'Dieter Quester' (b.
May 30,
1939 in
Vienna[1]) is a former
Formula One and still active
touring car racing driver from
Austria. Dieter has participated in 53 24-Hour Races.
Starting with motorboats in the 1950s, he became part of the
Formula 2 team of
BMW which intended to take part in the
1969 German Grand Prix. Teammate
Gerhard Mitter was killed at the
Nürburgring while practising with the ''BMW 269'', though. As a suspension or steering failure was suspected, the BMW team with Quester and
Hubert Hahne withdrew from the race, as did Mitter's teammate at Porsche,
Hans Herrmann.
Quester participated in his home
1974 Austrian Grand Prix on
August 18,
1974. He out-qualified his three team mates at Surtees and finished 9th ahead of
Hans-Joachim Stuck and double World Champion
Graham Hill in the race, but scored no championship points.
Quester then focused again on
European Touring Car Championship to drive a
BMW 3.0 CSL for
Schnitzer Motorsport. Quester had already won the 1973
Spa 24 Hours. Later racing in the
DTM, he once slid on the roof of his
BMW M3 over the start/finish line of the
AVUS for a 3rd place.
His career is still active at age 66, sponsored by
Red Bull. On
January 15,
2006, he won the 24 Hours race at the
Dubai Autodrome on a
BMW M3 together with
Hans-Joachim Stuck,
Philipp Peter and Toto Wolff. Stuck and Quester returned in the
24 Hours Nürburgring, but their BMW was destroyed in a crash at night that involved an oil spill and seven cars. During the weekend of September 9-10, 2006, he won the Britcar 24 Hours of Silverstone in a Duller Motorsport BMW MZ4, and on January 14, 2007 he again won the 24 Hours race at the
Dubai Autodrome in the Duller Motorsport
BMW Z4.
Complete Formula One Results
()
External links
★ http://www.f1rejects.com/drivers/quester/index.html Bio
★ http://www.motorsport-stats.com/f1/drivers/dquester/results.html
★ http://www.motorsport-stats.com/f1/drivers/dquester/index.html
★ http://bmw-motorsport.com/ms/en/fascination/history/bmw_touring/heroes/index.html
★ http://www.john-w.de/bmwf2/
References
1. The World Championship drivers - Where are they now?