Project Four Racing

British auto racing team


title: "Project Four Racing" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["formula-two-entrants", "british-auto-racing-teams", "british-formula-three-teams", "auto-racing-teams-established-in-1976"] description: "British auto racing team" topic_path: "geography/united-kingdom" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Four_Racing" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary British auto racing team ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox motor racing team"]

FieldValue
nameGBR Project Four Racing
founded1976
principalRon Dennis
former seriesEuropean Formula Two Championship
British Formula 3 Championship
BMW M1 Procar Championship
folded1980
(merged with McLaren)
::

| name = GBR Project Four Racing | logo = | founded = 1976 | principal = Ron Dennis | former series = European Formula Two Championship British Formula 3 Championship BMW M1 Procar Championship | folded = 1980 (merged with McLaren)

Project Four Racing was a British Formula Two and Formula Three team. The team was founded in 1976 by former Brabham mechanic Ron Dennis. At the end of 1980, the team merged with the McLaren Formula One team.

The team name lived on in the designation of the McLaren F1 race cars from to the season, all McLarens, starting with the John Barnard designed McLaren MP4/1, had carried the "MP4" name, with MP4 standing for "Marlboro Project 4" and later "McLaren Project 4". The road car McLaren MP4-12C also carried the prefix until it was dropped for the 2012 model year. From onward, after the departure of Dennis from McLaren, the team began to designate their cars with the name "MCL".

Racing history

Formula Two

The team competed in the European Formula Two Championship. Driving a BMW powered Ralt RT1, Eddie Cheever recorded the team's first race win in in the second of two races making up Round 4 at the Nürburgring on his way to finishing second for the round. Cheever then went on to win Round 8 at the Rouen-Les-Essarts circuit. He finished the season in second place, 12 points behind René Arnoux.

Over the next three seasons, Project Four would win just four more races before the team moved into Formula One with its last win coming thanks to Andrea de Cesaris who won Round 8 of the 1980 season at Misano in Italy driving a March 802-BMW.

Formula Three

Project Four also raced in the British Formula Three Championship. Its first win came thanks to Chico Serra, who won the opening round of the 1979 championship on Silverstone's Club Circuit driving a Toyota powered March 793. Serra won five of the seasons twenty races to win the championship from Andrea de Cesaris who drove a March 793-Toyota for Tiga. Stefan Johansson won the 1980 British Formula Three Championship driving for Project Four Racing.

BMW M1 Procar Championship

For the BMW M1 Procar Championship, all cars were built to identical standards, although their origins varied. BS Fabrications constructed five cars for the BMW factory team, while cars for other competitors were constructed by Project Four Racing or the Italian constructor Osella. The racing cars, designed to meet Group 4 technical regulations, shared only some basics from the M1 road cars.

In 1979, Procar constructor Project Four entered a car for Niki Lauda when he was not in the factory entries. Lauda won 3 races for P4, and the series, before retiring from F1 racing in late September. In 1980, Hans-Joachim Stuck won two events for P4, finishing 3rd overall.

Complete European Formula Two results

(key) (Results in bold indicate pole position; results in italics indicate fastest lap.) ::data[format=table]

YearChassisEngine(s)Drivers12345678910111213
March 752 762
Ralt RT1Lancia-Ferrari
Hart 420RHOCTHRVALSALPAUHOCROUMUGPERESTNOGHOC
USA Eddie CheeverDNQ4DSQRetRetRetRet35815
FRG Jochen MassDNQ
ITA Vittorio BrambillaRet
CAN Gilles VilleneuveRet
FIN Mikko KozarowitskyDNQ17Ret
ITA Luciano PavesiDNS
Ralt RT1BMWSILTHRHOCNÜRVALPAUMUGROUNOGPERMISESTDON
USA Eddie Cheever72Ret23Ret1715Ret23
BRA Ingo Hoffmann4RetRet716895333NCRet
FRG Hans-Joachim StuckRet
SUI Clay RegazzoniRet
March 782BMWTHRHOCNÜRPAUMUGVALROUDONNOGPERMISHOC
USA Eddie Cheever4Ret357Ret2Ret926Ret
BRA Ingo HoffmannRet46Ret4RetRet45Ret1014
March 792BMWSILHOCTHRNÜRVALMUGPAUHOCZANPERMISDON
GBR Stephen South5RetRetRetRetRet81Ret383
IRL Derek Daly22RetRet2112Ret1
FIN Keke Rosberg1Ret
ITA Andrea de Cesaris6
March 802BMWTHRHOCNÜRVALPAUSILZOLMUGZANPERMISHOC
ITA Andrea de Cesaris3RetRet2Ret2Ret5Ret61
BRA Chico Serra44RetRetRet8RetRet4RetRetRet
::

References

References

  1. "McLaren on Twitter".

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

formula-two-entrantsbritish-auto-racing-teamsbritish-formula-three-teamsauto-racing-teams-established-in-1976