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Williams FW24

Williams FW24
Williams FW24
Category Formula One
Constructor Williams
Designer(s) Patrick Head (Technical Director)
Gavin Fisher (Chief Designer)
Geoff Willis (Chief Aerodynamicist)
Predecessor FW23
Successor FW25
Technical specifications
Chassis Carbon-fibre monocoque
Suspension (front) Williams double wishbone, torsion bar, pushrod
Suspension (rear) Williams double wishbone, coil spring, pushrod
Engine BMW P81 2998 cc V10 (90°) naturally aspirated
Transmission Williams 7-speed longitudinal semi-automatic sequential
Fuel Petrobras
Lubricants Castrol
Tyres Michelin
Competition history
Notable entrants BMW Williams F1 Team
Notable drivers 5. Germany Ralf Schumacher
6. Colombia Juan Pablo Montoya
Debut 2002 Australian Grand Prix
Races Wins Poles F.Laps
17 1 7 3
Constructors' Championships 0
Drivers' Championships 0

The Williams FW24 was Williams F1 chassis for the 2002 F1 season. It was closely based on the previous year's FW23, and powered by a development of the ultra-powerful BMW engine from 2001. The car was aerodynamically inferior to the Ferrari and to the rival McLaren, but the engine's outright power put in on a par with the competition. However the BMW engine was unreliable, and Williams failed to rival Ferrari.

The car proved competitive, but no match for the dominant Ferrari F2002. Ralf Schumacher scored the team's only win of the season in Malaysia. Juan Pablo Montoya set an impressive run of five consecutive pole positions with the car in midseason, and completed the fastest lap of any circuit in formula 1 history during pre-qualifying, pace that he maintained to set pole position at Monza for the Italian Grand Prix (a track that favours engine power) with a lap average of 162.95 mph (262.242 km/h), completing the lap in 1:19.525, breaking the record previously set by former Williams driver Keke Rosberg at the 1985 British Grand Prix at Silverstone who lapped at an average of 160.9 mph (258.9 km/h) in his Honda turbo powered Williams FW10.

Williams finished second in the Constructors' Championship to Ferrari this season, trumping the McLaren team, which had a competitive but unreliable car.

() (results in bold indicate pole position)

Drivers did not finish the Grand Prix, but were classified as they completed over 90% of the race distance.


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