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Korean GP: Sauber sign up to use Ferrari engines in 2014
- Author, Andrew Benson
- Role, Chief F1 writer
Sauber will continue with Ferrari engines next season into Formula 1's new turbo era.
The Swiss team have used Ferrari engines for the last four years - and did so from 1997 to 2005 before they were taken over by BMW, which quit F1 in 2008.
Lotus are the only team yet to confirm its 2014 engine partner, although they are expected to stick with Renault.
F1 is switching to 1.6-litre V6 turbos with extensive energy recovery.
The move from the current 2.4-litre V8 naturally aspirated engines is to keep the sport aligned with developments in road cars, where smaller capacity engines with greater fuel efficiency are becoming the norm.
Sauber's "multi-year" deal includes the entire powertrain of energy recovery system (Ers) and gearbox. They will be the third team to use Ferrari engines, alongside the works outfit and Marussia.
Mercedes engines will be used by the German company's factory team as well as McLaren, Force India and Williams.
World champions Red Bull will use Renault, along with junior team Toro Rosso, Caterham and almost certainly Lotus.
McLaren will switch to Honda engines in 2015 in a deal that means no other team can work with the Japanese company until 2016.