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1971 McLaren M8E

Spyder
Chassis number: 80-01

The McLaren M8E Can-Am cars were McLaren 'customer cars', constructed by Trojan Ltd. for McLaren. This particular McLaren, chassis number 80-01, was originally purchased by Alain de Cadenet's Ecurie Evergreen Team. It was driven by Chris Craft in the European-based Interserie events from 1970 through 1973. Craft captured first place at Norisring and second place at Imola.

The McLaren #80-01 next made its way to the United States where it wound up in the capable hands of Warren Tope. With Tope behind the wheel, this M8E claimed the SCCA 1974 National Championship. In 1975 Tope crashed the car at the Pontiac, MI road race. The car was subsequently sold and repaired.

In 1984 the M8E returned to the track to run in vintage car races at Palm Beach, FL. In 1984 the #80-01 passed to a new owner and received a complete, ground-up restoration. Beginning in 1988 the M8E ran at various vintage racing events across the country, including such tracks as Watkins Glen, Lime Rock, Road Atlanta, Seattle, and Portland.

In 2005 the current owner purchased this McLaren M8E Can-Am Chassis #80-01.

The car has been raced by such drivers as Chris Craft, Bob Brown, Bob Lazier, and Warren Tope at such venues as Imola, Norisring, Mid-Ohio, Brainerd, Edmonton, Monterey, Elkhart Lake, and Atlanta. The current owner now drives this car at various vintage race events across the U.S.

The car is fitted with a Donovan aluminum engine block with a forged steel crank and Camillo rods. It also has J & E pistons, and a roller cam with a Milodon gear drive. The engine is fed by a Lucas McKay mechanical injection system prepared by Kinsler. Ignition is a Vertex Scintilla magneto with a McKay right-angle drive. The engine is lubricated via a dry sump system with an Ed Pink four-stage pump. It has a Hewland LG-500 4-speed gearbox and the power from the Chevy is driven through a Borg & Beck triple disc clutch. Braking is delivered through Lockheed twin pot calipers and ventilated discs front and rear. The shocks are double-adjusted Konis. The wheels are 11-15' front and 16-15' rear Magnesium alloy McLaren wheels.


Spyder
Chassis number: 80-04

This M83 Can-Am car is the ex-Vic Elford and Sam Posey car. It has American Racing Associates Livery and finished 9th in the 1971 Can-Am series. It is powered by an aluminum 496 cubic-inch Chevrolet V8 engine with Lucas injection and develops 780 horsepower. There is a Hewland LG500 MKII transaxle, aluminum monocoque with steel bulkheads and 4-piston Lockheed magnesium calipers.

by Dan Vaughan


Spyder

This McLaren M8E was originally campaigned by Roy Woods during the 1971 season. It was later driven by Vic Elford who crashed the car during practice at Laguna Seca. The car has been fully restored by Benton Bryan using an original monocoque tub and is equipped with a Lucas-injected all-aluminum Keith Black big block Chevy engine. The car has been extensively campaigned in vintage racing during the 1980s by both Vic Elford and Benton Bryan.

by Dan Vaughan


McLaren had done extremely well during the 1967 CanAm season with their M6A Works Team cars. They had secured a championship victory with their three cars. In 1968, McLaren put this design into production as a customer car and dubbed it the M6B.

Bruce McLaren was the youngest Grand Prix winner who would eventually become a car manufacturer. His resume includes racing on the Cooper Works F1 team during the era of the very competitive mid-engined Coopers. He was a works driver for a few years before purchasing his own Cooper in 1963, a car known as the Zerex Special. He campaigned the car in the American sports car series for a few years, modifying it as needed and eventually building a new racer from the group up. The car has a spaceframe chassis and was named the M1. It was first seen in 1964 and it quickly proved it was a very capable machine, earning a reputation and a contract with Elva/Trojan for the production of customer versions. This gave the Works team the financial backing and the time to focus on their racing program.

Within a few years, McLaren had diversified into other racing segments, building monoposto's that could be used in Formula 1 competition. The M1 was used in the newly formed CanAm Series with some success, but the Lola T70 ultimately proved too competitive. The M1 was replaced by the M6, which featured an aluminum monocoque and fiberglass body. This setup was similar to the T70. The McLaren Oldsmobile V8 engines that powered the M6 cars were lightweight but lacking in power compared to other team cars. A change was made to Chevrolet engines that offered large displacement sizes. The chassis of the M6A was brought to life in just eleven weeks. The design was made by Robin Herd. Bruce McLaren and teammate Denny Hulme fine-tuned the design through rigorous testing sessions. The chassis was aluminum monocoque which was both lightweight and strong. During 1967, McLaren and Hulme dominated. McLaren earned 30 points, and Hulme was close behind with 27. The McLarens and their Gulf-sponsored cars had won five of the six qualifying races and easily outclassed the competition.

Trojan handled the production of the M6B customer cars, again freeing McLaren for new development work and to concentrate on racing. The next McLaren racer was the M8A, introduced in 1968. It had a big-block V8 engine that produced 620 horsepower. It had an aluminum monocoque, independent suspension, and ventilated disc brakes on all four corners. The entire package was clothed in a fiberglass body that was wider than its predecessors. The increased width helped conceal the very wide tires and also aided in vehicle aerodynamics.

Bruce McLaren and Denny Hulme drove the Works M8A to the Championship, winning four of the six rounds. The other two races were won by customer-driven McLarens. An added bonus for the team was that their M7 Cosworth-powered racer had also won the Formula 1 Championship that year.

The M8B McLaren was the next iteration of the M8 series. It drew its inspiration from the Chaparrals, being given a large wing, a slightly increased width, and an increase in power. These small changes kept the car competitive, well, dominant! McLaren won all eleven races during the season with Bruce winning six of the races and his second CanAm title.

The suspension-mounted wings were deemed too dangerous and banned for the 1970 season. The customer cars this season were the M8C, while the Works drove the M8D. The M8C models, the first customer cars of the M8 model-line, featured a chassis-mounted wing and a body design similar to the prior McLaren M8 cars. The Works cars again grew in width to accommodate the wider tires. The engines received an increase in power which made the wider tires even more necessary to help alleviate wheel-spin and to keep the vehicle stable during heavy cornering. The 7-liter engine was enlarged to 7.6-liters resulting in a very impressive 670 horsepower. The body was new, with a design that earned it the nickname 'Batmobile.'

The season would begin with tragedy, as Bruce was killed during a test session in the M8D at Goodwood. The season would continue for the McLaren marque, with Dan Gurney filling the void left by Bruce during the first race. Peter Gethin would take over for the remainder of the season. Denny Hulme won six victories, with Gethin/Gurney winning three.

In 1971, the M8F was introduced. It was an evolution of the M8D with many changes to the engine. The V8 unit was constructed from lightweight aluminum and had a displacement size of over 8 liters. The result was a staggering 740 horsepower, making this the first CanAm car to exceed the 1000bhp/ton mark. Trojan continued to build the customer cars, which were now called the M8E. These versions were similar to M8C but fitted with a new strut-mounted rear wing. Two of the M8E cars were modified to a similar design of the M8D cars; these two cars are known as the M8E/D.

The factory drivers for 1971 were Hulme and Peter Revson. Hulme won three races, with Revson winning four. This made Revson the first American to win the CanAm Series title.

For 1972, the factory cars were the newly introduced M20 which featured a turbocharged V8 engine and side-mounted radiators. By now, other marque's had caught up to McLaren in terms of design and development, and the McLaren winning streak would come to an end. Leading the pack was the very powerful Porsche 917s which had over 900 horsepower at their disposal. The McLarens, producing just under 800 horsepower, were unable to keep pace as they once did.

When the 1972 season came to a close, McLaren withdrew from the series. Instead, they turned their attention to monoposto racing. The CanAm series would continue for only a short time longer as sponsorship continued to decline, resulting in the season ending prematurely.

by Dan Vaughan