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INDY COMPETITION SERVICES

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Footwork A11C - $P.O.R.

The Footwork A11C was originally powered by the Porsche 3512 engine. This complete, running F1 car is now powered by a 610 HP Judd CV engine.

P.O.R.
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Specifications :

Model : A11 C

Year : 1991

Team : FOOTWORK GRAND PRIX INTERNATIONAL

Drivers : Michele ALBORETO / Alex CAFFI

Engine : PORSCHE V12 replace with a JUDD CV V8

FULL RACE RESULTS :

1991 Championship - 18 teams &  35 drivers

Michele Alboreto 35th at Championship

Alex Caffi 33th at Championship

TEAM Footwork-Porsche 18th right behind Footwork-Ford and in front of Coloni

  • United States :  Michele ALBORETO AB / Alex Caffi NQ

  • Brazil : Michele ALBORETO NQ / Alex Caffi NQ

  • San Marino : Chassis #02 Michele ALBORETO NQ / Alex Caffi NQ

  • Monaco : Michele ALBORETO AB / Alex Caffi

HISTORY :

Footwork is a Formula 1  team created in 1991 following the takeover by the Japanese eponymous  consortium of the Arrows team of Jackie Oliver's, which was then in  financial ruin.

Footwork (after several seasons in Formula 3000)  competed in the F1 world championship from 1991 to 1993 before the  economic recession in Japan and the involvement of the trust in a  political-financial scandal caused its withdrawal.

In three  seasons and 42 Grands Prix, Footwork scored 10 points and his best  ranking in the world championship is a seventh place in 1992.

Jackie Oliver bought his team at the end of 1993, renamed it Arrows to enter the league in 1994.

Footwork will remain however involved in F1, but only as a sponsor of Arrows.

The  Arrows A11 was a Formula One car with which the Arrows team competed in  the 1989 and 1990 Formula One seasons, and at the start of the 1991  season (badged as a Footwork).

Designed by Ross Brawn, the A11 was  the first Arrows car following the ban on turbocharged engines at the  end of 1988, being fitted with a normally-aspirated 3.5-litre Ford  Cosworth DFR V8 engine.

It was raced to reasonably good effect by  Derek Warwick and Eddie Cheever in 1989, Warwick finishing in the top  six on five occasions and briefly challenging for victory in the  Canadian Grand Prix, and Cheever finishing third in the United States  Grand Prix, held in his home town of Phoenix, Arizona.
With 13 points, Arrows placed seventh in the Constructors' Championship.

For  1990, the car received minor suspension upgrades and became the A11B,  while Italian drivers Michele Alboreto and Alex Caffi replaced Warwick  and Cheever.
1990 turned out to be far less successful than 1989,  however, as the car failed to qualify seven times, and finished in the  top six only once, when Caffi took fifth at an attritional race in  Monaco.
Caffi was also forced to sit out the United States and  Spanish races through injury, Germany's Bernd Schneider deputising on  both occasions. The two points from Monaco gave Arrows ninth in the  Constructors' Championship.

By the start of 1991, the team had  been taken over by the Japanese Footwork concern and renamed  accordingly, and had also secured a deal to run Porsche V12 engines,  replacing the Fords.
However, the team's car for that season, the  FA12, had to be redesigned when it was discovered that the large Porsche  engine, the 3512, could not fit into it.
The team therefore modified  the A11B into the A11C to accommodate this engine, and used it in the  first two races, as well as at San Marino after Alboreto destroyed his  redesigned FA12 during practice.
From these five attempts, the aging car qualified only once (Alboreto in the United States), before being finally retired.


For more information email:info@indycompetition.com or call (765)335-2057

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