Cosworth is an automotive engineering company founded in London in 1958 specialising in engines for automobile racing. It supplies a wide range of motorsport series, including Formula One and the World Rally Championship, and is based in Northampton, England, with a North American facility in Torrance, California.
In 2006, two Formula One teams are being supplied with Cosworth engines: the Williams team are using Cosworth V8 engines, transmissions and associated electronics, and the Scuderia Toro Rosso team are using rev-limited Cosworth V10s based on 2005 spec engines.
Cosworth was previously a subsidiary of the Ford Motor Company, but is now owned by Gerald Forsythe and Kevin Kalkhoven.
The company has been through a number of owners. United Engineering Industries (UEI) purchased the company in 1980; UEI were taken over by Carlton Communications in 1988. Vickers plc bought Cosworth in 1990. In 1998 Vickers sold the company to Volkswagen Group, who then signed a deal with Ford, which bought the racing division which had long always made racing engines for Ford. Cosworth Technology (also known as CT) offers powertrain development consultancy, and its patented aluminium casting process is used by several car makers including Audi and Aston Martin. Volkswagen sold CT to the Mahle Group in December 2004.
Cosworth was split in 1998 into two companies, Cosworth Racing and Cosworth Technology. With the acquisition of Cosworth Technology into the Mahle Group, Cosworth Technology became Mahle Powertrain.
In September 2004, Ford announced that it was selling Cosworth Racing, along with its Jaguar Formula One team. On November 15, 2004, the sale of Cosworth was completed, to Champ Car World Series owners Gerald Forsythe and Kevin Kalkhoven, who renamed Cosworth Racing to Cosworth.
A year before, the SCA was introduced, a 1000cc engine based on a Ford Cortina 116E block that raced in Formula 2, and featured the first Cosworth design head.
An larger engine was designed for endurance racing in the mid 1970s, the FVC. Displacing 1976cc, it was distinguished by having gear-driven cams and a gear-driven alternator (to power lighting in night races)built into the cylinder head. The FVC produced only 275 HP, down from the 325 HP that other twin-cam four cylinders such as the Hart 420S produced but was more reliable. One was campaigned in the USA's CanAm series in 1978 in the Osprey SR-1, built and driven by Dan Hartill.
In 1966 Colin Chapman (Lotus Cars founder and principal of Team Lotus) persuaded Ford to bankroll Keith Duckworth's design for a new lightweight Formula 1 engine. Cosworth received the order along with the £100,000 that Ford felt it adequate to spend on such an objective. The design merged two in-line four-cylinder FVA units (as used in 1.6 L form in Formula 2) into a single 90° V8 engine, thus creating a legend in its own right, the DFV (standing for "double four valve"). This engine and its derivatives were used for a quarter of a century, and it was the most successful in the history of Formula 1/Grand Prix motor racing. Winning 167 races in a career lasting over 20 years, it was the product that put Cosworth Engineering on the map. Although originally designed for Formula One, the engine has been modified to be used in a range of categories.
The DFV won on its first outing, at the 1967 Dutch Grand Prix in the hands of Jim Clark, fitted to a Lotus 49, and from 1968 was available for purchase to any F1 team that wished it. During the 1970s it was not uncommon for almost the entire field (with the notable exception of Ferrari) to be using one of these engines (this at a time when independent wealthy individuals could buy exactly the same engine off the shelf that was also being used by McLaren et al). Most teams just built a tub around a Cosworth DFV and a Hewland gearbox. It won a record-holding 155 World Championship races, the last being Detroit in 1983, powering a Tyrrell driven by Michele Alboreto.
Although the DFV did not produce as much power as some V12 engines that some teams ran, it was lighter resulting in a better power/weight ratio. In addition to being lighter, it was also made a structural part of the car itself, by placing load bearing arms to stress the block. These design aspects appealed tremendously to the genius of Colin Chapman who utilized them to the fullest extent.
The DFY, introduced in 1982 was a further evolution of the DFV for Formula One, with a shorter stroke and a DFL bore, thereby producing more power, but still unable to fight against the turbocharged cars of the day. It was the advent of turbocharged engines in Formula 1 which sounded the death knell for the venerable DFV, and in 1986 Cosworth returned to the lower formulae preparing the DFV for the newly-created Formula 3000, with the installation of a compulsory rev limiter, which scaled power back from 500 to 420 hp; the DFV remained in this class until 1992.
In F1, a new DFV-based design was introduced for the new 3.5 L normally-aspirated rules in 1987. The DFZ was produced as an interim model, but in 1988 Cosworth created the DFV's final evolution, the DFR, which soldiered on in F1 with smaller teams until 1991, scoring its last points - including a pair of second places by Jean Alesi - with Tyrrell in 1990.
The DFV has recently been given a new lease of life thanks to the interest in Classic F1 racing, which was given a World Championship status by the FIA in 2004.
One of the most successful and longest-lived projects of Cosworth has been its CART/Champ Car engine program. In 1975, Cosworth developed the DFX, by destroking the engine to 2.65 L and adding two turbochargers, the DFX became the standard engine to run in Indycar racing, ending the reign of the Offenhauser, and maintaining that position until the late 80s. Ford backed Cosworth with creating a new interim design for Indycar racing in the late 80s, the DFS, which merged DFR technology into the aging DFX design, but it was eventually rendered obsolete by advancing technology.
While designed as an F1 engine the DFV was also used as in endurance racing, its flat-plane design lead to destructive vibrations putting stress on devices surrounding the engine, especially the exhaust system. Despite this handicap the DFV won the 24 hours of Le Mans twice in its original 3.0 L form. A special endurance version, the DFL, was then developed in two versions: one with 3.3 L and the other with 3.9 L. Whilst the former version soon became known for its reliability, the latter version was a step too far and is remembered as a failure.
In 1970, the BDC evolution received fuel injection for the first time. Two years later, the BDA series was being used in Formula 2, first in 1.8 L format, until reaching a maximum of 1975 cc in 1973, under BDG form, which also received an aluminum block.
The block could also be shortened, starting with the 1599 cc Formula Atlantic engine in 1970, followed by the 1.1 L and 1.3 L variants for SCCA club racing and sports car racing.
In the 1980s, the engine saw its final incarnations, the 1.7 L BDR, used in the road-going version of the Caterham , and the 1.8 L BDT, which powered the never raced Escort RS1700T and the more competitive Ford RS200, which was created for Group B rallying. A 2137 cc evolution model was developed by Brian Hart just as Group B was cancelled by the FIA.
Further evolutions of the YB included a reduced-emissions road version, as well as the block used in the Escort Cosworth (which used the Sierra floorpan). The engine stopped being used on new cars in 1997, with the Focus WRC and road-going Focus RS relying on Zetec designs.
Cosworth also developed a 72° F1 V10 for the Sauber Formula 1 team. It was even rumored in the late 1990s that a manufacturer (Volvo Cars was the prime candidate) intended to use a road-going version of this engine in a production car, although this never came to pass.
Cosworth has subsequently made several V10 engines for a number of Formula One teams. The Stewart Grand Prix team used Ford Cosworth CR-1 engines from its first season in 1997. Over the years next years Ford had increased its involvement with the Stewart team, and finally bought the team, renaming it Jaguar Racing for 2000. Jaguar pulled out of F1 at the end of 2004, but the team (renamed Red Bull Racing) continued to use Cosworth engines. Minardi also used Cosworth engines until 2005, often rebadged.
Williams will use Cosworth V8 engines for 2006 and onwards, and have begun testing the new CA2006 2.4 L V8 in November 2005. Scuderia Toro Rosso will use detuned V10 engines based on the 2005 units.
| Season | Engine | Teams | Victories | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1967 | DFV V8 | Team Lotus,Matra | 4 | |
| DFV V8 | Team Lotus,Matra,Team McLaren | 11 | ||
| DFV V8 | McLaren,Brabham,Team Lotus,Matra | 11 | ||
| DFV V8 | McLaren,Brabham,Team Lotus,Tyrrell,Ensign, Iso Marlboro,Surtees, Shadow, March | 15 | ||
| DFV V8 | McLaren,Brabham,Hesketh, Tyrrell, Shadow, March,Williams,Team Lotus,Parnelli,Hill, Penske, Ensign,Fittipaldi,Lyncar,Lola,Maki,Surtees | 8 | ||
| 1976 | DFV V8 | McLaren,Hesketh, Tyrrell, Shadow, March,Wolf Williams,Team Lotus,Parnelli,Brabham,WilliamsPenske, Ensign,Fittipaldi,Kojima,Boro | 10 | |
| DFV V8 | Ligier,Williams,Team Lotus | 8 | ||
| DFV V8 | McLaren,Williams, Team Lotus,Tyrrell, Brabham,Arrows, ATS, Osella,Fittipaldi, March,Theodore | 8 | ||
| DFV V8 | Tyrrell, Williams, McLaren, Lotus, Ligier, RAM, Arrows, Osella, Theodore | 3 | ||
| Ford DFZ V8 Ford V6 turbo | Benetton,Lola,Tyrrell,AGS,March,Coloni | 0 | ||
| 1989 | Ford DFR V8 HB V8 | Benetton,Arrows,Tyrrell,Osella,Coloni,Onyx,Ligier,Minardi,Dallara,Rial,AGS | 1 | |
| 1991 | HB V8 Ford DFR V8 | Benetton,Jordan,Lola, Fondmetal, Coloni, AGS | 1 | |
| HB V8 | Benetton,Team Lotus | 1 | ||
| HB V8 | Benetton,Team McLaren,Team Lotus,Minardi, Fondmetal | 6 | ||
| 1994 | Ford Zetec V8 | Benetton | 8 | |
| Ford V10 | Stewart Grand Prix,Lola,Tyrrell | 0 | ||
| 1998 | Ford V10 VJ Zetec-R (Stewart) Ford JD Zetec-R(Minardi,Tyrrell) | Stewart Grand Prix,Tyrrell,Minardi | 0 | |
| 1999 | Ford V10 VJM1/2 Zetec-R (Minardi), CR-1(Stewart) | Stewart Grand Prix Minardi (old engines rebaged as Fondmetal) | 1 | |
| 2000 | Ford V10 VJM3 Zetec-R (Minardi) CR-2 (Jaguar) | Jaguar Racing, Minardi (old engines rebaged as Fondmetal) | 0 | |
| 2001 | Ford V10 | Jaguar Racing , Minardi (old engines rebaged as Fondmetal) | 0 | |
| 2002 | Ford V10 | Jaguar Racing,Arrows | 0 | |
| 2003 | Ford V10 | Jaguar Racing,Jordan Grand Prix,Minardi | 1 | |
| Ford V10 | Jaguar Racing,Jordan Grand Prix,Minardi | 0 | ||
| 2005 | TJ2005 | Minardi,Red Bull Racing | 0 | |
| 2006 | TJ2005 (V10)- Toro Rosso CA2006 (V8) - Williams | Scuderia Toro Rosso,Williams | N/A | - |
Formula One engine manufacturers
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