The Brabham BT46 was a Formula One racing car, designed by Gordon Murray for the Brabham team owned by Bernie Ecclestone for the 1978 Formula One season. The car featured several radical design elements, the most obvious of which was the use of flat panel heat exchangers on the bodywork of the car to replace conventional water and oil radiators. The concept did not work in practice and was removed before the car’s race debut, never to be seen again. The cars, powered by a flat 12 Alfa-Romeo engine, raced competitively with modified nose-mounted radiators for most of the year, driven by Niki Lauda and John Watson, winning one race in this form and scoring sufficient points for the team to finish third in the constructors championship.
The ‘B’ variant of the car, also known as the Fan car was introduced at the 1978 Swedish Grand Prix as a counter to the dominant ground effect Lotus 79. The BT46B generated an immense level of downforce by means of a fan, claimed to be for increased cooling, but which also extracted air from beneath the car. The car only raced once in this configuration in the Formula One World Championship; Niki Lauda winning the 1978 Swedish Grand Prix at Anderstorp. The car was withdrawn before it could race again and the concept declared illegal by the FIA. The BT46B therefore preserves a 100% winning record.
However, the engine was also very wide and required a lot of fuel to complete a race distance. The most radical feature of the original car was its use of flat plate heat exchangers mounted flush to the surface of the bodywork in place of conventional water radiators. The absence of standard radiators allowed Murray to compensate somewhat for the large engine and fuel tanks and produce a relatively light design with a low frontal cross section (important to reduce drag). In practice the heat exchangers did not provide anything like enough cooling capacity, one of South African Murray’s rare design failures, and were replaced by more standard radiators in the nose of the car, similar to that of the BT45, compromising its aerodynamic efficiency. In addition to the question of drag the nose-mounted radiators moved weight towards the front of the car.Henry, Alan (1985) "Brabham, the Grand Prix Cars" p. 171 - 179 Osprey ISBN0905138368
After the winning debut and subsequent withdrawal of the BT46B ‘fan car’ at the Swedish Grand Prix (see below) the Brabham team completed the season with the standard BT46s. Niki Lauda winning the Italian Grand Prix in the standard car, albeit after Mario Andretti and Gilles Villeneuve were penalised a minute for jumping the second race start after Ronnie Peterson’s fatal accident at the first start.
In the end the cars were hamstrung by their unreliability and by the heavy flat 12 engine which did not permit the use of ground effects as implemented by the Lotus team.
The BT46 appeared for the last time in the Formula One World Championship at the first round of the 1979 season in the hands of Nelson Piquet. Niki Lauda also used the car to qualify for that race, as the new BT48 was proving troublesome, although he did race the new car. Piquet retired on the first lap.
It had not been clear to other designers just what Wright and Chapman had done with the Type 78, but by early 1978 Gordon Murray had grasped how the Lotus design was achieving its remarkable levels of grip. He also realised that the Alfa Romeo flat-12 engine used by Brabham that season was too wide to permit the venturi tunnels needed for really significant ground effect.Henry, Alan (1985) "Brabham, the Grand Prix Cars" p. 167 - 168 Osprey ISBN0905138368 At Murray's instigation, Alfa went on to produce a V12 engine for the 1979 season,Henry, Alan (1985) "Brabham, the Grand Prix Cars" p. 190 Osprey ISBN0905138368 although Ferrari persisted with the flat 12 design, and therefore lacked full ground effects, until their disastrous 1980 season. In the meantime, Murray's idea was to use another way of reducing the pressure underneath the car. In 1970 the Chaparral 2J "sucker car" had dominated the American sportscar scene. The 2J had two fans at the rear of the car driven by a dedicated two-stroke engine to draw large amounts of air from under the chassis, reducing pressure and creating downforce.Brabham and the fan car http://www.forix.com/8w/fancar.html Accessed on 11 March 2006 Murray designed a version driven by a complex series of clutches running from the engine to a large single fan at the back of the car. Therefore the faster the engine ran, the stronger the suction effect. Like the Lotus it had sliding "skirts" which sealed the gap between the sides of the cars and the ground. These prevented excessive air being sucked into the low pressure area under the car and dissipating the ground effect. There was a rule banning 'moveable aerodynamic devices', but the fan also drew air through a horizontally mounted radiator over the engine. Using a fan to assist cooling was legal – Brabham had used a small electric fan to this effect on the BT45Cs at the South American races at the start of the year - and Brabham claimed that this was the primary effect of the new device. These claims were lent some legitimacy by the cooling system design issues that had affected the original design at the start of the year.Henry, Alan (1985) "Brabham, the Grand Prix Cars" p. 181-183 Osprey ISBN0905138368
The BT46B was designed and tested in some secrecy. Brabham's lead driver, Niki Lauda, realised he had to adjust his driving style, mostly for cornering. He found that if he accelerated around corners, the car would 'stick' to the road as if it were on rails.Henry, Alan (1985) "Brabham, the Grand Prix Cars" p. 181-183 Osprey ISBN0905138368 This had the side effect of exposing the driver to massive lateral g-forces that would become a major problem in the ground effect era.
The car were modified BT46s - chassis numbers BT46/4 and BT46/6.Brabham BT46 www.oldracingcars.com Accessed 11 March 2006 Modifications to implement the fan concept were quite extensive - involving sealing the engine bay as well as adding the clutch system and the fan. These modifications added about 20kg to the weight of the car as well as costing around 20bhp.Brabham Alfa Romeo BT46 www.research-racing.de Accessed on 30 June 2006 Brabham BT46A www.statsf1.com Accessed on 30 June 2006 Brabham BT46B www.statsf1.com Accessed on 30 June 2006
The BT46B competed once again in 1979 in the Gunnar Nilsson Trophy at Donington Park. This was an event held to raise funds for the Gunnar Nilsson Cancer Fund. Originally intended as a non-championship Formula One race, without FIA sanction it was instead run in a time trial format, with victory going to the fastest single lap recorded. As it was not an FIA event, the car's illegality was not a factor. Nelson Piquet drove, coming fourth of the five cars competing.The fan car raced twice! www.forix.com Accessed on 11 March 2006
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