's 3.5L V12
Formula One engine, the 3512, at the
Lamborghini Museum. Lamborghini made the move to
Formula One in when the
FIA outlawed turbocharged engines. Former
Scuderia Ferrari designer / engineer
Mauro Forghieri was commissioned to design and build a new, 3.5 litre V12 engine for use by the French
Larrousse team in 1989. Dubbed the
Lamborghini LE3512, (
Lamborghini
Engineering
3.
5 liters
12 cylinders) the , 80° V12 engine was reported to be the best sounding engine of the new 3.5L
naturally aspirated formula. Lamborghini representatives stated at the engines début race, the
1989 Brazilian Grand Prix in
Rio de Janeiro, that they chose a lower ranked team to join Formula One (Larrousse was in its third season using
Lola chassis') as it was felt at the early stage of its development the 3512 would not be able to do justice to one of the teams usually closer to the front of the grid. Also, the front running teams already had existing engine suppliers in place (
McLaren with
Honda,
Williams with
Renault,
Benetton with
Ford, and Ferrari who made their own V12 engines). The Lamborghini V12 did impress many in 1989 despite its unreliability, and the engines best result in its first year came thanks to fast but accident prone Larrousse driver
Philippe Alliot when he qualified his
Lola LC89 in 5th position for the
Spanish Grand Prix at
Jerez, only 1.417 seconds slower than the
V10 McLaren-Honda of pole winner
Ayrton Senna. Alliot then backed up that performance by scoring the engine's first point in Formula One by finishing 6th in the race and setting the 4th fastest race lap in the process. Unfortunately, Alliot's teammate for the second half of 1989, former Ferrari driver
Michele Alboreto, never came to grips with either the Lola or the Lamborghini. In his eight races for Larrousse he recorded four DNF's, two failures to pre-qualify, one failure to qualify, and a single 11th-place finish in
Portugal. The Lamborghini V12's best finish came when Larrousse driver
Aguri Suzuki finished 3rd in the infamous
1990 Japanese Grand Prix at
Suzuka. Its time in Formula One (1989-1993) would prove to be frustrating though as poor reliability became the norm for the engine, despite being used by Grand Prix winning teams such as
Lotus and
Ligier who could boast driving talent such as
Derek Warwick (Lotus - 1990), and
Thierry Boutsen (Ligier - 1991). In a 2014 interview, Warwick said of the 3512 that it was "All noise and no go". In 1993 after four years in Formula One with only one significant result for the engine,
Bob Lutz of Lamborghini's parent company
Chrysler, did a hand-shake deal with
McLaren boss
Ron Dennis for the team to test the LE3512 to evaluate its potential as a race winner. McLaren made a modified version of their race car, the
McLaren MP4/8 dubbed the MP4/8B, to test the engine (the test car took three months to modify to fit the longer and heavier V12). Testing was completed by triple World Champion Ayrton Senna, and future dual World Champion
Mika Häkkinen at both the
Silverstone Circuit in England and the
Estoril circuit in Portugal. After his first drive of the car at Silverstone, Senna suggested certain changes to Forghieri (a less brutal 'top end' and a fatter mid-range), and he complied with engine power increased from to approximately and both drivers were very impressed despite the engine still being somewhat unreliable (Häkkinen reported a massive engine blow up while testing at Silverstone, though he did manage to lap the 5.226 km (3.260 mi) circuit some 1.4 seconds faster than the teams MP4/8 race car powered by a
Ford V8 engine). According to reports, Senna even wanted to race the engine at the
Japanese Grand Prix believing that while reliability might be a problem (according to McLaren engineers, the most they got out of any of the V12s post-Forghieri's changes was 19 laps at Silverstone before the engine blew up), at least he would be quicker than with the Ford powered race car (ironically Senna would win in both Japan and the last race in
Australia with the existing MP4/8). Despite this however, Ron Dennis decided to go with
Peugeot V10 engines in due to a better commercial agreement that would give long term stability to the team and at the end of the 1993 season, the Lamborghini LE3512 was retired from Grand Prix racing after the company was sold by Chrysler to an Indonesian investor group led by
Tommy Suharto. The Lamborghini, which on all cars it powered carried the words "Chrysler powered by Lamborghini" (other than the McLaren MP4/8B which was all virgin white, though the test engines were badged as Chrysler), was one of only five V12 engines used in the naturally aspirated era from 1989–2013, the others being from Ferrari (1989-1995),
Honda (1991-1992),
Yamaha (1991-1992), and
Porsche (1991). The only other 12 cylinder engines in Formula One during this time were disastrous efforts by
Life Racing Engines with their
W12 engine and
Subaru who reintroduced the
Flat 12 to the sport, both appearing in the first half of 1990.
LE3512 power output • - • - • - • - • - • 1993 - (McLaren tests only)
F1 statistics 1989-1993 • Races - 80 (49 starts) • First Race -
1989 Brazilian Grand Prix at
Jacarepaguá • First Chassis -
Larrousse Lola LC88C • Last Race -
1993 Australian Grand Prix at
Adelaide • Last Chassis -
Larrousse LH93 • Wins - 0 • Pole Positions - 0 • Podiums - 1 (3rd -
1990 Japanese Grand Prix at
Suzuka,
Aguri Suzuki, Larrousse
Lola LC90) • Points - 20 • Teams - Larrousse (, , , ),
Lotus (1990),
Ligier (),
Modena Team (1991),
Minardi () • Best Qualifying - 5th,
Philippe Alliot, Larrousse
Lola LC89,
1989 Spanish Grand Prix at
Jerez • Best Constructors' Championship - 6th, Larrousse, 1990 (11 points) • Best Drivers' Championship - 12th, Aguri Suzuki, 1990 (6 points) ==See also==