Gary Savage | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1960-04-27)27 April 1960 (age 65) |
| Occupation | Engineer |
| Years active | 1990 - 2009 |
| Known for | Formula One Engineer |
Gary Savage (born 27 April 1960) is a retired BritishFormula One engineer. He is best known for serving as Deputy Technical Director and later Operations Director at the Formula One team based inBrackley, during its successive incarnations asBritish American Racing,Honda Racing F1 Team andBrawn GP.[1]
Savage studied engineering atOxford Brookes University, where he later earned a doctorate, developing a specialism in advanced materials and composite structures. He began his Formula One career in 1990 withMcLaren as a research and development engineer, working on materials technology and structural development programmes during a period of rapid technical change in the sport.
In 1996, Savage joinedArrows as Head of Research and Development, overseeing materials research, structural analysis and the application of new composite manufacturing techniques. He subsequently held a similar position atProst Grand Prix, continuing to focus on the integration of advanced materials into chassis design and performance development.[2]
Savage moved toBritish American Racing (BAR) in 2000, where he took responsibility for composite engineering and production technologies, and was later promoted to Deputy Technical Director.[3] He retained this senior role as the team becameHonda Racing F1 Team, contributing to both car development and wider technical programmes, including Honda’s Bonneville 400 land-speed record project.[4]
He later served as Operations Director for the Brackley-based team through its Honda ownership and into the championship-winningBrawn GP era, overseeing operational delivery, manufacturing integration and technical coordination. Savage left the organisation at the end of 2009, concluding nearly two decades in Formula One engineering leadership.[5]