Brabham BT10 explained

The Brabham BT10 was a Formula 2 racing car designed by Ron Tauranac and powered by a 1500cc Cosworth 109E engine. Motor Racing Developments ran the BT10 in Formula Two, The 'BT10' campaigned fairly successfully in F2, taking several wins. The car was also entered for two Formula One races, John Willment Automobiles entered a BT10 at the 1964 British Grand Prix for Frank Gardner to drive but retired when he had an accident.[1] The BT10 final F1 race was the 1965 South African Grand Prix on New Year's Day. Two BT10s were entered, David Prophet entered himself to drive and John Willment Automobiles entered Paul Hawkins. The race saw Hawkins 9th and Prophet 14th.[2] The car was replaced by the Brabham BT16.

Complete Formula One World Championship results

(key) (Results in bold indicate pole position; results in italics indicate fastest lap.)

YearEntrantEngine(s)TyresDrivers12345678910PointsWCC
John Willment AutomobilesFord 109E, 1.5 L4MONNEDBELFRAGBRGERAUTITAUSAMEX304th
Frank GardnerRet
John Willment AutomobilesFord 109E, 1.5 L4RSAMONBELFRAGBRNEDGERITAUSAMEX27 (31)3rd
Paul Hawkins9
David ProphetDavid Prophet14

All points was scored by the Brabham BT7 and Brabham BT11.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Grand Prix results, British GP 1964 . 2 February 2016 . grandprix.com.
  2. Web site: Grand Prix results, South African GP 1965 . 2 February 2016 . grandprix.com.