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The Ford Fiesta RS WRC is the World Rally Car built for the Ford World Rally Team by Ford Europe and M-Sport for use in the World Rally Championship 20112016. It is based upon the Ford Fiesta road car, and replaced the Ford Focus RS WRC, which competed in various versions since 1999. It is also built to the new World Rally Car regulations for 2011, which are based upon the existing Super 2000 regulations, but is powered by a turbocharged 1.6-litre engine (1.6 L turbo Ford EcoBoost engine[2]) rather than the normally aspirated 2-litre engine found in Super 2000 cars. M-Sport and Ford introduced a Super 2000 version of the Ford Fiesta at the beginning of 2010, which forms the base of the WRC car.

Ford Fiesta RS WRC
Mads Østberg driving his Ford Fiesta RS WRC at the 2016 Rally de Portugal.
CategoryWorld Rally Car
ConstructorFord Europe/M-Sport
PredecessorFord Focus RS WRC
SuccessorFord Fiesta WRC
Technical specifications[1]
ChassisReinforced body with welded, multi-point roll cage
Length3,963 mm (156.0 in)
Width1,820 mm (72 in)
Wheelbase2,480 mm (98 in)
EngineFord EcoBoost engine 1.6 L (98 cu in) 4-cylinder, 16-valve turbocharged
Transmission6-speed M-Sport / X-Trac six-speed semi-automatic transmission gearbox with hydraulic shift
Weight1,200 kg (2,646 lb)
TyresMichelin
Pirelli
DMACK
Competition history (WRC)
Notable entrantsUnited Kingdom M-Sport World Rally Team
Czech Republic Jipocar Czech National Team
United Kingdom DMACK World Rally Team
Netherlands Ferm Power Tools World Rally Team
United Kingdom Ford World Rally Team
Qatar Qatar World Rally Team
Norway Adapta World Rally Team
Notable drivers
Norway Mads Østberg
Czech Republic Martin Prokop
Poland Robert Kubica
Wales Elfyn Evans
Italy Lorenzo Bertelli
Estonia Ott Tänak
France Eric Camilli
Norway Henning Solberg
Saudi Arabia Yazeed Al-Rajhi
Belgium Thierry Neuville
Finland Juho Hänninen
Finland Mikko Hirvonen
Finland Jari-Matti Latvala
Norway Petter Solberg
United Arab Emirates Khalid Al Qassimi
Russia Evgeny Novikov
Qatar Nasser Al-Attiyah
United States Ken Block
Argentina Federico Villagra
Netherlands Dennis Kuipers
DebutSweden 2011 Rally Sweden
First winSweden 2011 Rally Sweden
Last winUnited Kingdom 2012 Wales Rally GB
Wins
6

Stobart Ford World Rally Team drivers Matthew Wilson and Henning Solberg have carried out much of the development work on the car during 2010, with Per-Gunnar Andersson and M-Sport managing director and Ford team director Malcolm Wilson have also driven the car.[3]

From 2017 onwards, it was replaced by the Ford Fiesta WRC, but some private owners still enter this car to participate in rally competitions.

WRC victories (Fiesta RS WRC)

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No. Event Season Surface Driver Co-driver
1 Sweden  2011 Rally Sweden 2011 Snow Finland  Mikko Hirvonen Finland  Jarmo Lehtinen
2 Australia  2011 Rally Australia Gravel Finland  Mikko Hirvonen Finland  Jarmo Lehtinen
3 United Kingdom  2011 Wales Rally GB Gravel Finland  Jari-Matti Latvala Finland  Miikka Anttila
4 Sweden  2012 Rally Sweden 2012 Snow Finland  Jari-Matti Latvala Finland  Miikka Anttila
5 Portugal  2012 Rally de Portugal Gravel Norway  Mads Østberg Sweden  Jonas Andersson
6 United Kingdom  2012 Wales Rally GB Gravel Finland  Jari-Matti Latvala Finland  Miikka Anttila

RRC version

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In 2012, the RRC version of the Fiesta was launched to comply with the regional rally rules of the FIA; it is basically a Fiesta RS WRC, only with an S2000-specification rear wing, a slightly different front bumper, a lighter flywheel and a 30mm restrictor instead of a 33mm one found in the WRC variant. The Fiesta's with RRC specification can be converted to WRC specification in 6 hours.[4]

WRC-2 victories (Fiesta RRC)

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No. Event Season Driver Co-driver
1 Sweden  2013 Rally Sweden 2013 Saudi Arabia  Yazeed Al Rajhi United Kingdom  Michael Orr
2 Mexico  2013 Rally México Qatar  Abdulaziz Al-Kuwari Republic of Ireland  Killian Duffy
3 Argentina  2013 Rally Argentina Qatar  Abdulaziz Al-Kuwari Republic of Ireland  Killian Duffy
4 Australia  2013 Rally Australia Qatar  Abdulaziz Al-Kuwari Republic of Ireland  Killian Duffy
5 Portugal  2014 Rally de Portugal 2014 Qatar  Nasser Al-Attiyah Italy  Giovanni Bernacchini
6 Argentina  2014 Rally Argentina Qatar  Nasser Al-Attiyah Italy  Giovanni Bernacchini
7 Australia  2014 Rally Australia Qatar  Nasser Al-Attiyah Italy  Giovanni Bernacchini
8 Spain  2014 Rally Catalunya Qatar  Nasser Al-Attiyah Italy  Giovanni Bernacchini
9 Mexico  2015 Rally México 2015 Qatar  Nasser Al-Attiyah France  Matthieu Baumel
10 Argentina  2015 Rally Argentina Qatar  Abdulaziz Al-Kuwari United Kingdom  Marshall Clarke
11 Portugal  2015 Rally de Portugal Qatar  Nasser Al-Attiyah France  Matthieu Baumel
12 Italy  2015 Rally Italia Sardegna Ukraine  Yuriy Protasov Ukraine  Pavlo Cherepin
13 Australia  2015 Rally Australia Qatar  Nasser Al-Attiyah France  Matthieu Baumel
14 France  2015 Tour de Corse France  Julien Maurin France  Nicolas Klinger

Ford Fiesta RS WRC 'Evolution'

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In Rally Finland 2014 M-Sport launched a facelifted version of the Fiesta RS WRC. Despite the change on the front of the car, it's still the same under the bonnet. M-Sport later revealed the 'Evolution' version would come in 2015.

Before Rally Portugal 2015, M-Sport launched the 'Evolution' specification of the Fiesta RS WRC. Unlike the first version's engine which was built by Pipo Motors, the new Fiesta RS WRC's engine is completely built by M-Sport, with technical support from Ford. The car has also undergone a full redesign under the bonnet with further developments to the cooling package, transmission, electronics, wiring harness and differentials.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Evans, David (10 February 2011). "WRC Preview: Tech Insight". Autosport. Vol. 203, no. 6. Haymarket Publications. pp. 60–61.
  2. ^ "PARIS SHOW PREVIEW FOR ALL-NEW FORD FIESTA RS WORLD RALLY CAR | Ford Motor Company Newsroom". Archived from the original on 2010-10-06. Retrieved 2010-10-06.
  3. ^ http://www.motorsport.com/news/article.asp?ID=376511&FS=WRC [dead link]
  4. ^ "Ford Fiesta RRC". Archived from the original on 2012-11-14. Retrieved 2013-02-03.
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