Stephen Anderson Nichols (born 20 February 1947 in Salt Lake City, Utah)[1] is an American engineer who is best known as a car designer for many Formula One teams from the mid-1980s until 2001.
Steve Nichols | |
---|---|
Born | Stephen Anderson Nichols 20 February 1947 |
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Engineer |
Known for | Formula One car designer |
Notable work | McLaren MP4/4 |
Profile
editNichols graduated from the University of Utah in 1972. He began his career as a development engineer at Hercules Aerospace in 1973. In mid-1980 he moved to motorsport and joined McLaren in Formula One. In 1987 he became Chief Designer of F1 cars at McLaren following the departure of John Barnard to Ferrari.
His first car, the McLaren MP4/3 powered by the turbocharged TAG-Porsche V6 engine, carried Alain Prost to three victories in 1987, the last of which being the 1987 Portuguese Grand Prix where Prost scored his 28th win, passing Jackie Stewart's record of 27 that had stood since 1973. McLaren's second team driver Stefan Johansson, scored five podium finishes during the season. At the end of the season, the MP4/3 had given McLaren second place behind Williams in the Constructors' Championship.
McLaren MP4/4
editNichols' second car was the highly successful McLaren MP4/4, powered by a turbocharged Honda V6. The MP4/4, driven by Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost, almost completely dominated the 1988 season with 15 race victories from 16 races, as well as 15 pole positions. The only race the MP4/4 didn't win was the Italian Grand Prix which was won by Gerhard Berger's Ferrari. Berger also claimed the only non-McLaren pole of the year at the British Grand Prix. McLaren won the 1988 Constructors' Championship by a record 134 points from Ferrari, having wrapped up the title in Round 11 in Belgium. Senna and Prost also finished the Drivers' Championship in first and second place, giving the talented Brazilian his first World Championship.
Dispute over design credit
editWhile articles give credit to Gordon Murray for the MP4/4's design and claim that it was based on Murray's earlier Brabham BT55 for the 1986 season, many at McLaren, including team manager Jo Ramírez, have pointed out that the MP4/4 was a development of the MP4/3 and that Murray, who became McLaren's Technical Director in 1987, had very little to do with the design of either of Nichols' cars. Commenting on the differences of the BT55 and MP4/4, Nichols remarked:
The only similarity is that they were both low. But if you look at anything else – the rules were different [and therefore] the fuel tank size was different, the drivetrain was different, different engine, different gearbox – everything.[2]
Senior design engineer Matthew Jeffreys refuted Murray's claims of the BT55 being the basis of the MP4/4: "None of us were looking at BT55 drawings and we wouldn’t have wanted to be either – it was a disaster. Why would we want a McLaren to have copied a car that had huge problems and was also two years old?" Nichols suggested that Murray claimed credit for the MP4/4 in the hopes that its reputation would overshadow that of the BT55's engine and gearbox issues:
Gordon had the Brabham BT55, which was by any standard a terrible car. He’s got that blot on his copy book. So now I think he feels the need to claim credit for the MP4/4, to expunge the BT55 off his record.[2]
Murray denied Nichols' involvement in the MP4/4's development, stating in an interview with Motor Sport: "This thing about Steve Nichols being chief designer is the biggest load of rubbish you've ever heard. The MP4/4 was not designed by Steve Nichols, I can promise you that."[3] Murray also threatened Nichols and Jeffreys with legal action over their written claims in the McLaren MP4/4 Owners’ Workshop Manual written by Steve Rendle and published by Haynes.[2]
Later career
editAt the end of 1989, Nichols decided to follow Alain Prost and moved to Ferrari. Prost won five races and was a serious contender for the world title until a controversial collision triggered by Ayrton Senna put both drivers out of the race at the Japanese Grand Prix. Nichols stayed at Ferrari until December 1991, and later joined Sauber to help Peter Sauber move into Formula One. In 1993 he moved to Jordan as chief designer; later in 1995 he was back at McLaren as a technical consultant. He assisted McLaren back to the front of the grid and winning the world title in 1998 and 1999.
In 2001 he joined Jaguar Racing as technical director.[4] Although his success gave Jaguar their first podium in Monaco, Nichols left Jaguar in early 2002; he has not worked in Formula One since.[5]
In retirement, Nichols works as a freelance design and technical consultant, based in the United Kingdom; he is also an amateur racing driver, racing a Datsun 260ZX in historic racing events and a Van Diemen RF82 in Historic Formula Ford 2000.[5] In 2017, he founded Nichols Cars to market the N1A, a modern road-going interpretation of the McLaren M1A race car; the car is expected to reach production in 2022.[6]
References
edit- ^ "Stephen Anderson NICHOLS". Companies House.
- ^ a b c Elson, J. (20 October 2021). "'Gordon Murray's living in a parallel universe' — McLaren designers hit back over MP4/4 claims". Motor Sport Magazine.
- ^ Motor Sport, September 2021, Page 63.
- ^ Who's Steve Nichols?, Crash.Net
- ^ a b "Lunch with... Steve Nichols". Motor Sport. May 2018.
- ^ Reid, Alex (20 May 2022). "Modern Can-Am Nichols N1A Going Into Production With GM V8s". Carscoops. Retrieved 3 August 2022.