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1968 Lola T70 MKIII

Spyder
Chassis number: SL73/129

Eric Broadley's Lola project, the legendary T70, debuted in 1965 and quickly demonstrated its prowess in the hands of John Surtees, who won the inaugural Can-Am Championship in 1966. The T70 series was produced in open MK II Spyder and MK III Coupe forms until 1968.

Although eclipsed by the Ferrari 512 and Porsche 917, the race-proven Lola T70 demonstrated its reliability and speed when Mark Donohue and Chuck Parsons won the 1969 24 Hours of Daytona in a Roger Penske-entered, Chevrolet-powered MK IIIB Coupe. The T70 was driven by a veritable 'who's who' of 1960s motor racing stars on both sides of the Atlantic. T70 drivers included Denny Hulme, Frank Gardner, Jo Bonnier, Brian Redman, David Piper, Trevor Taylor, Paul Hawkins, Walt Hansgen and scores of others.

This is one of four Penske cars from the 1967 season and believed to be one of Mark Donohue's cars. The car always ran in the top three or four, finished 2nd at Road America, 3rd at Riverside and won the USRRC for 1967. According to John Starkey's Lola's T-70 book this chassis was sold to Carl Haas on February 16, 1968 and ran a Chevy small block. It still has the original LG600 gear box #045. Skip Scott and Chuck Parsons drove the car to victory in the 1968 Elkhart Lake Can-Am event. In 1979 Phil Reilly bought the project, which (via Steve Griswold in Berkeley) was then restored to Christ Cord & Tom Skouras, launching Phil's restoration business. Phil sourced original bodywork from a Penske-Donohue 1967 T-70, including a 'gurney style' nose, prompting the decision to livery the car in Sunoco style rather than 1968 Haas Simoniz colors. It participated in many vintage races under this livery until recently when Steve Hilton, the car's current owner, acquired a second body for the car, restoring it to its Carl Haas Tem Simoniz wax heritage for the 2007 vintage campaign.


The Lola Racing Cars Group introduced the T70 in 1965 and during its lifetime, from 1965 through 1969, over 100 examples were produced in three versions. They were designed for endurance racing, incorporating excellent aerodynamics and flowing lines. The chassis was an aluminum monocoque structure that was both lightweight and rigid. The project was undertaken by Eric Broadley of Lola Cars with assistance from F1 world champion John Surtees. Originally, Broadley had been considered by Ford to build a racer that could defeat Ferrari at LeMans. Colin Chapman of Lotus and Cooper were also considered. After some consideration, the project was given to Broadley of Lola. Ford had been impressed with the Lola Mark VI mid-engined racer which was powered by a Ford 4.2-liter engine and produced around 350 horsepower. The sleek body had been created by John Frayling and utilized some of the most exotic materials available. By 1965 Ford had their Ferrari slayer and Broadley was ready to again work under his own supervision. He was not fond of how the GT40 had progressed and felt that it had gone in too many directions with each decision being analyzed by a committee. Work began on the T70 which would share many similarities to the GT40. In a sense, the Lola T70 was a result of Enzo Ferrari, since the GT40 had been created to defeat Ferrari at Le Mans. The first version was the MKII open-roofed version. The second version was the MKIII Coupe-version followed by the MK IIIB.

The straight back end soon gave it the nickname of 'breadvan' as it resembled delivery trucks of that era. The rear body shape was the result of lessons learned from the GT40 project and its handling on the Mulsanne straight at Le Mans. It was designed to eliminate some of the lift created at high speeds. The GT40 created 300 kg of lift at speed while the Lola T70 only created 200 kg of downforce though it did increase drag.

Though designed for endurance racing, the T70 proved most potent on the short sprint races where its lightweight body and superior handling made it very competitive. Reliability issues plagued the car on races of more than three hours. The Chevrolet small-block power-plant was unsuitable for utilizing the high-octane fuels that powered other racers. The engine was unable to fully utilize European fuels and as such, did not perform as well as intended in international competition.

The T70 MKII was entered in the competitive and newly formed CanAm series, where it dominated at nearly every race it entered, winning five of the six rounds. John Surtees won the title after winning three of those races in a factory car. The cars were also successful in Group 7 racing until the series came to a halt in 1966. 1966 was the final year for a successful season for the Lola T70s in CanAm racing as McLaren would dominate the following year. The T70 would win only one CanAm race in 1967. The powerful McLaren M6 racers easily overpowered the T70. In retaliation, the T70 IIIB was introduced which improved power and performance. The front was improved to separate the airflow between the bottom and top of the car, thus, minimizing pressure underneath the vehicle. Power came from a 327 small-block Chevrolet engine which was later upgraded to a 350 cubic-inch unit. It would go on to win many international endurance races. One of the most famous of its victories was the 1969 Daytona 24 Hours driven by Mark Donohue and Chuck Parsons. The demise of the racer occurred when rule changes that limited the size of the engine made it obsolete. This benefited the Ferrari 312 and Porsche 917 as their F1 engines were appropriate and highly tuned.

By 1968, a new car was needed; Lola introduced the T160 which was lighter and more powerful than its predecessor.

The Lola T70 was important for sports racing for many reasons with the most recognizable being the importance of downforce at a cost of extra drag. The cars won many important victories during the close of the 1960's and have continued in competition to this day, with many racing in historic racing events.

by Dan Vaughan