Tim Densham

British engineer

Tim Densham
Born (1955-03-31) March 31, 1955 (age 69)
NationalityUnited Kingdom British
CitizenshipBritish
OccupationEngineer
Known forFormula One Engineer
TitleFormer Chief Designer

Tim Densham (born 31 March 1955[1]) is a former British Formula One engineer. He was most recently the chief designer at the Renault Formula One team.[2]

Biography

Densham started his career in motorsport with Team Lotus – the top team at the time – and started working at Ketteringham Hall under Colin Chapman. Densham soon was promoted to the position of race engineer, where he worked with Elio de Angelis in 1984 and Johnny Dumfries the following year. He went on to work with Satoru Nakajima when the team landed Honda engines in 1986. Away from the race tracks, he did a lot of testing work with Ayrton Senna[3] and Nelson Piquet and eventually became assistant chief engineer in charge of Team Lotus research and development department. Team Lotus, however, was plagued with financial issues, so in 1990 Densham decided to move on and found a job with Brabham.[2]

He worked as a designer once again and was the race engineer for Stefano Modena in 1990 and Mark Blundell in 1991. When Sergio Rinland left the team at the end of 1991 Densham was named chief designer for the BT61 project but the team went bankrupt so it closed down in the middle of the season with the new car never having been built. In late 1992 Densham joined Tyrrell as a design engineer. He was soon back on the racing team as race engineer to Andrea de Cesaris, Mark Blundell (again) and Ukyo Katayama, who he engineered in 1995 and 1996.[2]

At the start of 1998, however, Densham decided that he no longer wanted to attend races as he had in the past and moved to the test team. In the mid-season he quietly left Tyrrell and soon afterwards began working at a secret design center in Leatherhead, Surrey, on the Honda F1 car.[4] This was built by Dallara in Italy and ran for the first time in December with Jos Verstappen at the wheel. The death of Harvey Postlethwaite in 1999 resulted in Honda canceling the program and Densham was recruited to be chief designer at Benetton. He led the engineering department which designed the Benetton-Playlife B200 and remained with the team after it was taken over by Renault Sport.[5]

With Renault, Densham designed cars won back to back drivers' and constructors' titles in 2005 and 2006 and were one of the most competitive teams in the mid to late 2000s. In 2011 Densham left Renault and retired from Formula One.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Tim Densham". www.oldracingcars.com. Retrieved 9 October 2021.
  2. ^ a b c "Tim Densham". Grand Prix.com.
  3. ^ "Senna with test engineer Densham". Motorsport Images (found on Pinterest).
  4. ^ "Tim Densham". Old Racing Cars.
  5. ^ "Renault interview with Densham". motorsport.com.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ "Renault loses long time chief designer". Auto123.
  • v
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Renault in Formula One
Équipe Renault Elf (19771985)
Renault F1 Team (20022010)
Notable personnel
James Allison
Bob Bell
Éric Boullier
Flavio Briatore
Dirk de Beer
Jean-François Caubet
Nick Chester
Denis Chevrier
Alain Dassas
Tim Densham
Mike Elliott
Patrick Faure
John Iley
Ayao Komatsu
Gérard López
Patrick Louis
Eric Lux
Rob Marshall
Paul Monaghan
Jarrod Murphy
Rod Nelson
Steve Nielsen
Alan Permane
Simon Rennie
Bernard Rey
Mark Slade
Mark Smith
Pat Symonds
Rémi Taffin
Dino Toso
Jon Tomlinson
Naoki Tokunaga
Jonathan Wheatley
Rob White
Notable drivers
Jarno Trulli
Jenson Button
Giancarlo Fisichella
Heikki Kovalainen
Nelson Piquet Jr.
Robert Kubica
World Champion(s)
Spain Fernando Alonso
Drivers' titles
2005
2006
Constructors' titles
2005
2006
Formula One cars
R202
R23
R24
R25
R26
R27
R28
R29
R30
Related
Renault
Renault Sport
RF1 Driver Programme
Renault Formula One crash controversy
Lotus Renault GP (2011)
Renault F1 Team (20162020)
Titles achieved with Renault engines
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Benetton Formula
Founder
Luciano Benetton
Personnel
James Allison
Ben Agathangelou
Giorgio Ascanelli
John Barnard
Bob Bell
Rocco Benetton
Ross Brawn
Flavio Briatore
Rory Byrne
Nick Chester
Peter Collins
Frank Coppuck
Tim Densham
Pat Fry
Mike Gascoyne
Rob Marshall
Steve Matchett
Paul Monaghan
Jarrod Murphy
Steve Nielsen
Alan Permane
David Richards
Sergio Rinland
Mark Smith
Nigel Stepney
Pat Symonds
Rob Taylor
Willem Toet
Nikolas Tombazis
Dino Toso
Naoki Tokunaga
Joan Villadelprat
John Walton
Jonathan Wheatley
Nick Wirth
World Champions
Michael Schumacher
Drivers
Teo Fabi
Gerhard Berger
Thierry Boutsen
Alessandro Nannini
Johnny Herbert
Emanuele Pirro
Nelson Piquet
Roberto Moreno
Michael Schumacher
Martin Brundle
Riccardo Patrese
JJ Lehto
Jos Verstappen
Jean Alesi
Alexander Wurz
Giancarlo Fisichella
Jenson Button
Drivers' titles
1994
1995
Constructors' titles
1995
Formula One cars
B186
B187
B188
B189
B189B
B190
B190B
B191
B191B
B192
B193
B193B
B194
B195
B196
B197
B198
B199
B200
B201
Benetton Group
Toleman
Renault