The BMW P80 was a V10 naturally-aspirated Formula One engine designed by BMW for use in the Williams FW23 during the 2001 Formula One Season. It was an improvement over its predecessor the BMW E41, powering the car to four victories that season.
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V T E | BMW | |
---|---|---|
Personnel Willy Rampf · Peter Sauber · Mario Theissen | ||
Drivers Ernst Klodwig · Marcel Balsa · Günther Bechem · Rudolf Krause · Nick Heidfeld · Robert Kubica · Sebastian Vettel · Jacques Villeneuve | ||
Cars (as Constructor) Eigenbau · Special · 269 | ||
Cars (as Engine Supplier) Frazer Nash (1952): 421 AFM (1952–1953): 6 Klenk (1954): Meteor Lola (1967–1968): T100 · T102 Brabham (1982–1987): BT50 · BT52/BT52B · BT53 · BT54 · BT55 · BT56 ATS (1983–1984): D6 · D7 Arrows (1984–1988)*: A7 · A8 · A9 · A10/A10B Benetton (1986): B186 Ligier (1987)*: JS29B/JS29C Williams (2000–2005): FW22 · FW23 · FW24 · FW25 · FW26 · FW27 BMW Sauber (2006–2009): F1.06 · F1.07 · F1.08 · F1.09 | ||
Full Results BMW · BMW Sauber | ||
* Indicates as BMW engines were re-badged as Megatron in 1987 and 1988. |
V T E | |||
Drivers 2. Logan Sargeant · 23. Alexander Albon · 43. Franco Colapinto | |||
Personnel Frank Williams · Patrick Head · Pat Symonds · Mike Coughlan | |||
World Champions Alan Jones (1980) · Keke Rosberg (1982) · Nelson Piquet (1987) · Nigel Mansell (1992) · Alain Prost (1993) · Damon Hill (1996) · Jacques Villeneuve (1997) | |||
Cars March 761 · FW06 · FW07 · FW07B · FW07C · FW07D · FW08 · FW08C · FW09 · FW09B · FW10 · FW10B · FW11 · FW11B · FW12 · FW12C · FW13 · FW13B · FW14 · FW14B · FW15C · FW16 · FW16B · FW17 · FW17B · FW18 · FW19 · FW20 · FW21 · FW22 · FW23 · FW24 · FW25 · FW26 · FW27 · FW28 · FW29 · FW30 · FW31 · FW32 · FW33 · FW34 · FW35 · FW36 · FW37 · FW38 · FW40 · FW41 · FW42 · FW43 · FW43B · FW44 · FW45 · FW46 | |||