Category | Formula One | ||||||||
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Constructor | Shadow Racing Cars | ||||||||
Designer(s) |
Tony Southgate Dave Wass |
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Predecessor | DN5B / DN7 | ||||||||
Successor | DN9 | ||||||||
Technical specifications | |||||||||
Chassis | Aluminium monocoque | ||||||||
Axle track | Front: 1,473 mm (58.0 in) Rear: 1,524 mm (60.0 in) |
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Wheelbase | 2,718 mm (107.0 in) | ||||||||
Engine | Cosworth DFV NA | ||||||||
Transmission | Hewland TL 200 5-speed manual | ||||||||
Weight | 620 kg (1,370 lb) | ||||||||
Fuel | Fina/Valvoline | ||||||||
Tyres | Goodyear | ||||||||
Competition history | |||||||||
Notable drivers |
Tom Pryce Alan Jones Riccardo Patrese Clay Regazzoni |
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Debut | 1976 Dutch Grand Prix | ||||||||
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Constructors' Championships | 0 | ||||||||
Drivers' Championships | 0 |
The Shadow DN8 was a Formula One car used by the Shadow team during the 1976, 1977 and 1978 Formula One seasons. Driven by Alan Jones, it won the 1977 Austrian Grand Prix, Shadow's only Grand Prix victory.
The Shadow DN8 was conceptualised by Tony Southgate before he left the team to join Team Lotus. Dave Wass then completed the design work. It featured a low monocoque tub with hip radiators and an oil cooler positioned in the nose (but which would later be moved). Originally intended for the beginning of the 1976 season, a lack of funds following the withdrawal of major sponsor UOP the previous year meant the DN8 did not make its debut until late in the year, at the Dutch Grand Prix. Only one DN8 was produced for 1976, and it would not be until the third race of the following season that two DN8s were available for the drivers.
Southgate returned to the team in the summer of 1977, and this prompted development of the DN8; the chassis was slimmed down with the water and oil coolers reworked for the latter part of the season.
After qualifying third in the hands of Tom Pryce, the DN8 finished fourth in its first race of the year, in the 1976 Dutch Grand Prix. After the promise of this first race, it reverted to a midfield runner for the rest of the season. This continued into the early part of the 1977 Formula One season. After Pryce was killed during the South African Grand Prix, the team brought in Alan Jones as a replacement. Jones finished in the points in Monaco and Belgium, and scored a win in the Austrian Grand Prix, from 14th on the grid. He had run second for much of the race and inherited the lead when James Hunt's car developed engine trouble. Jones finished third in Italy and fourth in Canada and Japan for 22 points and 7th in the Drivers Championship standings.