Kauhsenwas aFormula Oneconstructor fromGermany,founded by former sportscar driverWilli Kauhsen.The team started in Formula Two in 1976, purchasing Renault cars, and raced with an assortment of drivers with limited success. Kauhsen then entered the1979 Formula One season,spending 1978 designing their own chassis with Cosworth engines. They participated in two World Championship Grands Prix withGianfranco Brancatelli,failing to qualify on both occasions, before the team was shut down.

Kauhsen
Full nameWilli Kauhsen Racing Team
BaseEschweiler,Germany
Founder(s)Willi Kauhsen
Noted staffKlaus Kapitza
Noted driversItalyGianfranco Brancatelli
Formula OneWorld Championship career
First entry1979 Spanish Grand Prix
Races entered2
Constructors'
Championships
0
Drivers'
Championships
0
Race victories0
Pole positions0
Fastest laps0
Final entry1979 Belgian Grand Prix
Willi Kauhsen on the right,Henri Pescaroloon the left, atCircuit de Spa-Francorchampsin Belgium in 1975

Formula Two

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Willi Kauhsen, who had racedPorschesand quasi-worksAlfa Romeosports cars, founded his racing team inFormula Twoin 1976, buying the championship-winning Elf-Renault 2J Formula Two cars.[1]The cars, driven byMichel LeclèreandKlaus Ludwig,[2]were renamed to Kauhsen-Renaults and initially started successfully, with Leclère taking pole at the first race of the1977 Formula Two championshipatSilverstone.[3]Continued modifications to thechassisby Kauhsen however led to downturns in performance,[1]and the car's original performance turned to successive failures to qualify; the poor results making Ludwig leave the squad mid-season. The second seat was then rotated betweenJosé Dolhem,Vittorio BrambillaandAlain Prostfor the remainder of the season. Brambilla achieved a third place in the second heat at theMisano Circuit,[3]which was the team's best result in the Formula Two championship. Subsequent races saw a best result of 10th for Prost, and with successive retirements and failures to qualify Kauhsen gave up on the championship before the final races.[3]

Formula One

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Although unsuccessful in Formula Two, Kauhsen decided to enter Formula One in1979,and after failing to secure a deal to run theKojimacars used in the1977 Japanese Grand Prix,[1]Kauhsen spent 1978 designing their own chassis. Bringing in designer Klaus Kapitza fromFord,Kauhsen planned to construct a copy of theLotus 79,[2]a car that had dominated the 1978 championship due to the use ofground effects.Apart from the chassis, Kauhsen bought the rest of the components from suppliers, including theCosworth DFVengine utilised by the majority of the teams at the time, and an outdated five-speedgearboxfromHewland.[1]Having planned to follow the then-advanced use of ground effects byLotus,initial testing of the prototype revealed fundamental design issues; the designers failed to take account of the variable ride height of cars during braking and acceleration, stopping the ground effects functioning correctly.[1][3]These problems forced the team to redesign the entire car, bringing in driversPatrick NèveandHarald Ertlto develop a new car with the limited funds available in the months before the Formula One season was to begin.

The problems in getting working ground effects on the chassis led to the team abandoning the concept, and returning to the older "wing car" that had been in prevalence before. These redesigns drained the team of funds; Kauhsen struggled to pay the entry fee for the championship, and only managed to acquire older tyres fromGoodyear.[1]After obtaining some sponsorship, and signing Italian driverGianfranco Brancatelli,the Kauhsen WK004 made its début appearance at the first race of the1979 British Formula One seasoninZolder,[4]albeit retiring early in the race due to engine issues.[5]Kauhsen's first World Championship appearance was at theSpanish Grand Prix,using another redesigned car.[3]Brancatelli failed to qualify for the race, being the slowest out of the 27 entries, the closest competitor being three seconds quicker.[1]Running an updated car at the next race inBelgium,[6]Brancatelli again failed to qualify, with a broken clutch preventing an improvement in pace.[1]After the two successive failures, and a lack of funds, Willi Kauhsen withdrew from Formula One and closed the team.[3]

The team's assets were purchased byArturo Merzario,[7]and was merged with his own eponymousMerzarioteam, which had been having a similar lack of success with the A2 chassis. The Kauhsen WK was used as the basis for theGiampaolo Dallaradesigned Merzario A4 car,[2]but this did not improve from the performance of either of the cars, failing to qualify at the remaining World Championship rounds. The A4's only racing appearance was at the non-championshipDino Ferrari Grand Prix,finishing in 11th place.[3]Merzario later left Formula One at the end of 1979, and moved to the Formula Two championship.

Complete European Formula Two results

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(key) (Results inboldindicate pole position; results initalicsindicate fastest lap.)

Year Chassis Engine(s) Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
1976 March 762 Hart
BMW
HOC THR VAL SAL PAU HOC ROU MUG PER EST NOG HOC
Ingo Hoffmann Ret 5 Ret Ret DNS 6 8 DNQ DNQ 8
Jochen Mass Ret
Klaus Ludwig Ret 13 5 9 9 5 10
Arturo Merzario DNS
1977 Jabouille 2J Renault SIL THR HOC NÜR VAL PAU MUG ROU NOG PER MIS EST DON
Michel Leclère Ret Ret Ret DNS Ret Ret DNS DNQ 15 DNQ 10
Klaus Ludwig Ret Ret Ret 9 DSQ 7
José Dolhem Ret
Alain Prost 10
Vittorio Brambilla Ret
Mario da Silva DNQ

Complete Formula One World Championship results

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(key)

Year Chassis Engine Tyres Drivers No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Points WCC
1979 WK FordCosworth DFV3.0V8 G ARG BRA RSA USW ESP BEL MON FRA GBR GER AUT NED ITA CAN USA 0 NC
Gianfranco Brancatelli 36 DNQ DNQ
Source:[8]

References

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  1. ^abcdefgh"Kauhsen Profile".Formula One rejects. 2003-08-17. Archived fromthe originalon 2010-12-28.Retrieved2011-02-11.
  2. ^abc"Encyclopedia: Kauhsen".Grandprix.Inside F1. 2001-08-08.Retrieved2011-02-11.
  3. ^abcdefgDiepraam, Mattijs."One of F1's most abysmal efforts".FORIX.Autosport.Retrieved2011-02-10.
  4. ^"Kauhsen WK/004".OldRacingCars.Retrieved2020-05-22.
  5. ^"Aurora F1 - 1979".GEL Motorsport.Retrieved2011-02-18.
  6. ^"Kauhsen WK/005".OldRacingCars.Retrieved2020-05-22.
  7. ^"Merzario Profile".Formula One rejects. 2004-10-03. Archived fromthe originalon 2008-07-25.Retrieved2011-11-09.
  8. ^"Results from Formula1".