Posts Tagged ‘Tyrrell’
A Dozen of our Favourite Fords
Thursday, January 20th, 2011Racing Beauty
Wednesday, October 21st, 2009Porsche 917
In its powder blue and orange Gulf livery, it dominated the imagination of fans of motor racing for an entire decade. it also happened to give Porsche their first outright wins of the 24 Heures Du Mans in 1970 and 1971. Superbly fast, powerful and savagely gorgeous, it of course featured as Steve McQueen’s charge in the flawed jewel of motor racing cinema that was 1971’s Le Mans.
Ferrari 250 GTO
See one in the flesh and you understand why they command up to $16M. Based on the SWB 250 GT, part of the appeal of the ‘Gran Turismo Omologato’ version is its rarity. Only a total of 39 were ever made in Maranello. The GTO’s curves and proportions were dreamed up in house in the Ferrari factory and developed by venerable coachbuilder Scaglietti. Automotive engineering as high art? We think so.
Tyrrell P34
Tyrrell’s P34 project was introduced as a solution to the perennial problem of aerodynamics in F1 racing. This big slick clad wheels were notoriously troublesome with airflow: so the solution of shrinking the front wheels and adding another row to compensate for loss of grip was come up with by Ken Tyrrell himself. Success in the 1976 season in the hands of Jody Sheckter and Patrick Depaillier was mixed with consternation. Sheckter, though having won the Swedish Grand Prix in a P34 that year, dismissed the design as a faddish anomaly. The P34 was outrageous, creative and lightning quick. What more could you ask of a race car?
Mercedes 300 SLR
According to Stirling Moss himself, there was no other car on the planet that could have achieved his record breaking time in the 1955 Mille Miglia. Teutonic engineering brilliance crossed with Stirling’s fearlessness combined to create the quickest ‘silver arrow’ in racing history. Now safely ensconced in the Mercedes museum in Stuttgart, you would have to control the budget of a large but developing nation to purchase the original.
Six Wheels Good
Friday, February 20th, 2009
Anyone who was a child in the 1970s can testify to the cultural import of The Thunderbirds. It wasn’t just the dashing derring-do of Scott, Virgil and the rest of the Tracy brothers that got little boys frothing with desire for adventure. In a forward thinking piece of proto feminist iconography, the Anderson husband and wife team made aristocratic badass superbitch Lady Penelope the kick-arse star of the show. The good Lady combined the strangely vapid expression of Paris Hilton with the comic book posh totty drawl of Margaret Thatcher. She was clearly as image obsessed as the former and as power-crazed as the latter. Just look at the way she ordered Parker, her long suffering butler around.
But it was, of course, the good Lady’s ride, the six wheeled FAB 1 Rolls Royce in shocking pink, that was the centrepiece of the Anderson aesthetic. Whether or not the backroom staff at the normally conservative Panther Westwinds company were Lady Penelope fans, they went ahead and produced in 1977 a car that was the inverse to the FAB 1: every bit as outrageous, but futuristic in the mean, menacing way that the fictitious Rolls attempted to disguise in that shocking pink paintjob. The Panther 6 was a convertible powered by a mid-mounted 8.2 litre Cadillac V8 with twin turbochargers, apparently capable of producing over 600bhp. Only two were ever produced and though the car’s top speed was never verified, the manufacturers claimed that the car was capable of over 200MPH, which would have made it the first production car to hit that magic watershed. It included a detachable hard top and a convertible soft top as well as a full array of electronic instrumentation. Air conditioning was included, as well as an automatic fire extinguisher, electric seats and windows, a mobile telephone and a television.
Panther Westwinds had enjoyed success since its launch in 1972 with its series of retro-styled cars based on the mechanical components of standard products from other manufacturers. At the end of the seventies the company experienced financial problems, was sold to Korean interests and moved disasterously into racing, before finally being swallowed up in 1990 by the Syang Yong corporation. The producers of the Panther 6 may of course, have been equally inspired by the P34 Tyrell that had rubbed motorsport’s cloying orthodoxy in the mud in 1976. Tyrell designer Derek Gardner’s theory that smaller front wheels could drastically lessen drag; the reduced grip offset by an extra set of steerable wheels, proved a hit, until Jody Sheckter dismissed the car as a piece of junk (despite having won the Swedish Grand Prix in the thing with team mate Derek Depailler in second place). Poor old Parker’s saving grace was that he, like Sheckter and Depailler and only a handful of other individuals, got to experience serious driving in a six wheeled supercar.

















