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Lister at Le Mans – Pole Position – Onboard Video

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Lister leading the pack at Le MansSit back and watch as Alex Buncombe puts the JD Classics Costin Lister on the pole at Le Mans ahead of a sixty-car field of beautiful historics.

Shot at the awesome Le Mans Legends race last year, this video showcases the awesome talent of Alex Buncombe as he steers the screaming six cylinder Lister to first place during qualifying. Buncombe went on to take the recently rebuilt, JD Classics Lister to victory in the actual race too.

More – A Lister to lust over (Gallery)

Jaguars, Aston Martins and more took to the track as part of the Le Mans Legends race. The sixty entrants drove vehicles produced between 1949 and 1965, jousting for victory on the 13.6km long track.

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MSR Shop T-Shirt of the Week: Corners of the Nurburgring

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Corners of the Nurburgring

Image: Motorsport Retro Store

As exciting to pronounce as they are to race, the corners of the Nurburgring are worth wearing on your sleeve.

Do it in style with this simple and striking tee, which features four corners of the Nurburgring: Flugplatz Fuchsrohre Karussell Brunnchen and Pflanzgarten.

Men’s t-shirts are 100% premium soft pre-shrunk jersey knit cotton and womens’ tees are light weight and made with deluxe ’30s soft style yarns.

Grab yours right here!

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Valtteri Bottas let loose in Damon Hill’s Williams FW18

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Valtteri Bottas driving the Williams FW18Damon Hill drove this very car to a stunning F1 World Championship in 1996, one of Williams’ greatest moments. Today we watch their current star driver Valtteri Bottas let loose behind the wheel. In 1996 Damon Hill won no less than eight Formula One Grands Prix. He placed second twice and his worst finishing position in a race he completed was fifth. By the conclusion of the season he was almost 20 points ahead of second placed Rothmans Williams team mate Jacques Villeneuve, and it was clear that the FW18 was the car of the season.

MORE: The most beautiful Formula One cars (gallery)

Fast forward 18 years and current Williams driver Valtteri Bottas is doing great things. In this video we see Bottas given the opportunity to jump behind the wheel of Hill’s old FW18 and go for a scream around Silverstone. Awesome!

MORE: Damon Hill reunited with his champion car (video)

Valtteri Bottas is currently in fourth place in the 2014 Formula One World Championship. He drives the Williams FW36.

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LEGO Formula 1 Masterpieces – Gallery

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LEGO Formula 1 Computer software, 3D modelling and good old fashioned creativity come together to allow the hands of Luca Rusconi to craft these incredible LEGO Formula 1 models.

Luca Rusconi is better known by his online handle Rosco PC, the LEGO master who uses a combination of computer aided design software and 3D modelling to design beautiful brick-by-brick construction plans before bringing each of his stunning projects to life.

MORE: Martini Porsche 935/78 recreated in LEGO (gallery)

He’s been building these cars for ten years, and has founded the LEGO user group BrianzaLUG. He’s an official LEGO ambassador and his amazing LEGO Formula 1 creations even feature operational suspension. The details are terrific, right down to the scrubbed tyres.

For more info take a look at RoscoPC’s website.

mclarenm23_01-54452c52967feMcLaren M23 – James Hunt

tyrrellp34_01-54452d03ee56bTyrrell P-34 – Ronnie Peterson

brabhambt46b_02Brabham BT46B

eagle_02Eagle Weslake MK1 T1G

ferrari126c2_01Ferrari 126C2

lotus43_01Lotus 43

lotus43_03Lotus 43

lotus49b_02Lotus 49B

lotus79_05Lotus 49

mclaren_03McLaren MP4/4 – Front Detail

williamsfw14b_03Williams FW14B

tyrrellp34_08Tyrrell P-34 – Engine Detail

Full gallery:

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Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale road racer – Arturio Merzario – Video

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Alfa Romeo 33 StradaleArturio Merzario raced in 85 Formula One Grands Prix between 1972 and 1979. Today, this Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale is his pride and joy.

During the 1970s he raced against drivers like Fittipaldi, Lauda, Stewart, and Hunt, scoring 11 Championship points in his eight year career. Today, Arturio Merzario is infatuated with an Italian sports car which was released five years before he made his debut in F1.

MORE – The most expensive Alfa Romeo ever sold (gallery)

The Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale is as rare as it is beautiful. During the 1970s Arturio Merzario won a host of endurance races behind the wheels of Alfa Romeo 33 race cars, including the 1000km of Nurburgring, 1000km of Monza and Targa Florio.  This video allows the driver to show off his own beloved Alfa, which was built as a road-legal version of the late 1960s race car.

MORE: Alfa Romeo Sprint Speciale – A Racing Statement (video)

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Renault V10 Onboard – Trulli’s pole winning lap – Monaco 2004

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Renault V10 onboardListen to the amazing sounds of that Renault V10 as we go for a pole-winning lap around Monaco with Jarno Trulli in 2004. At the time, this was a new lap record. Jarno Trulli spent three years racing glorious Renault V10s in Formula One before moving on to race with Panasonic / Toyota F1 in 2005. This video was shot during his first ever pole-winning lap at Monaco in 2004, which preceeded his first and only Formula One Grand Prix victory.

This fantastic lap was a full 0.411 seconds faster than the second quickest qualifier, and it set a new record at the time. Trulli ended up sixth in the season.

MORE: Watch 1990s F1 engines scream on the dyno! (video)

In the race Schumacher retired following a collision and second placed Trulli inherited the lead. He held off Jenson Button long enough to take the sole Formula One Grand Prix victory of his career. If you’re only going to win one, Monaco is the best place to do it!

MORE: Alain Prost drives the V10 F1 Renault Minivan (video)

Jarno Trulli last raced in Formula One in 2011.

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Lotus 72 – Photo of the Day

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Lotus 72 - POTDWould you believe this beautiful shot isn’t actually a photo? Neither did we! The stunning Lotus 72 has never looked better.

Designed by Colin Chapman for the 1970 Formula One season, and now re-designed by digital artist and CGI master Pedro Duarte of Portugal. The image depicts the JPS Lotus 72 sitting on the tarmac, perhaps a tribute to the 72D Emerson Fittipaldi drove to the 1972 Formula One World Championship.

You can download this photo in full 1920×1080 resolution simply by clicking here.

MORE: The five chapters of Lotus’ history

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A Classic Chevrolet Camaro Racecar to Crave

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Chevrolet Camaro Racecar

Images: Fantasy Junction

This classic Chevrolet Camaro racecar has seen period success at Le Mans, Sebring, Daytona and more, and is now freshly restored and looking for a new owner over at Fantasy Junction.

Porsche did a respectable job of locking the overall up in the 1982 24 Hours of Le Mans, but a little further back in the field an interesting fight was raging for GTO class honours. In amongst the thick of it was Billy Hagan, Gene Felton and this glorious ’82 Chevrolet Camaro.

The trio brought it home 17th overall, second in the GTO class, and cemented an impressive early performance in the car’s period racing career.

Chevrolet Camaro Racecar

A few months later the Camaro won the inaugural GP Miami IMSA GTO Grand Prix, then went on to win the GTO Class and claim sixth overall at the ’84 Daytona 24 Hours, before taking another class victory in the Sebring 12 Hours that March.

Its racing career continued at the hands of Hoyt Overbaugh in the mid-80s and early ’90s when it continued tackle great American circuits like Daytona, Sebring and Watkings Glen.

Chevrolet Camaro Racecar

Tex Racing Enterprises built the car with a Dennis Frings chassis and majestic 358 cubic inch V8 power plant, and looked after it through its racing career. Tex Powel himself was crew chief for the car’s Le Mans campaign, and played a significant role overseeing its restoration and supplying parts, many of which came from the car’s original stock.

During its restoration all mechanical systems were rebuilt or replaced and the engine was completely rebuilt by Petty Enterprises. It even has monstrous Marchal lamps to light up the Mulsanne straight in the darkest hours of the morning.

Chevrolet Camaro Racecar

A modern fuel cell and fire system have been installed for driver safety, and the car features an extremely well-built roll cage.

In terms of aesthetics it’s in great condition and has been faithfully restored to its Le Mans livery, including Stratagraph and Jean Charles Chevrolet sponsorship.

Chevrolet Camaro Racecar

The car is well documented and will become increasingly eligible for historic racing events around the world.

This one-off, well-documented and nicely-restored American racer has a great history, and we’d love to unleash it on the track! For more information head to Fantasy Junction’s official website here.

Images via Fantasy Junction

Chevrolet Camaro Racecar

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Fittipaldi and the McLaren M23 Reunited – Video

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Fittipaldi Depailler 1974 AustriaBehind the scenes with Emerson Fittipaldi, as he is reunited with his 1974 Formula One World Championship winning McLaren M23.

Opening Image: Emerson Fittipaldi in his M23 ahead of Matrick Depailler – Austria 1974 (The Cahier Archive)

This official McLaren video showcases the bringing together of racing legend Emerson Fittipaldi and his 1974 Champion McLaren M23. Four decades after driving the car to victory, Emerson is back behind the wheel. This time, it’s at the Goodwood Festival of Speed.

MORE: Martin Brundle drives the McLaren M23 (video)

Listen to Emerson explain the turning point in that memorable season, featuring what would become one of the most iconic Formula One cars of all time.

MORE: McLaren heritage – Photo genesis of an F1 icon

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For sale: A GT40 MK1 Built for the Road and Returned Home to Racing

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Ford GT40 Mk1

Image: RMD

This Ford GT40 was one of just thirty one road GT40s built by Ford Advanced Vehicles. Hardly a practical runabout, it was returned to race-ready rowdiness in its early life and is now up for sale at RMD.

Ford originally set out to build fifty road GT40s, but encountered a lack of interest in the impractical beast and chose to cease production at thirty plus a prototype.

Ford GT40 Mk1

The road cars shared much of the DNA of their race car brothers, but were calmed down a little with softened suspension, toned down brakes and a silencer fitted to the exhaust. Daily life conveniences included fitting a heater, de-mister, cloth interior, luggage boxes and even locks for the doors.

One of the 31 road-going GT40s, this car, chassis P/1062, was delivered in December of 1966 and assigned to Ford’s Kar Kraft division. It spent two undocumented years with Kar Kraft before it was finally moved in 1968 and sold in ’69 with a new road-modified MkII tail.

It spent the first year of its active life as a road car before being sold again and entering another undocumented phase of life. In the late ’70s the trail picks up with the car passing between two new owners before making its way to Jeff Lewis, a collector and racer in California.

Ford GT40 Mk1

Jeff immediately put it to good use, racing in the West Coast historic motorsport scene in the ’80s. The car had since been fitted with a standard Mk1 tail and was painted white with a black ‘go-faster’ racing stripe.

From this point the car barely had time to rest, making its way to Hans-Joachim Weber in Germany who modified it to full race spec and finished it in blue with a white centre stripe. Weber raced it actively for a full decade in Europe, eventually selling it to David McElrain, who already owned and raced another GT40 Mk1, in 1999.

As he, and most people, could only race one car at a time he set the current owner to driving duties of this car, eventually selling it to him in 2001.

Ford GT40 Mk1

He’s been racing P/1062 since then, earning successes in the Tour Auto, Le Mans Classic, Goodwood Revival and more. It has raced in the Le Mans Classic every year since 2004!

An inconsequential fire at Le Mans in 2006 served as the inspiration to provide the car with a full year-long restoration, which was completed before the next year’s event. It is currently receiving a full service to race-ready condition including fresh engine and gearbox, fuel bags, hub bearings and more.

It will include current FIA HTP papers and running spares for racing, making it a great option to hop into an interesting example one of history’s greatest sportscar racers and go racing. We can’t wait to see it go to a good home and keep up the stellar racing record its earned over the past three decades.

Head to RMD’s website here for more information.

Images via RMD

Ford GT40 Mk1

Ford GT40 Mk1

Ford GT40 Mk1

 

For sale: A GT40 MK1 Built for the Road and Returned Home to Racing is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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TWR XJS – Onboard at Donington – Video

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TWR XJS videoTake in the throaty roar of the glorious Group A TWR XJS as it twitches, slides and thunders around Donington at the hands of Alex Buncombe.

This fantastic video by JD Classics takes us for a ride aboard the unforgettable Tom Walkinshaw Racing Jaguar XJS Group A. The sound is absolutely tremendous as the talented Buncombe rows through the gears and uses every inch of the Donington surface to capture second place in the historic event.

MORE: Full details, gallery and specification on this very special TWR XJS

MORE: The glory of Group A (video)

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Ken Block Ford Escort Mk2 – Test footage

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Ken Block Escort Rally Archive footage captures Ken Block blasting through the forest, testing his Ford Escort Mk2 at Kearney Rally Village in upstate New York.

OK so he’s no Ari Vatanen behind the wheel and the livery isn’t particularly timely, however it’s great to see the internet superstar driving a bit of old metal, and awesome to see fresh footage of a Ford Escort Mk2 tearing through the Forest. It’s one of our all time favorite cars here at Motorsport Retro, we hope we don’t have to explain why…

MORE: Ford Escort – Rally Legend

MORE: WRC driver + Ford Escort MKII onboard footage (video)

 Ken Block was testing the car in the lead up to Rally New York.

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1985 Lancia Delta S4 Group B Up for Auction

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1985 Lancia Delta S4

Images: Artcurial

This 1985 Lancia Delta S4 Group B is a relic of rallying’s most out-there and exciting era, and a genuine factory works car to boot. It’s heading to auction at Artcurial’s upcoming Automobiles sur les Champs 7 sale.

Lasting just three years and change, from 1983 to 1986, Group B changed rally racing forever. Loose regulations allowed manufacturers to run all but rampant with their designs, producing some of the most powerful and fast machinery in the sport’s history. Machines the likes of these have not been seen since.

And up there with the most fearsomely fast of them all was Lancia’s Delta S4, which followed on from the 037 in the chronological sense only. It was designed from a blank slate with plans to knock Peugeot off the top step, on which they were becoming far too comfortable with their 205 T16.

1985 Lancia Delta S4

With regulations limiting engine capacity to 1,759cc, Lancia’s Jean Todt, Cesare Fiorio and Claudio Lombardi set out to keep weight below 900 kilograms. An all-aluminium engine was designed to at least match the 450bhp put out by the Peugot. To help it breathe and provide low-down power and response it received both a turbocharger and a mechanically-controlled supercharger.

Four-wheel drive with a Ferguson coupling allowed a power split between 40/60 and 0/100 front to rear and did the hard work in putting the power to the ground.

1985 Lancia Delta S4

It proved a successful design, with a Delta S4 winning on debut late in 1985 and putting in a fierce fight with Peugeot in 1986 before the series’ early demise.

This particular car, chassis 209, left the factory in November 1985 in time to contest the 1986 World Rally Championship. An official Lancia factory team car, soon-to-be two-time World Rally Champion Miky Biasion drove it to victory in the 1986 Rally Argentina with Tiziano Siviero.

1985 Lancia Delta S4

After that race it was put into storage, and today remains completely original.

This is a rare, exciting and completely original machine, and we love it!

It’ll head to auction on the second of November, 2014, at Artcurial’s Automobiles sur les Champs 7 sale. Head to their official website here for more details.

Images via Artcurial

1985 Lancia Delta S4

1985 Lancia Delta S4

1985 Lancia Delta S4

1985 Lancia Delta S4 Group B Up for Auction is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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1969 T91 Cooper: The Formula 1 car that was never built

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1969 T91 Cooper Formula One Car

In 1969, before the dissolution of their Formula 1 program, Cooper was working on two cars – the T86C and T91 Cooper. Neither car was finished, and that’s where their story begins.

Although it never hit the track in anger as a Formula 1 car, the T86C did evolve into a Formula 5000 machine, receiving a five-litre Ford V8 and racing in the Guards Formula 5000 championship in 1970.

The T91 Cooper, however, has more of a mystery behind it. One which Motorsports writer Colene Evans-Allen unravels here in her article Suspended in Time: An Unusual Piece of Motorsport History.

Thanks to Colene Evans-Allen.

1969 T91 Cooper Formula One Car

Suspended in Time:  An Unusual Piece of Motorsport History

The only living Steward from the most controversial race in Formula One history also owns one of the most unusual and rare pieces of motorsport memorabilia in the world.

Ron Evans was the Assistant Chief Steward of the 1973 Canadian Grand Prix – a race that ended with a protest and a question as to who the correct winner of the race was.  Evans was involved in the decision that Peter Revson was the winner, which was the last Formula One victory by Revson before his untimely death in March of 1974.  By sheer luck, Evans has another claim to fame.  He is the owner of a set of wooden patterns for suspension pieces for a race car.  The question is which race car do they belong to?

1969 T91 Cooper Formula One Car

The wooden patterns are stored in a pair of cardboard boxes in Evans’ garage outside of Cambridge, Ontario, Canada, and they aren’t incredibly impressive looking.  In fact, they’re a rather dull orange colour and fairly unremarkable except for the markings on them.  Each pattern is marked with the words “Cooper Cars” and a part number.  All the markings are handwritten in permanent marker, and the patterns are for rear uprights and related suspension pieces.

“I knew they were for a Cooper race car, but I had no idea which one,” says Evans. 

Despite having sold the Cooper Car Company to Chipstead Motor Group in 1965, John Cooper remained involved in the company’s Formula One program until it was disbanded in 1969.  At that time, the Formula One program was working on two different models of car – the T91 and the T86C.  Neither model of car was completed, although the T86C was converted into a Formula 5000 car.  The T91 components and intellectual property were sold, and the Fejer brothers in Ontario, Canada purchased a significant number of the assets, including the patterns for the suspension components of the T91.

The Fejers were known for their willingness to use components designed by others in the race cars they built, the most well known of those being the Chinooks.  The brothers had the idea that they would have a set of the T91 uprights cast from the patterns and use those uprights on the 1970 Formula 5000 Chinook currently being raced in vintage events by American Mike Knittel.  They sent the patterns to one of only three foundries in Canada at the time that was casting magnesium – Preston Magnesium Products in Cambridge, Ontario.  Evans was a customer of the foundry, where he was getting his own magnesium wheels cast. 

For reasons that aren’t clear, the foundry retained possession of the patterns for the T91 suspension pieces and they were never returned to the Fejers.  Steve Maiter, the foundry owner, stored the patterns away for several years.  In the mid-1970’s, the patterns were put out to be tossed in the garbage when Evans noticed them and asked Maiter if he could keep them.  With neither man realizing what they actually were, Maiter gave Evans the wooden patterns.  They have been in Evans’ possession ever since.  Ironically, the Fejer brothers believed the foundry had burned down and the patterns had been destroyed.  While the foundry didn’t burn down, it did close. 

The trail to figuring out what race car the patterns were for began with an email to Lord March in the United Kingdom.  He forwarded Evans to Mike Cooper – John Cooper’s son.  Mike Cooper put Evans in touch with the Cooper Car Club in the United States.  The members of that club compared the upright patterns against all existing Cooper Cars, and by process of elimination concluded that the patterns were likely for the 1969 T91 Formula One Car.  While not a definitive answer, it brought Evans to the realization that he had a very unique and rare piece of motorsport history. 

Two years ago, Evans’ daughter had a discussion with Ed Butt, who is a former employee of the Fejer brothers during the time that they purchased the assets from Cooper Car Company.  Butt was initially shocked to learn that the patterns had survived, given he had believed they had been destroyed long ago.  Butt was able to confirm that the patterns are the suspension pieces for the 1969 Cooper T91 Formula One Car.  This past summer Rudy Fejer also confirmed that the patterns were for “that Formula One car” when asked about them at the Canadian Historic Grand Prix 2014.

These patterns may be the only remaining pieces of the 1969 T91 Cooper anywhere in the world.  Evans has made several attempts over the years to get the patterns put in an appropriate museum, including the Formula One Museum in Donington, England.  None of these attempts have been successful, so the patterns continue to sit in their cardboard boxes in the attic of Evans’ garage.  Evans has no idea what he will do with the patterns, but he knows they’re a valuable piece of motorsport history.

After all, not many people in the world can say they may own the only pieces of a Formula One race car that was never built.

Colene Evans-Allen is a freelance motorsport writer in Cambridge, Ontario, Canada.  She writes for the Toronto Star and is the Canadian Motorsport Correspondent for In The Pits Racing Radio on the CBS Sports Radio Network.  Evans-Allen is also a Race Official with 15 years as a flag marshal, pit marshal, grid marshal, and scrutineer for SCCA(Detroit Region).

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MSR T-Shirt of the Week: Remember What It Takes

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Ayrton Senna Tee

Image: Motorsport Retro Store

Succeeding at the highest echelons of motorsport requires a lot from a person. The qualities which Ayrton Senna admired are a good start.

Men’s t-shirts are 100% premium soft pre-shrunk jersey knit cotton and womens’ tees are light weight and made with deluxe ’30s soft style yarns.

Grab yours at the Motorsport Retro Shop here.

MSR T-Shirt of the Week: Remember What It Takes is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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Datsun 240Z vs KTM 450 EXC

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Datsun 240Z Rally

“Life is more fun on gravel. The end.”

In which a Datsun 240Z rally car and KTM 450 EXC go very sideways, get very airborne and make very nice noises, and we forget all about worrying about which is faster because it’s all just a lot of fun.

“They went to Wales for an intensive programme of jump testing. Just to make sure it flew straight and true and could take repeated massive landings.”

When it comes to a lot of fun, this Datsun 240Z rally car gets it right. It has been built by Dansport to be as close to invincible as is practical and pounds out 270 horsepower from a straight six, through a racey and appropriately-screechy racing dog box.

It was built up to 1000 kilograms of brutality-besting beefiness by Dansport to survive the Safari Rally, and did an impressive job of just that, claiming fourth in the East African Safari Classic Rally.

Simple, purposeful, loud and wild – it’s everything we look for!

Its competition features half the wheels, one-sixth of the cylinders and is four decades younger – a KTM 450 EXC driven spectacularly by British Enduro and Supermoto Champion Ady Smith.

In the latest video from EVO’s car VS bike battles, we find out which is faster, and throw in a visit from an EVO VI rally car for good measure. Along the way we enjoy some very nice back-out right boot steering, a brilliant soundtrack and some fun with jumps.

Datsun 240Z vs KTM 450 EXC is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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W18 Engine – The smallest in the world – Video

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W18 engine - Mini buildFancy yourself a fairly patient individual? You haven’t seen anything yet. This is what 1850 grueling hours of labor looks like, input by one man to craft the world’s smallest W18 engine.

469 pieces, 388 screws, 1850 hours. It’s debatable to call this air powered creation an engine by some definitions of the word, however the quality and quantity of work which has gone into it as a project is undeniable.

With a bore of 14mm and a stroke of 10.25mm, the engine displaces just 28.4cc.

We’ve written about the man behind the smallest V12 engine before. As a followup, take a look the biggest of the smallest of them all, the minature W18.

MORE: The man behind the smallest V12 in the world (video)

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Graham Hill – Monaco 1969 – Photo of the Day

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Graham HillGraham Hill driving the Lotus 49B, on his way to his final Formula One World Championship Grand Prix victory at Monaco in 1969. This beautiful image captures Graham Hill and his Lotus 49B in action whilst on his way to winning the 1969 Monaco Grand Prix ahead of Piers Courage and third placed Jo Siffert.

MORE: Up for auction: ex-Graham Hill Lotus 49B

It was a glorious moment for Hill. He was the defending 1968 World Champion, and the star driver for Gold Leaf Team Lotus, he’d placed second in the 1969 South African season opener and came back from a terrible accident in Spain to win the Monaco Grand Prix. 1969 however, was not to be Graham Hill’s year. He placed seventh overall, and the season went to Jackie Stewart.

MORE: Onboard with Graham Hill at the 1970 Monaco Grand Prix (video)

Sadly, Monaco 1969 would be the last Formula One Championship Grand Prix he would win before his death in 1975.

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March 717 – Widescreen Gallery

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March 717 A revised 707, the March 717 is a one of a kind, 8.8 litre, 800 horsepower, 200 mile-per-hour CanAm monster of the past.

Images: Speed O Graphica

March 717_pic 16Originally, Robin Herd designed a sports car following the design of the McLaren M8 back in 1970. Herd used the mighty Chevrolet V8 that produced well over 700 hp. As Herd produced the 1970 Group 7 car, they dubbed it the March 707.March 717_pic 19

Group 7 was in fact a set of regulations used for both two-seater racing cars from 1966-75 and international formula racing cars from 1976-81. The Canadian-American Challenge Cup, also known as Can-Am was open to Group 7 cars. This series would see the most powerful racing machines ever build, dominated by McLaren and later Porsche.March 717_pic 15

The revised version pictured here was a revised version of the original 707, known as the March 717. The chassis was upgraded including a revised nose. Furthermore the radiators were moved to the sides of the V8 engine.March 717_pic 4

This particular car is particularly rare, as it is the only March 717 in existence.

March 717_pic 2It is often seen at historic racing events in Europe using a Chevrolet 8.8 litre engine (537 cu in) generating 800 bhp (597 KW), using a 5 speed gearbox build by Hewland.

March 717_pic 13The car has a weight of just 800 kgs and has a top speed of 325 km/h (202 mph).

Take a look at the full gallery here:

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24 Hours at the 24 Hours of Le Mans

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1963 24 Hours of Le Mans

Turn the clock back a half-century and spend 24 Hours at Le Mans in this brilliant short film from the 1963 running of the race.

This beautifully-remastered colour footage begins with spectators streaming in to the city of Le Mans. It paints a colourful picture of life at the event as cultures from around the world gather to celebrate together and partake in this history-making event.

The film follows the progress of Richie Ginther and Graham Hill, who are driving a Rover BRM 2.0L Turbine in the race.

Ferrari would capture the top six positions and the overall win, with Italy’s Lorenzo Bandini and Ludovico Scarfiotti taking honours in a Ferrari 250P. Hill, Ginther and their turbine from the future were right up there, however, completing 310 laps in an effort which would put them right up with the Ferraris alongside Peter Bolton and Ninian Sanderson in their AC Cobra.

Alongside the colour and celebration, the 1963 24 Hours of Le Mans did have a dark side. Christian Heins was killed when he lost control trying to avoid oil, cars and debris left behind by a multi-car accident caused by Bruce McLaren’s Aston Martin DB4’s engine blowing up early in the race.

Beautiful cars, legendary drivers and some amazing handheld periscopes make this video a joyous trip back to a simpler, and somehow more colourful time. Enjoy the 1963 24 Hours of Le Mans.

24 Hours at the 24 Hours of Le Mans is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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