during the latter half of 1994. . Pacific Racing had won in every junior category it had participated in, and by 1992 Wiggins was determined that it would make the step up to F1 for the 1993 season, in the process renaming the team as
Pacific Grand Prix. Lacking an in-house engineering staff and conscious of how limited his timescale was, Wiggins contacted F3000 constructor Reynard Racing to design and build the new PR01 chassis, hoping to benefit from several years of research and development that Reynard had invested in their recently scrapped in-house F1 project. Unfortunately for Pacific, the Rory Byrne-led design team had gone to
Benetton at the end of 1991 and Reynard had sold the design (still in form of paper drawings) to
Ligier. The small PR01 design team, working at Reynard but nominally employed by Pacific to conform to FIA Regulations, were forced to start a new design based on what little of the Reynard F1 research remained and utilizing a number of minor components from Reynard's F3000 chassis in an attempt to constrain costs. With their roots in the same project, the resulting Benetton
B193, Ligier JS37 and Pacific PR01 shared the same slab-sided, raised-nose profile that later became standard in Formula One. They instead postponed their entry in January 1993 because of a recession and resulting failure of investors to pay up. They were unable to enter F1 until 1994. The year was a disaster.
Paul Belmondo and former Jordan driver
Bertrand Gachot (who was a shareholder in the team) started the season as drivers, with
Oliver Gavin testing. The PR01, designed for the 1993 season, had undergone none of the vital wind tunnel testing required to refine the car's aerodynamics, had seen only a few dozen miles of track testing and its
Ilmor 3.5 L
V10 engine was underpowered by 1994 standards. That season the team failed to score a point or finish a single race, and from the
French Grand Prix onwards, neither car qualified. Aiming for a fresh start in 1995, Pacific made a deal with the owner of the former
Team Lotus to enter as "Pacific Team Lotus". Although no staff, equipment or technology came to the team as a result, the aim was for Pacific to benefit from association with the famous Lotus name. The obsolete Ilmor engines had been replaced by
Ford ED V8s and a whole host of new sponsors were brought in. Good news also came when the PR02 was guaranteed a start each race, with
Larrousse and Lotus disappearing from the entry lists and only
Forti coming in. An embarrassing moment happened during the reveal of the car when it took Wiggins 25 minutes to open a bottle of champagne. Belmondo had been replaced with
Andrea Montermini. Having had no luck in the first half of the season, team partner Gachot vacated his seat in mid-1995, making way for paydrivers
Giovanni Lavaggi (four races, four DNFs) and
Jean-Denis Délétraz (two races, one DNF, one NC). Gachot later returned after the money of the two pay-drivers dried up and two drivers Wiggins wanted to run (Formula Nippon driver
Katsumi Yamamoto for Okayama and Suzuka and test driver
Oliver Gavin for Australia) were denied superlicences. Pacific's best finishes that season were 8th in the
German and
Australian Grands Prix, both times as the multi-lapped last car in the track. ==Withdrawal and aftermath==