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New BRM V16 F1 continuation cars will restore the roar

by Nik Berg
4 November 2020 2 min read
New BRM V16 F1 continuation cars will restore the roar
Photos: BRM

British Racing Motors is to revive its landmark V16 Formula 1 car – and restore the roar for which its screaming engine became know for. Seven decades after the Type 15 Mk1 BRM V16 appeared a run of three ‘new’ continuation cars is being built, offering the potential for speeds of upto 200mph on track.

BRM founder Raymond Mays was determined to build a Grand Prix winner to champion British industry in the post-war years. More than 300 companies joined him in the venture, including Lucas, Girling and Rolls-Royce.

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The centrepiece of the BRM was its astounding V16 engine. Only 1.5-litres in capacity it used twin superchargers developed by Rolls-Royce from its Merlin aero engines. Revving to 12,000 rpm the engine produced a staggering 600bhp.

The chassis bore a striking resemblance to the dominant pre-war Mercedes and Auto Unions, thanks to post-war access to their designs (to the winner the spoils). The basic ladder chassis featured trailing arm front suspension and a de Dion rear end. One innovation was the fitting of oleo-pneumatic struts instead of coil springs and dampers. The steering was by recirculating ball, despite calls from drivers to fit a rack and pinion unit. The brakes were Girling drums, but in 1951 discs were fitted, which was a first in Formula 1.

John Owen with the sanctioned BRM V16 F1 continuation car
John Owen with the sanctioned BRM V16 F1 continuation car

The BRM sounded spectacular and was certainly fast, but reliable it was not. After a demonstration run at Silverstone two cars were entered in the International Trophy of 1950. Only one car started, and immediately broke a drive shaft. At Goodwood they faired better with Reg Parnell taking the Woodcote Cup and the Formula One Goodwood Trophy.

The cars continued to compete until 1953 with legends Juan Manuel Fangio and Jose Froilan Gonzalez even taking the wheel, but results were patchy at best. Stirling Moss described the BRM as “without doubt the worst car I ever raced. It was a disgrace.”

Nonetheless there is huge nostalgia behind this British racing white elephant. Only one car remained in a musuem, until restoration specialists Hall and Hall, already busy recreating Vanwall Formula One cars, agreed to build three more.

BRM driven by Fangio at the 1953 Goodwood race
Fangio attempts to tame the BRM at Goodwood. Photo: BRM

Driven by Simon, Paul and Nick Owen, whose grandfather Sir Alfred Owen was BRM team manager, the project came together after the discovery that three chassis had been allocated and never constructed. Now using some 20,000 original drawings Hall and Hall are recreating the cars. The first will go to John Owen, Sir Alfred’s son.

“Growing up, I was very aware of the old man’s passion for the BRM V16, especially the sound it made,” said Simon Owen. “Like most of my generation, I never had the privilege of hearing it race in anger but now we are all very keen to change that and bring the BRM experience to a new generations of fans. We are in a unique position to sanction the build of additional cars using these original chassis numbers, and it became our mission to make it happen.”

The new BRMs will meet FIA historic racing standards, so the world will hear the scream of the supercharged V16 engine once again in 2021.

Via Hagerty US

Vanwall returns with a £2million grand prix continuation car

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