Posts Tagged ‘Motorsport’

Silverstone Classic

Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

It’s one of those events that you might not think is what you’re all about.

But if you save your pennies for Bernie Ecclestone’s circus to come to the Northamptonshire countryside — you really should consider hitting the Silverstone Classic. For us, the Silverstone Classic offers much more bang for your hard-​​earned bucks.

The appeal is obvious to many of us. Think of every kind of racing formula to have graced the circuit for the last seventy odd years — think of cars and bikes from every era of 20th century racing in fact: and you have it all there.

But not only can you watch these rare and classic cars get an outing at the place for which they were bred — you can get truly up close and personal with the men and women and the machines themselves. There was music, classic aviation displays — an amazing weekend, in other words.

Highlight for us this year was undoubtedly the fiftieth anniversary commem­or­ation of the E-​​Type. Apparently close to a thousand etypes were on site and on-​​track, a record grid of 52 racing E-​​types contested a round of the E-​​type Challenge, the special race series created for 2011 to mark the anniversary year.

Buy your tickets early for next year’s extravaganza.

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Fully Mentalist Metro

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

One of the unexpected consequences of the fright­ening flux within the British car industry of the 1980s was the emergence of serious motor­s­ports divisions within the corporate struc­tures of car makers.

And the Metro 6R4 was perhaps the nuttiest, most unlikely fruits of this phenomenon — cultivated to add its exotic flavour to the hugely popular and spectacular Group B rally régime which was at the time making rally the most popular motor­sport on the planet.

Calling this monster, whose naturally aspirated V6 engine had elements of the Cosworth DFV and Rover V8 machinery stuffed in its rear end, was a little disin­genuous. Destined to appeal fondly to the British masses because of its moniker, it really only vaguely looked like the cheap, huge selling Metro.

Development of the 6R4 was taken on with the help of Williams Grand Prix Engineering — and the resultant racer was of course made of funda­mentally different stuff than the production Metro.

Panels of Glass Reinforced Plastic and a little bit of steel clothed a seam welded tubular frame — and the car was actually laid out appar­ently on the bigger Austin Maestro; hence that jutted jawed and bulbous backed profile.

There was permanent 4WD and the gearbox constructed so that it was relat­ively simple to change ratios and torque bias between the diffs. Rover of course had to make at least 200 of these cars available to homologate them for Group B — and in 1984 you could buy the homologated package which punched to the tune of around 250 BHP, for around £25K.

Later specs pushed this already punchy figure closer to the 400 mark — and fully race ready packages of these full Rally monsters would have cost you around £40K.

Group B was slain by the FIA in 1987 — and the 6R4 didn’t enjoy much race success.

What it did achieve was a lasting, justified reputation as the most bonkers British car ever created.

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D-Type: Beneath the Skin

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

Why is the D-​​Type such a beguiling beauty? Well, it remains as in all things aesthetic a matter of opinion, but in the case of the this particular machine there are some concrete factors that help explain its enduring charisma.

The D-​​Type looked, in 1954, unlike anything else out there on the race track, let alone the road. Its aerody­namic features were all about function, but this focus on winning unwit­tingly created something spectac­u­larly pleasing to the eye.

The intro­duction of aviation technology that facil­itated the speed and reliab­ility of the cars was a slowly blossoming flower that came to represent a patiently awaited premium for Britain.

When they saw C and D-​​types swathed in green (and occasionally blue) so successful on the circuits of Europe, Brits started to realise that they really had something to be proud of — that the struggles of the previous decades just might have been worth it.

This was in the years immedi­ately after the Festival of Britain, the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth and the conquering of Everest by that colonial hero Hilary.

Rationing of basic foodstuffs might have remained a part of people’s every day lives, but the cutting edge of British engin­eering demon­strated that these stric­tures could be transcended.

As Norman Dewis told us a couple of years ago, when the Jaguar team set off from Browns Lane en route to Europe the streets would be lined with flag-​​waving patriots. It’s a far cry from the inter­na­tional corpor­atism of today’s motorsport.

Jaguar’s spectac­u­larly named race manager Lofty England led the team that produced the Jaguar D-​​Type. The car was produced to extend and deepen the success of the C-​​Type — and it immedi­ately performed well. In its first appearance at Le Mans in 1954, the Jaguar team’s cars suffered, appar­ently, from sand in their fuel. Once this problem had been rectified, however, this car (No 14, driven by Duncan Hamilton and Tony Rolt) immedi­ately reestab­lished itself. Eventually it finished less than one lap down on the winning Ferrari.

This D Type was the first first works car to be completed, on the 4th of May 1954. As well as its debut second place at Le Mans, it came second also at the Reims 12 Hours and raced at various Grand Prix and Trophy events in the UK. Interestingly, in 1956 it was converted to a road going version of the car, a sort of almost-​​XKSS, with a screen frame created and the central member between cockpits removed.

It has been claimed that these innov­a­tions originally inspired the factory to go ahead and produce the limited run of the road-​​going XKSS, though this was denied by the crew at Browns Lane. Either way, the car was used on the road for many years and was sold to its current owner in 2000.

The Monocoque chassis of the D-​​Type was developed using battle-​​garnered aviation expertise. Sheets of aluminium alloy formed the central tub which carried the cockpit – and an aluminium subframe was attached to this that carried the engine in its compartment as well as the front running gear and the steering mechan­icals. Drive train and rear suspension was attached directly to the tub – and fuel was carried inside ‘bags’ mounted in compart­ments in the monocoque itself.

Malcolm Sayer, who, along with devel­opment engineer Norman Dewis had worked in the aviation industry in the forties, designed the D-Type’s beauti­fully sculpted coachwork. With the removal of the tradi­tional separate chassis that had featured in the C-​​Type, a greatly reduced frontal area was made possible. The engine was angled over slightly (notice the off-​​centre bonnet bulge) and engineers developed a dry-​​sump form of lubric­ation so that the whole issue could be lowered. A low-​​drag underbody combined with the stabil­izing fin behind the driver made high speeds at Le Mans just about manageable. After 1955 a long-​​nose version of the body was intro­duced which resulted in even greater top-​​end velocity.

That the D-Type’s aerody­namic properties and road presence would go on to inform that of the E-​​Type, which in turn went on to define glamorous yet accessible motoring in the sixties is testament to the power of these cars.

Source: Jaguar Sports Racers

Porsche @ Le Mans 2014

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

Top level motor­sport is poorer without the involvement of works teams.

That’s why we were gutted when Honda, Toyota and BMW pulled out of F1.

And that’s why it sits uncom­fortably with us that an F1 team with the name of an energy drinks company is running away with the title this year.

The wider automotive world needs companies that are making road cars involved in motoring’s cutting edge so that the trickle down effect of tech and aesthetic becomes bedded into mainstream car culture.

When they pull out the opposite happens. Look at Honda’s discon­tinu­ation of the sublime NSX and the super fun S2000. Look at Toyota’s bland­ified lineup. Look at BMW’s stultified devel­opment of new, exciting products these last few years.

So when we received word today that Porsche will be entering a fully developed works team at Le Mans in three years’ time, it made our hearts leap.

Surely the most successful team in the history of the 24 Hours needs to be there competing against the likes of Audi, Peugeot and Aston.

Not only does it put Porsche right at the heart of where they need to be, it throws down a gauntlet to your Ferraris and your Fords and any other global manufac­turer who want to achieve true credibility.

Step up to the plate. Don’t just trade on memories and spurious ideas of ‘heritage’.

Bravo Porsche. May you make history anew.

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Goodwood & the Joy of Hills

Tuesday, June 28th, 2011

We love hill climbing. Simple format; there’s a track up a hill — you have to be quickest. Unlike gridded wheel-​​to-​​wheel racing, there are no tactics, no strategies available and no one to show you the way. It’s just a pure test of car and driver.

If Colorado’s Pikes Peak is the ultimate Hillclimb, then Goodwood’s Festival of Speed (coming up this weekend) is a delicious tongue tip taster of the form. Every year a huge variety of vehicles — from priceless vintage cars and the latest in cutting edge Hypercar exotica to Rod Millen’s Pike Peak slaying Celica (above & Below) — gather on the lawn of Lord March’s elegant Sussex Estate.

I was lucky enough to witness this monstrous missile setting its record time a few years ago. Sometimes a vehicle can be so powerful it’s a little fright­ening to be near it.

This was such a car.

Not sure if Rod Millen will be at Goodwood this weekend – but rest assured it’s the highlight of the petrolhead year. And you should be there.

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Guy Martin Onboard

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

image via TT3D

Ok, so we know the TT was a couple of weeks back and that we all know, at least intel­lec­tually, how mad TT riders really have to be.

But: we’ve never seen anything that etches out the sublime and lightning quick inter­action of bike, body and mind that is needed to thread a compet­itive lap around the Isle of Man than the footage in the onboard video below.

The lap commentary by onboard rider and record-​​breaking mentalist Guy Martin sets off the incredible sequence perfectly — and what emerges that the man himself appears amazed that he can actually do the things that is evidenced by the video he shot.

The TT3D film was damn good. But there’s something in the rawness of this footage combined with Guy’s voiceover that transcends that totally.

Talk all through the video is of how calib­rated to this sort of high tempo effort the rider’s brain becomes through practice during TT week: and there is a barely disguised and totally refreshing sense of awe at the challenges he has faced.

Great to see and brilliant to hear.

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Le Mans 2011

Friday, June 10th, 2011


Click images and click top right to go huge!

With the great weekend at la Circuit La Sarthe almost upon us there’s little we’d love to do more than pull up the deep buttoned man– chair up close to the ‘tube, stack a case of fine claret and some fruits of the delicatessen, and gorge on the ultimate endurance event of motorsport.

Problem is, as with most forms of top-​​level racing, designs and sponsorship liveries have tended to meld into one colourful mass  — and it has become more and more tricky to I-​​D your Astons from your Audis, your Porsches from your prancing horses. Especially at night. Especially eighteen hours into your marathon endurance armchair session.

So the kind folk from Nissan have offered these spotter’s guides to make life a little easier — and if you are like us nerdish about things graphic and car-​​shaped, we think you’ll agree that they look pretty beautiful in an aesthetic kind of way, even if you stripped away the use value.

Let’s raise a toast to the most famous single motor race on the planet!