Education
Wirth attended Sevenoaks School from 1977 to 1984 and has B.Sc(Honours) in Mechanical Engineering (First Class) from University College London and is the youngest-ever Fellow of the Royal Institution of Mechanical Engineers.
Wirth attended Sevenoaks School from 1977 to 1984 and has B.Sc(Honours) in Mechanical Engineering (First Class) from University College London and is the youngest-ever Fellow of the Royal Institution of Mechanical Engineers.
He is also the former owner of the Formula One team, a former aerodynamicist at and former technical director at the Benetton, and teams. Wirth started his Formula One career as an aerodynamicist for Engineering, responsible for all aerodynamic concepts, schematics and design of windtunnel model components for the 1988 and 1989 Leyton House cars. In addition, he conceived and designed all components of the active suspension system, which ran successfully in February 1989.
Research, was founded in 1989 by Max Mosley and Nick Wirth.
lieutenant originally was involved in many areas of Formula One, including wind tunnel construction and chassis building for third parties. Wirth was previously employed by Team owner Mosley.
Research provided the team with engineering and design for the cars. The team suffered the blow of the death of Roland Ratzenberger during qualifying for the San Marino Grand Prix. suffered a difficult first season and eventually pulled out of Formula One during the 1995 season which forced Research into bankruptcy.
In 1999 Wirth founded RoboScience, creators of the RS-01 RoboDog.
In 2003 he founded Wirth Research. In 2006 Wirth Research began working for the FIA in the Casumaro windtunnel in Italy on the split rear wing (CDG) design that the FIA proposed for the 2008 F1 season. In 2007 Wirth Research became involved with the Acura LMP programme in the American Le Mans Series and was involved with designing the LMP1 class car for 2009 season.
Wirth used computational fluid dynamics extensively to design the LMP1 class car.
In 2009 Wirth Design teamed up with John Booth of Manor Motorsport to create a car for the 2010 Formula One season. Wirth was appointed the technical director of the team
Richard Branson"s company Virgin became a title sponsor and the team was renamed The car that Wirth designed for use in the 2010 season, the Virgin VR-01, is the first Formula One racing car designed entirely with computational fluid dynamics with no use of traditional wind tunnels during the design or build process. Wirth also designed Virgin"s second F1 car, the MVR-02, but its performance proved to be disappointing as it failed to close the gap to the leaders relative to the VR-01.
In June 2011, Virgin announced that it had parted company with Wirth and abandoned its policy of only using Computational Fluid Dynamics.
From 1996 until 1999 Wirth was chief designer and later a board member of the Benetton Formula One team