Malcolm Oastler

Malcolm Oastler
Born (1959-04-24) 24 April 1959 (age 65)
NationalityAustralia Australia

Malcolm Oastler (born 24 April 1959) is an Australian. He was the former technical director of Formula One team BAR, former chief engineer for Jaguar Racing, and designer of many race cars.

Career

Oastler was born in Sydney, Australia. A keen motorsport enthusiast and driver from a young age, he earned a first class honours degree in mechanical engineering from the New South Wales University of Technology. Oastler embarked on a driving career in the early 1980s, and was particularly successful in the Australian Formula Ford championship.[1] Deciding to try his luck in the European motorsport scene, Oastler relocated to England in 1985, but without any real financial back found it very tough to campaign in any series there.

He was working as a mechanic for Milldent Motorsport in Leicestershire in exchange for part-time drives in British Formula Ford 2000. In 1986 his engineering talents were recognised and he joined the Reynard company as a designer. Oastler was responsible for many designs at Reynard in racing categories such as Formula Ford, Formula Ford 2000, Formula 3000 and IndyCar. Oastler's Reynard design for the first Formula 3000 series was especially strong, and his chassis design went on to win five international titles. After the Formula 3000 success, Oastler led the IndyCar design from the start of the project. His Reynard 95I chassis went on to win eight races in total, including the Indy 500 and started from pole position no less than thirteen times.

In 1998 Oastler was seconded to the newly formed BAR team in a chief designer role. As such he was responsible for all design and enhancement work done on the 1999 BAR 01 car, and also much work done on the 1998 Tyrrell 026. (BAR was founded on the remains of the Tyrrell F1 team and actually competed under the Tyrrell name for the 1998 season. The name British American Racing was first seen on the track for the 1999 season.) During the 1999 season Oastler was promoted to the role of technical director, but that role reverted to the BAR-partnered Reynard company in 2000 which left Oastler back at the chief designer position. BAR management was taken over by David Richards for 2002 and Oastler soon found himself out of the team. During that season he resurfaced at Jaguar Racing and worked on their upcoming R4 chassis for the 2002 season, and was named Jaguar's chief engineer for 2003 and 2004.

During the Jaguar F1 team's tumultuous final season in 2004, Oastler decided to retire from professional motorsport, with the team thanking him for his contribution.[2] He has since returned to his native Australia to set up several rural ventures.

Personal life

Oastler is married to Joanna and has three daughters, Charlotte, Chloe and Kate.

Oastler has maintained an interest and involvement with motorsport within Australia. This has included competing in the Australian Hillclimb Championship, a category in which he is a 5 time champion.

Oastler also shares his various quirky engineering adventures through a YouTube channel, regularly featuring him working in his best thongs.

References

  1. ^ "Lunch with... Adrian Reynard". Motor Sport. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  2. ^ ""Oastler retires"". crash.net. 25 March 2004. Retrieved 30 December 2021.

External links

  • Profile at grandprix.com
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United Kingdom British American Racing
Founder
Craig Pollock
Former Staff
Mariano Alperin [ja]
Jock Clear
Gil de Ferran
Mark Ellis
Nick Fry
Luca Furbatto
Andrew Green
Ayao Komatsu
Simon Lacey
Ron Meadows
Malcolm Oastler
Adrian Reynard
David Richards
Andrew Shovlin
Otmar Szafnauer
Willem Toet
James Vowles
Graham Watson
Geoff Willis
Craig Wilson [ja]
Ian Wright
Jörg Zander
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Canada Jacques Villeneuve
United Kingdom Jenson Button
Japan Takuma Sato
France Olivier Panis
Brazil Ricardo Zonta
Finland Mika Salo
United Kingdom Anthony Davidson
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007
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United Kingdom Jaguar Racing
Jaguar TCS Racing - Formula E (2016–)
Personnel
Gerd Mäuser (Chairman)
James Barclay (Team Director)
Craig Wilson [ja] (Race Director)
Race drivers
9. New Zealand Mitch Evans
10. United Kingdom Sam Bird
Test & Reserve drivers
France Tom Dillmann
France Norman Nato
Former drivers
United Kingdom Adam Carroll
Brazil Nelson Piquet Jr.
United Kingdom Alex Lynn
United Kingdom James Calado
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Formula E Powertrains
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Jaguar Racing – F1 (2000–2004)
Personnel
Ben Agathangelou
John Allison
Gary Anderson
Mark Ellis
Dan Fallows
Mark Gallagher
Mark Gillan [ja]
Nick Hayes
Niki Lauda
Steve Nichols
Malcolm Oastler
David Pitchforth
Ian Pocock
Xevi Pujolar
Tony Purnell
Bobby Rahal
Neil Ressler
John Russell
Guenther Steiner
Dave Stubbs
Rob Taylor
Ben Waterhouse
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Australia Mark Webber
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Brazil Luciano Burti
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