Formula 1 Racing

The Williams that gave Coulthard a qualifying edge

Coulthard relished driving the

David Coulthard won 12 Formula 1 world championship grands prix with McLaren and helped the Woking team take the 1998 constructors’ title with the mighty MP4-13. But it’s the 1995 Williams FW17 that the Scot picks out as the best car of his illustrious career.

Coulthard had made his F1 debut in difficult circumstances, following the death of Ayrton Senna and saddled with the tricky FW16, as Williams struggled to adapt following the banning of the gizmos it had pioneered. Progress was made during 1994 and Adrian Newey’s FW17 for the following campaign was a better proposition.

“The 1994 car had its problems and had a tight cockpit,” says the Scot. “The 1995 car was more open and had a different feel.

“We were also making steps forward with the Renault engine and the car evolved as the year went on. It was competitive but Michael Schumacher and Benetton were strong.”

The FW17 was arguably the fastest car of 1995, Coulthard and team-mate Damon Hill taking 12 poles from 17 races. But Schumacher and Benetton often outfoxed Williams in the races, and both drivers made crucial errors.

“The car was really nicely balanced,” recalls the 51-year-old. “I had five poles and I wasn’t famed for my qualifying performance – that’s how good the car was!”

Despite his gaffe on the warm-up lap of the Italian GP, Coulthard also remembers the weekend for his domination of qualifying. He was quickest in both sessions at Monza and ended up beating Schumacher to pole by 0.564 seconds. He was also 1.237s ahead of Hill.

Coulthard relished driving the “nicely balanced” FW17, which he took to five poles in 1995

Photo by: Sutton Images

A multi-car accident on the first lap also gave him another chance to win the race: “I jumped into the T-car that had been used in the Spa warm-up in the rain by Damon. I led the first 13 laps when the front-left wheel bearing seized. But if I hadn’t spun my race car on the warm-up lap, I wouldn’t have been in the T-car with the rusty bearing…”

“When you were in the sweet spot it was great to drive. The wide track, slick tyres, torquey V10 engine… It was at the beginning of aerodynamics becoming more swoopy” David Coulthard

Coulthard’s first GP win finally came next time out at Estoril, as he dominated the Portuguese GP from pole. His last start for Williams ended with the infamous crash in the Adelaide pitlane, but Coulthard still has fond memories of the FW17, which finished the season in B spec with…

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