1978: riccardo Patrice finished sixth in Long Beach, USA, bringing the team points of 1. Sweden's runner-up after Perkins is still the team's best result today.
198 1: Parks won the team's only leading position in Long Beach.
1984: The team adopts BMW turbocharged engine.
1985: Belgian driver Thierry Butson won the second place in San Marino.
1987: BMW quits F 1. The team continued to use the BMW engine and changed its name to Megatron.
1989: Flying Arrow Investment10 million dollars opened a new technology center in Milton Keynes.
1989: Feijian was acquired by Japanese Footwork Company.
1995: export of footwork. Jackie Oliver is in charge of the team again.
World champion Dai Wen Hill signed on to join the team. Tom Walkinshaw bought the motorcade.
1997: Hill tied the team's best result in Hungary and won the second place.
1998: Both cars earned points in Monaco.
1999: Roger Silman was appointed as the administrative director and Mike Coughlan became the technical director.
2000: Rosa and Vestapan participated in the competition and won the seventh place.
200 1 season score: 1 point, team ranking 10.
2003: The motorcade declared bankruptcy.
Following Prost's bankruptcy, the Flying Arrow F 1 team finally declared bankruptcy liquidation, thus ending the 26-year lingering in F 1 for several months. They came home empty-handed and didn't take a sub-station champion. The best result was that former world champion damon hill won the runner-up in the Hungarian Grand Prix with 1997, and they only scored 14 1 point in the World Championships. After a period of time, the assets of the Flying Arrows will be cleaned up and auctioned. Walkinshaw, the former boss, is facing a lawsuit from Cosworth Company demanding to pay a huge engine fee of 9.6 million US dollars, while frentzen, Vestapan and Morgan Grenfell Bank, the former drivers, have also won the lawsuit against Bogongtang in Birmingham court to recover the unpaid wages and debts.