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Classic Racing Engines
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Table of Contents
Classic Racing Engines
CONTENTS
- Introduction
- Foreword by Eiji Taguchi
- Peugeot L3 3-litre four - 1913
The principles of racing-engine design are established by a team of renegade drivers and a Swiss engineer - Mercedes 18/100 4.5-litre four - 1914
Aviation engine-design concepts contribute to the winning power unit in the greatest Grand Prix yet held - Duesenberg 3-litre eight - 1921
American style and simplicity defeat Europe's complex engines and begin the straight-eight era - Bugatti Type 35 2.litre eight - 1925
A consummate sense of style was married with exquisite execution to create a great racing car - Delage 15.S-8 1.5-litre eight - 1927
Cost-no-object engineering made its engine one of the finest to power any automobile - Alfa Romeo Tipo B 2.7-litre eight - 1932
Vittorio Jano's straight-eight engine bravely carried the Grand Prix banner for Italy - Auto Union C-type 6-litre V16 - 1936
Sublime engineering created an exceptional engine for a radical rear-engined car - Austin Seven 744cc four - 1937
A mini-masterpiece serves as a memorial to the brief career of a brilliant British engineer - Mercedes-Benz M125 5.7-litre eight - 1937
Apotheosis of the big supercharged straight-eight, it competed in only one Grand Prix season - Auto Union D-type 3-litre V12 - 1938
Engineered with confident elegance, it powered the best-yet mid-engined racing car - Mercedes-Benz M154/M163 3-litre V12 - 1939
It marked the apogee of the achievements of the pre-war Mercedes-Benz engineering and racing department - Cisitalia 1.5.litre flat-12 - 1949
A magnificent design by the Porsche office, it is one of GP racing's most awesome might-have-beens - Maserati 4CLT/48 1.5-litre four - 1950
Tough descendant of a pre-war design, this four-cylinder engine won many races - Alfa Romeo 159 1.5.litre eight - 1951
Progenitor of a modern legend of invincibility, it powered the first two GP World Champions - BRM Type 15 1.5-litre V16 - 1951
British industry backed an ambitious winner which only matured after its racing Formula expired - Küchen 2-litre V8 - 1952
From the workshop of a brilliant German engineer came an engine able to challenge the best - Ferrari 500 2-litre four - 1953
Four Lampredi-designed cylinders were all Alberto Ascari needed to win two World Championships - Jaguar XK 3.4-litre six - 1954
A series-built straight-six provided the lusty heart of a great sports-racing car - Ferrari 553 2.5-litre four - 1954
Against sixes and eights Ferrari's four was surprisingly competitive in the GP racing of 1954 and '55 - Lancia D50 2.5-litre V8 - 1955
We gained a glimpse of the future from the compact V8 that powered Vittorio Jano's Grand Prix Lancia - Mercedes-Benz M196 2.5-litre eight - 1955
So exotic that it intimidated other teams simply by existing, the straight-eight Mercedes was a race winner as well - Porsche 547 1.5-litre flat-4 - 1955
Inheriting its layout from the Volkswagen, the four-cam Porsche racing engine bristled with ingenuity - Ferrari 750 Monza 3-litre four - 1955
Expanding a successful four-cylinder concept to sports-car size produced a versatile short-race winner - Novi 3-litre V8 - 1956
The most potent track-racing car of its era was powered by a centrifugally-supercharged vee-eight - Maserati 250F 2.5-litre six - 1957
Its powerful straight-six offered welcome proof that many cooks can brew a tasty broth - Vanwall V254 2.5-litre four - 1957
While others talked about making a GP engine based on motorcycle power, Tony Vandervell did it - and successfully - Borgward RS 1.5-litre four - 1958
Four valves per cylinder and direct fuel injection? Germany's Borgward had it in the I950s - Ferrari Dino 246 2.4-litre V6 - 1958
Ferrari's knack for making a very good big engine from a good little one was shown by his first vee-six - Aston Martin RB6 2.9-litre six - 1959
Backed by the resources of David Brown, a small British sports-car maker equalled the world's best on the track - Coventry Climax FPF 2.5-litre four - 1960
One of the simplest engines ever to win a World Championship, the FPF was nevertheless subtly sophisticated - Maserati 61 2.9-litre four - 1960
Improvisation and ingenuity created a great sports-racing engine and car for a troubled company - Ferrari Dino 156 1.5-litre V6 - 1961
A lighter, smaller, lower and more powerful V6 achieved a World Championship against Ferrari's wishes - BRM P56 1.5-litre V8 - 1962
Elements of the ill-fated BRMVI6 contributed to the success of a new V8 engine for the 1 ½-litre Formula 1 - Porsche 753 1.5-litre flat-8 - 1962
In spite of its confused and compromised origins this air-cooled eight was a race winner for Porsche - Coventry Climax FWMV 1.5-litre V8 - 1965
'No-frills' engineering and rigorous development created the V8 that powered Jim Clark to two World Championships - Honda RA272E 1.5-litre V12 - 1965
Formula 1's first Japanese competitor sought and found high power in high revolutions - Repco-Brabham 620 3-litre V8 - 1966
A shrewdly simple V8 conceived as a stopgap solution by Jack Brabham propelled him to yet another World Championship - BRM P75 3-litre H16 - 1966
BRM's second try at a I6-cylinder FI engine was more successful than its first: it won one championship GP - BMW M10 2-litre four - 1967
With a radical cylinder-head concept Ludwig Apfelbeck enticed BMW into single-seater racing - Gurney-Weslake 58 3-litre V12 - 1967
An Anglo-American V12 overcame design and manufacturing problems to make motor racing history - Ford DFV 3-litre V12 - 1967
Ford of Britain reaped rich rewards from its sponsorship of a new V8 from the brain of Keith Duckworth - Porsche 912 4.5-litre flat-12 - 1969
Porsche's rich patrimony of power-producing ideas combined to create a magnificent engine for its Type 917 - Drake Offenhauser 2.6-litre four - 1970
An engine that refused to die, the feisty Offy made a turbo-driven comeback in Indy-car racing - Ferrari 312B 3-litre flat-12 - 1970
Ferrari had failed to capitalize on the opportunity offered by the 3-litre GP Formula 1, but the 312B put that right - Matra MS12 3-litre V12 - 1970
Conceived for Formula 1 racing, the elegant Matra V12 came into its own in prototype sports cars - Alfa Romeo 115-12 3-litre flat-12 - 1975
A successful sports-ear-racing flat-I 2 had the power but not the lightness needed for Formula 1 - Renault EF4 1.5-litre V6 - 1984
A V6 built for sports cars was turbo-powered to create a revolution in Formula 1 racing engines - TAG-P01 1.5-litre V6 - 1987
An alliance between McLaren and Porsche financed by TAG produced a championship-winning vee-six - Honda RA122E/B 3.5-litre V12 - 1992
New technologies enriched the capability of one of the last VI2 engines to be built for Formula 1 - Mercedes-Benz 5001 3.4-litre V8 - 1994
An opportunistic engine with pushrod-operated valves brought Mercedes-Benz a historic Indianapolis victory - Table of Specifications
- Glossary
- Index