Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

James Key (Formula One)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British engineer (born 1972)

James Key
Born (1972-01-14)14 January 1972 (age 54)
Alma materUniversity of Nottingham (BEng)
OccupationFormula One engineer
EmployerAudi F1 Team

James Key (born 14 January 1972) is a BritishFormula One engineer. He is currently the technical director of theAudi F1 Team.

Education

[edit]

James Key studied Mechanical Engineering at the University of Nottingham. Lotus Engineering sponsored him to his degree in 1996.[2][3]

Formula One career

[edit]

Key joinedJordan Grand Prix in 1998 spending several years as a data engineer, then becamerace engineer forTakuma Sato. Following a year in the wind tunnel he transferred to the vehicle dynamics department, eventually becoming the department head during the team's final few seasons as Jordan Grand Prix.

Shortly after the team's ownership transferred toMF1 Racing, he became Technical Director during the2005 Formula One season following a brief period as Technical Co-ordinator. He was one of the youngest Technical Directors of a Formula One team, at the age of 33 years, along withSam Michael (born in 1971) who became the technical director of theWilliams F1 team at the age of 33 during the2004 season. Key retained his position during the team's transition throughSpyker F1 toForce India F1.

In April 2010 he left Force India to join theSauber team, replacingWilly Rampf as Technical Director.[4] He remained there for almost two years, before leaving in February 2012 to accept an undisclosed offer with one of the British-based teams.[5]

On 6 September 2012, it was announced that Key had joinedScuderia Toro Rosso as Technical Director, replacing Giorgio Ascanelli.[6]

On 26 July 2018,McLaren confirmed that Key had agreed to become technical director of the team, replacing the oustedTim Goss. On 22 February 2019, it was announced that Key would join McLaren from 25 March 2019, just after the Australian Grand Prix.[7] He formed a triumvirate withAndrea Stella as Racing Director and Piers Thynne as Production Director, all under Team PrincipalAndreas Seidl.[8] Key was sacked by McLaren on 23 March 2023 in an organisational change of the team's executive technical director role, replaced byDavid Sanchez following team dissatisfaction with the initial design and early season performance of their 2023 challenger - theMCL60.[9][10]

On 7 June 2023,Alfa Romeo F1 Team Stake announced that Key would join the team on 1 September 2023.[11] He took on the role of Technical Director again, replacing the oustedJan Monchaux. He previously held the position of Technical Director under this team under its former name of Sauber in 2013, ahead of their re-branding as theAudi works team in 2026.[4] He once again worked underAndreas Seidl, CEO of Sauber Group, who had served as Team Principal during the pair's time at McLaren. Seidl was later replaced at Sauber Group byMattia Binotto.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"F1, James Key sarà nuovo direttore tecnico Alfa Romeo dal 1 settembre".La Gazetta Dello Sport. 7 June 2023.
  2. ^"The will to win - careers advice to get ahead - University of Nottingham - The University of Nottingham".www.nottingham.ac.uk. Archived fromthe original on 26 January 2020. Retrieved26 January 2020.
  3. ^„Alumni James Key (Mechanical Engineering, 1996)“
  4. ^abBeer, Matt (24 February 2010)."Key takes over as Sauber technical boss".autosport.com.Haymarket Publications. Retrieved24 February 2010.
  5. ^Noble, Jonathan (3 February 2012)."Technical director James Key to part company with Sauber".autosport.com.Haymarket Publications. Retrieved3 February 2012.
  6. ^"Key replaces Ascanelli at Toro Rosso".www.formula1.com. 6 September 2012. Archived fromthe original on 29 September 2013. Retrieved19 May 2019.
  7. ^Beer, Matt."Toro Rosso: Key to join McLaren as F1 technical boss after Melbourne".
  8. ^"Stella promoted in McLaren restructure".BBC Sport. Retrieved25 July 2020.
  9. ^Noble, Jonathan (23 March 2023)."Key out, Sanchez] in as McLaren restructures F1 team".Motorsport.com.
  10. ^"McLaren Formula 1 team announces organisational changes".www.mclaren.com. Retrieved23 March 2023.
  11. ^"James Key joins Alfa Romeo F1 Team Stake as Technical Director".www.sauber-group.com. Retrieved7 June 2023.
Personnel
Founder
Ambassador
Current
Former
Drivers
2026 drivers
2026 reserve drivers
Driver Development Programme
F1 World Champions
Race winners
Former drivers
Formula One titles
Drivers' titles
Constructors' titles
Cars
Formula One
Formula Two
Sports cars
USAC/IndyCar
F5000/Libre
Development cars
Related
Drivers
Notable drivers
Drivers who were promoted
toRed Bull Racing
Formula One race winners
Personnel
Founder
Advisor to
Red Bull GmbH
Notable personnel
Senior team
Related
Founder
Notable personnel
Mariano Alperin
Alessandro Alunni Bravi
Andrea Benisi
Mattia Binotto
Ruth Buscombe
Giampaolo Dall'Ara
Elliot Dason-Barber
Dirk de Beer
André de Cortanze
Rémi Decorzent
Gabriele Delli Colli
Jost Capito
Alessandro Cinelli
Alex Chan
Steve Clark
Jacky Eeckelaert
Luca Furbatto
Eric Gandelin
Brendan Gilhome
René Hilhorst [ja]
Nicolas Hennel
Monisha Kaltenborn
James Key
Mike Krack
Axel Kruse [pt]
Urs Kuratle
Gerard Lecoq
Josef Leberer
Amiel Lindesay
Jan Monchaux
Matt Morris
Seamus Mullarkey
Francesco Nenci
Steve Nichols
Tom McCullough
John Owen
Steven Petrik
Pascal Picci [pt]
Xevi Pujolar
Willy Rampf
Leo Ress [ja]
Simone Resta
Sergio Rinland
Iñaki Rueda
Paul Russell
Marco Schüpbach
Andreas Seidl
Loïc Serra
Mark Smith
Julien Simon-Chautemps
Stefano Sordo
Willem Toet
Mario Theissen
Frédéric Vasseur
Pierre Waché
Ben Waterhouse
Jonathan Wheatley
Max Welti
Ian Wright [pt]
Jörg Zander
Beat Zehnder
Christoph Zimmermann
Notable drivers
Former drivers
Sportscars
Formula One cars
Founder
Notable staff
Notable drivers
Formula One cars
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=James_Key_(Formula_One)&oldid=1338653541"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp