Chevrolet Lacetti (2010–2011) In
2010 the team entered the
World Touring Car Championship, initially with Vaulkhard and
Darryl O'Young as drivers. Vaulkhard took the team's maiden WTCC Independents victory at the
2010 FIA WTCC Race of Italy. O'Young followed that up with the first ever victory for a Chinese driver in an FIA event at the
2010 FIA WTCC Race of Portugal; which he followed up with victories in Rounds 13 & 14 in Brno, earning the team's first pole position after finishing 8th in race 1 to secure reverse grid role for race 2. O'Young was later given a 30-second time penalty in race one, demoting him down the field and stripping him of his victory. Funding issues saw Vaulkard's season cut short and
Yukinori Taniguchi stepped in to replace him for the latter part of the season. He claimed a class victory in the first race at his home event in Japan, and that success was quickly followed up with a victory for O'Young in the second. O'Young entered the final races in Macau as the only man with an outside chance of taking the title from Sergio Hernandez; after a crash with Tom Coronel in race 1 putting him both out of the race, Hernandez took the title and O'Young dropped to 4th in the standings. At the end of their debut season the team claimed second place in the
Yokohama Teams' Trophy standings. Bamboo retained O'Young and Taniguchi for the
2011 season, continuing with the
Chevrolet Lacetti for the
2011 FIA WTCC Race of Brazil.
Chevrolet Cruze (2011–2013) The team switched to the
Chevrolet Cruze 1.6T for
2011 FIA WTCC Race of Belgium, replacing the Chevrolet Lacettis they ran in the opening round. O'Young took the Yokohama Drivers' Trophy victory in race two. That was to be the only independent victory for the team in 2011, the team ended the year fifth in the Yokohama Teams' Trophy standings. For
2012 the team had agreed a deal with
RML Group which would see them run the same specification of car as the factory
Chevrolet team. They signed former BTCC driver
Alex MacDowall and
Formula Renault 3.5 race winner
Pasquale di Sabatino in an all–rookie lineup. The team left the opening round of the season at
Monza with MacDowall tied at the top of the Independent Drivers' Trophy with
Stefano D'Aste and
Pepe Oriola. MacDowall was the fastest independent driver in qualifying for the
Race of Austria and took his first WTCC independent victory in race one, the first of the season for Bamboo. For the
Race of Brazil, di Sabatino was recovering from bronchitis and pneumonia was ruled out of competing by doctors with
Michel Nykjær substituting for the Italian driver for the weekend. Nykjær took the independents' pole position and then the independents' win in race one by finishing in fifth place. The team signed
Robb Holland to race their second car at the
Race of the United States. O'Young returned to the team for the
Race of Japan for the remainder of the season. MacDowall finished fifth in race one having started on the second row of the grid to take the independent drivers' victory. Both drivers were involved in a first lap pileup at the
Race of China in race one with both drivers eventually retiring due to race incidents. The team went to the season finale in
Macau with a slim chance for MacDowall to take the independent drivers' title. The weekend got off to a bad start when O'Young collided head on the barriers at the Mandarin Oriental corner in Thursday testing. O'Young took the independents' pole position in qualifying and then the independents' victory in race one after being the last car to escape the pileup at the Lisboa corner. MacDowall starting from pole position in race two was quickly passed by
Norbert Michelisz at the start. He retook the leader later on but then the pair of them were passed by the works Chevrolet of
Alain Menu. MacDowall's race ended when he was tapped from behind by
Yvan Muller and collided head–on with the barriers on the exit of the high speed Mandarin bend. O'Young took his second independents' victory of the weekend. Bamboo engineering stayed in the WTCC for the
2013 season with
James Nash joining from
Team Aon. The team retained MacDowall in their second car. The team left the
Race of Italy with MacDowall having claimed his first overall podium result and Nash leading the independent drivers' trophy, the team were second in the teams' trophy behind RML. Nash secured his first podium finish at the
Race of Morocco in race one when he finished third. Nash took the independent driver's victory in race two, the two Bamboo drivers then shared the independent victories at the
Race of Slovakia. Bamboo took their first overall victory in the WTCC at the
Race of Austria when Nash held off the advances of Yvan Muller in the final laps of race two to finish on the top step of the podium having started from pole position. Nash followed this up with a second victory of the season in
Race 2 in Portugal with a lights to flag victory from pole position 5 seconds ahead of reigning World Champion Rob Huff. MacDowall and Nash continued to trade independent class victories throughout the remainder of the season, with MacDowall victorious in the
United States &
Japan, where he also took an overall an podium for second, and Nash took both wins and an overall podium for 3rd in
China. The pair went into the finale at
Macau both with a chance of taking the independent crown. Nash sealed this in race one by following MacDowall home and then sealed 3rd in the World Championship with a 4th place whilst main rival
Tom Chilton crashed out of both races. Nash & MacDowall shared 12 independent race wins between them in a dominant year for bamboo.
Chevrolet Cruze TC1 (2015) After the sabbatical in 2014 whilst the squad competed in the
World Endurance Championship, Bamboo returned to the
World Touring Car Championship in
2015 continuing their relationship with RML and Chevrolet by competing with the Chevrolet Cruze in its new TC1 format. The team signed successful GT driver
Gregoire Demoustier for the season which begun in promising fashion with the Frenchman scoring on his debut in
Race 2 in Argentina with a 10th place. Another good result for Demoustier and a 10th place was secured in
Race 2 at the Hungaroring. Following a major upgrade for the Slovakia round, Demoustier narrowly missed out on a reverse grid pole position at his home race in
Paul Ricard, France by 0.015 seconds, after running in the top 6 in both free practice sessions. The Frenchman put on a similar competitive display in
China running high up in the practice sessions and again just missing out on Q2. ==GP3 Series==