Monoposto
Chassis number: 4
The famous Australian Frank Matich is a well-known and accomplished racer. He began his racing career by racing his MG TC, which was later replaced with an Austin-Healey 100/4. Later, he moved to a Jaguar D-Type with support from Leaton Motors, which led to a fourth-place finish in the Australian Tourist Trophy at Bathurst in 1958. By 1960 he was driving a Lotus 15 that was powered by a 2.5-liter Coventry Climax engine. Later, he was driving a Lotus 19, which provided many podium finishes for him, though he never won the Australian title in the car. His accomplishments with the Lotus 19 did not go unnoticed, and soon he had support from a wealthy businessman named Laurie O'Neill and Total Oil's Australian branch.
During the early 1960s, Matich was driving Elfin Sports Cars, Brabhams, and a Lotus 19B. By 1964, Matich was a serious contender for many of the major races in Australia. Driving the Lotus in 1964, Matich had won the Tourist Trophy at Longford. The following year, however, would be a different story. In June 1965, the throttle on the Lotus stuck open and sent the car and Matich hurtling into a fence behind the paddock area. A fire quickly consumed the car and left Matich with serious burns. Total later abandoned their sponsorship and sold the Brabham.
Laurie O'Neill provided funding to Matich for the building of a prototype Elfin 400 powered by a 4.5-liter Oldsmobile engine. Though it was raced for only a short time, it captured many lap records. It was later sold to Neil Allen.
Matich began work on creating his own car with help from Bob Britton. The result was the Matich SR3 and powered by a 4.5-liter Oldsmobile engine. The later example of the car was given a Repco 4.4-liter V8.
By the 1970s, the Formula 5000 had caught Matich's attention. The five-liter V8-powered racing cars seemed suited for his expertise. McLaren sent Matich a racer; a second car, a M10B, was later sent over. With these amazing machines, Matich was able to secure the Australian Grand Prix in 1970.
In 1970 he constructed his own racer, the Matich A50. The work was done with help from John Joyce at Bowin Designs. The machine proved its capabilities by securing another Australian Grand Prix victory in 1971. Its debut event was a dominant performance at the November 1971 Australian Grand Prix. It won at Warwick Farm during the 1972 Tasman and later dominated at the 1972 Australian Gold Star. It won one more race during the 1973 Tasman before being replaced by a revised car, the A51, for the 1973 US Season.
This particular example is chassis number 4, the third and final example built. Chassis number 001 is believed to have later become chassis number 002. Chassis number 003 was later wrecked in the United States, leaving just two surviving examples. Chassis number 004 was intended as a spare car for Matich. It was not completed by the factory as they had switched their efforts to the A51 project. Johnny Walker later purchased the rolling chassis and fitted an engine and transmission from his Elfin MR5. The components were assembled at the Matich factory.
The car would have a rather lengthy racing career, beginning in 1972 and continuing until 1982. It would race again in 1990, 1992, 1993, and 1996. After another short stint, it returned to the track in June 2001.
by Dan Vaughan