Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/brabham-formula-one-cars

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Brabham BT52

Formula One racing car


Formula One racing car

FieldValue
Image[[File:Nelson Piquet driving Brabham BT52 2013 Goodwood Festival of Speed.jpg275px]]
CaptionNelson Piquet driving the BT52 at the 2013 Goodwood Festival of Speed.
Car_nameBrabham BT52
Brabham BT52B
CategoryFormula One
ConstructorBrabham
DesignerGordon Murray (Technical Director)
David North (Chief Designer)
Paul Rosche (Chief Engine Designer (BMW))
PredecessorBT50
SuccessorBT53
TeamFila Sport Brabham BMW
Drivers5. BRA Nelson Piquet
6. ITA Riccardo Patrese
Technical ref
<ref>{{cite weburlhttp://www.weismann.net/brabham.htmltitle=Brabham F1 Racecars Weismann Transaxles • Brabham BT52Bwork=weismann.netaccess-date=3 November 2010url-status=deadarchive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100407225223/http://www.weismann.net/brabham.htmlarchive-date=7 April 2010 }}
ChassisCarbon fibre monocoque with rear subframe
Engine nameBMW M12/13,
ConfigurationStraight 4,
Capacity1499 cc,
Turbo/NAturbo,
Engine positionmid-engine, longitudinally mounted
Gearbox nameBrabham/Hewland
Typemanual
Gears5/6-speed
DifferentialWeismann Differential
Front suspensionDouble wishbones, push-rod operated coil springs over dampers
Rear suspensionDouble wishbones, push-rod operated coil springs over dampers
WheelbaseBT52: 2860 mm
BT52B: 2845 mm
TrackBT52:
Front: 1778 mm
Rear: 1657 mm
BT52B:
Front: 1753 mm
Rear: 1651 mm
FuelCastrol
TyresMichelin
Weight540 kg
Debut1983 Brazilian Grand Prix
Races15
Cons_champ0
Drivers_champ1 (, Nelson Piquet)
Wins4
Poles2
Fastest_laps4

Brabham BT52B David North (Chief Designer) Paul Rosche (Chief Engine Designer (BMW)) 6. ITA Riccardo Patrese | Turbo/NA = turbo, BT52B: 2845 mm Front: 1778 mm Rear: 1657 mm BT52B: Front: 1753 mm Rear: 1651 mm

The Brabham BT52 was a Formula One car designed for the Brabham team by longtime Brabham designer Gordon Murray for the season. The car ran on Michelin tyres and was powered by the BMW M12/13 four-cylinder turbocharged engine, which in 1983 produced a maximum power of approximately 850 bhp in qualifying trim, detuned to around 650 bhp for the proper races. Its drivers were World Champion Nelson Piquet and Riccardo Patrese.

History

After the ground effect cars were banned at the end of the previous season, the FIA mandated that all F1 cars be designed with flat undersides for safety reasons. With just six weeks until the opening race in Brazil, this left Brabham with three fully built BT51s ready to go that were now useless, so Murray started from scratch and he designed the BT52. The previously crucial sidepods were now generating lift rather than suction and so the BT52 had short, angular sidepods to keep lift at a minimum. Murray also took a gamble and moved approximately 70% of the car's weight to the rear in an effort to obtain more traction. The car featured a distinctive dart-shaped profile and oversized rear wing in an effort to claw back as much downforce as possible, while the monocoque was built from aluminium and carbon fibre composite to keep weight as low as possible. The 1983 season saw refuelling stops reintroduced after successful experiments in so the BT52's fuel system was designed with this in mind and had a small fuel tank positioned high up behind the driver.

The car was easy to drive and Piquet used it to good effect that season. Fighting with Alain Prost in the Renault and René Arnoux of Ferrari, it seemed he would lose out on the title after a run of mid season bad luck. After German company Wintershall developed a special batch of fuel and further development to the car was done, he became the first driver to win the world championship with a turbo engine after winning three races, Brazil (Round 1), Italy (Round 13) and European (Round 14), and scoring consistently with three 2nd and two 3rd places. Patrese on the other hand seemed to corner the market on Brabham's bad luck and while often as quick or quicker than Piquet (including leading the San Marino Grand Prix before crashing out with only six laps remaining, and grabbing pole at Monza) he didn't score a point until his third place finish in Round 10 at the German Grand Prix. His only other points finish being his win at the season ending South African Grand Prix at Kyalami.

With Piquet winning his second World Drivers' Championship with 59 points, and Patrese finishing ninth on 13 points, Brabham finished third in the Constructors' Championship with 72 points, 7 behind second placed Renault and 17 behind winners Ferrari. The BT52 was updated after the Canadian Grand Prix to the BT52B and proceeded to win three of the remaining seven races of the season. The two variants of the chassis can easily be distinguished as the colour scheme was also reversed at the same time. A further update came later in the season when Brabham adopted the Ferrari style winglets on the rear wing in order to generate more downforce. The BT52 was replaced for the Formula One season by the Brabham BT53.

Complete Formula One World Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearEntrantChassisEngineDrivers123456789101112131415PtsWCC
Fila Sport Brabham BMWBMW M12/13
S4 tcBRAUSWFRASMRMONBELDETCANGBRGERAUTNEDITAEURRSA723rd
BT52Nelson Piquet1Ret2Ret244Ret
BT52B213†3Ret113
BT52Riccardo PatreseRet10RetRetRetRetRetRet
BT52BRet3Ret9Ret71

† Did not finish, but was classified as he had completed more than 90% of the race distance.

References

References

  1. "STATS F1 • Brabham BT52". Statsf1.com.
  2. "STATS F1 • Brabham BT52B". Statsf1.com.
  3. "Brabham F1 Racecars Weismann Transaxles • Brabham BT52B". weismann.net.
  4. Boeriu, Horatiu. (24 January 2017). "Watch BMW Build The Most Powerful F1 Engine Ever - BT52 1,280 horsepower". BMW Blog.
  5. "TECH TUESDAY: The ground-breaking Brabham BT52".
  6. "1983 Brabham BT52 BMW - Images, Specifications and Information".
  7. (7 July 2014). "X-ray spec -- Brabham BT 52".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Brabham BT52 — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report