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In 1994, the British car magazine Autocar stated in a road test regarding the F1, "The McLaren F1 is the finest driving machine yet built for the public road." They further stated, "The F1 will be remembered as one of the great events in the history of the car, and it may possibly be the fastest production road car the world will ever see."
The McLaren F1 GTR is the racing variant of the McLaren F1 sports car first produced in 1995 for grand touring style racing, such as the BPR Global GT Series, FIA GT Championship, JGTC, and British GT Championship. It was powered by the naturally aspirated BMW S70/2 V12 engine.
The Gordon Murray Automotive Type 50 or GMA T.50 is a sports car manufactured by Gordon Murray Automotive.Designed by Gordon Murray and inspired by the McLaren F1, the T.50 is powered by an all-new 3,994 cc (4.0 L) naturally aspirated V12 engine developed by Cosworth.
Although in general, prices of collectible cars have slightly recessed as a result of the recent recession, [36] prices for most high-end collector cars have held their value or continued to rise. [4] Since the 1990s recession, values of the most desirable cars have risen by at least 200%. [33]
The Rarest McLaren F1 of All Is for Sale. Brian Silvestro. August 5, 2022 at 8:04 AM. Photo credit: Patrick Ernzen ©2022 Courtesy of RM Sotheby’s ... And this car, chassis 059, is the most ...
The MCL38 was the first McLaren car to win a Grand Prix since the MCL35M in 2021, the first since the MP4-27 in 2012 to win multiple Grands Prix in a single season, the first since the MP4-29 in 2014 to lead the World Constructors' Championship, and the first since the MP4/13 in 1998 to win the Constructors' Championship, doing so at the 2024 ...
The F1 is the kind of vehicle that changed things forever. When McLaren’s first road car arrived in 1992, it mixed style and performance in a way that few cars ever have. The Peter Stevens ...
McLaren's first purpose-built road car was the F1, based on a concept developed by Gordon Murray that he convinced Ron Dennis to back. McLaren Cars went into hibernation following the completion of the F1's production run, and McLaren didn't return to the production car market until launching McLaren Automotive in 2010, just prior to the ...