Early career Brabham's professional racing career began in Australia in 1983, racing karts for two years, after which he moved into the
Ford Laser "one make" series for 1985. In 1986, he switched to
Formula Ford 1600 and subsequently to
Australian Formula 2, winning the
1987 Australian Drivers' Championship in that category. The 1987 ADC was, unlike previous years, only held as a single race rather than a series of rounds and was run as a support category to the
1987 Australian Grand Prix in
Adelaide. After starting 38th on the grid due to carburettor and electrical problems with his
Ralt RT30 Volkswagen in qualifying, he caught and passed leader Rohan Onslow on lap 13 of the 15 lap race and went on to a 1.7 second victory. Brabham also competed in the New Zealand
Formula Atlantic series, the American Formula Atlantic series and in the South American Formula 3 Championship during the 1987 season. A move from Australia to Europe under sponsorship from Camel in 1989 saw him joining the Bowman team and winning the British
Formula Three Championship.
Formula One career at the
1994 British Grand Prix meeting at
Silverstone Brabham's break into
Formula One in with the
Brabham team met with little success. He had raised a considerable amount of sponsorship to join the team bearing his family name (though it had been sold on three times since) but financial constraints hindered the team all season. While David had been hired to drive ahead of the season he requested to skip the first two races to prepare himself,
Gregor Foitek taking the seat instead. Ironically his brother Gary attempted to qualify for the first two rounds in the ill-fated Life before quitting; the brothers therefore both contested the 1990 season without actually entering any of the same meetings. Brabham's first outing with the team was the
1990 San Marino Grand Prix where he failed to qualify. His first Formula One start came at the next race in
Monaco where his father Jack had won in
1959, his first championship year. In 14 races he only managed to qualify the uncompetitive Judd-engined car six times, including the last race of the year at home in
Australia. This, and David being unable to raise the reported $3m needed to keep his place in the team, led to him being replaced at the end of the season. Brabham joined the
Tom Walkinshaw Racing Jaguar team in 1991 and also in that year won the
Spa 24 Hours driving a
Nissan Skyline R32 GT-R alongside
Naoki Hattori and
Anders Olofsson. Brabham returned to Formula One in with the under-funded
Simtek team after his father bought shares in the team. The second seat was to be filled by paying drivers, with
Roland Ratzenberger taking the first five races before
Jean-Marc Gounon took over. The S941 chassis was overweight, used a fully manual gearbox as opposed to the semi-automatic types used by most teams and inferior wire-spring
Cosworth HB customer engines. Despite this Brabham qualified for every round of the series. The team suffered the blow of the death of Roland Ratzenberger during qualifying for the
San Marino Grand Prix. Traditionally the other team driver would withdraw in such a situation, but seeing the demoralisation around him, Brabham decided to race on, only to crash out after a suspension failure of his own. In Ratzenberger's memory the team made a collective decision to see out the season, with Brabham's strong leadership often cited as a key factor. While the Simtek was uncompetitive he won considerable acclaim for his determination and for gradually improving the speed of the underfunded package, also handily out-performing his various teammates.
Touring cars during the
1995 British Touring Car Championship season Brabham quit
Formula One at the end of that year to begin
touring car racing – while he wanted to help Simtek the salary offered by the BMW works team was too good to ignore. 1995 in a
BTCC BMW was not a success, but subsequent successes included winning the 1996
JGTC GT500 championship in
McLaren F1 GTR (so far the only non-Japanese team car to win this), and the
1997 AMP Bathurst 1000 in its
Super Touring era. Driving a
BMW 320i at
Bathurst with brother Geoff, the pair were flagged in 2nd but were elevated to the win soon after the finish when their
BMW Motorsport Australia teammates
Paul Morris and
Craig Baird were disqualified, the team making an error at the last pit stop by not doing a driver change and leaving Baird in the car for the run home, not realising that he would exceed his allowed driving time before the race ended. Brabham won the Professional Sports Car Championship in the United States with the
Panoz racing team in 1998, and the 1999
Petit Le Mans race also with Panoz. during the
2000 24 Hours of Le Mans GT racing Brabham joined Sumo Power GT for the
2011 FIA GT1 World Championship, teaming with
Jamie Campbell-Walter in a Nissan GT-R. The duo finished 10th in the driver's championship. He joined the
Blancpain Endurance Series in 2012, driving a
McLaren MP4-12C for
United Autosports.
Sports car racing winning
Peugeot 908 at the
Goodwood Festival of Speed Since 1999, Brabham has been a regular in the
American Le Mans Series (ALMS), having raced for teams such as
Panoz and
Prodrive Ferrari 550 Maranello. He won the
Sebring 12-hour race in 2005. In Australia, he has contested the
Bathurst 24 Hour race and continued to make occasional appearances in the
Bathurst 1000. Brabham has won a total of 23 ALMS events across all four classes in the series. He is a two-time champion in the series, winning the LMP1 title in 2009 and LMP title in 2010. In 2003, Brabham won first-in-class (4th overall) with
Multimatic Motorsports at the 24 Hours of Daytona, the Daytona Prototype category's inaugural race. Brabham finished second at the
2003 24 Hours of Le Mans driving for Bentley. In 2005 he started the first of four consecutive Le Mans starts racing Aston Martin DBR9's. He finished ninth overall and third in the GT1 Class for
Aston Martin Racing. At the
2006 24 Hours of Le Mans, Brabham scored a fourth in the GT1 category (ninth overall) driving for Russian Age Racing. Brabham won the GT1 class of the
2007 24 Hours of Le Mans and again in the
2008 24 Hours of Le Mans driving for
Aston Martin Racing. Driving for
Peugeot, he won the
2009 24 Hours of Le Mans outright with co-drivers
Alexander Wurz and
Marc Gené driving a
Peugeot 908 HDi FAP. He joined brother Geoff as a Le Mans winner with his older brother having also won for Peugeot in
1993. It also saw him join his father and older brother as an outright winner at Le Mans with father Jack having won the only
French Grand Prix held at the
Bugatti Circuit in
1967. David Brabham became only the fourth Australian driver to win the 24 Hours of Le Mans following
Bernard Rubin in
1928,
Vern Schuppan in
1983, and older brother Geoff in 1993. Brabham won the 2009 and 2010
American Le Mans Series LMP championship, driving for
Highcroft Racing. For 2012, he would compete in the
FIA World Endurance Championship in a JRM Racing
Honda Performance Development ARX-03a. , Handprints and signatures from the winners of the 2009 edition of the
24 Hours of Le Mans ==Project Brabham==