Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/1984-formula-one-season-cars

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

Lotus 95T

Formula One racing car

Lotus 95T

Summary

Formula One racing car

FieldValue
Image[[File:Mansell Lotus 95T Dallas 1984 F1.jpg275px]]
Car_nameLotus 95T
CategoryFormula One
ConstructorLotus
DesignerGérard Ducarouge (Technical Director)
Martin Ogilvie (Chief Designer)
John Davis (Head of Aerodynamics and R&D)
Predecessor94T
Successor97T
TeamJohn Player Team Lotus
Drivers11. ITA Elio de Angelis
12. GBR Nigel Mansell
Technical ref
ChassisKevlar / Nomex honeycomb monocoque
Engine nameRenault Gordini EF4,
Configuration90° V6,
Capacity1492 cc,
Turbo/NAturbocharged,
Engine positionmid-engine, longitudinally-mounted
Power750-760 hp @ 11,500 rpm
Gearbox nameLotus / Hewland
Typemanual
Gears5-speed
Front suspensionDouble-wishbones, pull-rod, coil springs
Rear suspensionDouble-wishbones, pull-rod, coil springs
Wheelbase2775 mm
TrackFront: 1800 mm
Rear: 1700 mm
FuelElf
TyresGoodyear
Weight540 kg
Debut1984 Brazilian Grand Prix
Races16
Cons_champ0
Drivers_champ0
Wins0
Poles2
Fastest_laps0
Podiums6

Martin Ogilvie (Chief Designer) John Davis (Head of Aerodynamics and R&D) 12. GBR Nigel Mansell | Turbo/NA = turbocharged, Rear: 1700 mm

The Lotus 95T was a Formula One racing car designed by Gérard Ducarouge for use by Team Lotus in the 1984 Formula One World Championship. The car brought Lotus its best results for several seasons, frequently reaching the podium.

Design

The car was powered by the Renault Gordini EF4 V6 turbo engine and ran on Goodyear tyres, after Lotus had switched from Pirelli. It was a development of the Lotus 94T, which had proved competitive at the end of .

The chassis of the 95T was praised by the editor of the AUTOCOURSE annual in 1984 as the best handling of the season during the annual's team by team review. The technical review of the 95T was particularly positive of the Lotus mechanical grip in slow corners, mentioning that it was equal, if not slightly better than the McLaren MP4/2. The AUTOCOURSE editor reported that the McLaren was more aerodynamically efficient and was better in fast corners, but netherless praised the leadership of Gerard Ducarouge's technical directorship in reviving Lotus in 1984 after a dismal (in terms of results) 1983 season.

Season summary

The 95T of Elio de Angelis at the [[1984 Detroit Grand Prix
Cockpit of the 95T
Rear wing of the 95T
Renault Gordini]] EF4 engine in the 95T

The car was driven by Elio de Angelis and Nigel Mansell, both of whom were consistently competitive in a season otherwise dominated by McLaren. De Angelis finished in the top five on eleven occasions, including four podium finishes; he also took pole position at the opening race in Brazil. With 34 points, he was third in the Drivers' Championship.

Mansell, meanwhile, finished third in France and the Netherlands, and was running second in the final race in Portugal when his brakes failed (which handed Niki Lauda the Drivers' Championship by half a point from Alain Prost). However, he also crashed out of the lead at a rain-hit Monaco (which prompted team boss Peter Warr, with whom he had a difficult relationship, to famously declare, "He'll never win a Grand Prix as long as I have a hole in my arse"), and in oppressive heat at Dallas he took pole position and led the first half of the race, before his gearbox failed on the final lap and he collapsed from exhaustion trying to push the car to the finish line. He ultimately finished equal ninth in the Drivers' Championship with 13 points, the same tally as Ayrton Senna, who would replace him for .

With a total of 47 points, Lotus placed third in the Constructors' Championship, its best placing since . The 95T was seen by many in Formula One as being as good as the dominant McLaren MP4/2, its biggest problems being the tyres, the gearbox and the Renault engine, which despite being powerful and reliable was not as fuel-efficient as the TAG-Porsche engine in the McLaren. Nonetheless, the car had helped to re-establish Lotus as consistent front-runners, and would be succeeded for 1985 by a further development, the Lotus 97T.

After Formula One

Mansell's 95T was auctioned by Mecum Auctions in Monterey, California in August 2013, with a pre-sale estimate of between $500,000 and $600,000. However, it failed to sell.

Complete Formula One results

(key) (results in bold indicate pole position)

YearTeamEngineTyresDrivers12345678910111213141516PointsWCC
John Player Team LotusRenault Gordini EF4
V6 tcBRARSABELSMRFRAMONCANDETDALGBRGERAUTNEDITAEURPOR473rd
Elio de Angelis3753554234RetRet4RetRet5
Nigel MansellRetRetRetRet3Ret6Ret6Ret4Ret3RetRetRet

Notes

References

  1. "1984 Lotus 95T Renault - Images, Specifications and Information". Ultimatecarpage.com.
  2. "Engine Renault • STATS F1".
  3. Taylor, Simon. (December 2009). "Lunch with... Nigel Mansell". [[Motor Sport (magazine).
  4. (4 July 2013). "Push To Pass Out - Nigel Mansell's 1984 Lotus 95T Comes Up For Auction".
  5. "Lotus 95T - F1technical.net".
  6. "1984 Lotus Type 95T John Player Special". Mecum Auctions.
  7. "Mecum - Monterey, CA - August 15-17, 2013". [[Sports Car Market]].
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 Lotus 95T — 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