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Jacques Villeneuve 2005 Canada
Sauber C24
Race Car
Category Formula One
Constructor Sauber
Designer Willy Rampf (Technical Director)
Jacky Eeckelaert (Engineering Director)
Christoph Zimmermann (Head of Chassis Design)
Phil Arnaboldi (Head of Car Concept)
Seamus Mullarkey (Head of Aerodynamics)
Dirk de Beer (Principal Aerodynamicist)
Predecessor Sauber C23
Successor BMW Sauber F1.06
Chassis {{{Chassis}}}
Suspension (front) Upper and lower wishbones, inboard springs and dampers, actuated by pushrods
Suspension (rear) Same as front
Engine Petronas 05A (Ferrari 053) 3.0 90° V10 naturally aspirated mid-engined, longitudinally mounted
Electric_motor {{{Electric motor}}}
Battery {{{Battery}}}
Power {{{Power}}}
Transmission Sauber 7-speed Semi automatic
Weight {{{Weight}}}
Fuel {{{Fuel}}}
Brakes {{{Brakes}}}
Tyres Michelin
Notable entrants Sauber Petronas
Notable drivers 11. 25px Canada Jacques Villeneuve
12. 25px Brazil Felipe Massa
Debut 2005 Australian Grand Prix
Races competed 19
Race victories 0
Podiums 0
Constructors' Championships 0
Drivers' Championships 0
Pole positions 0
Fastest laps 0


The Sauber C24 was a Formula One car built by Sauber for the 2005 season.

The C24 was driven by Jacques Villeneuve and Felipe Massa, the first time Sauber had a non-European driver lineup. The team didn't have a test driver. Sauber finished eighth in the Constructors' Championship scoring just 20 points - the team's lowest finish since 2000 season.

Overview[]

Jacques Villeneuve 2005 San Marino

Jacques Villeneuve in the pits at the 2005 San Marino Grand Prix.

The Sauber C24 was supposed due to be launched in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on 11 January to mark the 10th anniversary of Petronas, but the launch was cancelled due to the Asian tsunami disaster in 2004.[1] This car was the first completely designed with the team's new wind tunnel at Hinwil. The engine was a Petronas 05A 3.0 V10.

Sponsorship and livery[]

Sauber went into 2005 season with sponsorship continuity. The livery had a sponsorship change with Red Bull sponsorship departing to Red Bull Racing after a nine-year alliance with Sauber. The front nose livery was changed to blue due to usage of Michelin Tires, previously the nose livery was white in 2001-2004 seasons. The team's main sponsor was Credit Suisse.

Sauber C24B[]

The Sauber team was taken over by BMW for the 2006 season. A C24B variant of the car fitted with BMW's P86 V8 Formula One engine was used in early testing between the 2005 and 2006 seasons in the hands of Nick Heidfeld and Jacques Villeneuve. On 27 November 2005, Heidfeld attended a Sauber seat fitting with his former boss Peter Sauber. On 28 November-2 December 2005, Heidfeld attended off-season testing at Barcelona in a C24B car using Michelin tyres. On 7–17 December 2005, Heidfeld and Villeneuve attended off season testing at Circuito de Jerez with the same car. Just before the launch of BMW Sauber F1.06, Heidfeld attended off-season testing with C24B car in the full white interim livery on 10–13 January 2006.

Complete Formula One results[]

(key)

Year Entrant Engine Tyres Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Points WCC
2005 Sauber Petronas Petronas V10* M AUS MAL BHR SMR ESP MON EUR CAN USA FRA GBR GER HUN TUR ITA BEL BRA JPN CHN 20 8th
25px Canada Jacques Villeneuve 13 Ret 11 4 Ret 11 13 9 DNS 8 14 15 Ret 11 11 6 12 12 10
25px Brazil Felipe Massa 10 10 7 10 11 9 14 4 DNS Ret 10 8 14 Ret 9 10 11 10 6

* denotes Ferrari engine badged as Petronas

References[]



image (between 170-190 pixels)
Sauber

Founder

Peter Sauber

Notable personnel

Ruth Buscombe · Dirk de Beer · Jost Capito · Monisha Kaltenborn · James Key · Matt Morris · Steve Nichols · Tom McCullough · John Owen · Xevi Pujolar · Willy Rampf · Leo Ress · Andreas Seidl · Loïc Serra · Mark Smith · Julien Simon-Chautemps · Willem Toet · Mario Theissen · Frédéric Vasseur · Pierre Waché · Ben Waterhouse · Max Welti · Jörg Zander · Beat Zehnder · Christoph Zimmermann

Notable drivers

25px Austria Karl Wendlinger · 25px Germany Heinz-Harald Frentzen · 25px Great Britain Johnny Herbert · 25px France Jean Alesi ·25px Germany Nick Heidfeld · 25px Finland Kimi Räikkönen · 25px Brazil Felipe Massa · 25px Italy Giancarlo Fisichella · 25px Canada Jacques Villeneuve · 25px Flag of Poland Robert Kubica · 25px Germany Sebastian Vettel ·25px Japan Kamui Kobayashi · 25px Mexico Sergio Pérez · 25px Sweden Marcus Ericsson · 25px Monaco Charles Leclerc

Sportscars

C1 · C2 · C3 · C4 · C5 · SHS C6 · C7 · C8 · C9 · C11 · C291 · C292

Formula One cars

C12 · C13 · C14 · C15 · C16 · C17 · C18 · C19 · C20 · C21 · C22 · C23 · C24 · F1.06 · F1.07 · F1.08 · F1.09 · C29 · C30 · C31 · C32 · C33 · C34 · C35 · C36 · C37

Related

Alfa Romeo in Formula One · BMW in Formula One · Mercedes-Benz in motorsport

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Smallwikipedialogo.png This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Sauber C24. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Autopedia, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.


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