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The Forti FG01, also designated Forti FG01-95, was a Formula One car for the 1995 season and was the first car made by Forti. The number 21 seat was taken by rookie Pedro Diniz and the number 22 seat was taken by veteran Roberto Moreno. The team never employed a test driver. The engine was a Ford EDD 3.0 V8. The team's main sponsor was Parmalat. The FG01 is also notably the last F1 car to sport a conventional manual gearbox + H-pattern shifter, and was the only car to use one on the grid.

Forti FG01
Forti FG01B
CategoryFormula One
ConstructorForti
Designer(s)Giacomo Caliri (Executive Engineer)
Sergio Rinland (Technical Director)
Giorgio Stirano (Chief Designer)
Chris Radage (Head of Design)
Hans Fouche (Head of Aerodynamics)
SuccessorFG03
Technical specifications[1][2]
ChassisCarbon-fibre monocoque
Suspension (front)Double wishbones, pushrod
Suspension (rear)As front
Axle trackFront: 1,700 mm (67 in)
Rear: 1,600 mm (63 in)
Wheelbase2,950 mm (116 in)
EngineFord ED 3-litre V8 (75°) (1995)
Ford Zetec-R 3-litre V8 (90°) (1996) mid-engined
TransmissionHewland six-speed manual/semi-automatic
Power630–660 hp (470–490 kW)[3]
WeightChassis weight (tub): 42 kg (93 lb)
Formula weight: 595 kg (1,312 lb) (including driver)
FuelElf
LubricantsSTP
TyresGoodyear
Competition history
Notable entrantsParmalat Forti Ford (1995)
Forti Grand Prix (1996)
Notable drivers21. Brazil Pedro Diniz (1995)
22. Brazil Roberto Moreno (1995)
22. Italy Luca Badoer (1996)
23. Italy Andrea Montermini (1996)
Debut1995 Brazilian Grand Prix
RacesWinsPolesF/Laps
22000

The car was designed by Giacomo Caliri and Giorgio Stirano, with input from Sergio Rinland, and was built at the team's base in Alessandria, Italy.[4]

Concept

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Building its own car for the first time was the hardest task for the team (as required by the F1 regulations). This turned out to be the main obstacle for Guido Forti, as he insisted on having a reliable car built instead of a fast one. That was precisely what he received: his first F1 car, the Forti FG01, was an outdated, overweight and very slow machine, and has been described as nothing more than "a revised F3000 car"[5] and, more harshly, "a fearful pile of junk".[6]

"It simply wasn't efficient and we had to restart it. We took off more than 60 kg from the first version to the last and by Silverstone we were on the minimum weight limit. During the year we also had to re-homologate the nose and side pods, develop the semi-automatic gearbox, which was worth about half a second a lap, and redesign the monocoque, not in terms of shape but in terms of the lay-up of the skins."

Giorgio Stirano on the problems experienced with the FG01.[1]

 
A graph of the FG01's qualifying performance throughout the 1995 season.

The FG01 had many influences. Its roots dated back to 1991 when former Brabham designer Rinland left the British team before the season ended. Rinland set up Astauto Ltd. in Tolworth, England, hiring several of his former collaborators from Brabham when the team closed its doors. Brabham sold the building and wind tunnel at Chessington to Yamaha, facilities that Astauto rented to develop the new Fondmetal GR02, which was designed and built by June 1992, just six months after it was commissioned by Gabriele Rumi. The Fondmetal GR02 was a natural successor of the Brabham BT60, in concept, as it was conceived by the same design team. Due to Fondmetal's own severe financial troubles, the GR02 was run only in a few races before the team was closed. When in late 1994, Forti bought the remains of the Fondmetal Team, acquiring all the spares of the GR02 in the process, the team then turned to Rinland to purchase the design of what would have been the 1993 F1 car design by the Astauto Design Team after the collapse of the Fondmetal team. At that time, Rinland was living and working in California on a new ChampCar project. Forti sent his Chief Designer and former Astauto employee Chris Radage to California to gather all the technical information, data and drawings from Rinland, returning to Italy to design and develop the new Forti FG01. Rinland joined the team in early 1995 for a short period as Technical Director, once he had returned to Europe.[7] Rinland assisted experienced Italian engineers Giorgio Stirano[1] and Giacomo Caliri in designing the car.[8] The car's aerodynamics were completed by former Brabham employee Hans Fouche using wind-tunnels in South Africa, and composite work was done by the Belco Avia company.[9] However, it was rumoured that the FG01 was little more than a re-working of the GR02.[10]

Thus the FG01 did not promise much in terms of performance. It was angular and bulky, with poor aerodynamic performance negatively affecting grip and handling; it had a plump nose, initially no airbox, and was overweight and under-powered, using a small Ford-Cosworth ED V8 customer engine largely financed by Ford Brasil, which developed an estimated 100 bhp less than the most powerful engine in the field, the Renault V10 supplied to the Benetton and Williams teams.[11] It was also the only car to have a manual gearbox in the 1995 F1 season. The only attractive thing about the car was its blue and yellow colour scheme accompanied by fluorescent green wheel-rims, illustrating the team's Brazilian influence in its first year.[10] Rinland subsequently left the team after a few weeks, after falling out with the team's management over the car's lack of competitiveness.[1][12]

For 1996, the car was upgraded to B specification, with Luca Badoer and Andrea Montermini on board. It was eventually replaced by the Forti FG03 car for the Monaco Grand Prix.

Complete Formula One World Championship results

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(key)

Year Chassis Engine Tyres Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Points WCC
1995 Forti FG01 Ford ED V8 G BRA ARG SMR ESP MON CAN FRA GBR GER HUN BEL ITA POR EUR PAC JPN AUS 0 NC
Pedro Diniz 10 NC NC Ret 10 Ret Ret Ret Ret Ret 13 9 16 13 17 Ret 7
Roberto Moreno Ret NC NC Ret Ret Ret 16 Ret Ret Ret 14 DNS 17 Ret 16 Ret Ret
1996 Forti FG01B Ford Zetec-R V8 G AUS BRA ARG EUR SMR MON ESP CAN FRA GBR GER HUN BEL ITA POR JPN 0 NC
Luca Badoer DNQ 11 Ret DNQ
Andrea Montermini DNQ Ret 10 DNQ DNQ
Sources:[13][14]

References

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Footnotes

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  1. ^ a b c d Constanduros, Bob (1995). "Formula 1 Review: Forti". In Henry, Alan (ed.). AUTOCOURSE 1995-96. Hazleton Publishing Ltd. p. 71. ISBN 1-874557-36-5.
  2. ^ Henry, Alan (1996). "Formula 1 Review: Forti". In Henry, Alan (ed.). Autocourse 1996–97. Hazleton Publishing Ltd. p. 92. ISBN 1-874557-91-8.
  3. ^ "Engine Ford Cosworth • STATS F1".
  4. ^ "Forti - getting ready for action" GrandPrix. Retrieved 11 March 2007
  5. ^ Ménard, Vol. 2, p.626.
  6. ^ Saward, Joe (1996-01-01). "No news is big news!". grandprix.com. Retrieved 2007-08-23.
  7. ^ "Rinland joins Forti". grandprix.com. 1995-03-27. Retrieved 2006-01-13.
  8. ^ "Forti - getting ready for action". grandprix.com. 1995-02-06. Retrieved 2007-04-03.
  9. ^ "Constructors: Forti Corse S.R.L." grandprix.com. Retrieved 2008-03-14.
  10. ^ a b "Forti-Corse - full profile". f1rejects.com. Archived from the original on October 10, 2007. Retrieved 2006-10-29.
  11. ^ Domenjoz (ed.), pp. 36-37
  12. ^ "Rinland leaves Forti?". grandprix.com. 1995-05-08. Retrieved 2007-01-13.
  13. ^ "All championship race entries, in a Forti". ChicaneF1. p. 2. Retrieved 17 September 2021.
  14. ^ "Forti FG01–95". StatsF1. Retrieved 17 September 2021.
    "Forti FG01-95B". StatsF1. Retrieved 17 September 2021.

Books

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