'Renault F1' is the
Renault company's
Formula One racing team. Renault has competed in Formula One (originally via subsidiary
Renault Sport), both as an engine supplier and as a constructor from the late
1970s to the present day, with several breaks. Renault introduced the
turbo engine to Formula One when they debuted their first car, the
Renault RS01 at
Silverstone in . Although the Renault team won races and competed for world titles, it was as a supplier of normally aspirated engines to the
Benetton and
Williams teams in the
1990s that Renault first tasted world championship success. Renault returned to the category as a constructor in by taking over the Benetton team, which was renamed Renault in . Their first championship as a constructor was achieved in ; the same year that they won their first drivers' championship with former test driver,
Fernando Alonso, repeating that feat in .
Renault F1 is coordinated from the team's
UK base at
Enstone,
Oxfordshire where the chassis are designed and built. Engines are manufactured at Renault's facility at
Viry-Châtillon outside Paris. As well as their championship wins in 2005 and 2006, Renault also contributed to 5 driver's world championships (, , , , ) and 6 constructor's world championships (1992, 1993, , 1995, 1996, 1997) as engine supplier for Benetton and Williams.
Currently, Renault F1 is responsible for Renault's involvement in Formula One; Renault's other motorsport activities are conducted through
Renault Sport.
Renault in the 1970s and 1980s
Renault first involvement in Formula One was made by the
Renault Sport subsidiary.
Renault entered the last five races of with
Jean-Pierre Jabouille in its only car. The
Renault RS01 was well known for its Renault-
Gordini V6 1.5
L turbocharged engine, the first regularly used turbo engine in Formula One history. Jabouille's car and engine proved highly unreliable and became something of a joke during its first races, earning the nickname of "Yellow Teapot" and failing to finish any of its races despite being extremely powerful.
The following year was hardly better, characterized by four consecutive retirements caused by blown engines, but near the end of the year the team showed signs of success. Twice, the RS01 qualified 3rd on the grid and while finishing was still something of an issue, it managed to finish its first race on the lead lap at
Watkins Glen near the end of , giving the team a fourth place finish and its first Formula One points.

The Renault RS10 was the first
turbocharged car to win a Grand Prix.
Expanding to two drivers with
René Arnoux joining Jabouille in , the team continued to struggle although Jabouille earned a
pole position in
South Africa. By mid-season, both drivers had a new
ground-effect car, the RS10, and at
Dijon for the
French Grand Prix the team legitimized itself with a brilliant performance in a classic race. The two Renaults were on the front row in qualifying, and pole-sitter Jabouille won the race, the first driver in a turbo-charged car to do so, while Arnoux and
Gilles Villeneuve were involved in an extremely competitive duel for second, Arnoux narrowly getting beaten to the line. While Jabouille ran into hard times after that race, Arnoux finished a career-high second at
Silverstone in the following race and then repeated that at the Glen, proving it wasn't a fluke.
Arnoux furthered this in with consecutive wins in
Brazil and
South Africa. Jabouille continued to have problems with retirements, but in his only points finish he emerged victorious in
Austria. At the end of the year Jabouille crashed heavily at the
Canadian GP and suffered serious leg injuries, which effectively ended his career as a Grand Prix driver.
Alain Prost was signed up for . In his three years with the team, Prost showed the form that would make him a Formula One legend and the Renaults were among the best in Formula One, twice finishing third in the constructors championships and second once. Prost won nine races with the team while Arnoux added two more in .
Arnoux left for rival
Ferrari after 1982 and was replaced by American
Eddie Cheever. In , Renault and Prost came very close to winning the drivers' title but were edged out by
Nelson Piquet (
Brabham-BMW) at the last race of the season in
South Africa. It was later rumoured that the Brabham team had been using illegal gasoline in that race. It has however never been proved.
[1]
After Prost left, the team turned to
Patrick Tambay and Englishman
Derek Warwick to bring them back to prominence. Despite a few good results, the team was not as competitive in and as in the past, with other teams doing a better job with turbo engines, some of which came from Renault themselves. provided another F1 first, as the team ran a third car in
Germany that featured the first in-car camera which could be viewed live by a
television audience. The car only lasted 23 laps before a clutch problem forced it to retire.
In 1985, major financial problems emerged at Renault and the company could no longer justify the large expenses needed to maintain the racing team's competitiveness. CEO
Georges Besse pared down the company's involvement in F1 from full-fledged racing team to engine supplier for the season before taking it entirely out of F1 at the end of that year.
Renault as an engine supplier
In
1989, Renault rejoined Formula One as an engine supplier to
Williams and by the sixth round in
Canada, the team had already secured their first Renault powered victory. Renault had also pioneered the first V10 engine in F1. Williams enjoyed signs of promise for the next 2 years and by
1992, with the aid of active-ride, the Williams-Renault was a World Championship-winning car; winning over half of the races during the season.
Williams perfected their active-ride for
1993 and won the Constructors' Title in yet another dominant year with
Alain Prost winning 7 of the 16 rounds.
1994 would prove to be the only time Renault didn't win the Drivers championship after Williams driver,
Ayrton Senna, the favourite to win the title, was killed at the
1994 San Marino Grand Prix. This left the Brazilian's inexperienced teammate,
Damon Hill, to take Senna's seat as team leader, but by the
French Grand Prix, Hill was 37 points behind Championship leader
Michael Schumacher. After a series of disqualifications for the
German, Hill managed to close the gap down to 1 point before the last race in
Adelaide, but the two drivers collided controversially and both retired from the race, making Schumacher the drivers' champion. Schumacher was the only driver to win a Drivers title during the time between 1992 and 1997 without a Renault engine, but Williams still retained the Constructors' championship.
Benetton acquired Renault engines for
1995 and their driver, Michael Schumacher, managed to successfully defend his Drivers title by 33 points from his nearest rival, Damon Hill, while Benetton won their first, and only, Constructors title by 29 points. Williams won the next two seasons in both the Drivers' and Constructors' championship with Damon Hill winning the title in
1996 and
Jacques Villeneuve in
1997.
Renault pulled out of Formula One at the end of 1997, coinciding with the departure of
Adrian Newey, the head of Williams' design team, who had designed all of the Renault powered Williams' from 1992 onwards. However, the power unit was still bought by teams 'off the shelf' for several years afterwards by Benetton (where the engine was re-badged as ''
Playlife''), Williams (where it was re-badged as ''
Mecachrome'') and
BAR and
Arrows (where it was re-badged as ''
Supertec'').
On
September 15 2006, Renault announced that it had agreed to supply
Red Bull Racing with engines in
2007 and
2008. On November 1st, 2006,
Red Bull Racing confirmed the use of Renault engines and the transfer of the Ferrari units to
Scuderia Toro Rosso.
Renault's return in the 2000s

Renault F1 logo, 2002-2006.
On
March 16 2000, Renault purchased
Benetton Formula Limited for $120 million to return to Formula One. Renault maintained the Benetton name for the
2000 and the
2001 seasons. When reporting the purchase the ''
International Herald Tribune'' commented that "the team will not race under the Renault name until it is ready to win and reap the marketing benefits."
[1]
2000

Members of the Renault F1 pit crew in 2002.
Despite the purchase by Renault, the team still used the Playlife engines they had been using for the last 2 years. The drivers were
Giancarlo Fisichella and
Alexander Wurz. The team scored 20 points, as well as 2 podium finishes in
Monaco and
Canada.
2001
Wurz left the team in 2001 to become a test driver at
McLaren and was replaced by
British driver,
Jenson Button, who was "''on loan''" from the
Williams team. Button and Fisichella scored 10 points for the team, including a podium finish for Fisichella in
Belgium.
2002
In
2002, Benetton were rebranded as Renault F1. Fisichella left to rejoin
Jordan. The team replaced the
Italian with fellow Italian
Jarno Trulli. Button and Trulli scored 23 points during the season.
2003
Despite outscoring his teammate during 2002, Button was dropped by Renault in
2003, his replacement was
Spaniard Fernando Alonso, who had been impressive as a test driver the previous year. Alonso won the
2003 Hungarian Grand Prix, the first time Renault had won a Grand Prix since the
1983 Austrian Grand Prix. Renault was innovative during this period producing non-standard designs such as the 111° 10-cylinder engine for the 2003 RS23 which was designed to effectively lower the center of gravity of the engine and thus improve the car's handling. This eventually proved too unreliable and heavy, so Renault returned to a more conventional development route.
2004
In , the team surprised everybody by becoming real contenders for second place in the Constructors' Championship. Trulli won the
Monaco Grand Prix in spectacular fashion. However, his relationship with Renault (particularly with team principal and Trulli's ex-manager Flavio Briatore) deteriorated after he was consistently off the pace in the latter half of the year, and made claims of favouritism in the team towards Alonso (though the two teammates themselves remained friendly).
Commentators regularly point to the
French Grand Prix as the final straw for Briatore, where Trulli was overtaken by
Rubens Barrichello in the final stages of the last lap, costing Renault a double podium finish at their home Grand Prix. He subsequently announced he was joining
Toyota F1 for the following year and in fact left Renault early, driving the Toyota in the last two races of the 2004 season. Hoping to secure second place in the Constructors' Championship, Renault replaced Trulli with World Champion
Jacques Villeneuve for the final three races. However, Villeneuve — away from F1 racing for almost an entire season and struggling to aclimatise quickly to racing at the premier level — did not impress, and the team finished third behind
BAR.
2005
Giancarlo Fisichella was Trulli's replacement for the
2005 season. The
Italian had been thought by many F1 fans as a capable driver whose career had been marred by the uncompetitive cars he was given to work with. 2005 would see him finally driving a top class car, and indeed he took advantage of a rain-affected qualifying session to win the first race of the season, the
Australian Grand Prix.
Fernando Alonso then proceeded to steal the limelight by winning the next three races and building himself a considerable lead in the Drivers' World Championship, thereby doing the same for Renault in the Constructors' championship. Meanwhile, Fisichella experienced a run of bad luck that saw him fail to finish several races. After the
San Marino Grand Prix, Renault and Alonso's championship leads came under massive attack from a fast-but-fragile
McLaren-Mercedes team and Kimi Räikkönen respectively for the Drivers' Championship. McLaren took the lead of the Constructors' World Championship by securing a one-two finish at the
Brazilian Grand Prix, but that was to be the race in which Alonso secured the Drivers' title, becoming the youngest ever driver to do so. This achievement was followed by a win in
China to secure the Constructors' World Championship for Renault after McLaren driver
Juan Pablo Montoya's car was badly damaged by a drain cover coming loose on the track, breaking
Ferrari's six-year stranglehold on that title. It was the first time Renault had won the title as a manufacturer, after plenty of success as an engine supplier in the 1990s with Williams.
On
October 21 to celebrate winning both the Drivers' and Constructors' World Championships, and to mark the end of the V10 era in Formula One, Renault engineers at Viry-Châtillon used an RS-25 V10 engine to "play"
Queen's ''
We Are the Champions''.
2006

The Renault team's engine, the RS26. Renault's first
V8 engine in Formula One.
Fernando Alonso and
Giancarlo Fisichella were retained for 2006, although test driver
Franck Montagny was replaced by
Heikki Kovalainen. The team's 2006 contender, the R26 - featuring a seven speed gearbox made of
titanium, was unveiled at a launch event on January 31.
The team started 2006 well, Alonso won the opening
Bahrain Grand Prix as well as the
Australian Grand Prix and finished second in
Malaysia behind teammate Fisichella to claim Renault's first one-two finish since
René Arnoux and
Alain Prost in 1982. They continued this, with Alonso taking 2 second places and a well earned win at his home grand prix in
Spain, at the
Circuit de Catalunya as well as the
Monaco Grand Prix. Fisichella took 8th, 6th and 3rd place finishes in the
San Marino Grand Prix,
European Grand Prix and the
Spanish Grand Prix.
The team recently celebrated its 200th Grand Prix at Silverstone, which was won by Fernando Alonso. As the Formula One season progressed to its North American stint, Fernando Alonso won the
Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal, Canada. The
U.S Grand Prix was something of an exercise of minimising damage. Ferrari had a distinct performance advantage over the whole weekend. However Renault were the fastest of all the
Michelin runners. Fisichella finished 3rd, well ahead of Alonso who finished 5th.
At the
French Grand Prix, Renault were expected to be faster than Ferrari, however Ferrari again had the advantage. Alonso was running third for most of the race, unable to challenge the Ferraris of Schumacher and Massa. However a tactical switch to a two stop strategy enabled him to pass Massa and finishing second, minimising his points loss.
On 21 July 2006 the FIA banned the use of mass damper systems, developed and first used by the Renault team and subsequently used by 7 other teams, including Ferrari. Flavio Briatore has named
McLaren as the team who complained to the FIA.
[2] The system uses a spring-mounted mass in the nose cone to reduce the sensitivty of the car to vibration. This is particularly effective in corners and over kerbs to keep the tyres in closer contact to the track surface than they would otherwise be.
[3] However race stewards at the
German Grand Prix deemed the system legal. The FIA announced its intention to appeal the decision and Renault announced they would not race with the system for fear of retrospective punishment if the appeal was upheld. Renault's performance at the German Grand Prix was one of their worst of the season, however the team blamed blistering of their Michelin tyres, suggesting it was not a result of the loss of the mass damper system. The FIA International Court of Appeal met in Paris on August 22 2006, to examine the appeal made by the FIA against the decision handed down by the stewards at the German Grand Prix. The Court ruled that use of the device known as a Tuned Mass Damper is an infringement of Article 3.15 of the Formula One Technical Regulations.
Points in the
Brazilian Grand Prix secured the constructor's championship for Renault in 2006.
On
October 16,
2006, Renault announced the Dutch banking giant
ING would replace
Mild Seven as title sponsor for three years starting in .
[4]
2007
Renault has confirmed Giancarlo Fisichella and Heikki Kovalainen as their race drivers for 2007. Test drivers will be
Nelson Piquet Jr and
Ricardo Zonta. The car for 2007, the
R27, was unveiled on
24 January 2007, and bears a new yellow, blue, orange and white livery in deference to the corporate colours of ING.
Renault engines are also being used by
Red Bull Racing team, while the Ferrari engine contract is being passed to Scuderia Toro Rosso (otherwise known as the second "development" Red Bull team).
Renault struggled in comparison to their form in recent seasons in
Australia, with
Giancarlo Fisichella finishing the race in 5th place. Rookie
Heikki Kovalainen struggled even more than the Italian, spinning his car as he chased
Toyota's Ralf Schumacher and ending up in 10th place. Results didn't improve until the start of the European season, although both drivers finished in the points in the next race at
Malaysia. Heikki Kovalainen struggled in
Bahrain too, although the gap between himself and Fisichella at the end of the race was not as great as was seen at Melbourne, with Fisichella finishing only 8th. The team's pace began to pick up in Barcelona, with both drivers making it into Q3, setting competitive lap times in the race (4th fastest lap for Kovalainen) and looking set for 5th and 8th, only to be hampered by an identical problem on both fuel rigs, forcing both drivers to make extra pitstops which dropped them back to 7th and 9th.
Future
Questions have been raised regarding Renault's commitment to its Formula One team, particularly with the appointment of
Carlos Ghosn as CEO in 2005. Ghosn has a reputation as a ruthless businessman, nicknamed "le cost cutter". However at the 2005 French Grand Prix Ghosn set out his policy regarding the company's involvement in motorsport: "We are not in Formula One out of habit or tradition. We're here to show our talent and that we can do it properly... Formula One is a cost if you don't get the results. Formula One is an investment if you do have them and know how to exploit them." In short he will continue Renault's investment in F1 as long as the team is successful and can use the resulting publicity for wider commercial gain. Renault have recently signed an agreement with Formula One Management pledging its allegiance to Formula 1 until 2012. After Renault won both championships in 2006 for a second year, Ghosn said "It is an important victory because it justifies the investment Renault has made in Formula 1, and will make in the future. More and more, Formula 1 is working as an investment for us, not a loss."
[5]
Renault F1 has a research relationship with
Boeing, the aim of which is ''"to investigate technology collaboration projects of mutual interest."''
[6] Similar relationships include that of
McLaren and
BAE Systems.
Complete Formula One results
() (results in bold indicate 'pole position')
References
1. Teams Rev Up for Battle in the Brand-Name Game Brad Spurgeon
2. The Long Interview: Flavio Briatore, , Matt, Bishop, F1 Racing, 2006
3. FIA bans controversial damper system
4. ING replaces Mild Seven at Renault. Retrieved October 16, 2006.
5. Ghosn: Titles justify investment
6. Boeing Company. (June 17, 2004). Boeing, Renault F1 Team to Collaborate on Technology Development. Press Release.
7. Season ongoing
External links
★
ING Renault F1 Team's official website in English
★
Renault Driver Development Programme
★
Renault Merchandise
★
French Grand Prix 1979, INA archives video (French soundtrack)