Renault RE60
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Category | Formula One | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Constructor | Renault | ||||||||
Designer(s) | Bernard Dudot (Technical Director) Jean-Marc d'Adda (Chief Designer) Jean-Claude Migeot (Head of Aerodynamics) | ||||||||
Predecessor | Renault RE50 | ||||||||
Technical specifications[1] | |||||||||
Chassis | Carbon fibre monocoque | ||||||||
Suspension (front) | Forks / springs | ||||||||
Suspension (rear) | Forks / springs | ||||||||
Axle track | Front: 1,800 mm (71 in) Rear: 1,650 mm (65 in) | ||||||||
Wheelbase | 2,800 mm (110 in) | ||||||||
Engine | Renault Gordini EF4B / EF15, 1,494 cc (91.2 cu in), 90° V6, turbocharger, mid-engine, longitudinally mounted | ||||||||
Transmission | Hewland with Renault casing, 5-speed manual | ||||||||
Weight | 540 kg (1,190 lb) | ||||||||
Fuel | Elf | ||||||||
Tyres | Goodyear | ||||||||
Competition history | |||||||||
Notable entrants | Equipe Renault Elf | ||||||||
Notable drivers | 15. Patrick Tambay 16. Derek Warwick 14. François Hesnault | ||||||||
Debut | 1985 Brazilian Grand Prix | ||||||||
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Constructors' Championships | 0 | ||||||||
Drivers' Championships | 0 |
The Renault RE60 was a Formula One car designed by Bernard Dudot and Jean-Claude Migeot and was raced by the Renault team in the 1985 season. The cars were driven by Patrick Tambay and Derek Warwick who had also driven for the team in 1984.
Design and development
The car was an evolution of 1984’s RE50 raced by the team that pioneered turbocharged engines in Formula One in 1977. While the team and the Renault turbo engine had ultimately been successful in winning races they had never won either the constructors' nor drivers' championships.[2]
Top Renault engineer Michel Tétu and four other key personnel had left the team and the entire team's employment structure had been reshuffled; this proved to be a total disaster for the Renault team. Upon getting to the Jacarepaguá circuit in Rio de Janeiro for pre-season testing, testing by Warwick proved problematic. The car proved to be 3 1/2 seconds slower than the previous year's RE50, and it was later described by Warwick as being "impossible to drive".[3] A modified version of the car, RE60B, was introduced at the French Grand Prix but this failed to generate any better results.
Driver contracts
Niki Lauda had signed an initial letter of intent to leave his 1984 championship-winning McLaren team and join Renault for 1985.[4] The agreement was not implemented and Lauda stayed with McLaren for the 1985 season.
Derek Warwick’s initial contract with Renault was only for the 1984 season. During the year he was approached by the Williams team, who used turbocharged Honda engines, about driving for them in 1985 as a replacement for Jacques Laffite who was moving back to Ligier. As the results for the Honda engine had been relatively poor other than Keke Rosberg's win in the 1984 Dallas Grand Prix, Warwick felt his chances of winning were greater with Renault and he re-signed for the 1985 season, while the Williams drive eventually went to Nigel Mansell.
Racing history
The best results were two third places for Tambay, in Portugal and San Marino, the second and third races of the season. It proved less successful than its predecessor with Tambay scoring the last two podium finishes for the team.
Of the four teams who used the turbocharged Renault V6 engine during the season, the factory-backed Renault team were outperformed by both Lotus and fellow French team Ligier. Lotus finished fourth in the Constructors' Championship, scoring 71 points and three wins, two for Ayrton Senna and one for Elio de Angelis. Ligier finished sixth in the title with seven more points than Renault who finished seventh with just 16 points scored. Tyrrell, who only started using the Renault engines from mid-season, scored 3 points.
Aftermath
The 1985 season proved to be the last for the factory Renault team although the Renault name would live on in Formula One with both V6 turbo and naturally aspirated V10 engines successfully supplied to various teams until Renault purchased and renamed the Benetton team at the end of 2001. Renault had decided that funding a Formula One team was not worth attempts developing technology for their road cars and the bad PR generated by their continuous failures to be competitive had been the final straw.
Ironically for Warwick, he would later regret his decision to stay in Renault as the 1985 Williams FW10 and its Honda engines won four races in 1985, including giving Mansell his first two career wins, the second of which was the South African Grand Prix that saw the French F1 teams, including the State owned Equipe Renault, boycott the race under the direction of the French Government in protest to South Africa's Apartheid policy. While Mansell would go on to ultimately win 31 races and the 1992 World Championship in his career, Warwick's Formula One career never recovered and he would never win a Grand Prix or drive in a truly competitive car again.
Complete Formula One World Championship results
(key)
Year | Entrant | Engine | Tyres | Driver | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | Pts. | WCC |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1985 | Equipe Renault Elf | Renault Gordini EF4B / EF15 V6 tc |
G | BRA | POR | SMR | MON | CAN | DET | FRA | GBR | GER | AUT | NED | ITA | BEL | EUR | RSA | AUS | 16 | 7th | |
Patrick Tambay | 5 | 3 | 3 | Ret | 7 | Ret | 6 | Ret | Ret | 10 | Ret | 7 | Ret | 12 | Ret | |||||||
Derek Warwick | 10 | 7 | 10 | 5 | Ret | Ret | 7 | 5 | Ret | Ret | Ret | Ret | 6 | Ret | Ret | |||||||
François Hesnault | Ret |
- Equipe Renault Elf boycotted the 1985 South African Grand Prix due to mounting international pressures against tolerating the country's system of apartheid. Renault's boycott was in lockstep with the French government's boycott and sanctioning of South Africa
References
- ^ "STATS F1 • Renault RE60". Statsf1.com. Retrieved 2010-08-23.
- ^ "In the hot seat - Derek Warwick". Motor Sport. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
- ^ "Motor Sport magazine". SoundCloud.
- ^ Niki Lauda & Herbert Volker (1986). To Hell and Back: Lauda Autobiography. Stanley Paul & Co/Hutchinson. ISBN 978-0091642402.