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The Williams FW18 is a Formula One car used by the Williams F1 team to compete in the 1996 Formula One season. Designed by Adrian Newey and Patrick Head, it is one of the most successful F1 designs of all time. The FW18s were driven by Damon Hill and Jacques Villeneuve. The car proved to be the most successful of the entire 1996 field; winning ...
The Williams FW17 is a Formula One racing car designed by Adrian Newey, with which the Williams team competed in the 1995 Formula One World Championship. It was driven by Damon Hill , who was in his third year with the team, and David Coulthard , who was in his first full season after a part-time role in 1994 .
Williams Racing, legally known as Williams Grand Prix Engineering Limited and competing as Atlassian Williams Racing, is a British Formula One team and constructor. It was founded by Frank Williams (1942–2021) and Patrick Head .
Damon Hill's Williams - Renault: FW18: 1996 Datsun: Type 14 Saloon: 1935 De Dietrich: 24 hp: 1903 De Dion-Bouton: Model Q 6 hp: 1904 De Dion-Bouton: Model Q 6 hp: 1903 DeLorean Motor Company: DeLorean: 1981 Del Boy's Reliant Regal: 1971 Dixon-Bate: Trailer: 1932 Douglas: Model R: 1913 Douglas: Vespa 152/L2: 1959 Douglas: With Dixon Banking ...
Renault was the initial dominant engine supplier from 1995 until 1997, winning the first three world championships with Williams and Benetton in this era. The championship-winning 1995 Benetton B195 produced a power output of 675 hp (503.3 kW) @ 15,200 rpm, and the 1996 championship-winning Williams FW18 produced 700 hp (522.0 kW) @ 16,000 rpm ...
Articles about Formula One cars constructed by Frank Williams Racing Cars and Williams Grand Prix Engineering. Pages in category "Williams Formula One cars" The following 46 pages are in this category, out of 46 total.
The RS series is a family of naturally-aspirated Grand Prix racing engines, designed, developed and manufactured jointly by Mecachrome and Renault Sport for use in Formula One, and used by Arrows, BAR, Williams, Ligier, Lotus, Caterham, Benetton, Renault, and Red Bull, from 1989 until 2013. [4]
F310 at the Museo Ferrari. The F310 proved to be a front-running car, but without the outright pace or superb reliability which led to the Williams FW18s dominating 1996. . Schumacher was able to win three Grands Prix, but the F310's shortcomings were shown by Irvine's run of eight consecutive retirements, most of them mechanical, as well as three straight double retire