touch. Although Williams easily won the Constructors' Championship that year, it was not until the season-ending Grand Prix of Australia that the Drivers' title was decided, Prost making the most of both Williams drivers tyre problems. {{F1|1987}} saw the Williams grow only stronger, with Piquet driving more consistent races to take his 3rd title ahead of Mansell who crashed in Japan in practice forcing him to sit out for the final 2 races. 1987 also saw the return of atmospheric engines to Formula One, after the turbo-only year of 1986. Capacity was increased to 3.5 litres, and the turbo engines were restricted in [[boost pressure]] and fuel capacity to limit their effect, with a total ban to be introduced in {{F1|1989}}. Nevertheless, while turbo engines lasted, they dominated, Williams winning easily in 1987, and McLaren returning to form in {{F1|1988}} with the super-team of Prost and Senna winning 15 of 16 races, a record unmatched today. It was Senna who emerged the victor, claiming the first of his 3 World Titles. === 3.5-litre naturally aspirated engines, active suspension and electronic driver aids (1989–1993) === :''See [[1989 Formula One season|1989 season]], [[1990 Formula One season|1990 season]], [[1991 Formula One season|1991 season]], [[1992 Formula One season|1992 season]] and [[1993 Formula One season|1993 season]].'' In 1989, turbos were banned and new regulations allowing only naturally aspirated engines up to 3.5 litres were put in their place. The dominance of McLaren-Honda continued for the next 3 seasons, Prost winning the title in 1989, Senna in {{F1|1990}} and {{F1|1991}}. The V10 and V12 engines produced by the Japanese manufacturer proved to be just as good an engine as the turbo V6 before them, and the V10 was the best engine over the 2 seasons it was used and developed by McLaren and Honda. The championship was marred however by the fierce rivalry between the two men, culminating in a pair of clashes at the Japanese Grands Prix of 1989 and 1990. They both dominated Formula One from 1988 to 1990, winning 37 of the 48 Grand Prix staged and each scoring almost twice as many points as the third-place driver in those championships. In 1989 Prost 'closed the door' on his overtaking teammate while Senna later freely admitted to deliberately driving into Prost in the 1990 race, drawing stiff condemnation from all quarters of Formula One. Senna, however, was more concerned with the threat (and opportunity) afforded by the resurgent Williams, now powered by Renault (the French giant's innovative engine technology allowed their engines to be level with Honda's engines) and designed by aerodynamics genius [[Adrian Newey]] which were to dominate Formula One for the next 7 years. It was more than Renault engines, however, which allowed Williams and later [[Benetton Formula|Benetton]] to dominate Formula One from {{F1|1992}} to {{F1|1997}}. Refuelling at pit stops was reintroduced turning each race into a series of sprints – as a result the race strategy became as important as the driver's ability. In the early 1990s, teams started introducing electronic driver aids, whose use spread rapidly. [[Active suspension]], (pioneered by Lotus in 1987), [[Gearbox#Semi-automatic transmission|semi-automatic gearbox]]es (Ferrari in 1989), and [[traction control system|traction control]] (Williams in 1991) became essential to compete. Some of these technologies were borrowed from contemporary road cars. Others were primarily developed for the track and later made their way to the showroom. All enabled cars to reach higher and higher speeds, provided the teams were willing to spend the money. The [[Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile|FIA]], due to complaints that technology was determining the outcome of races more than driver skill, banned many such aids in 1994. However, many observers felt that the ban on driver aids was a ban in name only as the FIA did not have the technology or the methods to eliminate these features from competition. Even this controversy did not diminish the pleasure British fans of the sport felt in 1992, when Nigel Mansell finally won the title, after a decade of trying, nor French fans in {{F1|1993}} when Alain Prost took his 4th Championship, both drivers piloting Williams cars. Lightweight television cameras attached to the cars became common in the early 1990s (following an American network TV practise actually pioneered in Australia). As well as boosting audience figures this also made the sport more attractive to sponsors beyond the traditional [[cigarette]] companies. Safety improvements also meant that the major car manufacturers were more inclined to attach themselves to teams on a rolling basis. {{F1|1994}}, then, seemed ripe to produce a stunning season. Ayrton Senna had moved to Williams to replace Prost, who retired from the sport. Young German driver [[Michael Schumacher]] had [[Ford]] power for his Benetton. McLaren had high hopes for its new [[Peugeot]] engine (which had been developed through the French marque's Le Mans sportscar racing program) which ultimately did not happen and Ferrari were looking to erase the dismal memories of the last 3 years with [[Gerhard Berger]] and [[Jean Alesi]]. The season was stunning, but for all the wrong reasons. === Safety, rules and regulations (1994) === :''See [[1994 Formula One season|1994 season]].'' [[File:Benetton B 194 4841.JPG|thumb|The [[Benetton Formula|Benetton]] [[Benetton B194|B194]] [[Michael Schumacher]] drove to the {{f1|1994}} title]] By {{F1|1994}}, the previous death in Formula One was nearly a decade past, that of [[Elio de Angelis]] during testing at the [[Circuit Paul Ricard]] in 1986. There had been several horrifying accidents (for example Nelson Piquet and Gerhard Berger at [[Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari|Imola]], or [[Martin Donnelly (racing driver)|Martin Donnelly]] at [[Circuito Permanente de Jerez|Jerez]]), but no fatalities. The speed of Formula One cars had continuously risen over 8 years, despite turbocharged engines being made illegal, the width of tyres being reduced and driver aids eventually being removed. There was an "air of invincibility" in Formula One, a belief that the cars were inherently safe and no more drivers would die.<ref name="damonhill">{{cite news | first = Damon | last = Hill | title = Had Ayrton foreseen his death? | url = http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,12771-1077121,00.html | work = The Times | publisher = News International | date = 17 April 2004 | accessdate = 2006-10-28 | location=London}}</ref> At the [[1994 San Marino Grand Prix|San Marino Grand Prix]] weekend this belief was crushed completely with the serious injuries sustained by [[Rubens Barrichello]] in practice and the deaths of [[Roland Ratzenberger]] during qualifying and [[Ayrton Senna]] in the race on 1 May 1994.<ref name="BBConthisday">{{cite news | title = Race ace Senna killed in car crash | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/may/1/newsid_2479000/2479971.stm | publisher = BBC News | date = 1 May 1994 | accessdate = 2006-10-28}}</ref> Furthermore, [[Karl Wendlinger]] was left comatose after a crash two weeks later at the [[1994 Monaco Grand Prix|Monaco Grand Prix]].<ref>{{cite book | last = Hamilton | first = Maurice | authorlink = | coauthors = | editor = | others = | title = Frank Williams | accessdate = | edition = | date = | publisher = Macmillan | location = | isbn = 0-333-71716-3 | page = 241}}</ref> The shock from the sudden injuries and deaths was stunning. Not only had two drivers been killed, but one of them was a triple world champion and arguably the best F1 driver at the time. The [[Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile|FIA]] reacted swiftly and harshly with major changes to be enforced from that year onwards, and it was the beginning of the FIA's push to increase safety in Formula One. While significant changes could not be made to cars in 1994, the FIA required all Formula One cars' airboxes to be perforated to reduce their "ram-air" effect, to reduce power. For the same reason special racing fuels, previously an exotic mixture of benzenes and toluenes, were banned and only those with similar characteristics to everyday unleaded petrol would be permitted. To reduce downforce, and therefore the cornering speed of the cars, a wooden "plank" was to be fitted beneath the central portion of the chassis, forcing a large section of the floor further away from the track. If the plank was worn over a certain tolerance (approximately 10&nbsp;mm), the car would be deemed illegal. This wooden plank remains under F1 cars today. Further, from 1995 designs were required to be drawn from a reference plane (template), and strict limitations were enforced as to the minimum and maximum tolerances for aspects of the vehicle such as the size of the cockpit opening (an idea well known in [[Champ Car]] for a decade) and of aerodynamic devices, commonly called wings. Further, maximum engine displacement was reduced from 3.5 litres to 3 litres. Further changes were mandated as the FIA continued to try to curb the increase in speeds of Formula One cars as the years progressed. These changes included the increase in size of the cockpit opening (to ensure driver egress was easy and to minimise possible side head impacts), introducing grooved tyres (to reduce cornering speeds by reducing grip) and narrower bodywork (this would complicate cooling and also reduce cornering speed), raising and reducing wing sizes and elements (cutting aerodynamic downforce, thus reducing cornering speed), and introducing comprehensive checks on stiffness tolerances and measurements to ensure cars conformed completely with the regulations (for example, weight tests on wings and bodywork to ensure that they maintained integrity and did not flex to give an aerodynamic advantage in a straight line). The rapid introduction of all of these new rules and regulations, particularly those introduced in {{F1|1994}}, made the atmosphere even more chaotic for Formula One. Michael Schumacher had to fight desperately for his first World Drivers' Championship, as his Benetton team found itself in frequent violations of FIA regulations and Schumacher was suspended for several races as a result. Even his championship-clinching race in Australia was controversial, as he collided with rival [[Damon Hill]] (son of Graham) and ensured himself of the title. === 3-litre engines (1995–1999) === :''See [[1995 Formula One season|1995 season]], [[1996 Formula One season|1996 season]], [[1997 Formula One season|1997 season]], [[1998 Formula One season|1998 season]] and [[1999 Formula One season|1999 season]]. [[File:Jacques Villeneuve 1996.jpg|thumb|[[Jacques Villeneuve]] driving for the [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] Formula One team at the 1996 [[Canadian Grand Prix]]]] However, by {{F1|1995}} things had settled down somewhat. The downgraded 3-litre formula had no effect of the domination of the Renault V10, and Schumacher took his second Drivers' title, and Benetton their first Constructors' title, with relative ease, defeating the Williams team of Hill and [[David Coulthard]]. The Renault engine which powered both teams was virtually unbeatable, with only Ferrari claiming a single win at the [[1995 Canadian Grand Prix|Canadian Grand Prix]] for Alesi, his only career win. For {{F1|1996}}, the FIA mandated a much larger minimum size cockpit area, along with driver's head protection, to ensure the driver's head was less exposed (ironically, this limited [[driver visibility]] and contributed to accidents). As part of his plan to rebuild Ferrari, [[Jean Todt]] brought Michael Schumacher to the team from Benetton that year, essentially in exchange for his 1995 drivers Alesi and Berger. There was an immediate effect, in his first year with the Scuderia Schumacher won three races, more than the team had managed in the previous five years. Ferrari were not championship contenders though and Damon Hill made a strong run to the title, finally claiming the crown after 3 years of almost but not quite.<ref>{{cite book | last = Hamilton | first = Maurice | authorlink = | coauthors = | editor = | others = | title = Frank Williams | accessdate = | edition = | date = | publisher = Macmillan | location = | isbn = 0-333-71716-3 | page = 272}}</ref> In {{F1|1997}}, another son of an F1 racing legend took the titles for Williams once again, as [[Jacques Villeneuve]] became the 4th driver to take both the Formula One and [[Champ Car|CART]] championship (the others being Mario Andretti, Emerson Fittipaldi, and Nigel Mansell). This season was much closer than 1996, and Villeneuve only clinched the Drivers' Championship at the final race. Once again, Michael Schumacher collided with his championship rival at the final race, but unlike 1994 events turned against him. Schumacher not only found himself knocked out of the race, but was found to have deliberately tried to run Villeneuve off of the road. Schumacher was stripped of second place in the Championship and was disgraced.<ref>{{cite news | title = Schumacher loses championship runner-up crown | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/29895.stm | publisher = BBC News | date = 11 November 1997 | accessdate = 2006-10-28}}</ref> At the end of 1997 Renault withdrew from Formula One. McLaren-[[Mercedes-Benz HighPerformanceEngines|Mercedes]] took the Drivers' Crown for the next two years, both being claimed by [[Mika Häkkinen]]. The Finn was nearly untouchable as he took his first title while Schumacher and Villeneuve could only watch. {{F1|1999}} provided a stiffer contest for the title. Villeneuve was out of the picture at the brand-new [[British American Racing|BAR]] but Schumacher was in contention when he crashed and broke his leg at [[Silverstone Circuit|Silverstone]].<ref>{{cite news | title = Schumacher breaks leg in race crash | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/391405.stm | publisher = BBC News | date = 11 July 1999 | accessdate = 2006-11-13}}</ref> His teammate [[Eddie Irvine]] eventually lost by only two points to [[Mika Häkkinen]], but his efforts contributed to Ferrari's first Constructors' Championship since 1983. Behind the title races, however, there were signs of trouble brewing in Formula One. Long-established, highly respected names like Brabham and Lotus vanished from the starting grids. French manufacturer [[Equipe Ligier|Ligier]] found themselves in desperate straits, and were sold to Alain Prost. [[Ken Tyrrell]]'s team floundered on, despite dismal results, until 1998, when [[British American Racing|BAR]] bought the team. And the colourful era of the small, private teams finally came to an end. Names like [[Larrousse]], [[Dallara]], [[Simtek]], [[Pacific Racing|Pacific]], [[MasterCard Lola]], [[Life Racing Engines]], [[March Engineering]], [[Onyx Grand Prix]], [[Scuderia Coloni|Coloni]], [[Andrea Moda Formula|Andrea Moda]], [[Fondmetal]], [[Osella]], [[Footwork Arrows|Footwork]], [[Automobiles Gonfaronnaises Sportives|AGS]], [[Modena (racing team)|Lambo]], [[Leyton House Racing]], [[EuroBrun]] and [[Forti]] would no longer be seen on the starting grids, with only [[Jordan Grand Prix|Jordan]], [[Sauber]], [[Arrows Grand Prix International|Arrows]] and [[Minardi]] managing to survive somehow. The flourishing of Jordan in 1998 and 1999, under the leadership of Damon Hill, [[Heinz-Harald Frentzen]] and [[Ralf Schumacher]] (Michael's younger brother) proved to be a last hurrah of the privateer, not a sign of health in the sport. Even once mighty Benetton, champions only a few years before, were barely surviving. [[Jackie Stewart]] fronted his own team from 1997 to 1999 with backing from Ford but even then sold out as the team transformed into [[Jaguar Racing|Jaguar]]. === V10 engine and road car manufacturer team era (2000–2004) === :''See [[2000 Formula One season|2000 season]], [[2001 Formula One season|2001 season]], [[2002 Formula One season|2002 season]], [[2003 Formula One season|2003 season]] and [[2004 Formula One season|2004 season]].'' [[File:Michael Schumacher-I'm the man (cropped).jpg|thumb|upright|[[Michael Schumacher]] before the [[2005 United States Grand Prix]]]] After the banning of turbocharged engines in 1989, V10 became the most popular engine configuration in Formula One, because it offered the best compromise between power and fuel consumption. From the 1998 season onwards, all competing teams had V10 engines in their cars. V12s were powerful but thirsty, and vice versa for V8s. {{F1|2000}} saw the grids of Formula One start to revert to normal, as Jordan rapidly faded out of sight, and Williams, looking forward to a new partnership with [[BMW]] started to reassert itself. The fight at the front, however, was very much between Häkkinen and Schumacher, each two-time champion, driving cars closely matched in performance. Ferrari had been steadily improving since their low point in the early 1990s and in 2000 Schumacher prevailed, becoming the first 3 time Champion since Senna, and bringing the World Drivers' title to Ferrari for the first time since Jody Scheckter in 1979. The {{F1|2001}} season saw Ferrari start to leave the rest of the grid behind, and Schumacher won the championship by the [[2001 Hungarian Grand Prix|Hungarian]] Grand Prix, which tied him as second quickest championship winner with [[Nigel Mansell]]. For {{F1|2002}}, the season was a red-wash. Ferrari finished every race, and won 15 of 17. Michael Schumacher scored more points than the second and third placed drivers combined, after gaining a podium in all of the races (Schumacher had only one third place in [[2002 Malaysian Grand Prix|Malaysia]]). In this season, he wrapped up the championship at the [[2002 French Grand Prix|French Grand Prix]] (Round 11 of 17), becoming the earliest ever championship winner. While Ferrari celebrated their dominance, the sport itself was seen by many to be in trouble. Two more privateers, [[Prost (racing team)|Prost]] and Arrows, had closed their doors for good. Benetton was also no more, the team having been completely bought out by Renault and turned into their factory team. Even more troubling was the one team in seemingly no danger of disappearing: Ferrari. While Formula One was no stranger to teams monopolizing the winner's stand, Ferrari's actions throughout the 2002 season annoyed many; in particular the staged finishes of the [[2002 Austrian Grand Prix|Austrian Grand Prix]] and the [[2002 United States Grand Prix|US Grand Prix]]. It seemed to many that it was possible to take the dictum of 'win at all costs' too far. Ratings and attendance noticeably declined in the later half of 2002, a serious problem for a sport which was by far the most expensive (and, more importantly, most lucrative) in the world by this time. Also, a number of major manufacturers had joined Formula One since 2000 - there were now 8 manufacturers participating in some form in Formula One. Toyota, Ford/[[Jaguar Cars|Jaguar]] and Renault had joined as full works teams, and Mercedes, Honda, BMW and [[Cosworth]] were all supplying engines to specific teams. In 2003, despite heavy rule changes (such as a new points system) in order to prevent another year of Ferrari dominance, Schumacher won the championship once more. He was run close by both [[Kimi Räikkönen]] and [[Juan Pablo Montoya]], but Schumacher prevailed, taking the championship by two points at [[2003 Japanese Grand Prix|Suzuka]]. It seemed that 2003 was the perfect balm to ease the memories of the previous season, with 8 different race winners (including first-time victories for [[Fernando Alonso]], Kimi Räikkönen and [[Giancarlo Fisichella]]) and 5 different teams, including both Renault (for the first time in twenty years) and Jordan, who grabbed a lucky win in a wild [[2003 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazilian Grand Prix]]. In 2004 Ferrari and Schumacher returned to almost total dominance of the championships, winning both with ease - in the first thirteen races of the season, Schumacher managed to win twelve. A new race in [[Bahrain]] made its debut in April and another new race in [[People's Republic of China|China]] debuted in September. It was initially thought that in introducing these new races, older Grands Prix in Europe, like the [[British Grand Prix]], might be removed from the championship, but instead the number of races was increased to eighteen. According to Ecclestone, the move was to increase Formula One's global reach, though the steady tightening of restrictions on [[tobacco advertising]] in Europe and elsewhere may also have been a factor. This move saw the percentage of races held outside Formula One's traditional European home climb to around fifty percent – meaning the World Championship, which visits four of the six continents, truly deserves its name. 2004 was Michael Schumacher's most recent of his record seven World Championships. Schumacher also holds the record for the most races won – with ninety-one. Despite Ferrari's dominance (taking 15 wins from the 18 races), the battle back in the pack was much more open than 2002, as powerhouses McLaren and Williams got off to horrendous starts with radical new cars. As could have been expected, Renault were quick to capitalize on the misfortunes of the two older British teams, but the real shock came from [[British American Racing]], led by [[Jenson Button]]. Although failing to win a race, Button was a regular sight on the 2nd or 3rd step of the podium, and with teammate [[Takuma Sato]] who had finished 3rd at the US Grand Prix behind the Ferraris managed to clinch 2nd in the Constructors' Championship, leaving Renault 3rd, [[Jarno Trulli]]'s win in Monaco some consolation. Montoya and Räikkönen each managed a solitary win for their teams, which finished 4th and 5th in the results. The [[Ford Motor Company]]'s decision to pull out of Formula One at the end of 2004 exposed the vulnerabilities of some small teams. Not only was their works Jaguar team sold to Austrian drinks company [[Red Bull]],<ref>{{cite news | title = Red Bull buys Jaguar F1 team | url = http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,1351773,00.html | publisher = The Guardian | date = 15 November 2004 | accessdate = 2006-11-13 | location=London | first=Mark | last=Tran}}</ref> but the few remaining small independent teams, who traditionally had used Ford engines, found their engine supply in a precarious state. === 2.4-litre V8 engines (2005–2008) === :''See [[2005 Formula One season|2005 season]] and [[2006 Formula One season|2006 season]], [[2007 Formula One Season|2007 season]] and [[2008 Formula One Season|2008 season]].'' [[File:Alonso (Renault) qualifying at USGP 2005.jpg|thumb|[[Fernando Alonso]] qualifying in a [[Renault in Formula One|Renault]] Formula One car at the [[2005 United States Grand Prix]]]] In {{F1|2005}}, Formula One saw Ferrari and BAR rapidly fade out of sight, as the works Renault team dominated the early part of the season, and Fernando Alonso forged a clear championship lead. In the latter part of the season McLaren were significantly the stronger team, with consistently better results and a win tally of 6 from 7 races. However, their early record of poor reliability had meant that catching Renault in either Drivers' or Constructors' Championships was a tall order. For a while it looked close between Räikkönen and Alonso, but by [[2005 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazil]] Alonso had become Formula One's youngest ever champion. The Constructors' Championship looked even more likely for [[McLaren (racing)|McLaren]], widely regarded as the faster car and with reliability much improved. However, a retirement for [[Juan Pablo Montoya]] in the season finale at [[2005 Chinese Grand Prix|Shanghai]] secured the Constructors' title for [[Renault F1|Renault]]. One statistic proved the two teams' dominance: they together won all but one of the races, the controversial [[2005 United States Grand Prix|US Grand Prix]], in which neither of the two teams participated, which was Schumacher and Ferrari's only win of the year. Arguably, the final small specialist racing team disappeared with the September 2005 purchase of Minardi by Red Bull to be renamed as [[Scuderia Toro Rosso]] and run as a separate entity alongside [[Red Bull Racing]]. Jordan had been bought by Russo-Canadian steel company [[Midland Group|Midland]] early in 2005 and was renamed [[Midland F1]] for the 2006 season. In June 2005, BMW bought a majority stake in [[Sauber]], which became their factory entry. The Williams team ceased their partnership with BMW as a result, entering a commercial arrangement with Cosworth instead. From 2006 manufacturer teams had an unprecedented level of involvement in the sport. [[Honda]] also bought BAR. 2005 marked the end of the V10 era in Formula One. To keep costs down, the configuration had been made mandatory in 2000 (although only V10s had been in use since 1998, Toyota were planning on entering Formula One with a V12 and had to delay their entry by a year to redesign) so that engine builders would not develop and experiment with other configurations. Over this period, the statistics show a supremacy of the Renault and Ferrari engines, with Renault clinching six Constructors and five Drivers' Championships as engine suppliers for Williams and Benetton from 1992 to 1997, and their first ever Drivers' and Constructors' Championships in a 100% Renault car in 2005. Ferrari also enjoyed great success in the V10 era, winning six Constructors' Championships and five Drivers' Championships from 1999 to 2004. [[File:Alonso + Barrichello + Villeneuve + Schumacher 2006 USA.jpg|thumb|right| Fernando Alonso (Renault) leads [[Rubens Barrichello]] ([[Honda Racing F1|Honda]]), Jacques Villeneuve ([[BMW Sauber|BMW]]) and [[Ralf Schumacher]] ([[Toyota F1|Toyota]]) at the [[2006 United States Grand Prix]]]] 2006 was the last season with two tyre manufacturers: Japanese manufacturer [[Bridgestone]] and French company Michelin. In December 2005, the FIA announced that from the 2008 season, there would be only one tyre supplier. Five days later, Michelin announced it would quit Formula One at the end of the 2006 season, leaving Bridgestone as the sole supplier from 2007. Renault and Fernando Alonso established early leads in both the Constructors' and Drivers' Championships. By mid-season, Ferrari appeared to be making a comeback, however. The Italian Grand Prix saw Schumacher reduce Alonso's lead to only two points as Alonso suffered an engine failure. The race also saw Ferrari pull ahead of Renault for the first time in 2006. However, the race results were largely overshadowed by Schumacher announcing, during the post-race press conference, that he would retire at the end of the season. However, an engine failure for Schumacher at the Japanese Grand Prix, along with costly puncture in the final round in Brazil allowed Alonso to secure the Drivers' Championship for the 2nd year running, with Renault also securing the Constructors' Championship. The [[2007 Formula One season]] saw a much more competitive McLaren, with current world champion Alonso alongside rookie [[Lewis Hamilton]]. However, Hamilton surprised everyone with a run of 9 consecutive podiums in his first 9 races seeing him take a significant lead in the Drivers' Championship. Alonso's relationship with McLaren deteriorated as the season progressed, as he believed it was his right as world champion to be favoured above his teammate. A mistake by Hamilton in [[2007 Chinese Grand Prix|China]] and a mechanical problem in [[2007 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazil]] ruined his championship. Alonso, however, was not able to fully capitalise on the situation, and Ferrari's Kimi Räikkönen took the championship after a strong second half to the season. Räikkönen turned around a 17-point deficit with 2 races to go to win by a single point. Both McLarens finished the Championship on 109 points. Fernando Alonso was placed third, behind Lewis Hamilton through countback. [[Renault in Formula One|Renault]] had a much less successful season in 2007 than in previous years and struggled to match the pace of McLaren and Ferrari. Ferrari also clinched the Constructors' Championship after McLaren's disqualification over controversy over the suspicion that McLaren had Ferrari information. For the 2008 and 2009 seasons Fernando Alonso returned to Renault, but having little success he joined Ferrari in 2010. [[2008 Formula One season|2008]] again saw McLaren and Ferrari have the most competitive cars. However, the season was much more open, with winners from 3 other teams. After agonising defeat in 2007, Hamilton clinched the Drivers' Championship in dramatic fashion, overtaking Timo Glock in the Toyota to secure the 5th place he needed in the last corner of the last lap of the [[2008 Brazilian Grand Prix|final Grand Prix]]. [[Felipe Massa]] had won the race, and would also have won the Drivers' Championship if it had not been for Hamilton's crucial overtake. Despite this, Ferrari secured the Constructors' Championship for the 8th time in 10 years. === Cost cutting measures and departure of factory teams (2009–2013) === :''See [[2009 Formula One season|2009 season]], [[2010 Formula One season|2010 season]], [[2011 Formula One season|2011 season]], [[2012 Formula One season|2012 season]] and [[2013 Formula One season|2013 season]]'' [[File:Jenson Button 2009 Turkey 2.jpg|thumb|right|[[Brawn GP]] won both the Drivers' and Constructors' Championships in their debut (and only) season in the penultimate round in [[2009 Brazilian Grand Prix]]]] During the 2000s, Formula One cars had become extremely complex, efficient, and reliable, so much so that actual racing between drivers began to become less and less common. 2009 saw the introduction of many new rules and regulations (including engine RPM limits, an adjustable front wing, and disproportionate wing sizes) to encourage overtaking. Engine RPM reached 20,000 rpm and were initially limited to 19,000 rpm for 2009; this was lowered to 18,000 from 2010 to 2013. The most significant system introduced in F1 was the Kinetic Energy Recovery System (KERS), a system that stores energy, created by braking, through a flywheel; this energy is then channeled to the car's drivetrain to increase acceleration. A few well-funded teams had tested this technology the previous year but it remained too experimental; all of the teams' KERS systems needed more development, such that none of them would be ready for 2009. Due to the recession, many more rule changes were brought in to reduce the cost of participating in Formula One. Initially a standardised engine was proposed, but this idea was rejected by the teams, who came up with their own cost-cutting measures. These included a huge reduction in testing times and an increase in the required engine and gearbox mileage. Many teams voiced concerns over the cost of KERS and have suggested a standardised unit, but so far no such opportunity exists. The new rules and regulations saw a new order in 2009, with new teams [[Brawn GP]] and [[Red Bull Racing]] and their drivers leading the way, with Ferrari and McLaren having a poor season. However, Ferrari started by the [[2009 British Grand Prix|British Grand Prix]] to make the most of their car with a string of podium finishes and a race victory in Belgium, while a redesign of the McLaren challenger helped Lewis Hamilton to win two races and gain more points than any other driver after it was upgraded at the [[2009 German Grand Prix|German Grand Prix]]. After dominating the beginning of the season with six out of seven race wins, Jenson Button eventually clinched the Drivers' title in Brazil, with Brawn GP winning the Constructors' Championship in its only season, before being taken over by [[Mercedes-Benz|Mercedes]]. Rubens Barrichello, Jenson Button's teammate, was second in the Drivers' Championship for the whole season until he had a problem at the [[2009 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazilian Grand Prix]] and was overtaken (in points) by [[Sebastian Vettel]], a Red Bull driver, who won the [[2009 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix|Abu Dhabi Grand Prix]] to finish eleven points behind Button. Also, the major manufacturer teams were starting to disappear rapidly due to the worldwide economy crisis. In addition to Ford/Jaguar which had left in 2004, Honda had departed in 2008 also due to uncompetitiveness, [[Toyota]] and BMW both departed entirely in 2009 (BMW sold Sauber, a team it had bought in 2005 after its split with Williams even though in 2010 the team was still called BMW Sauber), Renault changed their involvement as a full works effort to engine supplier in 2011 and Cosworth departed entirely as an engine supplier in 2013. [[File:Webber Canada GP 2010.jpg|thumb|left|[[Red Bull Racing]] prospered under the new rules with a runners-up in the {{F1|2009}} Drivers' and Constructors' Championships and both titles in {{F1|2010}}, {{F1|2011}}, {{F1|2012}} and {{F1|2013}}]] {{F1|2010}} saw more changes in the way of rules and regulations. KERS and double diffusers were banned for the 2010 season, but new innovative features on the cars such as F-Ducts were introduced. An allocated eight engines, per driver, for the whole season was also introduced as part of more cost cutting methods. The biggest change in the points scoring system in F1 history happened between 2009 & 2010. The 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1 point system for the top eight finishers (which had been running since 2003), was replaced with the drastically different 25-18-15-12-10-8-6-4-2-1 for the top 10 finishers. [[Red Bull Racing]] returned to have a great season in 2010, thanks to their hiring of designer Adrian Newey in 2007. They won the Constructors' Championship in the penultimate round in Brazil, and Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel won the championship in the final round of the 2010 season at Abu Dhabi. [[Mercedes-Benz in Formula One|Mercedes GP]] (formerly Brawn GP) had a much less successful and winless season than 2009 with their two new drivers – seven-time World Champion Michael Schumacher who returned to Formula One, but was regularly beaten by fellow German, [[Nico Rosberg]]. McLaren and Ferrari had better seasons in 2010, finishing second and third in the constructors, respectively. The Drivers' Championship was very closely fought, with six men leading the championship at one point, in the joint longest ever (nineteen-race) season. For most of the season, the title looked like it could have gone to either Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel or [[Mark Webber]], or either McLaren's Lewis Hamilton or reigning World Champion Jenson Button (also at McLaren). But, the Ferrari of Fernando Alonso clawed back 47-points after the [[2010 British Grand Prix|British Grand Prix]], to be leading the Drivers' Championship with two races left. A record four drivers were still in contention for the title going into the final round in Abu Dhabi. They were Alonso, Webber, Vettel and Hamilton (placing in that order in number of points before the race). They did not finish that way though, with Vettel winning the race and the title when the others finished too far down the field. Vettel became the youngest ever World Champion in the history of the sport. After a controversial race in [[2010 German Grand Prix|Hockenheim]], 2010 led to the ban on [[team orders]] being dropped. When Ferrari asked Felipe Massa to move over to allow their No.1 driver; Fernando Alonso into the lead of the race and take the win - they were fined $100,000. The [[FIA]] decided that the rule was too vague, and there was nothing they could do to enforce it. This led to an end to the ban on team orders for the [[2011 Formula One season]]. Other changes included a re-introduction KERS, the introduction of the [[Drag reduction system]] (DRS) (a driver activated moveable flap on the cars rear wing), and a change in tyre supplier from Bridgestone to Pirelli. Vettel and Red Bull lead their respective championship from the start until the end of the season, dominating and taking their second successive titles. Vettel also became the youngest double world champion when he clinched the title at the [[2011 Japanese Grand Prix]], Red Bull took the Constructors' Championship at the following race in [[2011 Korean Grand Prix|South Korea]]. McLaren and Ferrari finished second and third in the standings once again, albeit much further behind. Button eventually took second place in the standings, with Webber in third once again. Vettel took 11 victories throughout the course of the year, broke the record for the most pole positions in a season (15) and the most championship points (392). After a slow start to the 2012 season, Vettel won 4 races in a row and challenged Fernando Alonso and Ferrari all the way through. Eventually, the German Vettel took the lead from the Spanish Alonso and Vettel opened up a 13-point gap come the last round in Brazil. Vettel won his third consecutive Drivers' title after finishing 6th at Interlagos, while Alonso finished 2nd. 2013 also went Vettel's way: the superiority of the Red Bull in race trim allowed the German to open up a small lead early in the season, and starting with the Belgian Grand Prix (after F1's 4-week break), the superiority of the Red Bull car began to show. The British-based Austrian team had developed an engine-mapping system that gave their car a type of traction control (actual traction control systems are illegal), and Vettel used this to his considerable advantage. He won in Belgium and after that, the rest of the remaining races in the season (9 races total). The German and the Red Bull team simply ran away with the Drivers' and Constructors' Championships, both of which they won in India – Vettel won his 4th consecutive Drivers' Championship there. Come the Korean round, 2 rounds before the Indian one – Red Bull had developed a special aerodynamic diffuser that gave the cars a considerable cornering advantage. Vettel and his Australian teammate Mark Webber were leading 1–2 for most of those 9 races, and the cars often qualified in the top 3 grid spots; and when they qualified 1–2, it was often by considerable amounts of time. === 1.6-litre turbocharged V6 hybrid engines (2014–present) === [[File:Nico Rosberg 2016 Malaysia Q3.jpg|thumb|[[Mercedes-Benz in Formula One|Mercedes]] cars have so far proved to be the most competitive of the V6 Turbo Hybrid era]] :''See [[2014 Formula One season|2014 season]], [[2015 Formula One season|2015 season]], [[2016 Formula One season|2016 season]], [[2017 Formula One season|2017 season]], [[2018 Formula One World Championship|2018 season]], [[2019 Formula One World Championship|2019 season]] and [[Formula One engines]]'' Formula One entered its second turbocharged era in 2014. Australia was the location of the end of the first era ([[1988 Australian Grand Prix|Adelaide 1988]]) and start of the second ([[2014 Australian Grand Prix|Melbourne 2014]]). The series is being run under the most radical engine regulation changes since [[1995 Formula One World Championship|1995]]. All cars entering any Formula One championship race must run with 1.6-litre single turbocharged 6-cylinder engines with a rev limit of 15,000 rpm and maximum fuel flow of 100&nbsp;kg/hr. New car regulations will also be enforced, and the minimum weight regulations will be raised from 642&nbsp;kg (1,415&nbsp;lb) to 690&nbsp;kg (1,521&nbsp;lb). [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]], [[Mercedes-Benz in Formula One|Mercedes]] and [[Renault in Formula One|Renault]] produced engines from 2014 with [[Honda in Formula One|Honda]] producing engines from 2015; Cosworth did not participate from 2014 and beyond. In-season engine development returned; the previous V8's development was frozen. The new turbo engines produce 600&nbsp;bhp (the previous V8s produce approximately 750&nbsp;hp); but the new Energy Recovery System (ERS) will be twice as powerful as the current [[Kinetic energy recovery system|KERS]] system; this new ERS system will give the drivers up to the equivalent of 160&nbsp;hp when activated; the current KERS gives cars an extra 80&nbsp;hp when activated.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.formula1.com/inside_f1/rules_and_regulations/sporting_regulations/8689/fia.html|title=Inside F1|work=Formula1.com|accessdate=1 May 2016}}</ref> Since the start of the 2014 season, the Mercedes team and their drivers [[Lewis Hamilton]], [[Nico Rosberg]] and [[Valtteri Bottas]] have dominated the sport, winning 84 of the 114 races (59 for Hamilton, 20 for Rosberg and 5 for Bottas).<!-- As of the 2019 Italian GP --> This astounding and historic winning streak has been the result of Mercedes development of the "split turbocharger", a system in which the compressor and turbine components of the turbo charger are placed at separate sides of the engine and connected by a rod running through the V of the engine. This new technology gave Mercedes and their customer teams many advantages over their competitors due to the need for less cooling and a more compact power unit. The only other drivers to win races during this period are [[Daniel Ricciardo]] (7) and [[Max Verstappen]] (7) of Red Bull, along with [[Sebastian Vettel]] (13), [[Kimi Räikkönen]] (1) and [[Charles Leclerc]] (2) of Ferrari. On top of this Mercedes have won the drivers' championship from 2014-2018 (4 for Hamilton and 1 for Rosberg) and have taken the constructors' title from 2014-2018, although since the rule changes in car design implemented in [[2017 Formula One World Championship|2017]], Ferrari have been in a position to fight for both the drivers' and constructors' championship with Vettel coming second in both 2017 and 2018. == Footnotes == <references group="note"/> == See also == {{Portal|Formula One}} {{Wikipedia books|Formula racing}} {{clear}} == References == {{reflist|2}} * [http://www.formula1.com/results/season/2006/ The Official Formula One Website – Results Archive (2006)]. * ''FerrariWorld – see F1 racing cars 1940s–1990s'' (2006). [http://www.ferrariworld.com]. Retrieved 9 February 2006. * {{cite book|last=Hillier|first= V.A.W|title=Fundamentals of Motor Vehicle Technology|year=1993|publisher=Nelson Thornes Ltd|isbn=0-7487-0531-7}} * Autosport 50th Anniversary Edition, 13 July 2000 * Roderick Eime: ''[http://members.ozemail.com.au/~motorweb/158/ The "Little Alfa" That Grew Too Big]''.{{unreliable source?|date=November 2012}} * Pierre Ménard: ''Automobile Historique N°45 Février 2005 – Lotus 72 (1973–1975) – Prolongations exceptionnelles'' p.&nbsp;60–71 {{Fr icon}} * [http://perso.wanadoo.fr/did.legrand/htm/histoire.htm Histoire d’un sport: La formule 1] {{Fr icon}}{{unreliable source?|date=November 2012}} == External links == {{DEFAULTSORT:History Of Formula One}} [[Category:Formula One]] [[Category:History of motorsport|Formula One]]'
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'{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2012}} [[File:Ferrari Formula 1 lineup at the Nürburgring.jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|Some [[Scuderia Ferrari]] Formula One cars from between 1950 and 2002]] {{Formula One|related}} [[Formula One]] automobile racing has its roots in the European [[Grand Prix motor racing|Grand Prix]] championships of the 1920s and 1930s, though the foundation of the modern Formula One began in 1946 with the [[Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile]]'s (FIA) standardisation of rules, which was followed by a World Championship of Drivers in 1950. The sport's history parallels the evolution of its [[Formula One regulations|technical regulations]]. In addition to the world championship series, non-championship Formula One races were held for many years, the last held in 1983 due to the rising cost of competition. National championships existed in [[South Africa]] and the [[United Kingdom]] in the 1960s and 1970s. == History == === The early years and the ccjeoioçqvhçnevchfievhufffffffffvliheifoqhfueoihgvefio thiscshit is a son of a fuking bitch nigga ontinuation of pre-WWII supercharged engines (1946–1950) === Formula One was first defined in 1946 by the Commission Sportive Internationale (CSI) of the FIA, forerunner of FISA, as the premier single seater racing category in worldwide motorsport to become effective in 1947. This new "International Formula" was initially known variously as Formula A, Formula I, or Formula 1 with the corresponding "Voiturette" formula being titled Formula B, Formula II, or Formula 2.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/archive/article/december-1947/16/formula-races-1948|title=Formula Races - 1948|date=7 July 2014|website=motorsportmagazine.com|accessdate=28 March 2018}}</ref> When the 500c formula was internationally recognised as Formula 3 in 1950 it was never titled as "Formula C" so the three International Formulae were then "officially" titled Formula 1, Formula 2 and Formula 3.<ref>[http://www.conceptcarz.com/view/racing/racingClassCars.aspx?racingClassID=4 Formula One] Retrieved from www.conceptcarz.com on 28 April 2009</ref> In the beginning, the formula was largely based on pre-[[World War II]] regulations defined by engine capacity. The regulation expected to bring a new balance between [[supercharged]] and [[normally aspirated]] cars. Non-supercharged 4.5-litre pre-war Grand Prix cars were allowed to race against the pre-war 1.5-litre supercharged '[[voiturette]]s', while pre-war supercharged 3-litre Grand Prix cars were banned. The first race under the new regulations was the [[1946 Turin Grand Prix]] held on 1 September, the race being won by [[Achille Varzi]] in an [[Alfa Romeo (Formula One)|Alfa Romeo]] [[Alfa Romeo 158/159 Alfetta|158 Alfetta]]. Championships for drivers or constructors were not introduced immediately. In the early years there were around 20 races held from late Spring to early Autumn (Fall) in Europe, although not all of these were considered significant. Most competitive cars came from Italy, particularly Alfa Romeo. Races saw pre-war heroes like [[Rudolf Caracciola]], [[Manfred Von Brauchitsch]] and [[Tazio Nuvolari]] end their careers, while drivers like [[Alberto Ascari]] and [[Juan Manuel Fangio]] rose to the front. === The era of factory Italian and Mercedes front-engine cars (1950–1957) === :''See [[1950 Formula One season|1950 season]], [[1951 Formula One season|1951 season]], [[1952 Formula One season|1952 season]], [[1953 Formula One season|1953 season]], [[1954 Formula One season|1954 season]], [[1955 Formula One season|1955 season]], [[1956 Formula One season|1956 season]] and [[1957 Formula One season|1957 season]].'' [[File:Alfa-Romeo-159-(1951).jpg|thumb|[[Juan Manuel Fangio]] drove this [[Alfa Romeo 158/159 Alfetta|Alfa Romeo 159]] to the title in 1951]] The [[Grand Prix motorcycle racing|Motorcycle World Championships]] was introduced in [[1949 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season|1949]]. In 1950, the FIA responded with the first ever official World Championship for Drivers. The championship series, to be held across six of the 'major' Grands Prix of Europe plus the [[Indianapolis 500]], was in effect a formalization of what had already been developing in Grand Prix racing during the previous years. [[Italy|Italian]] teams of [[Alfa Romeo (Formula One)|Alfa Romeo]], [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]], and [[Maserati]] were best positioned to dominate the early years. Other national manufacturers – such as the French manufacturer [[Talbot]] or the British [[British Racing Motors|BRM]] – competed, although less successfully. A number of private cars also took part in local races. The Italian and German factory teams in those days often employed 2 to 3 drivers whose nationality was the same as the team's and at least 1 foreign driver; for example the Alfa Romeo team in 1950 consisted of [[Formula One drivers from Italy|Italian drivers]] [[Giuseppe Farina]], [[Luigi Fagioli]] and [[Piero Taruffi]]; and [[Formula One drivers from Argentina|Argentine driver]] [[Juan Manuel Fangio]]. Alfa Romeo dominated all before them in the [[1950 Formula One season|1950 season]], winning every race bar one in the championship with the pre-war "Alfetta" 158s. The sole exception was the Indianapolis 500, which was part of the championship, although not run to Formula One regulations and rarely contested by the European teams. The race would never be important for Formula One and was no longer part of the championship after 1960. [[Nino Farina]] won the inaugural championship, [[Juan Manuel Fangio]] taking it in 1951 with the Alfa-Romeo 159, an evolution of the 158. The Alfetta's engines were extremely powerful for their capacity: In 1951 the 159 engine was producing around {{convert|420|bhp|abbr=on}} but this was at the price of a fuel consumption of 125 to 175 litres per 100&nbsp;km (2.26 to 1.61 mpg imp/1.88 mpg to 1.34 mpg US).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ddavid.com/formula1/alfa158.htm |title=Grand Prix Cars - Alfa Romeo 158 |publisher=Ddavid.com |date=7 August 1938 |accessdate=2010-10-04}}</ref> [[Enzo Ferrari]], who had raced the Alfettas before the war, and his engine designer Aurelio Lampredi, were the first to understand that the 1.5-litre supercharged engine was a dead end: Any increase in power meant more fuel to carry or more time lost in the pits for refuelling, For the last races of 1950 Ferrari sent his 1.5-litre supercharged 125s to the museum, and fielded the new V12 4.5-litre normally aspirated 375s. With a fuel consumption of around {{convert|35|L/100 km}} the 375s offered fierce opposition to the Alfettas towards the end of the [[1951 Formula One season|1951 season]]. Alfa Romeo, a state-owned company, decided to withdraw after a refusal of the Italian government to fund the expensive design of a new car. Surprisingly, Alfa Romeo involvement in racing was made with a very thin budget, using mostly pre-war technology and material during the two seasons. For instance the team won two championships using only nine pre-war built engine blocks. No Alfa Romeo, a supporting cast of privateer [[Lago-Talbot]] entries and an almost undriveable, unreliable [[British Racing Motors|BRM]] would make Ferrari effectively invincible. The [[Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile|FIA]] was in an embarrassing position as it had already announced that current Formula One regulations would last until 1954 before switching to 2.5-litre atmospheric engines. Major manufacturers were already working to develop cars for the future regulation and it was obvious that nobody would develop a new car for only two years. The promoters of the World Championship Grands Prix, mindful of the lack of serious competition for the Alfettas, eventually all adopted [[Formula Two]] regulations for two years. However, Ferrari's dominance went on with the light 4-cylinder powered 500s, bringing Italian [[Alberto Ascari]] his two championships in the [[1952 Formula One season|1952]] and [[1953 Formula One season|1953 seasons]]. Ferrari's Formula One cars continued to race very successfully in non-Championship Formula One and Formule Libre races through this period. Ironically, during this period the only World Championship race for which Formula One cars were eligible was the Indianapolis 500. In 1952 Ferrari entered four Formula One 375s with Alberto Ascari as lead driver, but with little success. Discounting the Indianapolis 500, the World Championship was entirely based in Europe until 1953 when the season opened in Argentina. Since then there has always been at least one race outside Europe. As planned, the World Championship races returned to Formula One regulations for the [[1954 Formula One season|1954 season]], now based on a new 2.5-litre atmospheric engine regulation. This successfully brought more entrants to the field. [[Lancia in Formula One|Lancia]] and [[Mercedes-Benz]] came to the formula, hiring the best drivers of the era: Ascari for Lancia, Fangio for Mercedes. Featuring [[desmodromic valve]]s, [[fuel injection]], [[magnesium]] and exotic alloys parts, "streamlined" bodywork and other advanced features, the brand new Mercedes began the 1954 season with Fangio taking pole position at the "Grand Prix de l'ACF" at [[Reims-Gueux]] with the first lap over {{convert|200|km/h|mi/h|0|abbr=on}} in Formula One before winning the race after a duel with other Mercedes driver [[Karl Kling]], who finished second. The Mercedes cars swept the next two seasons with Fangio winning all but three of the races. However, at the end of the [[1955 Formula One season|1955 season]] Mercedes vanished as swiftly as they had come. They had proven the superiority of their technology, but the crash of one of their sportscars that year at [[Le Mans 24 Hours|Le Mans]], killing 83 people, was also a significant factor. The company would not return to Formula One for forty years.<ref>{{cite news|title=Le Mans disaster claims 77 lives|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/june/11/newsid_3726000/3726535.stm|publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation|date=11 June 1955|accessdate=20 November 2006}}</ref> After Le Mans, four of the year's remaining Grands Prix were cancelled. The Monaco Grand Prix saw a spectacular incident when Ascari and his Lancia crashed into the harbour after missing a chicane. Ascari was pulled out of the water alive and apparently well. However, there was speculation over an undetected internal injury when four days later Ascari was killed at Monza while testing a sportscar. After Ascari's death, Lancia followed Mercedes out of the category, passing their engines, cars, information and technology to Ferrari. The [[1956 Formula One season|1956 season]] saw Fangio make good use of the Lancia-born Ferrari to win his fourth championship. Driving for Maserati, he took his fifth championship in the [[1957 Formula One season|1957 season]], a record which would not be beaten for 46 years.<ref>{{cite news | title = Drivers: Juan-Manuel Fangio | url = http://www.grandprix.com/gpe/drv-fanjua.html | publisher = grandprix.com | accessdate = 2006-11-20}}</ref> Ferrari developed a new engine for 1957, the V6 "Dino" engine, it was competitive by 1958 and Mike Hawthorn became the first British F1 World Champion, though his victory was short-lived, he died the following winter. === British independent specialist teams and the rear-mid engine revolution (1958–1961) === :''See [[1958 Formula One season|1958 season]], [[1959 Formula One season|1959 season]], [[1960 Formula One season|1960 season]] and [[1961 Formula One season|1961 season]].'' [[File:Mike Hawthorn 1958 Argentine GP.jpg|thumb|[[Mike Hawthorn]] in a [[Ferrari 246 F1]] in the [[1958 Argentine Grand Prix]]]] Although the basic formula remained unchanged in 1958, races were shortened from around 500&nbsp;km/300miles to 300&nbsp;km/200 miles and cars had to use [[Avgas]] instead of various fuel mixtures using [[methanol]] as the primary component. 1958 saw the introduction of an International Cup for F1 Manufacturers<ref name=FIA_1974>International Cup for F1 Manufacturers, FIA Year Book of Automobile Sport 1974, Grey section, pages 120-121</ref> with points allocated on an 8, 6, 4, 3, 2, 1 basis to the first six cars in the race (i.e. unlike in the Drivers' Championship, there was no point for fastest lap). Furthermore, points were only awarded to the highest placed car of each make, i.e. if a make finished 1st and 2nd they would receive only eight points and the 3rd placed car would receive 4 points. Indianapolis, which was included in the World Championship of Drivers, did not count towards the International Cup for F1 Manufacturers.<ref name=FIA_1974/> With Fangio retired, [[Mike Hawthorn]] in a Ferrari took the {{F1|1958}} Drivers' Championship – becoming the first English driver to earn a title. The British [[Vanwall]] team took the maiden Constructors' Championship that [[1958 Formula One season|season]], but ruined their Drivers' Championship aspirations by taking points off one another. [[Stirling Moss]], despite having many more wins than Hawthorn, lost the championship by one point. It was high sportsmanship that cost Moss the 1958 title. When Hawthorn was threatened with disqualification at the finish of the Portuguese Grand Prix for going in the wrong direction (to restart his car following a spin), Moss argued to stewards on Hawthorn's behalf. The points granted Hawthorn were the difference in the championship. This season also saw a woman driving in Formula One for the first time with [[Maria Teresa de Filippis]] racing a private Maserati at the Belgian Grand Prix.<ref group="note">Women had driven in Grands Prix prior to Formula One, e.g. [[Hellé Nice]].</ref> 1958 was a watershed in another crucial way for Formula One. Against a small field of Ferraris and Maseratis, [[Stirling Moss]] won the [[1958 Argentine Grand Prix|Argentine Grand Prix]] driving a mid-engined [[Cooper Car Company|Cooper]] entered by the private team of [[Rob Walker Racing Team|Rob Walker]], and powered by a 2-litre [[Coventry-Climax]] Straight-4. This was the first victory for a car with the engine mounted behind the driver in Formula One.<ref group="note">The mid-engined [[Auto Union]]s had been successful in Grand Prix in the 1930s.</ref> It was also the first World Championship GP win for a private entrant (excepting the Indianapolis 500 where all the entries were technically private entrants using bought-in chassis). The next Grand Prix in [[1958 Monaco Grand Prix|Monaco]] was also won by the same Cooper car, this time driven by [[Maurice Trintignant]] and facing more substantial opposition. Powered by undersized engines, the Coopers remained outsiders in 1958 but as soon as the new 2.5-litre Coventry-Climax engine was available, the little British cars went on to dominate Formula One. The [[1959 Formula One season|1959]] season was effectively the start of the mid-engined revolution, and this season saw fierce competition between the works Cooper of [[Formula One drivers from Australia|Australian]] [[Jack Brabham]] and [[Stirling Moss|Moss]] in the Walker team's Cooper. The Getrag-modified [[Citroën]] [[Traction Avant]] transaxle proved to be the Achilles heel of the Coopers, so Walker switched to a transaxle manufactured by ex-Maserati engineer Valerio Colotti. The special transmission turned out to be more unreliable than the standard part, and Brabham took the title with Moss second. For [[1960 Formula One season|1960]] while Enzo Ferrari adopted a conservative attitude, claiming "the horses pull the car rather than push it." It was probably disinformation: at the same time Ferrari was preparing for 1961 by designing mid-engined F2 and F1 cars. The Italian front-engined red cars were not only being effectively beaten by the British teams, but thoroughly outclassed- the British rear mid-engined cars had considerably better road holding than the front-engined cars. Although down on power, the British cars' superior handling and lesser demands on tyres more than made up the power deficit. It was obvious to everyone that rear-mid engined cars were the way to go at that point in time. [[Team Lotus|Lotus]] and [[British Racing Motors|BRM]] introduced mid-engined machines. Walker's team switched to a Lotus 18 chassis. Moss gave Lotus its first Formula One victory at Monaco but his season was ruined by a serious crash at Spa, Belgium. Brabham took a second title with his Cooper, but Moss returned in time to win the final race of the season, the U.S. Grand Prix at Riverside, California. The mid-engined revolution rendered another potentially revolutionary car obsolete. The front-engined [[4WD|four-wheel drive]] [[Ferguson Research Ltd.|Ferguson]] [[Four-wheel drive in Formula One#Ferguson P99 (1961)|P99]] raced in British Formula One races in {{F1|1961}}, winning the non-Championship [[Oulton Park International Gold Cup]]<ref>Christian Moity, La Ferguson P 99 Climax (1961-1964). La preuve par quatre. Auto Passion n°136 May–June 2001 p. 42-49</ref> under heavy rain. But the car was too heavy and complex compared to the new breed of mid-engined machines. By 1961, British specialist teams such as Lotus, Cooper and BRM, and later McLaren, Tyrrell and Williams- organizations created purely for producing, developing and competing purpose-built open-wheel racing cars had overtaken the industrial manufacturing powers such as Ferrari, Mercedes, Maserati and Alfa Romeo. The only major automotive manufacturer with a full works effort was Ferrari- which was really a manufacturer that made road cars to fund its racing in F1 and endurance racing. Whereas the big continental manufacturers, with lots of money to spend built the whole car including the drivetrain systems themselves, (excluding BRM), the British teams, with only limited amounts of money only built their chassis; they bought their engines and gearboxes from independent manufacturers such as Coventry-Climax and later Ford/Cosworth engines, and Hewland gearboxes. The only British team that was also a manufacturer of road cars like Ferrari was Lotus; but even so, that company grew considerably but never to the size of Mercedes or Alfa Romeo. From 1957 to 1961, Formula One had transformed from a scattershot industrial manufacturer sideshow of technology to a seriously competitive business for team owners and engineers wanting to come up with new technologies to out-do the opposition and also to sell their technology to big manufacturers or other interested parties. People like Cooper and Lotus founders John Cooper and Colin Chapman proved that competitiveness and developing new automotive technology was about fresh thinking, not industrial might. These British teams were regularly beating manufacturer teams like Ferrari, whom company founder [[Enzo Ferrari]] referring to these new British teams as ''garagistes''- Italian for garage teams- which is effectively how all these British teams operated- their cars were built in small sheds or garages. In {{F1|1961}}, in an attempt to curb speeds, Formula One was downgraded to 1.5-litre, non-supercharged engines (essentially the then-current Formula Two rules), a formula which would remain for the next five years. Forced induction was still an option, but limited to 750cc and no one seriously considered the option, as supercharging had proven limiting to fuel consumption. Ferrari could have used its already proven V6 powered mid-engined [[Formula 2]] cars, but preferred to go one step forward by designing a very sophisticated car powered by a 120° V6, which was their first ever rear-mid engined car, the [[Ferrari 156 F1|156]]. The considerably more powerful and efficient engine Ferrari had led to the Maranello outfit dominating the 1961 season as the British teams scrambled to come up with a suitable engine. American Phil Hill won the 1961 title in a works Ferrari. His teammate, Wolfgang von Trips of [[Formula One drivers from Germany|Germany]], died along with 14 spectators in a horrific crash on the first lap of the Italian Grand Prix at Monza. Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, the Formula One World Championship was merely the tip of the iceberg when it came to races run to Formula One regulations. The total number of races run to Formula One regulations remained about the same as it had been before the introduction of the World Championship. Many famous races, such as the [[Pau Grand Prix|Pau]] and [[Syracuse, Italy|Syracuse]] Grands Prix, the [[BRDC International Trophy]], the [[Race of Champions (Brands Hatch)|Race of Champions]] and the [[Oulton Park Gold Cup]], were not part of the World Championship, but nonetheless continued to draw the top drivers and teams to compete. === Anglophone drivers and 1.5-litre engines (1962–1967) === :''See [[1962 Formula One season|1962 season]], [[1963 Formula One season|1963 season]], [[1964 Formula One season|1964 season]], [[1965 Formula One season|1965 season]], [[1966 Formula One season|1966 season]] and [[1967 Formula One season|1967 season]].'' [[File:John Surtees.JPG|thumb|upright|[[John Surtees]] ([[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]) at the [[1964 British Grand Prix]]]] In 1962, the Lotus team ran the [[Lotus 25]] powered by the new Coventry-Climax FWMV V8 engine. The car had an aluminium sheet [[monocoque]] chassis instead of the traditional [[spaceframe]] design. This proved to be the greatest technological breakthrough since the introduction of mid-engined cars, but the Lotus was unreliable at first. [[Jim Clark]] finished second that year leaving the title to [[Graham Hill]] and his new V8 powered [[British Racing Motors|BRM]]. As soon as the car and the engine became reliable, the era of the [[Team Lotus|Lotus]] and of [[Jim Clark]] began. Clark won the title twice in three years, {{F1|1963}} and {{F1|1965}}, the latter being the only occasion to date of a driver winning both the Championship and the [[Indianapolis 500|Indianapolis 500-Mile Race]] in the same year. For 1964 Lotus introduced the new [[Lotus 33]] and Ferrari made considerable technological and financial effort to win the title. Ferrari used no less than three different engines in the season—the existing V6, a V8 and a [[flat-12]], while Lotus was struggling with the teething troubles of a new car. The title went to [[John Surtees]] and Ferrari. Surtees' title was especially notable, as he became the only driver ever to win the World Championship for both cars and [[motorcycles]]. The [[1965 Mexican Grand Prix]], the last race of the 1.5 litres Formula One, saw Richie Ginther giving Honda its first victory at the end of a season that was otherwise disappointing for the Japanese newcomer. This was the first victory by a Japanese car and, as of today, the only one by a car powered by a transverse engine. {{F1|1966}} saw a 'Return to Power' as Formula One changed the engine rules once again, allowing engines of 3.0-litre normally aspirated, or 1.5-litre [[supercharged]] or forced induction. 1966 was a transitional year for most teams, however, the year did see the first use of [[composite material]]s, a technology which would later revolutionise the sport. The [[McLaren M2B]], designed by [[Robin Herd]], used an aluminium-wood laminate known as [[Mallite]] for much of its monocoque, although the car's design did not make best use of the new material. Given the shift to 1500cc forced induction, it is surprising that any teams did not seriously consider fielding turbocharged versions of their 1500cc naturally aspirated engines right from that point, Coventry Climax had considered it for their FWMW flat 16, but the company had decided to end its Formula 1 racing activities and the idea stopped there. It would be Eleven years before a team exploited the 1500cc forced induction option again. Ferrari was the great favorite with a 3-litre version of his well tested powerful sports car V12 design, but the new cars were very heavy, probably in an excess of self-confidence. An enlarged V6 held some promise but Surtees left mid-season after a dispute with team manager Eugenio Dragoni at the 24 Hours of Le Mans sportscar race. Coventry-Climax, formerly supplier to much of the field, pulled out of the sport leaving teams like Lotus to struggle with enlarged versions of obsolete Climax engines. Cooper turned to a development of an otherwise obsolete Maserati V12 that was originally designed for the Maserati 250 F in the late 1950s, while BRM made the choice to design an incredibly heavy and complex [[H engine|H-16]]. The big winner was Jack Brabham, whose eponymous racing team took victory two years running with a light and compact spaceframe chassis powered by the aluminium-block stock-derived [[Repco]] V8 unit. With SOHC heads and no more than 330&nbsp;bhp,<ref group="note">Probably {{convert|285|bhp|abbr=on}} at its beginning and {{convert|330|bhp|abbr=on}} at final stage of development.</ref> the Repco was one of the least powerful of the new 3-litre engines but unlike the others it was light, reliable and available right from the start of the new rules. 1966 was Jack's year, while {{F1|1967}} went to his teammate, [[New Zealand]]er [[Denny Hulme]], as Jack tried new parts on his car. In 1967 Lotus introduced the [[Lotus 49]], powered by the Ford-Cosworth [[Cosworth DFV|DFV]] V8 engine that was to dominate Formula One for the next decade. Like the Repco the Cosworth was light and compact but it was a real racing engine using 4-valve DOHC heads and delivered much more power. Cosworth had aimed for {{convert|400|bhp|abbr=on}} and exceeded this when the engine first ran. The DFV was designed to be fully stressed (an idea pioneered by the [[Lancia in Formula One|Lancia]] D50).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ferrariownersclub.co.uk/happenings/2006/october/ferrari_fangio/report.asp |title=Fangio Ferrari 50 - Ferrari Owners' Club |publisher=Ferrariownersclub.co.uk |accessdate=2010-10-04 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110221000829/http://www.ferrariownersclub.co.uk/happenings/2006/october/ferrari_fangio/report.asp |archivedate=21 February 2011 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> This allowed Chapman to design a monocoque that ended just after the driver's seat while the Brabham were still using a very classic tubular frame that supported the engine, the gearbox and the rear suspension wishbones. The newborn DFV suffered from frequent failures due to excessive vibration from the flat-plane crank, forcing [[Keith Duckworth]] to redesign several parts and allowing Hulme to win the World Drivers' Crown on reliability. 1967 also saw a remarkable result by [[Rhodesia]]n driver [[John Love (racing driver)|John Love]] with a 2.7-litre four-cylinder Cooper-Climax. Love, who was in his forties and although seen as one of the finest drivers in Southern Africa was not a major star, led and finished second in that year's South African Grand Prix. Love's obsolete Cooper was originally designed for the short races of the [[Tasman Series]]; to run a full Grand Prix, Love added two auxiliary fuel tanks. Unfortunately the auxiliary tank's fuel pump failed and forced him to refuel after having led most of the race.<ref>John Love, L'homme de Kyalami. Automobile historique (To be completed)</ref> By the late 1960s, overseas races outside Europe formed about a third of the championship in any year. The core of the season remained the European season run over the Northern Hemisphere summer, with overseas races usually falling at the start or end of the season, a pattern which has continued to this day. There were also a number of non-championship races run outside Europe; the South African Grand Prix was occasionally one of these. British and English-native speaking drivers dominated the racing scene in the 1960s. Britons Graham Hill, Jim Clark, John Surtees and Jackie Stewart won 7 championships combined in that decade- Australian Jack Brabham won 2 championships, New Zealander Denny Hulme won a championship in 1967 and American Phil Hill won a championship in 1961. === The DFV engine, 12-cylinder engines and the arrival of sponsorship, safety and aerodynamics (1968–1976) === {{see also|Hunt–Lauda rivalry}} :''See [[1968 Formula One season|1968 season]], [[1969 Formula One season|1969 season]], [[1970 Formula One season|1970 season]], [[1971 Formula One season|1971 season]], [[1972 Formula One season|1972 season]], [[1973 Formula One season|1973 season]], [[1974 Formula One season|1974 season]], [[1975 Formula One season|1975 season]] and [[1976 Formula One season|1976 season]].'' [[File:Lotus-49c-2.jpg|thumb|The [[Lotus 49]], the first F1 car to appear in a sponsor's livery, at a demonstration run in 2005]] In 1968, Lotus lost its exclusive right to use the DFV. McLaren built a DFV-powered car and a new force appeared on the scene when [[Ken Tyrrell]] entered his team using Cosworth-powered French [[Equipe Matra Sports|Matra]] chassis driven by ex-BRM [[Jackie Stewart]] as lead driver. Clark took his last win at the 1968 season opening South African Grand Prix. On 7 April 1968 the double champion was killed at Hockenheim in a Formula Two event. The season saw three significant innovations. The first was the arrival of unrestricted [[sponsor (commercial)|sponsorship]], which the FIA decided to permit that year after the withdrawal of support from automobile related firms like BP, Shell and Firestone. [[Team Gunston]], a South African [[Privateer (motorsport)|privateer team]], was the first Formula One team to paint their cars in the livery of their sponsors when they entered a private [[Brabham]] for [[John Love (racing driver)|John Love]], painted in the colours of [[Gunston]] cigarettes, in the [[1968 South African Grand Prix]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.wheels24.co.za/FormulaOne/sa-was-ahead-of-the-curve-50-years-of-sponsorship-in-f1-20180320|title='SA was ahead of the curve' - 50 years of sponsorship in F1|website=wheels24.co.za|accessdate=4 October 2018}}</ref> In the next round at the [[1968 Spanish Grand Prix]] Lotus became the first [[Factory-backed|works team]] to follow this example, with [[Graham Hill]]'s [[Lotus 49]]B entered in the Red, Gold and White colors of [[Imperial Tobacco]]'s Gold Leaf brand. The second innovation was the introduction of wings as seen previously on various cars including the [[Chaparral Cars|Chaparral]] 2F sports car. Colin Chapman introduced modest front wings and a spoiler on Graham Hill's [[Lotus 49]]B at the [[1968 Monaco Grand Prix]]. Brabham and Ferrari went one better at the [[1968 Belgian Grand Prix]] with full width wings mounted on struts high above the driver. Lotus replied with a full width wing directly connected to the rear suspension that required a redesign of suspension wishbones and transmission shafts. Matra then produced a high mounted front wing connected to the front suspension. This last innovation was mostly used during practice as it required a lot of effort from the driver. By the end of the season most teams were using sophisticated wings. There was several case of wings, struts, or even suspension collapsing. Lastly, the third innovation was the introduction of a full face helmet for drivers, with [[Dan Gurney]] becoming the first driver to wear such helmet at the [[1968 German Grand Prix]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.allamericanracers.com/gurney_grand-prix/eagle_f1-photo.html |title=Eagle Eye: The Eagle Gurney-Weslake F1 Effort |publisher=Allamericanracers.com |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120428145632/http://www.allamericanracers.com/gurney_grand-prix/eagle_f1-photo.html |archivedate=28 April 2012 |accessdate=9 January 2016}}</ref> Lotus won both titles in {{F1|1968}} with [[Graham Hill]] with Stewart second. Unfortunately, 1968 was the year that former double World Champion [[Jim Clark]] died in a Formula 2 race in Germany. This was a tragedy for the sport and many of its fans and within the next few years many of the drivers campaigned for more safety at races to stop more deaths happening. The 1968 Matras most innovative feature was the use of aviation-inspired structural fuel tanks but the FIA decided to ban the technology for 1970.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://atlasf1.autosport.com/news/safety.html |title=Safety Improvements in F1 Since 1963 |publisher=Atlasf1.autosport.com |date= |accessdate=2010-10-04}}</ref> For 1969 Matra made the radical decision to withdraw its works team and build a new car using structural tanks for the Tyrrell team, even though it would be eligible for only a single season. The 1969 season started with cars using larger and more sophisticated wings than the previous year. When both Lotus cars broke their wings' struts and crashed at the Spanish Grand Prix, the FIA banned wings for the next race at Monaco. They were reintroduced later in the season but were to be restricted in size and height, and attached directly to the chassis in a fixed position. Safety became a major issue in Formula One and the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa did not take place as the drivers boycotted the circuit after safety upgrades were not installed as demanded. Stewart won the 1969 title easily with the new Matra MS80, a spectacular achievement from a constructor and a team that had only entered Formula One the previous year. It remains the only title won by a chassis built in France. 1969 also saw a brief resurgence of interest in [[four wheel drive]] with a record of four such cars on field at the British Grand Prix. [[Johnny Servoz-Gavin]] became the one and only driver to score a point with a 4WD, finishing sixth with the [[Matra MS84]] at the Canadian Grand Prix, although the front wheel transmission was actually disconnected.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.forix.com/8w/4wd69.html |title=8W - How? - Four-wheel drive in 1969 Grand Prix racing |publisher=Forix.com |date= |accessdate=2010-10-04}}</ref> Wide tyres and [[downforce]] had proved to be better means of increasing grip, and the technology was largely abandoned. Jacky Ickx finished second in the championship for [[Brabham]], competitive again after dropping its Repco engines in favour of the DFV. For 1970 Tyrrell were asked by Matra to use their V12, but decided to retain the Cosworth instead.<ref>François Hurel, V8 Cosworth. L'élément moteur. ''Autohebdo''. 1 March 2006 N° 1535 p. 26-31</ref> As Matra was now a Chrysler affiliate and Tyrrell derived much of its income from Ford and Elf (associated with Renault) the partnership ended. Ken Tyrrell bought [[March Engineering|March]] 701 chassis as an interim solution while developing his own car for the next season. The new wedge-shaped Lotus 72 was a very innovative car featuring [[variable flexibility suspension|variable flexibility]] [[Torsion beam suspension|torsion bar]] suspension, hip-mounted radiators, inboard front brakes and an overhanging rear wing. The 72 originally had suspension problems, but once resolved the car quickly showed its superiority and Lotus's new leader, the Austrian [[Jochen Rindt]], dominated the championship until he was killed at Monza when a brake shaft broke. He took the {{F1|1970}} title posthumously for Lotus. 1970 saw the introduction of slick tyres by Goodyear. Ferrari's new flat-12 engine proved to be more powerful than the Ford-Cosworth DFV; but slightly heavier. Their performance started to improve at the end of that season, and Belgian [[Jacky Ickx]] won 3 races- but this proved to not be enough to overhaul Rindt's points total; Ickx later said he was happy to not have won the championship that year. After Rindt's death the Lotus team had a desultory 1971 season with its two new and inexperienced drivers - [[Emerson Fittipaldi]] and Reine Wisell. The team spent a lot of time experimenting with a [[gas turbine]] powered car, and with four wheel drive again. After Jack Brabham's retirement, his old team went into a steep decline. Using their own chassis heavily inspired by the Matra MS80 but with conventional tanks, [[Tyrrell Racing|Tyrrell]] and Stewart easily took success in {{F1|1971}}. Focussing again on the type 72 chassis, now fielded in [[John Player Special]]'s black and gold livery, Lotus took the {{F1|1972}} championship by surprise with 25-year-old Brazilian driver Emerson Fittipaldi becoming the then youngest world champion. Stewart came second, his performance compromised by a [[stomach ulcer]]. In {{F1|1973}}, Lotus teammates Fittipaldi and [[Ronnie Peterson]] raced each other while Stewart was supported by [[François Cevert]] at Tyrrell. Stewart took the Drivers' title, but then at the final race of the season, the United States Grand Prix at Watkins Glen, Cevert crashed during Saturday practice in the notorious esses and was killed instantly. Stewart, temporary hire [[Chris Amon]] and Tyrrell withdrew from the race effectively handing the Constructors' title to Lotus. At the end of the season Stewart made public his decision to retire, a decision that was already made before the U.S. Grand Prix. McLaren, having fully recovered from the death of their founder, ended the 1973 season with three wins and several poles. The new M23, an updated interpretation of the Lotus 72 concept, appeared to many as the best design on the field. Fittipaldi made the choice to leave Lotus for McLaren that offered him true lead driver status that Chapman refused to him. The 1974 season went to pre-season favourites McLaren and Fittipaldi, but was a far closer result than expected. Ferrari bounced back from a dismal 1973 season with its first true monocoque cars, the [[flat-12]] powered 312 B3s driven by young Austrian [[Niki Lauda]] and the experienced Clay Regazzoni. Despite the failure of the new Lotus 76, Peterson managed to win Grands Prix with the four-year-old 72. Brabham driver Carlos Reutemann was also able to win with the new BT44 and young talent Jody Scheckter ended most of the races in the points, including winning the Swedish Grand Prix with the M23-lookalike Tyrrell 007. Lauda's season fizzled out after a crash on the first lap of the German Grand Prix. Only the last race of the season decided the Drivers' title between Fittipaldi, Regazzoni, and Scheckter. By this time the innovations introduced by the Lotus 49 and 72 had changed car design. Fully stressed engine and variable flexibility suspension was now the norm, most cars had wedge shaped bodywork and airboxes towered over driver's heads. The main innovation of this era came in 1975, when the Ferrari 312T appeared, its transverse [[gearbox]] allowing better weight distribution. Ferrari won the Constructors titles in {{F1|1975}}, {{F1|1976}}, and {{F1|1977}}. Lauda took a relatively straightforward first Drivers' title in 1975. The main surprise of the season came when the tiny [[Hesketh Racing|Hesketh]] team won the Dutch Grand Prix with [[James Hunt]]. Despite entering only one car and refusing sponsorship the team finished 4th in the Constructors' Championship. That year also saw [[Lella Lombardi]] score the first points by a woman in Formula One for 6th place at the Spanish Grand Prix. [[File:LaudaNiki19760731Ferrari312T2.jpg|thumb|[[Niki Lauda]] practicing at the [[Nürburgring]] during the [[1976 German Grand Prix]]]] For 1976, Fittipaldi made the surprising decision to drive for the [[Formula One drivers from Brazil|Brazilian]] [[Fittipaldi Automotive]] team of his brother [[Wilson Fittipaldi Júnior|Wilson]], sponsored by [[Copersucar]]. James Hunt, who knew that Hesketh's future was doomed by its lack of sponsorship (Lord Hesketh had tried to obtain major backing once he realised Hunt was a likely title contender and that he could no longer afford to run the team out of his own pocket), signed for McLaren. In 1976 Lauda's second successive title seemed inevitable until he crashed on the second lap at the [[Nürburgring]], suffering severe burns as well as lung and blood damage. He was given the last rites but unbelievably was back in his Ferrari six weeks later. He lost the championship by a single point to James Hunt in heavy rain at the final round at [[Fuji Speedway|Fuji]] in Japan when he pitted his car and refused to continue, declaring that the risk was too great and that from now on he would refuse to race under extreme conditions. The most radical innovation of 1976 was the 6-wheeled [[Tyrrell P34]]. The P34 was a good car, often finishing third or fourth and winning the Swedish Grand Prix, but it was not superior to the best 4-wheeled cars. 1976 also saw the Lotus team fitting brushes or plastic skirts under its rather uncompetitive 77; McLaren and Brabham also experimented with air-dams and splitters in an attempt to cause low-pressure areas under the car but found no significant effect on performance, in fact nobody knew what was in Chapman's mind. The incident at Fuji damaged Lauda's relationship with Enzo Ferrari and Lauda officially became the second driver of the Scuderia with [[Carlos Reutemann]] as leader. Lauda signed for Brabham before the end of the 1977 championship, having taken the title easily before Enzo Ferrari refused him a car for the end of the season. His second title was mostly built on regularity and reliability. Despite his conflict with the "Commendatore" and his second driver status Lauda enjoyed immense respect from the Ferrari team, which did its best to give him a good car. There was in fact a very competitive field that year but no single challenger to the Austrian emerged and points taken away from Ferrari were shared between many teams and drivers. Surprisingly, the new [[Walter Wolf Racing|Wolf]] team, born from the ashes of [[Frank Williams Racing Cars]] and Hesketh, made excellent use of its legacy with Jody Scheckter finishing second to Niki Lauda. === Ground-effect era (1977–1982) === :''See [[1977 Formula One season|1977 season]], [[1978 Formula One season|1978 season]], [[1979 Formula One season|1979 season]], [[1980 Formula One season|1980 season]], [[1981 Formula One season|1981 season]] and [[1982 Formula One season|1982 season]].'' 1977 also saw two radical technical innovations that would change the future of Formula One. The purpose of Lotus's experimentation in 1976 was revealed with the [[Lotus 78]], which brought [[ground effect in cars|ground effect]] to Formula One for the first time, using wing-profiled sidepods sealed to the ground by sliding [[lexan]] skirts. Generating radically increased downforce with significantly less drag,<ref group="note">Reportedly, the internal name of the project that gave birth to 78 was "Something for nothing", Lotus external consultant [[Peter Wright (racing car designer)|Peter Wright]], one of the designers of the 1970 [[March 701]], brought the idea.</ref> the Lotus 78s driven by [[Mario Andretti]] and [[Gunnar Nilsson]] won five Grands Prix in 1977. [[Renault F1|Renault]] unveiled the second when their [[Renault RS01|RS01]] made its first appearance powered by a 1.5-litre turbocharged engine, derived from their [[Sports car racing|sportscar]] unit. Although supercharged engines were successful in the 1950s and the regulations allowing for turbocharged engines had existed for 11 years, no Formula One team had built one, feeling that the fuel consumption and [[Turbocharger#Lag|turbo lag]] (boost lag) would negate its superior power. Motor engineer [[Bernard Dudot]],<ref>Bernard Canonne & Christophe Wilmart, 1906-2006 100 ans de Grand Prix. Rétroviseur November 2006</ref> who had observed the turbocharged [[Offenhauser]] engines used in [[Champ Car]] racing in the USA, pushed for this choice. The entry of Renault also brought Michelin's [[radial tyre]]s to Formula One. Goodyear, who enjoyed a monopoly before the entry of [[Michelin]], was still using the [[cross ply]] design for racing. Goodyear saw the entry of Michelin as a serious threat and made a notable effort in research and development to develop its own radial tyres. Tyrrell's 1977 season was disastrous because [[Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company|Goodyear]] was too busy to continue to develop the unique small tyres required by the P34. Without continuing development, the tyres became less competitive and the six-wheeled concept had to be dropped. [[Michelin]] eventually left F1 after the 1984 season. [[File:2001 Goodwood Festival of Speed Brabham BT46B Fan car.jpg|thumb|The [[Brabham BT46#Brabham BT46B – the "fan car"|Brabham BT46B]] "fan car"]] For {{F1|1978}} the new [[Lotus 79]] made a more radical and mature use of the ground effect concept. Many other teams began experimenting with the technology, but Lotus had a [[Head start (positioning)|head start]] and [[Mario Andretti]] won the Championship in the "Black Beauty", becoming the first driver to win both the American [[American Championship Car Racing|IndyCar]] championship and the Formula One title. [[Brabham]] outbid Lotus in generating downforce with [[Brabham BT46|BT46B]] "fan car", a revival of the "sucker car" concept used by [[Jim Hall (race car driver)|Jim Hall]]'s [[Chaparral 2J]] in the [[Can-Am]] series in the early 1970s. The car exploited a loophole in the regulations, but the team, led by Bernie Ecclestone who had recently become president of the Formula One Constructors Association, withdrew the car before it had a chance to be banned after winning its only race with [[Niki Lauda]] at the wheel at the [[1978 Swedish Grand Prix|Swedish Grand Prix]]. Late in the season Ronnie Peterson crashed into the barriers in the first lap at Monza and his Lotus burst into flames. James Hunt heroically pulled him out of the car and the medical prognosis was initially good but the Swede died the next day because of an [[embolism]]. Hunt would retire after the following season's Monaco Grand Prix. For 1979 [[Equipe Ligier|Ligier]], the up-and-coming [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] team and surprisingly [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]], despite the handicap of the Flat-12 that obstructed wind tunnels, produced wing-cars designs that were more effective than the [[Lotus 79]]. This forced Lotus to hastily introduce the new 80 that overplayed the ground effect concept (it was originally intended to run with no drag-inducing wings, merely ground-effect sidepods) and never proved competitive. Renault persisted with the turbo engine, despite frequent breakdowns that resulted in the nickname of the 'Little Yellow Teapot', and finally won for the first time at Dijon in {{F1|1979}} with the [[Renault RS10|RS10]] that featured both ground effect and turbo engine. [[File:Renault RS10 1979.jpg|left|thumb|The [[Renault RS10]], the first turbocharged car to win a Grand Prix, had ground-effect aerodynamics permitted in 1979]] The new technologies introduced by Renault and Lotus became entangled in the [[FISA–FOCA war]] of the early 1980s. Turbo engines were complex machines whose layout limited the ground effect 'tunnels' under the car. They were an emerging technology and so they were difficult and expensive to develop and build and make reliable. It was mostly manufacturer-supported teams, such as Renault, Ferrari and [[Alfa Romeo]] which took that route. In contrast, the cheap, reliable and narrow Ford-Cosworth [[Cosworth DFV|DFV]] engine, still used by most teams more than a decade after its introduction, lent itself well to highly efficient ground effect aerodynamics. These two groups were represented by two political bodies – the sport's governing body [[Federation International du Sport Automobile|FISA]], headed by [[Jean Marie Balestre|Jean-Marie Balestre]]; and [[Formula One Constructors Association|FOCA]], headed up by [[Bernie Ecclestone]]. The first group supported a strict limitation of ground effect to gain full advantage from their powerful turbos while the other relied on unrestricted ground effect to balance their horsepower deficit. There were also financial considerations. Faced with large constructors with unrestricted budgets, the smaller constructors wanted a larger share of Formula One's income to remain competitive. The battles between FISA and FOCA during the first years of the 1980s overshadowed the events on track. [[Jody Scheckter]] took Ferrari's last title for 21 years in {{F1|1979}}, but attention there was already being focused on young Canadian [[Gilles Villeneuve]]. [[Alan Jones (Formula 1)|Alan Jones]] and [[Keke Rosberg]] brought success to Frank Williams at last in {{F1|1980}} and {{F1|1982}}, while young Brazilian [[Nelson Piquet]] won titles for [[Brabham]] team owner Ecclestone in {{F1|1981}} and {{F1|1983}}. [[Patrick Depailler]] was killed in {{F1|1980}}, probably due to high lateral acceleration causing a black out in Hockenheim's fast Ostkurve. The double blow struck to Ferrari in {{F1|1982}}, of the death of Gilles Villeneuve and the crippling injury to teammate [[Didier Pironi]] only a few weeks later, helped bring this crisis into the spotlight, and helped both sides settle the dispute for the good of the sport. The old fashioned DFV helped make the UK domestic Aurora Formula One series possible between 1978 and 1980. As in South Africa a generation before, second hand cars from manufacturers like [[Team Lotus|Lotus]] and [[Fittipaldi Automotive]] were the order of the day, although some, such as the [[March Engineering|March]] 781, were built specifically for the series. In 1980 the series saw South African [[Desiré Wilson]] become the only woman to win a Formula One race when she triumphed at Brands Hatch in a Williams. After several years in darkness [[McLaren]] merged with [[Ron Dennis]]'s Formula Two Project-4 team. The [[McLaren MP4/1]] (McLaren Project-4) introduced the first [[carbon fibre composite|carbon fiber composite]] chassis in 1981, an innovation which, despite initial doubts over its likely performance in a crash, had been taken up by all the teams by the middle of the decade. The use of carbon fibre composite in place of aluminium honeycomb produced cars that were significantly lighter, yet also far stiffer which improved grip and therefore cornering speed. Significant skepticism regarding the use of carbon fiber chassis remained, but [[John Watson (racing driver)#Move to McLaren and championship challenge|John Watson's 1981 crash]] in the MP4/1 showed that the new technology was sufficiently safe, with the violent accident leaving Watson unscathed, where similar previous incidents had resulted in death or serious injury. <!---Subjective and not at the right place: Ironically, despite all of the controversy swirling around the privateers, the 1970s in Formula One provided some of the most colorful and competitive grids ever found in the sport. The cheapness of the Ford-Cosworth DFV encouraged many private entrants to buy or build their own cars to run in the seasons with varying degrees of success. While names like [[Ensign (racing team)|Ensign]], [[Penske]], and [[Theodore Racing|Theodore]] came and went without making much of an impression, other teams, such as [[Hesketh Racing|Hesketh]], [[Shadow Racing Team|Shadow]], [[Walter Wolf Racing|Wolf]], or [[Arrows Grand Prix International|Arrows]] enjoyed more success, and even challenged the established giants of the sport from time to time.---> === 1.5-litre turbo-charged engines (1983–1988) === :''See [[1983 Formula One season|1983 season]], [[1984 Formula One season|1984 season]], [[1985 Formula One season|1985 season]], [[1986 Formula One season|1986 season]], [[1987 Formula One season|1987 season]] and [[1988 Formula One season|1988 season]].'' The {{F1|1983}} title, won by Piquet for the Brabham team of Bernie Ecclestone, champion of the non-manufacturer teams' rights, was the first-ever won by a turbocharged engine. By 1983, the dispute between FISA and FOCA had been resolved and although FOCA emerged with the stronger hand, the teams had seen the writing on the wall. Renault had proven in 1979 and 1980 that turbo-charged engines were a more efficient means of getting more performance from the powertrain with the FIA regulations. The turbo cars were faster on almost all of the high speed (Hockenheim, Österreichring, Monza, Silverstone) and high-altitude tracks (Interlagos, Kyalami), but by 1982, the turbo cars were fastest just about everywhere. The 1982 season made it obvious to all the competing Formula One teams that turbocharged engines were the way to go if anyone wanted to be competitive in Formula 1. By 1983, the reliability of the turbo-charged engines had been ironed out and made more reliable, and in 1984, only [[Tyrrell Racing|Tyrrell]] still struggled on with the old DFV engines. 1983 also saw the last non-championship Formula One race: The 1983 [[Race of Champions (Brands Hatch)|Race of Champions]] at [[Brands Hatch]], won by reigning World Champion Keke Rosberg in a Williams-Ford/Cosworth in a close fight with American [[Danny Sullivan]]. Safety issues finally helped resolve the dispute; after nearly 50 years, the power achieved by the turbocharged cars could finally match the 640&nbsp;hp (477&nbsp;kW) produced by the supercharged 1937 [[Mercedes-Benz W125]], without a huge consumption of special fuel. By {{F1|1986}}, some engines were producing over {{convert|1350|bhp|abbr=on}} in short bursts in qualifying. [[BMW]]'s {{convert|1000|bhp|abbr=on}} [[dynamometer]] was incapable of measuring the output of their qualifying engines - [[Paul Rosche]] estimated that it might be as much as {{convert|1400|bhp|abbr=on}}. First fuel consumption and then turbocharger boost were restricted to 4-bar in 1987 and 1.5-bar in 1988. By 1988, the turbos were only slightly more powerful than the lighter 3.5-litre naturally aspirated cars that had been introduced the previous year. The thirsty turbo engines briefly saw refuelling introduced into the sport, but this was banned for 1984. [[File:Williams F1 FW11 Crop.jpg|thumb|The [[Williams FW11]] won the Constructors' Championship in {{F1|1986}}, the only year before 2014 in which every car in the field had a [[Turbocharger|turbocharged]] engine]] With controversy at last left behind, the Formula One teams flourished through the remainder of the 1980s and into the 1990s. Despite the overwhelming dominance of two teams—McLaren and Williams—this period is regarded (perhaps ironically) as one of the brightest spots in F1's 50-year history. [[Niki Lauda]], coming out of retirement for a hefty sum in {{F1|1982}}, pipped his teammate [[Alain Prost]] to the title in {{F1|1984}} by a mere half point, the closest ever finish in Formula One history. That half point in itself was controversial in that it came at the rain-shortened Grand Prix of Monaco, which resulted in half points, too. Prost won that race, but rookie [[Ayrton Senna]] made the stronger impression in his [[Toleman]] car, finishing 2nd and rapidly closing on Prost (while the young German [[Stefan Bellof]] in the inferior non-turbocharged Tyrrell raced from the back of the field to 3rd and might even have taken the win, running faster than both Prost and Senna and with Senna reputed to have terminal suspension damage after an earlier incident even though later that year Tyrrell were disqualified from the championship losing all of their points from both the Drivers' and Constructors' championships). It was the start of a rivalry between the two men that would continue for nearly a decade. But in the early years, Prost held the advantage, driving for the McLaren team with the [[Porsche]]-built [[Techniques d'Avant Garde|TAG]] turbo engine which took three world titles in a row. {{F1|1986}} provided another close finish. The [[Honda Racing F1|Honda]]-powered Williams cars of Nelson Piquet and [[Nigel Mansell]] looked untouchable, but too often they took points from each other, allowing McLaren's Prost to stay in touch. Although Williams easily won the Constructors' Championship that year, it was not until the season-ending Grand Prix of Australia that the Drivers' title was decided, Prost making the most of both Williams drivers tyre problems. {{F1|1987}} saw the Williams grow only stronger, with Piquet driving more consistent races to take his 3rd title ahead of Mansell who crashed in Japan in practice forcing him to sit out for the final 2 races. 1987 also saw the return of atmospheric engines to Formula One, after the turbo-only year of 1986. Capacity was increased to 3.5 litres, and the turbo engines were restricted in [[boost pressure]] and fuel capacity to limit their effect, with a total ban to be introduced in {{F1|1989}}. Nevertheless, while turbo engines lasted, they dominated, Williams winning easily in 1987, and McLaren returning to form in {{F1|1988}} with the super-team of Prost and Senna winning 15 of 16 races, a record unmatched today. It was Senna who emerged the victor, claiming the first of his 3 World Titles. === 3.5-litre naturally aspirated engines, active suspension and electronic driver aids (1989–1993) === :''See [[1989 Formula One season|1989 season]], [[1990 Formula One season|1990 season]], [[1991 Formula One season|1991 season]], [[1992 Formula One season|1992 season]] and [[1993 Formula One season|1993 season]].'' In 1989, turbos were banned and new regulations allowing only naturally aspirated engines up to 3.5 litres were put in their place. The dominance of McLaren-Honda continued for the next 3 seasons, Prost winning the title in 1989, Senna in {{F1|1990}} and {{F1|1991}}. The V10 and V12 engines produced by the Japanese manufacturer proved to be just as good an engine as the turbo V6 before them, and the V10 was the best engine over the 2 seasons it was used and developed by McLaren and Honda. The championship was marred however by the fierce rivalry between the two men, culminating in a pair of clashes at the Japanese Grands Prix of 1989 and 1990. They both dominated Formula One from 1988 to 1990, winning 37 of the 48 Grand Prix staged and each scoring almost twice as many points as the third-place driver in those championships. In 1989 Prost 'closed the door' on his overtaking teammate while Senna later freely admitted to deliberately driving into Prost in the 1990 race, drawing stiff condemnation from all quarters of Formula One. Senna, however, was more concerned with the threat (and opportunity) afforded by the resurgent Williams, now powered by Renault (the French giant's innovative engine technology allowed their engines to be level with Honda's engines) and designed by aerodynamics genius [[Adrian Newey]] which were to dominate Formula One for the next 7 years. It was more than Renault engines, however, which allowed Williams and later [[Benetton Formula|Benetton]] to dominate Formula One from {{F1|1992}} to {{F1|1997}}. Refuelling at pit stops was reintroduced turning each race into a series of sprints – as a result the race strategy became as important as the driver's ability. In the early 1990s, teams started introducing electronic driver aids, whose use spread rapidly. [[Active suspension]], (pioneered by Lotus in 1987), [[Gearbox#Semi-automatic transmission|semi-automatic gearbox]]es (Ferrari in 1989), and [[traction control system|traction control]] (Williams in 1991) became essential to compete. Some of these technologies were borrowed from contemporary road cars. Others were primarily developed for the track and later made their way to the showroom. All enabled cars to reach higher and higher speeds, provided the teams were willing to spend the money. The [[Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile|FIA]], due to complaints that technology was determining the outcome of races more than driver skill, banned many such aids in 1994. However, many observers felt that the ban on driver aids was a ban in name only as the FIA did not have the technology or the methods to eliminate these features from competition. Even this controversy did not diminish the pleasure British fans of the sport felt in 1992, when Nigel Mansell finally won the title, after a decade of trying, nor French fans in {{F1|1993}} when Alain Prost took his 4th Championship, both drivers piloting Williams cars. Lightweight television cameras attached to the cars became common in the early 1990s (following an American network TV practise actually pioneered in Australia). As well as boosting audience figures this also made the sport more attractive to sponsors beyond the traditional [[cigarette]] companies. Safety improvements also meant that the major car manufacturers were more inclined to attach themselves to teams on a rolling basis. {{F1|1994}}, then, seemed ripe to produce a stunning season. Ayrton Senna had moved to Williams to replace Prost, who retired from the sport. Young German driver [[Michael Schumacher]] had [[Ford]] power for his Benetton. McLaren had high hopes for its new [[Peugeot]] engine (which had been developed through the French marque's Le Mans sportscar racing program) which ultimately did not happen and Ferrari were looking to erase the dismal memories of the last 3 years with [[Gerhard Berger]] and [[Jean Alesi]]. The season was stunning, but for all the wrong reasons. === Safety, rules and regulations (1994) === :''See [[1994 Formula One season|1994 season]].'' [[File:Benetton B 194 4841.JPG|thumb|The [[Benetton Formula|Benetton]] [[Benetton B194|B194]] [[Michael Schumacher]] drove to the {{f1|1994}} title]] By {{F1|1994}}, the previous death in Formula One was nearly a decade past, that of [[Elio de Angelis]] during testing at the [[Circuit Paul Ricard]] in 1986. There had been several horrifying accidents (for example Nelson Piquet and Gerhard Berger at [[Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari|Imola]], or [[Martin Donnelly (racing driver)|Martin Donnelly]] at [[Circuito Permanente de Jerez|Jerez]]), but no fatalities. The speed of Formula One cars had continuously risen over 8 years, despite turbocharged engines being made illegal, the width of tyres being reduced and driver aids eventually being removed. There was an "air of invincibility" in Formula One, a belief that the cars were inherently safe and no more drivers would die.<ref name="damonhill">{{cite news | first = Damon | last = Hill | title = Had Ayrton foreseen his death? | url = http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,12771-1077121,00.html | work = The Times | publisher = News International | date = 17 April 2004 | accessdate = 2006-10-28 | location=London}}</ref> At the [[1994 San Marino Grand Prix|San Marino Grand Prix]] weekend this belief was crushed completely with the serious injuries sustained by [[Rubens Barrichello]] in practice and the deaths of [[Roland Ratzenberger]] during qualifying and [[Ayrton Senna]] in the race on 1 May 1994.<ref name="BBConthisday">{{cite news | title = Race ace Senna killed in car crash | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/may/1/newsid_2479000/2479971.stm | publisher = BBC News | date = 1 May 1994 | accessdate = 2006-10-28}}</ref> Furthermore, [[Karl Wendlinger]] was left comatose after a crash two weeks later at the [[1994 Monaco Grand Prix|Monaco Grand Prix]].<ref>{{cite book | last = Hamilton | first = Maurice | authorlink = | coauthors = | editor = | others = | title = Frank Williams | accessdate = | edition = | date = | publisher = Macmillan | location = | isbn = 0-333-71716-3 | page = 241}}</ref> The shock from the sudden injuries and deaths was stunning. Not only had two drivers been killed, but one of them was a triple world champion and arguably the best F1 driver at the time. The [[Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile|FIA]] reacted swiftly and harshly with major changes to be enforced from that year onwards, and it was the beginning of the FIA's push to increase safety in Formula One. While significant changes could not be made to cars in 1994, the FIA required all Formula One cars' airboxes to be perforated to reduce their "ram-air" effect, to reduce power. For the same reason special racing fuels, previously an exotic mixture of benzenes and toluenes, were banned and only those with similar characteristics to everyday unleaded petrol would be permitted. To reduce downforce, and therefore the cornering speed of the cars, a wooden "plank" was to be fitted beneath the central portion of the chassis, forcing a large section of the floor further away from the track. If the plank was worn over a certain tolerance (approximately 10&nbsp;mm), the car would be deemed illegal. This wooden plank remains under F1 cars today. Further, from 1995 designs were required to be drawn from a reference plane (template), and strict limitations were enforced as to the minimum and maximum tolerances for aspects of the vehicle such as the size of the cockpit opening (an idea well known in [[Champ Car]] for a decade) and of aerodynamic devices, commonly called wings. Further, maximum engine displacement was reduced from 3.5 litres to 3 litres. Further changes were mandated as the FIA continued to try to curb the increase in speeds of Formula One cars as the years progressed. These changes included the increase in size of the cockpit opening (to ensure driver egress was easy and to minimise possible side head impacts), introducing grooved tyres (to reduce cornering speeds by reducing grip) and narrower bodywork (this would complicate cooling and also reduce cornering speed), raising and reducing wing sizes and elements (cutting aerodynamic downforce, thus reducing cornering speed), and introducing comprehensive checks on stiffness tolerances and measurements to ensure cars conformed completely with the regulations (for example, weight tests on wings and bodywork to ensure that they maintained integrity and did not flex to give an aerodynamic advantage in a straight line). The rapid introduction of all of these new rules and regulations, particularly those introduced in {{F1|1994}}, made the atmosphere even more chaotic for Formula One. Michael Schumacher had to fight desperately for his first World Drivers' Championship, as his Benetton team found itself in frequent violations of FIA regulations and Schumacher was suspended for several races as a result. Even his championship-clinching race in Australia was controversial, as he collided with rival [[Damon Hill]] (son of Graham) and ensured himself of the title. === 3-litre engines (1995–1999) === :''See [[1995 Formula One season|1995 season]], [[1996 Formula One season|1996 season]], [[1997 Formula One season|1997 season]], [[1998 Formula One season|1998 season]] and [[1999 Formula One season|1999 season]]. [[File:Jacques Villeneuve 1996.jpg|thumb|[[Jacques Villeneuve]] driving for the [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] Formula One team at the 1996 [[Canadian Grand Prix]]]] However, by {{F1|1995}} things had settled down somewhat. The downgraded 3-litre formula had no effect of the domination of the Renault V10, and Schumacher took his second Drivers' title, and Benetton their first Constructors' title, with relative ease, defeating the Williams team of Hill and [[David Coulthard]]. The Renault engine which powered both teams was virtually unbeatable, with only Ferrari claiming a single win at the [[1995 Canadian Grand Prix|Canadian Grand Prix]] for Alesi, his only career win. For {{F1|1996}}, the FIA mandated a much larger minimum size cockpit area, along with driver's head protection, to ensure the driver's head was less exposed (ironically, this limited [[driver visibility]] and contributed to accidents). As part of his plan to rebuild Ferrari, [[Jean Todt]] brought Michael Schumacher to the team from Benetton that year, essentially in exchange for his 1995 drivers Alesi and Berger. There was an immediate effect, in his first year with the Scuderia Schumacher won three races, more than the team had managed in the previous five years. Ferrari were not championship contenders though and Damon Hill made a strong run to the title, finally claiming the crown after 3 years of almost but not quite.<ref>{{cite book | last = Hamilton | first = Maurice | authorlink = | coauthors = | editor = | others = | title = Frank Williams | accessdate = | edition = | date = | publisher = Macmillan | location = | isbn = 0-333-71716-3 | page = 272}}</ref> In {{F1|1997}}, another son of an F1 racing legend took the titles for Williams once again, as [[Jacques Villeneuve]] became the 4th driver to take both the Formula One and [[Champ Car|CART]] championship (the others being Mario Andretti, Emerson Fittipaldi, and Nigel Mansell). This season was much closer than 1996, and Villeneuve only clinched the Drivers' Championship at the final race. Once again, Michael Schumacher collided with his championship rival at the final race, but unlike 1994 events turned against him. Schumacher not only found himself knocked out of the race, but was found to have deliberately tried to run Villeneuve off of the road. Schumacher was stripped of second place in the Championship and was disgraced.<ref>{{cite news | title = Schumacher loses championship runner-up crown | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/29895.stm | publisher = BBC News | date = 11 November 1997 | accessdate = 2006-10-28}}</ref> At the end of 1997 Renault withdrew from Formula One. McLaren-[[Mercedes-Benz HighPerformanceEngines|Mercedes]] took the Drivers' Crown for the next two years, both being claimed by [[Mika Häkkinen]]. The Finn was nearly untouchable as he took his first title while Schumacher and Villeneuve could only watch. {{F1|1999}} provided a stiffer contest for the title. Villeneuve was out of the picture at the brand-new [[British American Racing|BAR]] but Schumacher was in contention when he crashed and broke his leg at [[Silverstone Circuit|Silverstone]].<ref>{{cite news | title = Schumacher breaks leg in race crash | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/391405.stm | publisher = BBC News | date = 11 July 1999 | accessdate = 2006-11-13}}</ref> His teammate [[Eddie Irvine]] eventually lost by only two points to [[Mika Häkkinen]], but his efforts contributed to Ferrari's first Constructors' Championship since 1983. Behind the title races, however, there were signs of trouble brewing in Formula One. Long-established, highly respected names like Brabham and Lotus vanished from the starting grids. French manufacturer [[Equipe Ligier|Ligier]] found themselves in desperate straits, and were sold to Alain Prost. [[Ken Tyrrell]]'s team floundered on, despite dismal results, until 1998, when [[British American Racing|BAR]] bought the team. And the colourful era of the small, private teams finally came to an end. Names like [[Larrousse]], [[Dallara]], [[Simtek]], [[Pacific Racing|Pacific]], [[MasterCard Lola]], [[Life Racing Engines]], [[March Engineering]], [[Onyx Grand Prix]], [[Scuderia Coloni|Coloni]], [[Andrea Moda Formula|Andrea Moda]], [[Fondmetal]], [[Osella]], [[Footwork Arrows|Footwork]], [[Automobiles Gonfaronnaises Sportives|AGS]], [[Modena (racing team)|Lambo]], [[Leyton House Racing]], [[EuroBrun]] and [[Forti]] would no longer be seen on the starting grids, with only [[Jordan Grand Prix|Jordan]], [[Sauber]], [[Arrows Grand Prix International|Arrows]] and [[Minardi]] managing to survive somehow. The flourishing of Jordan in 1998 and 1999, under the leadership of Damon Hill, [[Heinz-Harald Frentzen]] and [[Ralf Schumacher]] (Michael's younger brother) proved to be a last hurrah of the privateer, not a sign of health in the sport. Even once mighty Benetton, champions only a few years before, were barely surviving. [[Jackie Stewart]] fronted his own team from 1997 to 1999 with backing from Ford but even then sold out as the team transformed into [[Jaguar Racing|Jaguar]]. === V10 engine and road car manufacturer team era (2000–2004) === :''See [[2000 Formula One season|2000 season]], [[2001 Formula One season|2001 season]], [[2002 Formula One season|2002 season]], [[2003 Formula One season|2003 season]] and [[2004 Formula One season|2004 season]].'' [[File:Michael Schumacher-I'm the man (cropped).jpg|thumb|upright|[[Michael Schumacher]] before the [[2005 United States Grand Prix]]]] After the banning of turbocharged engines in 1989, V10 became the most popular engine configuration in Formula One, because it offered the best compromise between power and fuel consumption. From the 1998 season onwards, all competing teams had V10 engines in their cars. V12s were powerful but thirsty, and vice versa for V8s. {{F1|2000}} saw the grids of Formula One start to revert to normal, as Jordan rapidly faded out of sight, and Williams, looking forward to a new partnership with [[BMW]] started to reassert itself. The fight at the front, however, was very much between Häkkinen and Schumacher, each two-time champion, driving cars closely matched in performance. Ferrari had been steadily improving since their low point in the early 1990s and in 2000 Schumacher prevailed, becoming the first 3 time Champion since Senna, and bringing the World Drivers' title to Ferrari for the first time since Jody Scheckter in 1979. The {{F1|2001}} season saw Ferrari start to leave the rest of the grid behind, and Schumacher won the championship by the [[2001 Hungarian Grand Prix|Hungarian]] Grand Prix, which tied him as second quickest championship winner with [[Nigel Mansell]]. For {{F1|2002}}, the season was a red-wash. Ferrari finished every race, and won 15 of 17. Michael Schumacher scored more points than the second and third placed drivers combined, after gaining a podium in all of the races (Schumacher had only one third place in [[2002 Malaysian Grand Prix|Malaysia]]). In this season, he wrapped up the championship at the [[2002 French Grand Prix|French Grand Prix]] (Round 11 of 17), becoming the earliest ever championship winner. While Ferrari celebrated their dominance, the sport itself was seen by many to be in trouble. Two more privateers, [[Prost (racing team)|Prost]] and Arrows, had closed their doors for good. Benetton was also no more, the team having been completely bought out by Renault and turned into their factory team. Even more troubling was the one team in seemingly no danger of disappearing: Ferrari. While Formula One was no stranger to teams monopolizing the winner's stand, Ferrari's actions throughout the 2002 season annoyed many; in particular the staged finishes of the [[2002 Austrian Grand Prix|Austrian Grand Prix]] and the [[2002 United States Grand Prix|US Grand Prix]]. It seemed to many that it was possible to take the dictum of 'win at all costs' too far. Ratings and attendance noticeably declined in the later half of 2002, a serious problem for a sport which was by far the most expensive (and, more importantly, most lucrative) in the world by this time. Also, a number of major manufacturers had joined Formula One since 2000 - there were now 8 manufacturers participating in some form in Formula One. Toyota, Ford/[[Jaguar Cars|Jaguar]] and Renault had joined as full works teams, and Mercedes, Honda, BMW and [[Cosworth]] were all supplying engines to specific teams. In 2003, despite heavy rule changes (such as a new points system) in order to prevent another year of Ferrari dominance, Schumacher won the championship once more. He was run close by both [[Kimi Räikkönen]] and [[Juan Pablo Montoya]], but Schumacher prevailed, taking the championship by two points at [[2003 Japanese Grand Prix|Suzuka]]. It seemed that 2003 was the perfect balm to ease the memories of the previous season, with 8 different race winners (including first-time victories for [[Fernando Alonso]], Kimi Räikkönen and [[Giancarlo Fisichella]]) and 5 different teams, including both Renault (for the first time in twenty years) and Jordan, who grabbed a lucky win in a wild [[2003 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazilian Grand Prix]]. In 2004 Ferrari and Schumacher returned to almost total dominance of the championships, winning both with ease - in the first thirteen races of the season, Schumacher managed to win twelve. A new race in [[Bahrain]] made its debut in April and another new race in [[People's Republic of China|China]] debuted in September. It was initially thought that in introducing these new races, older Grands Prix in Europe, like the [[British Grand Prix]], might be removed from the championship, but instead the number of races was increased to eighteen. According to Ecclestone, the move was to increase Formula One's global reach, though the steady tightening of restrictions on [[tobacco advertising]] in Europe and elsewhere may also have been a factor. This move saw the percentage of races held outside Formula One's traditional European home climb to around fifty percent – meaning the World Championship, which visits four of the six continents, truly deserves its name. 2004 was Michael Schumacher's most recent of his record seven World Championships. Schumacher also holds the record for the most races won – with ninety-one. Despite Ferrari's dominance (taking 15 wins from the 18 races), the battle back in the pack was much more open than 2002, as powerhouses McLaren and Williams got off to horrendous starts with radical new cars. As could have been expected, Renault were quick to capitalize on the misfortunes of the two older British teams, but the real shock came from [[British American Racing]], led by [[Jenson Button]]. Although failing to win a race, Button was a regular sight on the 2nd or 3rd step of the podium, and with teammate [[Takuma Sato]] who had finished 3rd at the US Grand Prix behind the Ferraris managed to clinch 2nd in the Constructors' Championship, leaving Renault 3rd, [[Jarno Trulli]]'s win in Monaco some consolation. Montoya and Räikkönen each managed a solitary win for their teams, which finished 4th and 5th in the results. The [[Ford Motor Company]]'s decision to pull out of Formula One at the end of 2004 exposed the vulnerabilities of some small teams. Not only was their works Jaguar team sold to Austrian drinks company [[Red Bull]],<ref>{{cite news | title = Red Bull buys Jaguar F1 team | url = http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,1351773,00.html | publisher = The Guardian | date = 15 November 2004 | accessdate = 2006-11-13 | location=London | first=Mark | last=Tran}}</ref> but the few remaining small independent teams, who traditionally had used Ford engines, found their engine supply in a precarious state. === 2.4-litre V8 engines (2005–2008) === :''See [[2005 Formula One season|2005 season]] and [[2006 Formula One season|2006 season]], [[2007 Formula One Season|2007 season]] and [[2008 Formula One Season|2008 season]].'' [[File:Alonso (Renault) qualifying at USGP 2005.jpg|thumb|[[Fernando Alonso]] qualifying in a [[Renault in Formula One|Renault]] Formula One car at the [[2005 United States Grand Prix]]]] In {{F1|2005}}, Formula One saw Ferrari and BAR rapidly fade out of sight, as the works Renault team dominated the early part of the season, and Fernando Alonso forged a clear championship lead. In the latter part of the season McLaren were significantly the stronger team, with consistently better results and a win tally of 6 from 7 races. However, their early record of poor reliability had meant that catching Renault in either Drivers' or Constructors' Championships was a tall order. For a while it looked close between Räikkönen and Alonso, but by [[2005 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazil]] Alonso had become Formula One's youngest ever champion. The Constructors' Championship looked even more likely for [[McLaren (racing)|McLaren]], widely regarded as the faster car and with reliability much improved. However, a retirement for [[Juan Pablo Montoya]] in the season finale at [[2005 Chinese Grand Prix|Shanghai]] secured the Constructors' title for [[Renault F1|Renault]]. One statistic proved the two teams' dominance: they together won all but one of the races, the controversial [[2005 United States Grand Prix|US Grand Prix]], in which neither of the two teams participated, which was Schumacher and Ferrari's only win of the year. Arguably, the final small specialist racing team disappeared with the September 2005 purchase of Minardi by Red Bull to be renamed as [[Scuderia Toro Rosso]] and run as a separate entity alongside [[Red Bull Racing]]. Jordan had been bought by Russo-Canadian steel company [[Midland Group|Midland]] early in 2005 and was renamed [[Midland F1]] for the 2006 season. In June 2005, BMW bought a majority stake in [[Sauber]], which became their factory entry. The Williams team ceased their partnership with BMW as a result, entering a commercial arrangement with Cosworth instead. From 2006 manufacturer teams had an unprecedented level of involvement in the sport. [[Honda]] also bought BAR. 2005 marked the end of the V10 era in Formula One. To keep costs down, the configuration had been made mandatory in 2000 (although only V10s had been in use since 1998, Toyota were planning on entering Formula One with a V12 and had to delay their entry by a year to redesign) so that engine builders would not develop and experiment with other configurations. Over this period, the statistics show a supremacy of the Renault and Ferrari engines, with Renault clinching six Constructors and five Drivers' Championships as engine suppliers for Williams and Benetton from 1992 to 1997, and their first ever Drivers' and Constructors' Championships in a 100% Renault car in 2005. Ferrari also enjoyed great success in the V10 era, winning six Constructors' Championships and five Drivers' Championships from 1999 to 2004. [[File:Alonso + Barrichello + Villeneuve + Schumacher 2006 USA.jpg|thumb|right| Fernando Alonso (Renault) leads [[Rubens Barrichello]] ([[Honda Racing F1|Honda]]), Jacques Villeneuve ([[BMW Sauber|BMW]]) and [[Ralf Schumacher]] ([[Toyota F1|Toyota]]) at the [[2006 United States Grand Prix]]]] 2006 was the last season with two tyre manufacturers: Japanese manufacturer [[Bridgestone]] and French company Michelin. In December 2005, the FIA announced that from the 2008 season, there would be only one tyre supplier. Five days later, Michelin announced it would quit Formula One at the end of the 2006 season, leaving Bridgestone as the sole supplier from 2007. Renault and Fernando Alonso established early leads in both the Constructors' and Drivers' Championships. By mid-season, Ferrari appeared to be making a comeback, however. The Italian Grand Prix saw Schumacher reduce Alonso's lead to only two points as Alonso suffered an engine failure. The race also saw Ferrari pull ahead of Renault for the first time in 2006. However, the race results were largely overshadowed by Schumacher announcing, during the post-race press conference, that he would retire at the end of the season. However, an engine failure for Schumacher at the Japanese Grand Prix, along with costly puncture in the final round in Brazil allowed Alonso to secure the Drivers' Championship for the 2nd year running, with Renault also securing the Constructors' Championship. The [[2007 Formula One season]] saw a much more competitive McLaren, with current world champion Alonso alongside rookie [[Lewis Hamilton]]. However, Hamilton surprised everyone with a run of 9 consecutive podiums in his first 9 races seeing him take a significant lead in the Drivers' Championship. Alonso's relationship with McLaren deteriorated as the season progressed, as he believed it was his right as world champion to be favoured above his teammate. A mistake by Hamilton in [[2007 Chinese Grand Prix|China]] and a mechanical problem in [[2007 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazil]] ruined his championship. Alonso, however, was not able to fully capitalise on the situation, and Ferrari's Kimi Räikkönen took the championship after a strong second half to the season. Räikkönen turned around a 17-point deficit with 2 races to go to win by a single point. Both McLarens finished the Championship on 109 points. Fernando Alonso was placed third, behind Lewis Hamilton through countback. [[Renault in Formula One|Renault]] had a much less successful season in 2007 than in previous years and struggled to match the pace of McLaren and Ferrari. Ferrari also clinched the Constructors' Championship after McLaren's disqualification over controversy over the suspicion that McLaren had Ferrari information. For the 2008 and 2009 seasons Fernando Alonso returned to Renault, but having little success he joined Ferrari in 2010. [[2008 Formula One season|2008]] again saw McLaren and Ferrari have the most competitive cars. However, the season was much more open, with winners from 3 other teams. After agonising defeat in 2007, Hamilton clinched the Drivers' Championship in dramatic fashion, overtaking Timo Glock in the Toyota to secure the 5th place he needed in the last corner of the last lap of the [[2008 Brazilian Grand Prix|final Grand Prix]]. [[Felipe Massa]] had won the race, and would also have won the Drivers' Championship if it had not been for Hamilton's crucial overtake. Despite this, Ferrari secured the Constructors' Championship for the 8th time in 10 years. === Cost cutting measures and departure of factory teams (2009–2013) === :''See [[2009 Formula One season|2009 season]], [[2010 Formula One season|2010 season]], [[2011 Formula One season|2011 season]], [[2012 Formula One season|2012 season]] and [[2013 Formula One season|2013 season]]'' [[File:Jenson Button 2009 Turkey 2.jpg|thumb|right|[[Brawn GP]] won both the Drivers' and Constructors' Championships in their debut (and only) season in the penultimate round in [[2009 Brazilian Grand Prix]]]] During the 2000s, Formula One cars had become extremely complex, efficient, and reliable, so much so that actual racing between drivers began to become less and less common. 2009 saw the introduction of many new rules and regulations (including engine RPM limits, an adjustable front wing, and disproportionate wing sizes) to encourage overtaking. Engine RPM reached 20,000 rpm and were initially limited to 19,000 rpm for 2009; this was lowered to 18,000 from 2010 to 2013. The most significant system introduced in F1 was the Kinetic Energy Recovery System (KERS), a system that stores energy, created by braking, through a flywheel; this energy is then channeled to the car's drivetrain to increase acceleration. A few well-funded teams had tested this technology the previous year but it remained too experimental; all of the teams' KERS systems needed more development, such that none of them would be ready for 2009. Due to the recession, many more rule changes were brought in to reduce the cost of participating in Formula One. Initially a standardised engine was proposed, but this idea was rejected by the teams, who came up with their own cost-cutting measures. These included a huge reduction in testing times and an increase in the required engine and gearbox mileage. Many teams voiced concerns over the cost of KERS and have suggested a standardised unit, but so far no such opportunity exists. The new rules and regulations saw a new order in 2009, with new teams [[Brawn GP]] and [[Red Bull Racing]] and their drivers leading the way, with Ferrari and McLaren having a poor season. However, Ferrari started by the [[2009 British Grand Prix|British Grand Prix]] to make the most of their car with a string of podium finishes and a race victory in Belgium, while a redesign of the McLaren challenger helped Lewis Hamilton to win two races and gain more points than any other driver after it was upgraded at the [[2009 German Grand Prix|German Grand Prix]]. After dominating the beginning of the season with six out of seven race wins, Jenson Button eventually clinched the Drivers' title in Brazil, with Brawn GP winning the Constructors' Championship in its only season, before being taken over by [[Mercedes-Benz|Mercedes]]. Rubens Barrichello, Jenson Button's teammate, was second in the Drivers' Championship for the whole season until he had a problem at the [[2009 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazilian Grand Prix]] and was overtaken (in points) by [[Sebastian Vettel]], a Red Bull driver, who won the [[2009 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix|Abu Dhabi Grand Prix]] to finish eleven points behind Button. Also, the major manufacturer teams were starting to disappear rapidly due to the worldwide economy crisis. In addition to Ford/Jaguar which had left in 2004, Honda had departed in 2008 also due to uncompetitiveness, [[Toyota]] and BMW both departed entirely in 2009 (BMW sold Sauber, a team it had bought in 2005 after its split with Williams even though in 2010 the team was still called BMW Sauber), Renault changed their involvement as a full works effort to engine supplier in 2011 and Cosworth departed entirely as an engine supplier in 2013. [[File:Webber Canada GP 2010.jpg|thumb|left|[[Red Bull Racing]] prospered under the new rules with a runners-up in the {{F1|2009}} Drivers' and Constructors' Championships and both titles in {{F1|2010}}, {{F1|2011}}, {{F1|2012}} and {{F1|2013}}]] {{F1|2010}} saw more changes in the way of rules and regulations. KERS and double diffusers were banned for the 2010 season, but new innovative features on the cars such as F-Ducts were introduced. An allocated eight engines, per driver, for the whole season was also introduced as part of more cost cutting methods. The biggest change in the points scoring system in F1 history happened between 2009 & 2010. The 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1 point system for the top eight finishers (which had been running since 2003), was replaced with the drastically different 25-18-15-12-10-8-6-4-2-1 for the top 10 finishers. [[Red Bull Racing]] returned to have a great season in 2010, thanks to their hiring of designer Adrian Newey in 2007. They won the Constructors' Championship in the penultimate round in Brazil, and Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel won the championship in the final round of the 2010 season at Abu Dhabi. [[Mercedes-Benz in Formula One|Mercedes GP]] (formerly Brawn GP) had a much less successful and winless season than 2009 with their two new drivers – seven-time World Champion Michael Schumacher who returned to Formula One, but was regularly beaten by fellow German, [[Nico Rosberg]]. McLaren and Ferrari had better seasons in 2010, finishing second and third in the constructors, respectively. The Drivers' Championship was very closely fought, with six men leading the championship at one point, in the joint longest ever (nineteen-race) season. For most of the season, the title looked like it could have gone to either Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel or [[Mark Webber]], or either McLaren's Lewis Hamilton or reigning World Champion Jenson Button (also at McLaren). But, the Ferrari of Fernando Alonso clawed back 47-points after the [[2010 British Grand Prix|British Grand Prix]], to be leading the Drivers' Championship with two races left. A record four drivers were still in contention for the title going into the final round in Abu Dhabi. They were Alonso, Webber, Vettel and Hamilton (placing in that order in number of points before the race). They did not finish that way though, with Vettel winning the race and the title when the others finished too far down the field. Vettel became the youngest ever World Champion in the history of the sport. After a controversial race in [[2010 German Grand Prix|Hockenheim]], 2010 led to the ban on [[team orders]] being dropped. When Ferrari asked Felipe Massa to move over to allow their No.1 driver; Fernando Alonso into the lead of the race and take the win - they were fined $100,000. The [[FIA]] decided that the rule was too vague, and there was nothing they could do to enforce it. This led to an end to the ban on team orders for the [[2011 Formula One season]]. Other changes included a re-introduction KERS, the introduction of the [[Drag reduction system]] (DRS) (a driver activated moveable flap on the cars rear wing), and a change in tyre supplier from Bridgestone to Pirelli. Vettel and Red Bull lead their respective championship from the start until the end of the season, dominating and taking their second successive titles. Vettel also became the youngest double world champion when he clinched the title at the [[2011 Japanese Grand Prix]], Red Bull took the Constructors' Championship at the following race in [[2011 Korean Grand Prix|South Korea]]. McLaren and Ferrari finished second and third in the standings once again, albeit much further behind. Button eventually took second place in the standings, with Webber in third once again. Vettel took 11 victories throughout the course of the year, broke the record for the most pole positions in a season (15) and the most championship points (392). After a slow start to the 2012 season, Vettel won 4 races in a row and challenged Fernando Alonso and Ferrari all the way through. Eventually, the German Vettel took the lead from the Spanish Alonso and Vettel opened up a 13-point gap come the last round in Brazil. Vettel won his third consecutive Drivers' title after finishing 6th at Interlagos, while Alonso finished 2nd. 2013 also went Vettel's way: the superiority of the Red Bull in race trim allowed the German to open up a small lead early in the season, and starting with the Belgian Grand Prix (after F1's 4-week break), the superiority of the Red Bull car began to show. The British-based Austrian team had developed an engine-mapping system that gave their car a type of traction control (actual traction control systems are illegal), and Vettel used this to his considerable advantage. He won in Belgium and after that, the rest of the remaining races in the season (9 races total). The German and the Red Bull team simply ran away with the Drivers' and Constructors' Championships, both of which they won in India – Vettel won his 4th consecutive Drivers' Championship there. Come the Korean round, 2 rounds before the Indian one – Red Bull had developed a special aerodynamic diffuser that gave the cars a considerable cornering advantage. Vettel and his Australian teammate Mark Webber were leading 1–2 for most of those 9 races, and the cars often qualified in the top 3 grid spots; and when they qualified 1–2, it was often by considerable amounts of time. === 1.6-litre turbocharged V6 hybrid engines (2014–present) === [[File:Nico Rosberg 2016 Malaysia Q3.jpg|thumb|[[Mercedes-Benz in Formula One|Mercedes]] cars have so far proved to be the most competitive of the V6 Turbo Hybrid era]] :''See [[2014 Formula One season|2014 season]], [[2015 Formula One season|2015 season]], [[2016 Formula One season|2016 season]], [[2017 Formula One season|2017 season]], [[2018 Formula One World Championship|2018 season]], [[2019 Formula One World Championship|2019 season]] and [[Formula One engines]]'' Formula One entered its second turbocharged era in 2014. Australia was the location of the end of the first era ([[1988 Australian Grand Prix|Adelaide 1988]]) and start of the second ([[2014 Australian Grand Prix|Melbourne 2014]]). The series is being run under the most radical engine regulation changes since [[1995 Formula One World Championship|1995]]. All cars entering any Formula One championship race must run with 1.6-litre single turbocharged 6-cylinder engines with a rev limit of 15,000 rpm and maximum fuel flow of 100&nbsp;kg/hr. New car regulations will also be enforced, and the minimum weight regulations will be raised from 642&nbsp;kg (1,415&nbsp;lb) to 690&nbsp;kg (1,521&nbsp;lb). [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]], [[Mercedes-Benz in Formula One|Mercedes]] and [[Renault in Formula One|Renault]] produced engines from 2014 with [[Honda in Formula One|Honda]] producing engines from 2015; Cosworth did not participate from 2014 and beyond. In-season engine development returned; the previous V8's development was frozen. The new turbo engines produce 600&nbsp;bhp (the previous V8s produce approximately 750&nbsp;hp); but the new Energy Recovery System (ERS) will be twice as powerful as the current [[Kinetic energy recovery system|KERS]] system; this new ERS system will give the drivers up to the equivalent of 160&nbsp;hp when activated; the current KERS gives cars an extra 80&nbsp;hp when activated.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.formula1.com/inside_f1/rules_and_regulations/sporting_regulations/8689/fia.html|title=Inside F1|work=Formula1.com|accessdate=1 May 2016}}</ref> Since the start of the 2014 season, the Mercedes team and their drivers [[Lewis Hamilton]], [[Nico Rosberg]] and [[Valtteri Bottas]] have dominated the sport, winning 84 of the 114 races (59 for Hamilton, 20 for Rosberg and 5 for Bottas).<!-- As of the 2019 Italian GP --> This astounding and historic winning streak has been the result of Mercedes development of the "split turbocharger", a system in which the compressor and turbine components of the turbo charger are placed at separate sides of the engine and connected by a rod running through the V of the engine. This new technology gave Mercedes and their customer teams many advantages over their competitors due to the need for less cooling and a more compact power unit. The only other drivers to win races during this period are [[Daniel Ricciardo]] (7) and [[Max Verstappen]] (7) of Red Bull, along with [[Sebastian Vettel]] (13), [[Kimi Räikkönen]] (1) and [[Charles Leclerc]] (2) of Ferrari. On top of this Mercedes have won the drivers' championship from 2014-2018 (4 for Hamilton and 1 for Rosberg) and have taken the constructors' title from 2014-2018, although since the rule changes in car design implemented in [[2017 Formula One World Championship|2017]], Ferrari have been in a position to fight for both the drivers' and constructors' championship with Vettel coming second in both 2017 and 2018. == Footnotes == <references group="note"/> == See also == {{Portal|Formula One}} {{Wikipedia books|Formula racing}} {{clear}} == References == {{reflist|2}} * [http://www.formula1.com/results/season/2006/ The Official Formula One Website – Results Archive (2006)]. * ''FerrariWorld – see F1 racing cars 1940s–1990s'' (2006). [http://www.ferrariworld.com]. Retrieved 9 February 2006. * {{cite book|last=Hillier|first= V.A.W|title=Fundamentals of Motor Vehicle Technology|year=1993|publisher=Nelson Thornes Ltd|isbn=0-7487-0531-7}} * Autosport 50th Anniversary Edition, 13 July 2000 * Roderick Eime: ''[http://members.ozemail.com.au/~motorweb/158/ The "Little Alfa" That Grew Too Big]''.{{unreliable source?|date=November 2012}} * Pierre Ménard: ''Automobile Historique N°45 Février 2005 – Lotus 72 (1973–1975) – Prolongations exceptionnelles'' p.&nbsp;60–71 {{Fr icon}} * [http://perso.wanadoo.fr/did.legrand/htm/histoire.htm Histoire d’un sport: La formule 1] {{Fr icon}}{{unreliable source?|date=November 2012}} == External links == {{DEFAULTSORT:History Of Formula One}} [[Category:Formula One]] [[Category:History of motorsport|Formula One]]'
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'@@ -7,5 +7,5 @@ == History == -=== The early years and the continuation of pre-WWII supercharged engines (1946–1950) === +=== The early years and the ccjeoioçqvhçnevchfievhufffffffffvliheifoqhfueoihgvefio thiscshit is a son of a fuking bitch nigga ontinuation of pre-WWII supercharged engines (1946–1950) === Formula One was first defined in 1946 by the Commission Sportive Internationale (CSI) of the FIA, forerunner of FISA, as the premier single seater racing category in worldwide motorsport to become effective in 1947. This new "International Formula" was initially known variously as Formula A, Formula I, or Formula 1 with the corresponding "Voiturette" formula being titled Formula B, Formula II, or Formula 2.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.motorsportmagazine.com/archive/article/december-1947/16/formula-races-1948|title=Formula Races - 1948|date=7 July 2014|website=motorsportmagazine.com|accessdate=28 March 2018}}</ref> When the 500c formula was internationally recognised as Formula 3 in 1950 it was never titled as "Formula C" so the three International Formulae were then "officially" titled Formula 1, Formula 2 and Formula 3.<ref>[http://www.conceptcarz.com/view/racing/racingClassCars.aspx?racingClassID=4 Formula One] Retrieved from www.conceptcarz.com on 28 April 2009</ref> '
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