Recent Updates

 

03/12/2026 12:00 AM

New MG S9 due in UK this month as £34k, seven-seat PHEV

 

03/12/2026 12:00 AM

Nissan gives X-Trail rugged makeover, reduces engine options

 

03/12/2026 12:00 AM

Government to review planned fuel duty rise as Iran war causes price surge at pumps

 

03/12/2026 12:00 AM

A110 EV still Alpine's focus but ICE variant adds 'growth possibilities'

 

03/12/2026 12:00 AM

Alfa Romeo GTV: a humble Fiat hatchback turned into a 150mph star

 

03/11/2026 12:00 PM

A roof on a scooter? Volvo sorting itself out, A-Class vs A2

 

03/11/2026 12:00 PM

New £45,000 Jaecoo 8 is brand's largest, plushest car yet

 

03/11/2026 12:00 PM

New MG 4X crossover brings semi-solid-state batteries

 

03/11/2026 12:00 PM

Every model discounted by the UK's Electric Car Grant

 

03/11/2026 12:00 PM

Revealed: the best used cars in every segment

<<    17   18   19   20   21   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 7920   Next >
Damn Fine Value: When Ford hit F1 jackpot with Cosworth DFV
Sunday, Mar 08, 2026 12:00 AM
7 1967 dutch gp from newspress colour As the Blue Oval rejoins the grid, we look back at the most successful engine in F1 history

Powering 155 race wins, 12 drivers' and 10 constructors' titles, the Ford-Cosworth DFV (Double Four Valve) is the greatest engine in Formula 1 history. And the deal that put the Blue Oval on its cover might be the biggest bargain in the history of the sport.

The DFV was born when Lotus boss Colin Chapman was looking for a firm to replace long-time partner Coventry Climax, which had chosen not to build a unit for 1966's new 3.0-litre F1 rules.

Former Lotus gearbox engineer Keith Duckworth had just founded Cosworth with Mike Costin and reckoned they could produce a competitive engine with £100,000 of investment.

Ford of Britain's PR chief, Walter Hayes, spotted an opportunity and persuaded the company's board to stump up the cash.

Jim Clark won on the engine's debut in the 1967 Dutch Grand Prix, and the DFV quickly became the choice of the privateer squads. In the 1969 and 1973 seasons, a DFV-powered car won every race.

The 1980s turbo era marked the end of the DFV's dominance, with its final win claimed by Tyrrell's Michele Alboreto in the 1983 Detroit Grand Prix. Subsequent Ford-Cosworth engines weren't so successful, with the high being Michael Schumacher's 1994 title, in which he won eight of 16 races in a Benetton powered by an EC Zetec-R.

Ford's final win was an opportunistic success for Jordan's Giancarlo Fisichella in the 2003 Brazilian Grand Prix. While the DFV was a bargain, Ford's ownership of its own squad emphatically was not.

In 2000, the firm bought Stewart Grand Prix and rebranded it Jaguar Racing.

Despite heavy investment, it claimed just two podiums in five seasons before Ford cut its losses and sold the team at the end of 2004 to energy drinks firm Red Bull. Yes - the team Ford now returns to the grid with.