International Formula 3000

International Formula 3000
Category Single seaters
Country International
Inaugural season 1985
Folded 2004
Last Drivers' champion Italy Vitantonio Liuzzi
Last Teams' champion United Kingdom Arden International

The Formula 3000 International Championship was a motor racing series created by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) in 1985 to become the final preparatory step for drivers hoping to enter the Formula One championship. Formula Two had become too expensive, and was dominated by works-run cars with factory engines; the hope was that Formula 3000 would offer quicker, cheaper, more open racing. The series began as an open specification, then tyres were standardized from 1986 onwards, followed by engines and chassis in 1996. The series ran annually until 2004, and was replaced in 2005 by the GP2 Series.

The series was staged as the Formula 3000 European Championship in 1985,[1] as the Formula 3000 Intercontinental Championship in 1986[2] and 1987[3] and then as the Formula 3000 International Championship from 1988[4] to 2004.[5]

Engines

Formula 3000 replaced Formula Two, and was so named because the engines used initially were 3.0 L (183ci) Cosworth DFV engines made obsolete by popularization of 1.5 L turbocharged engines in Formula One (it has been observed Bernie Ecclestone had purchased a job-lot of DFVs in 1984, with no obvious use for them at the time).

The rules permitted any 90-degree V8 engine, fitted with a rev-limiter to keep power output under control. As well as the Cosworth, a Honda engine based on an Indy V8 by John Judd also appeared; a rumoured Lamborghini V8 never raced. In later years, a Mugen-Honda V8 became the thing to have, eclipsing the DFV; Cosworth responded with the brand new AC engine. Costs, not unlike the senior series, were getting out of control.

Chassis

A Lola chassis in the 2000 season.

The first chassis from March, AGS and Ralt were developments of their existing 1984 Formula Two designs, although Lola's entry was based on and looked very much like an IndyCar. A few smaller teams tried obsolete three-litre Formula One cars (from Tyrrell, Williams, Minardi, Arrows and RAM), with little success—the Grand Prix and Indycar-derived entries were too unwieldy—their fuel tanks were about twice the size of those needed for F3000 races, and the weight distribution was not ideal. The first few years of the championship saw March establishing a superiority over Ralt and Lola—there was little to choose between the chassis, but more Marches were sold and ended up in better hands. The form book was rewritten in 1988 with the entry of the ambitious Reynard marque with a brand new chassis; Reynard had won their first race in every formula they'd entered. This would continue in F3000. The next couple of years saw Lola improve slightly—their car was arguably marginally superior to the Reynard in 1990—and March slip, but both were crushed by the Reynard teams and by the mid-90s, F3000 was a virtual Reynard monopoly, although Lola did eventually return with a promising car and the Japanese Footwork and Dome chassis were seen in Europe. Dallara briefly tried the series before moving up to Formula One, and AGS moved up from Formula Two but never recaptured their occasional success. At least one unraced F3000 chassis existed—the Wagner fitted with a straight-six short-stroke BMW. This was converted into a sports car, however.

Politics

The series was not without controversy. Definitive rules for the 1985 season did not appear until the championship was well under way. In 1987 questions were asked about the ability of some of the drivers, given the high number of accidents in the formula. In 1989 the eligibility of the new Reynard chassis was challenged - it was raced with a different (but safer and no faster) nose to the one that had been crash tested. This season also saw problems with driver changes - the cost of F3000 was escalating to the point that teams were finding it difficult to run drivers for a whole season. A badly implemented "two driver changes per car per season" rule meant that some cars had to sit idle while drivers with budgets could not race them (rather than allowing two drivers to share a drive through the season on a race-by-race basis, teams could only change the driver of any entry twice in a year). In 1991 the performance of some Italian teams attracted attention - they had started using Agip's "jungle juice" Formula One fuel, worth an estimated 15 bhp—giving their drivers a significant advantage. In the early years of the formula there was much concern about safety, with a high number of accidents resulting in injuries to drivers and, unfortunately, one fatality in the International Championship - Marco Campos in the very last round of the 1995 series.

Races

Formula 3000 races during the "open chassis" era tended to be of about 100–120 miles in distance, held at major circuits, either headlining meetings or paired with other international events. The "jewel in the crown" of the F3000 season was traditionally the Pau Grand Prix street race, rivalled for a few years by the Birmingham round. Most major circuits in France, Italy, Spain, Germany and the United Kingdom saw the series visit at least once.

The spec-chassis years

In 1996, new rules introduced a single engine (a detuned Judd V8 engine, re-engineered by and badged as a Zytek) and chassis (Lola), to go along with tyre standardization (Avon) introduced in 1986. The following year the calendar was combined with that of Formula One, so the series became support races for the Grand Prix. Several Grand Prix teams established formal links with F3000 teams to develop young drivers (and engineering talent); these relationships varied from formal "junior teams" (such as the one McLaren set up for Nick Heidfeld) to fairly distant relationships based mostly upon shared sponsors and the use of the 'parent' team's name. The series grew dramatically through the late nineties, reaching an entry of nearly 40 cars - although this in itself was problematic as it meant many drivers failed to qualify. In 2000, the series was restricted to 15 teams of two cars each.

However, by 2002 expenses were once more very high and the number of entries, and sponsors, rapidly dwindled. International Formula 3000 was experiencing tough competition with cheaper formulae, such as European F3000 (using ex-FIA 1999 and 2002 Lola chassis), World Series by Nissan (also known as Formula Nissan) and Formula Renault V6 Eurocup. By the end of 2003, car counts had fallen to new lows.

The 2004 season was the last F3000 campaign, due in part to dwindling field sizes. In 2005 it was replaced with a new series known as GP2, with Renault backing.

Champions

For a complete list of drivers, see List of International Formula 3000 drivers.
Sweden's Björn Wirdheim won the 2003 FIA Formula 3000 International Championship for Drivers
Season Champion Driver Team Car Champion Team Car
1985 West Germany Christian Danner United Kingdom BS Automotive March 85B-Cosworth Not Awarded N/A
1986 Italy Ivan Capelli Italy Genoa Racing March 86B-Cosworth Not Awarded N/A
1987 Italy Stefano Modena United Kingdom Onyx March 87B-Cosworth Not Awarded N/A
1988 Brazil Roberto Moreno United Kingdom Bromley Motorsport Reynard 88D-Cosworth Not Awarded N/A
1989 France Jean Alesi United Kingdom Eddie Jordan Racing Reynard 89D-Mugen Not Awarded N/A
1990 France Érik Comas France DAMS Lola T90/50-Mugen Not Awarded N/A
1991 Brazil Christian Fittipaldi United Kingdom Pacific Racing Reynard 91D-Mugen Not Awarded N/A
1992 Italy Luca Badoer Italy Crypton Engineering Reynard 92D-Cosworth Not Awarded N/A
1993 France Olivier Panis France DAMS Reynard 93D-Cosworth Not Awarded N/A
1994 France Jean-Christophe Boullion France DAMS Reynard 94D-Cosworth Not Awarded N/A
1995 Italy Vincenzo Sospiri United Kingdom Super Nova Racing Reynard 95D-Cosworth Not Awarded N/A
1996 Germany Jörg Müller Austria RSM Marko Lola T96/50-Zytek Not Awarded N/A
1997 Brazil Ricardo Zonta United Kingdom Super Nova Racing Lola T96/50-Zytek Not Awarded N/A
1998 Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya United Kingdom Super Nova Racing Lola T96/50-Zytek Not Awarded N/A
1999 Germany Nick Heidfeld United Kingdom West Competition Lola T99/50-Zytek Not Awarded N/A
2000 Brazil Bruno Junqueira United Kingdom Petrobras Junior Team Lola T99/50-Zytek United Kingdom D2 Playlife Super Nova Lola T99/50-Zytek
2001 United Kingdom Justin Wilson United Kingdom Coca-Cola Nordic Racing Lola T99/50-Zytek United Kingdom Coca-Cola Nordic Racing Lola T99/50-Zytek
2002 France Sébastien Bourdais United Kingdom Super Nova Racing Lola B02/50-Zytek United Kingdom Arden International Lola B02/50-Zytek
2003 Sweden Björn Wirdheim United Kingdom Arden International Lola B02/50-Zytek United Kingdom Arden International Lola B02/50-Zytek
2004 Italy Vitantonio Liuzzi United Kingdom Arden International Lola B02/50-Zytek United Kingdom Arden International Lola B02/50-Zytek

Three past F3000 champions (Müller, Junqueira and Wirdheim) have never been entered in an F1 race. Montoya and Bourdais became Champions in North American open-wheel (CART and Champcar) respectively, with Fittipaldi, Moreno, Junqueira and Wilson also becoming race winners, and Wirdheim making the ranks. Müller became a BMW driver in WTCC touring car racing after having been a test driver for the BMW-Williams F1 project in 1999 as well as a racer of the BMW V12 LMR Le Mans winner. Sospiri attempted to qualify for one Formula One race but failed to make it, as part of the disastrous MasterCard Lola team. Wirdheim has been third driver in practice sessions for Jaguar Racing, but has never participated in a race.

Three past F3000 champions have won an F1 Grand Prix: Alesi, Panis and Montoya (who also won the Indy 500).

Other F3000 series

Main article: Formula 3000

References

  1. 1986 FIA Yearbook, Red section, page 82
  2. 1987 FIA Yearbook, Red section, page 98
  3. 1988 FIA Yearbook, Red section, page 97
  4. Automobile Year 1988/89, pages 236-242
  5. 2004 FIA Formula 3000 International Championship Classifications Retrieved from web.archive.org on 25 April 2010
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