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| Full name | Motor Racing Developments, Ltd. |
|---|---|
| Base | Chessington,United Kingdom (1962–1989) Milton Keynes,United Kingdom (1990–1992) |
| Founder(s) | Jack Brabham Ron Tauranac |
| Noted staff | Bernie Ecclestone Gordon Murray Ron Dennis Charlie Whiting John Judd Herbie Blash |
| Noted drivers | |
| Formula One World Championship career | |
| First entry | 1962 German Grand Prix |
| Races entered | 403 entries (394 starts) |
| Engines | Climax,Repco,Ford,Alfa Romeo,BMW,Judd,Yamaha |
| Constructors' Championships | 2 (1966,1967) |
| Drivers' Championships | 4 (1966,1967,1981,1983) |
| Race victories | 35 |
| Podiums | 120 |
| Points | 832 |
| Pole positions | 40 |
| Fastest laps | 41[a] |
| Final entry | 1992 Hungarian Grand Prix |
Motor Racing Developments Ltd., commonly known asBrabham (/ˈbræbəm/BRAB-əm), was a Britishracing car manufacturer andFormula One racing team. It was founded in 1960 by the Australian driverJack Brabham and the British-Australian designerRon Tauranac. The team had a successful thirty-year history, winning fourFIAFormula OneWorld Drivers' Championships and twoWorld Constructors' Championships.
Under Brabham and Tauranac, Brabham won double world championships in 1966 and 1967, with the 1966 drivers' title going to Jack Brabham and the 1967 title going toDenny Hulme. Jack Brabham is the only Formula One driver to win a Drivers' Championship in a car bearing his own name. Brabham was the first Formula One team to use awind tunnel to design cars. It became the world's largest manufacturer ofopen-wheel racing cars sold to customer teams, having built more than 500 cars by 1970. Teams using Brabham cars won championships inFormula Two andFormula Three. The cars also competed in events like theIndianapolis 500 andFormula 5000 racing.
The businessmanBernie Ecclestone owned Brabham during most of the 1970s and 1980s, and later became responsible for administering thecommercial aspects of Formula One. Under Ecclestone and chief designerGordon Murray, the team won two more Drivers' Championships in the 1980s with BrazilianNelson Piquet. During this period, the team withdrew from manufacturing customer cars but introduced innovations such as carbon brakes andhydropneumatic suspension; it also reintroducedin-race refuelling. Its unique 'fan car' won its only race, in1978, before being withdrawn. Piquet won his first championship in1981 in theground effectBT49-Ford. In1983, he became the first driver to win a title with aturbocharged car, theBrabham BT52, which was powered byBMW's M12straight-four engine and won four Grands Prix that season. Ecclestone sold the team in 1988.
Midway through the1992 season, the team collapsed financially and was investigated for fraud, as its new owner, Japanese engineering firm Middlebridge, failed to make its loan repayments. In 2009, a German organisation unsuccessfully attempted to enter the2010 Formula One season using the Brabham name.

The Brabham team was founded byJack Brabham andRon Tauranac, who met in 1951 while both were successfully building and racing cars in their native Australia. Brabham, who had been a highly successfuldirt oval speedwaySpeedcar driver with multipleAustralian national and state titles to his credit before moving full-time into road racing in 1953, was the more successful driver. He went to the United Kingdom in 1955 to further his racing career. There he started driving for theCooper Car Company works team. By 1958, he had progressed with them toFormula One, the highest category ofopen-wheel racing defined by theFédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), motorsport's world governing body.[b] In1959 and1960, Brabham won theFormula One World Drivers' Championship in Cooper's revolutionarymid-engined cars.[1]
Despite their innovation of placing the engine behind the driver, the Coopers and their chief designer,Owen Maddock, were generally resistant to developing their cars. Brabham pushed for further advances, and played a significant role in developing Cooper's highly successful 1960 T53 "lowline" car, with input from his friend Tauranac.[2] Brabham was confident he could do better than Cooper. In late 1959, he asked Tauranac to come to the UK and work with him. Initially, they produced upgrade kits forSunbeam Rapier andTriumph Herald road cars at his car dealership, Jack Brabham Motors. However, their long-term aim was to design racing cars.[3] Brabham described Tauranac as "absolutely the only bloke I'd have gone into partnership with".[4] Later, Brabham offered a Coventry-Climax FWE-engined version of the Herald, with 83 hp (62 kW) and uprated suspension to match the extra power.[5]

To meet their aim of designing racing cars, Brabham and Tauranac set up Motor Racing Developments Ltd. (MRD), deliberately avoiding the use of either man's name. The new company would compete with Cooper in the market for customer-built racing cars.[6] As Brabham was still employed by Cooper, Tauranac produced the firstMRD car, for the entry levelFormula Junior class, in secrecy. Unveiled in the summer of 1961, the "MRD" was soon renamed. Motoring journalistJabby Crombac pointed out that "[the] way a Frenchman pronounces those initials—written phonetically, 'em air day'—sounded perilously like the French word...merde."[7] Gavin Youl achieved a second-place finish at Goodwood and another atMallory Park in the MRD-Ford.[8] The cars were subsequently known as Brabhams, with type numbers starting with BT for "Brabham Tauranac".[9]
By the1961 Formula One season, theLotus andFerrari teams had developed the mid-engined approach further than Cooper. Brabham had a poor season, scoring only four points, and—having run his own private Coopers in non-championship events during 1961—left the company in 1962 to drive for his own team: the Brabham Racing Organisation, using cars built by Motor Racing Developments.[10][11] The team was based atChessington, England[12] and held theBritish licence.[13]

Motor Racing Developments initially concentrated on making money by building cars for sale to customers in lower formulae, so the new car for the Formula One team was not ready until partway through the1962 Formula One season. The Brabham Racing Organisation (BRO) started the year fielding a customer Lotus chassis, which was delivered at 3am to keep it a secret.[8] Brabham took two points finishes in Lotuses, before the turquoise-liveried Brabham BT3 car made its debut at the1962 German Grand Prix. It retired with athrottle problem after 9 of the 15 laps, but went on to take a pair of fourth places at the end of the season.[14]
From the1963 season, Brabham was partnered by American driverDan Gurney, the pair now running in Australia'sracing colours of green and gold.[15] Brabham took the team's first win at the non-championshipSolitude Grand Prix in 1963.[16] Gurney took themarque's first two wins in the world championship, at the 1964French andMexican Grands Prix. Brabham works and customer cars took another three non-championship wins during the1964 season.[17] The1965 season was less successful, with no championship wins. Brabham finished third or fourth in the Constructors' Championship for three years running, but poor reliability marred promising performances on several occasions. Motor sport authors Mike Lawrence and David Hodges have said that a lack of resources may have cost the team results, a view echoed by Tauranac.[18]
The FIA doubled the Formula One engine capacity limit to 3 litres for the1966 season and suitable engines were scarce. Brabham used engines from Australian engineering firmRepco, which had never produced a Formula One engine before, based on aluminium V8engine blocks from the defunct AmericanOldsmobile F85 road car project, and other off-the-shelf parts.[19] Consulting and design engineerPhil Irving (ofVincent Motorcycle fame) was the project engineer responsible for producing the initial version of the engine. Few expected the Brabham-Repcos to be competitive,[20] but the light and reliable cars ran at the front from the start of the season. At theFrench Grand Prix atReims-Gueux, Brabham became the first man to win a Formula One world championship race in a car bearing his own name. Only his former teammate,Bruce McLaren, has since matched the achievement. It was the first in a run of four straight wins for the Australian veteran. Brabham won his third title in 1966, becoming the only driver to win the Formula One World Championship in a car carrying his own name (cfSurtees,Hill andFittipaldi Automotive). In1967, the title went to Brabham's teammate, New ZealanderDenny Hulme. Hulme had better reliability through the year, possibly due to Brabham's desire to try new parts first.[21] The Brabham team took the Constructors' World Championship in both years.[22]

For1968, AustrianJochen Rindt replaced Hulme, who had left to joinMcLaren. Repco produced a more powerful version of their V8 to maintain competitiveness against Ford's newCosworth DFV, but it proved very unreliable. Slow communications between the UK and Australia had always made identifying and correcting problems very difficult. The car was fast—Rindt setpole position twice during the season—but Brabham and Rindt finished only three races between them, and ended the year with only ten points.[23]
Although Brabham bought Cosworth DFV engines for the1969 season, Rindt left to join Lotus. His replacement,Jacky Ickx, had a strong second half to the season, winning inGermany andCanada, after Brabham was sidelined by a testing accident.[24] Ickx finished second in the Drivers' Championship, with 37 points toJackie Stewart's 63. Brabham himself took a couple of pole positions and two top-3 finishes, but did not finish half the races. The team were second in the Constructors' Championship, aided by second places atMonaco andWatkins Glen scored byPiers Courage, driving a Brabham for theFrank Williams Racing Cars privateer squad.[25]
Brabham took his last win in the opening race of the1970 season and was competitive throughout the year, although mechanical failures blunted his challenge.[26] After losing secured victories in the last corner at both Monaco and England, Jack decided he had had enough, and sold his part in the company to former Jochen Rindt manager, a businessman named Bernie Ecclestone, at the end of the year. Aided by number-two driverRolf Stommelen, the team came fourth in the Constructors' Championship.[27]

Tauranac signed double world championGraham Hill and young AustralianTim Schenken to drive for the1971 season. Tauranac designed the unusual 'lobster claw'BT34, featuring twinradiators mounted ahead of the front wheels, a single example of which was built for Hill. Although Hill, no longer a front-runner since his 1969 accident, took his final Formula One win in the non-championshipBRDC International Trophy atSilverstone,[28] the team scored only seven championship points.[27]
Tauranac left Brabham early in the1972 season after Ecclestone changed the way the company was organised without consulting him. Ecclestone has since said "In retrospect, the relationship was never going to work", noting that "[Tauranac and I] both take the view: 'Please be reasonable, do it my way'".[29] The highlights of an aimless year, during which the team ran three different models, were pole position for Argentinian driverCarlos Reutemann at his home race atBuenos Aires and a victory in the non-championship Interlagos Grand Prix. For the1973 season, Ecclestone promoted the young South African engineerGordon Murray to chief designer and moved Herbie Blash from the Formula Two programme to become the Formula One team manager. Both would remain with the team for the next 15 years. For 1973, Murray produced the triangular cross-section BT42, with which Reutemann scored two podium finishes and finished seventh in the Drivers' Championship.

In the1974 season, Reutemann took the first three victories of his Formula One career, and Brabham's first since 1970. The team finished a close fifth in the Constructors' Championship, fielding the much more competitiveBT44s. After a strong finish to the 1974 season, many observers felt the team were favourites to win the1975 title. The year started well, with a first win for Brazilian driverCarlos Pace at theInterlagos circuit in his nativeSão Paulo. However, as the season progressed, tyre wear frequently slowed the cars in races, and the team was constantly outperformed byFerrari andMcLaren.[30] Pace took another two podiums and finished sixth in the championship; while Reutemann had five podium finishes, including a dominant win in the1975 German Grand Prix, and finished third in the Drivers' Championship. The team likewise ranked second in the Constructors' Championship at the end of the year.[27]
While rival teams Lotus and McLaren relied on the Cosworth DFV engine from the late 1960s to the early 1980s, Ecclestone sought a competitive advantage by investigating other options. Despite the success of Murray's Cosworth-powered cars, Ecclestone signed a deal with Italian motor manufacturerAlfa Romeo to use their large and powerfulflat-12 engine from the1976 season. The engines were free, but they rendered the newBT45s, now in redMartini Racing livery, unreliable and overweight.[31] At that time, designer David North was hired to work alongside Murray.[32] The 1976 and1977 seasons saw Brabham fall toward the back of the field again. Reutemann negotiated a release from his contract before the end of the 1976 season and signed with Ferrari. UlstermanJohn Watson replaced him at Brabham for 1977. Watson lost near certain victory in theFrench Grand Prix (Dijon) of that year when his car ran low on fuel on the last lap and was passed by Mario Andretti's Lotus, with Watson's second place being the team's best result of the season. The car often showed at the head of races, but the unreliability of the Alfa Romeo engine was a major problem. The team lost Pace early in the 1977 season when he died in alight aircraft accident.[33]
For the1978 season, Murray'sBT46 featured several new technologies to overcome the weight and packaging difficulties caused by the Alfa Romeo engines. Ecclestone signed then two-time Formula One world championNiki Lauda from Ferrari through a deal with Italian dairy products companyParmalat which met the cost of Lauda ending his Ferrari contract and made up his salary to the £200,000 Ferrari was offering. 1978 was the year of the dominantLotus 79 "wing car", which usedaerodynamicground effect to stick to the track when cornering, but Lauda won two races in the BT46, one with the controversial "B" or "fan car" version.[34]
The partnership with Alfa Romeo ended during the1979 season, the team's first with young Brazilian driverNelson Piquet. Murray designed the full-ground effectBT48 around a rapidly developed new Alfa Romeo V12 engine and incorporated an effective "carbon-carbon braking" system—a technology Brabham pioneered in 1976. However, unexpected movement of the car's aerodynamiccentre of pressure made its handling unpredictable and the new engine was unreliable. The team dropped to eighth in the Constructors' Championship by the end of the season.[35] Alfa Romeo started testing their own Formula One car during the season, prompting Ecclestone to revert to Cosworth DFV engines, a move Murray described as being "like having a holiday".[36] The new, lighter, Cosworth-poweredBT49 was introduced before the end of the year at theCanadian Grand Prix; where after practice Lauda announced his immediate retirement from driving, later saying that he "was no longer getting any pleasure from driving round and round in circles".[37]

The team used the BT49 over four seasons. In the1980 season Piquet scored three wins and the team took third in the Constructors' Championship with Piquet second in the Drivers' Championship. This season saw the introduction of the blue and white livery that the cars would wear through several changes of sponsor, until the team's demise in 1992. With a better understanding of ground effect, the team further developed the BT49C for the1981 season, incorporating a hydropneumatic suspension system to avoidride height limitations intended to reduce downforce. Piquet, who had developed a close working relationship with Murray,[38] took the drivers' title with three wins, albeitamid accusations of cheating. The team finished second in the Constructors' Championship, behind theWilliams team.[27]
Renault had introducedturbocharged engines to Formula One in 1977. Brabham had tested aBMW four-cylinderM12 turbocharged engine in the summer of 1981. For the1982 season the team designed a new car, theBT50, around the BMW engine which, like the Repco engine 16 years before, was based on a road car engine block, theBMW M10. Brabham continued to run the Cosworth-powered BT49D in the early part of the season while reliability and driveability issues with the BMW units were resolved. The relationship came close to ending, with the German manufacturer insisting that Brabham use their engine. The turbo car took its first win at theCanadian Grand Prix. In the Constructors' Championship, the team finished fifth, the driversRiccardo Patrese, who scored the last win of the Brabham-Ford combination in theMonaco Grand Prix, 10th and World Champion Piquet a mere 11th in the Drivers' Championship. In the1983 season, Piquet took the championship lead from Renault'sAlain Prost at the last race of the year, theSouth African Grand Prix to become the first driver to win the Formula One Drivers' World Championship with a turbo-powered car. The team did not win the Constructors' Championship in either 1981 or 1983, despite Piquet's success. Patrese was the only driver other than Piquet to win a race for Brabham in this period—the drivers in the second car contributed only a fraction of the team's points in each of these championship seasons. Patrese finished ninth in the Drivers' Championship with 13 points, dropping the team behind Ferrari and Renault to third in the Constructors' Championship.

Piquet took the team's last wins: two in 1984 by winning the seventh and eighth races of that season, theCanadian Grand Prix and theDetroit Grand Prix, and one in 1985 by winning theFrench Grand Prix. He finished fifth in 1984 and a mere eighth in 1985 in the respective Drivers' Championships.[38] After seven years and two world championships, Piquet felt he was worth more than Ecclestone's salary offer for 1986, and reluctantly left for the Williams team at the end of the season.
For the1986 season, Patrese returned to Brabham, and was joined byElio de Angelis. The season was a disaster for Brabham, scoring only two points. Murray's radical long and lowBT55, with its BMW M12 engine tilted over to improve its aerodynamics and lower its centre of gravity, had severe reliability issues, and the Pirelli tyres performed poorly. De Angelis became the Formula One team's only fatality when he died in a testing accident at thePaul Ricard circuit.Derek Warwick, who replaced de Angelis, was close to scoring two points for fifth in theBritish Grand Prix, but a problem on the last lap dropped him out of the points.
In August, BMW after considering running their own in-house team, announced their departure from Formula One at the end of the season. Murray, who had largely taken over the running of the team as Ecclestone became more involved with his role at theFormula One Constructors Association, felt that "the way the team had operated for 15 years broke down". He left Brabham in November to join McLaren.[39]
Ecclestone held BMW to their contract for the1987 season, but the German company would only supply the laydown engine. The upright units, around which Brabham had designed their new car, were sold for use by theArrows team. Senior figures at Brabham, including Murray, have admitted that by this stage Ecclestone had lost interest in running the team. The 1987 season was only slightly more successful than the previous year—Patrese and de Cesaris scoring 10 points between them, including two third places at theBelgian Grand Prix and theMexican Grand Prix. Unable to locate a suitable engine supplier, the team missed the FIA deadline for entry into the 1988 world championship and Ecclestone finally announced the team's withdrawal from Formula One at the Brazilian Grand Prix in April 1988. During the season-endingAustralian Grand Prix, Ecclestone announced he had sold MRD toEuroBrun team ownerWalter Brun for an unknown price.
Brun soon sold the team on, this time to Swiss financier Joachim Lüthi, who brought it back into Formula One for the1989 season. The newBrabham BT58, powered by aJuddV8 engine (originally another of Jack Brabham's companies), was produced for the 1989 season.[40] Italian driverStefano Modena, who had driven for the team in the1987 Australian Grand Prix in a one off drive for the team, drove alongside the more experiencedMartin Brundle who was returning to Formula One after spending 1988 winning theWorld Sportscar Championship forJaguar. Modena took the team's last podium: a third place at theMonaco Grand Prix (Brundle, who had only just scraped through pre-qualifying by 0.021 seconds before qualifying a brilliant 4th, had been running third but was forced to stop to replace a flat battery, finally finishing sixth). The team also failed to make the grid sometimes: Brundle failed to prequalify at theCanadian Grand Prix and theFrench Grand Prix. The team finished 9th in the Constructors' Championship at the end of the season.[27]
After Lüthi's arrest on tax fraud charges in mid-1989,[41] several parties disputed the ownership of the team. Middlebridge Group Limited, a Japanese engineering firm owned by billionaire Koji Nakauchi, was already involved with establishedFormula 3000 team Middlebridge Racing and gained control of Brabham for the1990 season. Herbie Blash had returned to run the team in 1989 and continued to do so in 1990. Middlebridge paid for its purchase using £1 million loaned to them by finance company Landhurst Leasing,[42] but the team remained underfunded and would only score a few more points finishes in its last three seasons.[citation needed]
Jack Brabham's youngest son,David, raced for the Formula One team for a short time in 1990 including the season-endingAustralian Grand Prix (the first time a Brabham had driven a Brabham car in anAustralian Grand Prix since1968). 1990 was another disastrous year, with Modena's fifth place in the season-openingUnited States Grand Prix being the only top six finish. The team finished ninth in the Constructors' Championship. Brundle and fellow BritonMark Blundell, scored only three points during the1991 season. Due to poor results in the first half of 1991, they had to prequalify in the second half of the season; Blundell failed to do so in Japan, as did Brundle in Australia. The team finished 10th in the Constructors' Championship, behind another struggling British team, Lotus. The 1992 season started withEric van de Poele andGiovanna Amati afterJapanese Formula 3000 driverAkihiko Nakaya was denied a superlicense.Damon Hill, the son of another former Brabham driver and World Champion, debuted in the team after Amati was dropped when her sponsorship failed to materialise. Amati, the fifth and last (as of April 2025[update]) woman to race in Formula One, ended her career with three DNQs.[43]
ArgentineSergio Rinland designed the team's final cars around Judd engines, except for 1991 whenYamaha powered the cars. In the1992 season the cars (which were updated versions of the 1991 car) rarely qualified for races. Hill gave the team its final finish, at theHungarian Grand Prix, where he crossed the finish line 11th and last, four laps behind the winner,Ayrton Senna. After the end of that race the team ran out of funds and collapsed.[44]
Middlebridge Group Limited had been unable to continue making repayments against the £6 million ultimately provided by Landhurst Leasing, which went intoadministration. TheSerious Fraud Office investigated the case. Landhurst's managing directors were found guilty of corruption and imprisoned, having accepted bribes for further loans to Middlebridge.[42] It was one of four teams to leave Formula One that year. (cfMarch Engineering,Fondmetal andAndrea Moda Formula). Although there was talk of reviving the team for the following year, its assets passed to Landhurst Leasing and were auctioned by the company'sreceivers in 1993.[45] Among these was the team's old factory in Chessington, which was acquired by Yamaha Motor Sports and used to house Activa Technology Limited, a company manufacturing composite components for race and road cars run by Herbie Blash. The factory was bought by theCarlin DPRGP2 motor racing team in 2006.[46]

Brabham cars were also widely used by other teams, and not just in Formula One. Jack Brabham and Ron Tauranac called the company they set up in 1961 to design and buildformula racing cars to customer teams Motor Racing Developments (MRD), and this company had a large portfolio of other activities. Initially, Brabham and Tauranac each held 50 per cent of the shares.[10] Tauranac was responsible for design and running the business, while Brabham was the test driver and arranged corporate deals like the Repco engine supply and the use of the MIRA wind tunnel. He also contributed ideas to the design process and often machined parts and helped build the cars.[47]
From 1963 to 1965, MRD was not directly involved in Formula One, and often ran works cars in other formulae. A separate company, Jack Brabham's Brabham Racing Organisation, ran the Formula One works entry.[48] Like other customers, BRO bought its cars from MRD, initially at £3,000 per car,[49] although it did not pay for development parts. Tauranac was unhappy with his distance from the Formula One operation and before the 1966 season suggested that he was no longer interested in producing cars for Formula One under this arrangement. Brabham investigated other chassis suppliers for BRO, however the two reached an agreement and from 1966 MRD was much more closely involved in this category.[50] After Jack Brabham sold his shares in MRD to Ron Tauranac at the end of 1969, the works Formula One team was MRD.[citation needed]

Despite only building its first car in 1961, by the mid-1960s MRD had overtaken established constructors like Cooper to become the largest manufacturer of single-seat racing cars in the world,[51] and by 1970 had built over 500 cars.[52] Of the other Formula One teams which used Brabhams, Frank Williams Racing Cars and theRob Walker Racing Team were the most successful. The1965 British Grand Prix saw seven Brabhams compete, only two of them from the works team, and there were usually four or five at championship Grands Prix throughout that season. The firm built scores of cars for the lower formulae each year, peaking with 89 cars in 1966.[52] Brabham had the reputation of providing customers with cars of a standard equal to those used by the works team, which worked "out of the box". The company provided a high degree of support to its customers—including Jack Brabham helping customers set up their cars. During this period the cars were usually known as "Repco Brabhams", not because of the Repco engines used in Formula One between 1966 and 1968, but because of a smaller-scale sponsorship deal through which the Australian company had been providing parts to Jack Brabham since his Cooper days.[53]

At the end of 1971 Bernie Ecclestone bought MRD. He retained the Brabham brand, as did subsequent owners. Although the production of customer cars continued briefly under Ecclestone's ownership, he believed the company needed to focus on Formula One to succeed. The last production customer Brabhams were the Formula Two BT40 and the Formula Three BT41 of 1973,[54] although Ecclestone sold ex-works Formula One BT44Bs toRAM Racing as late as 1976.[55]
In 1988 Ecclestone sold Motor Racing Developments to Alfa Romeo. The Formula One team did not compete that year, but Alfa Romeo put the company to use designing and building a prototype "Procar"—a racing car with the silhouette of a large saloon (theAlfa Romeo 164) covering a composite racing car chassis and mid-mounted race engine. This was intended for a racing series for major manufacturers to support Formula One Grands Prix, and was designated the Brabham BT57.[56]
Brabham cars competed at theIndianapolis 500 from the mid-1960s to the early 1970s. After an abortive project in 1962,[57] MRD was commissioned in 1964 to build an IndyCar chassis powered by an AmericanOffenhauser engine. The resultant BT12 chassis was raced by Jack Brabham as the "Zink-Urschel Trackburner" at the1964 event and retired with a fuel tank problem. The car was entered again in1966, taking a third place forJim McElreath. From 1968 to 1970, Brabham returned to Indianapolis, at first with a 4.2-litre version of the Repco V8 the team used in Formula One—with whichPeter Revson finished fifth in 1969—before reverting to the Offenhauser engine for 1970.[58] The Brabham-Offenhauser combination was entered again in 1971 byJ.C. Agajanian, finishing fifth in the hands ofBill Vukovich II.[59] Although no Brabham car ever won at Indianapolis, McElreath won fourUnited States Automobile Club (USAC) races over 1965 and 1966 in the BT12. The "Dean Van Lines Special" in whichMario Andretti won the 1965 USAC national championship was a direct copy of this car, made with permission from Brabham by Andretti's crew chief Clint Brawner.[60] Revson took Brabham's final USAC race win in a BT25 in 1969, using the Repco engine.[61]
In the 1960s and early 1970s, drivers who had reached Formula One often continued to compete inFormula Two. In 1966 MRD produced the BT18 for the lower category, with aHonda engine acting as a stressed component. The car was extremely successful, winning 11 consecutive Formula Two races in the hands of the Formula One pairing of Brabham and Hulme. Cars were entered by MRD and not by the Brabham Racing Organisation, avoiding a direct conflict with Repco, their Formula One engine supplier.[62]
The firstFormula Three Brabham, the BT9, won only four major races in 1964. The BT15 which followed in 1965 was a highly successful design. 58 cars were sold, which won 42 major races. Further developments of the same concept, including wings by the end of the decade, were highly competitive up until 1971. The BT38C of 1972 was Brabham's first production monocoque and the first not designed by Tauranac. Although 40 were ordered, it was less successful than its predecessors. The angular BT41 was the final Formula Three Brabham.[63]
Brabham made one car forFormula 5000 racing, theBrabham BT43. Rolled out in late 1973 it was tested in early 1974 by John Watson at Silverstone before making its debut at the Rothmans F5000 Championship Round at Monza on 30 June 1974, driven byMartin Birrane. FormerAustralian Drivers' ChampionKevin Bartlett used theChevrolet poweredBrabham BT43 to finish 3rd in the1978 Australian Drivers' Championship including finishing 5th in the1978 Australian Grand Prix.[27]
Tauranac did not enjoy designing sports cars and could only spare a small amount of his time from MRD's very successful single-seater business. Only 14 sports car models were built between 1961 and 1972, out of a total production of almost 600 chassis.[64] The BT8A was the only one built in any numbers, and was quite successful in national level racing in the UK in 1964 and 1965.[65] The design was "stretched" in 1966 to become the one-off BT17, originally fitted with the 4.3-litre version of the Repco engine forCan-Am racing. It was quickly abandoned by MRD after engine reliability problems became evident.[66]

Brabham was considered a technically conservative team in the 1960s, chiefly because it persevered with traditionalspaceframe cars long after Lotus introduced lighter, stiffermonocoque chassis to Formula One in 1962. Chief designer Tauranac reasoned that monocoques of the time were not usefully stiffer than well designed spaceframe chassis, and were harder to repair and less suitable for MRD's customers.[67] His "old fashioned" cars won the Brabham team the 1966 and 1967 championships, and were competitive in Formula One until rule changes forced a move to monocoques in 1970.[68]
Despite the perceived conservatism, in 1963 Brabham was the first Formula One team to use awind tunnel to hone its designs to reducedrag and stop the cars lifting off the ground at speed.[69] The practice became the norm in only the early 1980s, and is possibly the most important factor in the design of modern cars. Towards the end of the 1960s, teams began to exploit aerodynamicdownforce to push the cars' tyres down harder on the track and enable them to maintain faster speeds through high-speed corners. At the1968 Belgian Grand Prix, Brabham was the first, alongside Ferrari, to introduce full width rear wings to this effect.[70]
The team's most fertile period of technical innovation came in the 1970s and 1980s whenGordon Murray became technical director. During 1976, the team introduced carbon-carbonbrakes to Formula One, which promised reducedunsprung weight and better stopping performance due to carbon's greatercoefficient of friction. The initial versions usedcarbon-carbon compositebrake pads and asteel disc faced with carbon "pucks." The technology was not reliable at first; in 1976, Carlos Pace crashed at 180 mph (290 km/h) at theÖsterreichring circuit after heat build-up in the brakes boiled thebrake fluid, leaving him with no way of stopping the car.[71] By 1979, Brabham had developed an effective carbon-carbon braking system, combining structural carbon discs with carbon brake pads.[72]
Although Brabham experimented with airdams and underbody skirts in the mid-1970s, the team, like the rest of the field, did not immediately understand Lotus's development of aground effect car in 1977. TheBrabham BT46B "Fan car" of 1978, generated enormous downforce with a fan, which sucked air from beneath the car, although its claimed use was for engine cooling. The car raced only once in the Formula One World Championship—Niki Lauda winning the1978 Swedish Grand Prix—before aloophole in the regulations was closed by the FIA.[73]
Although in 1979 Murray was the first to use lightweightcarbon fibre composite panels to stiffen Brabham'saluminium alloy monocoques, he echoed his predecessor Tauranac in being the last to switch to the new fully composite monocoques. Murray was reluctant to build the entire chassis from composite materials until he understood their behaviour in a crash, an understanding achieved in part through an instrumentedcrash test of a BT49 chassis.[72] The team did not follow McLaren's 1981MP4/1 with its own fully composite chassis until the "lowline" BT55 in 1986, the last team to do so. This technology is now used in all top level single seater racing cars.[74]
For the 1981 season the FIA introduced a 6 cm (2.4 in) minimumride height for the cars, intended to slow them in corners by limiting the downforce created by aerodynamic ground effect. Gordon Murray devised ahydropneumatic suspension system for the BT49C, which allowed the car to settle to a much lower ride height at speed. Brabham was accused of cheating by other teams, although Murray believes that the system met the letter of the regulations. No action was taken against the team and others soon produced systems with similar effects.[75]
At the1982 British Grand Prix, Brabham reintroduced the idea of re-fuelling and changing the car's tyres during the race, unseen since the1957 Formula One season, to allow its drivers to sprint away at the start of races on a light fuel load and soft tyres. After studying techniques used at theIndianapolis 500 and inNASCAR racing in the United States, the team was able to refuel and re-tyre the car in 14 seconds in tests ahead of the race. In 1982 Murray felt the tactic did little more than "get our sponsors noticed at races we had no chance of winning," but in 1983 the team made good use of the tactic.[76] Refuelling was banned for 1984, although it reappeared between1994 and2009, but tyre changes have remained part of Formula One.[77]
The fan car and hydropneumatic suspension exploited loopholes in the sporting regulations. In the early 1980s, Brabham was accused of going further and breaking the regulations. During 1981, Piquet's first championship year, rumours circulated of illegal underweight Brabham chassis. DriverJacques Laffite was among those to claim that the cars were fitted with heavily ballastedbodywork before being weighed atscrutineering. The accusation was denied by Brabham's management. No formal protest was made against the team and no action was taken against it by the sporting authorities.[78]
From 1978, Ecclestone was president of theFormula One Constructors Association (FOCA), a body formed by the teams to represent their interests. This left his team open to accusations of having advance warning of rule changes. Ecclestone denies that the team benefited from this and Murray has noted that, contrary to this view, at the end of 1982 the team had to abandon its new BT51 car, built on the basis that ground effect would be permitted in 1983. Brabham had to design and build a replacement, the BT52, in only three months.[79] At the end of the 1983 season, Renault and Ferrari, both beaten to the Drivers' Championship by Piquet, protested that theResearch Octane Number (RON) 102.4 of the team's fuel was above the legal limit of 102. The FIA declared that a figure of up to 102.9 was permitted under the rules, and that Brabham had not exceeded this limit.[80]
On 4 June 2009, Franz Hilmer confirmed that he had used the name to lodge an entry for the 2010 Formula One season as a cost-capped team under the new budget cap regulations.[81] The Brabham family was not involved and announced that it was seeking legal advice over the use of the name.[82] The team's entry was not accepted, and the Brabham family later obtained legal recognition of their exclusive rights to the Brabham brand.[83]
In September 2014,David Brabham—the son of Brabham founder Sir Jack Brabham—announced the reformation of the Brabham Racing team under the name Project Brabham, with plans to enter the 2015FIA World Endurance Championship and 201524 Hours of Le Mans in the LMP2 category using acrowdsourcing business model.[84] The company also expressed interest in returning to Formula One, but did not have the financial capacity to do so.[85]
In 2019,Brabham Automotive announced its goal to enter the2021 FIA World Endurance Championship using aBT62 in theGTE class.[86] The team competed in the2019 GT Cup Championship.[87] It also entered the final two races of the2019 Britcar Endurance Championship, winning on its debut.[88]
In 2021,Brabham Automotive debuted their BT63 GT2 car at the season finale of the2021 GT2 European Series.
Results achieved by the "works" Brabham team.Bold results indicate a championship win.
Amati, the fifth woman to ever race in Formula 1, made three attempts to pre-qualify for Brabham during the 1992 season, at South Africa, Mexico and Brazil, failing to make it through each time.
It returned after a year's absence under new ownership and struggled on for four largely unsuccessful campaigns before closing its doors following the 1992 Hungarian GP.
All race and championship results are taken from the Official Formula 1 Website.1962 Season review. www.formula1.com. Retrieved 27 April 2006
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| Preceded by | Formula One Constructors' Champion 1966–1967 | Succeeded by |