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Thread: Team VDS Twin-Turbo McLaren M8F

  1. #1

    Team VDS Twin-Turbo McLaren M8F

    Name:  VDS McLaren M8F.jpg
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    When Mark Donohue lined his new white L&M sponsored Penske Porsche 917/10 on pole at the opening round of the 1972 Can-Am championship ahead of the Gulf McLaren M20s of Peter Revson and Denny Hulme, there was a clear sense of a changing of the guard in big-bore sports car racing. After five years of domination by the McLaren team, Donohue whistled away from the rolling start, and despite Revson getting the jump, the big white Porsche was in front by the first turn, and proceeded to drive away comfortably until he was forced to pit with a jammed throttle linkage which delayed him for three laps. But it was clear, turbo-charging had arrived.

    Donohue didn’t win the ’72 Can-Am, but his car did. After spending much of 1971 based in Germany at the Porsche factory, burying himself into the role of development and testing, Donohue and the Porsche engineers sculpted the 917/10 into a formidable racing machine. After his strong opening round showing, Donohue injured himself badly in a testing shunt, and George Follmer took over driving duties of the Penske turbo Panzer, winning the Can-Am championship, despite missing the first round. The 917/10 was producing 880hp from its turbo 5 litre 12 cylinder motor by the end of the ’72 Can-Am season, well up on the normally aspirated big block Chevy’s fitted into the back of the works McLarens.

    Meanwhile, over in Europe, and due to the huge success the Can-Am enjoyed from its inception in 1966, a similar series was formed in 1970, called Interserie. Given most Can-Am cars were built in the UK by Eric Broadley’s Lola company and by Peter Agg’s Trojan company, which built the customer Mclarens, it made sense that a European big bore sports car series should also enjoy some success. It combined FIA Group 5, 6, and Group 7, under which Can-Am was run in the US. The Interserie would be dominated by Porsche, who cornered the marked in the first couple of years with normally aspirated 917 models, while grids were bolstered by Lola T70 coupes, and smaller Chevron and Lola cars, and a smattering of privateer Group 7 machinery.

    Wealthy Belgian racing enthusiast, Count Van der Straeten, entered the Interserie in 1970, running a Lola T70, decked out in the Count’s dark red, with white and blue center stripe racing colours, and with his long time driver Teddy Pilette at the helm. For the ’71 Interserie, Team VDS was armed with a customer McLaren M8E, fitted with a Louis Morand built 7.5 litre alloy big block Chevy, and it was Morand who would develop one of these units, fitted with a pair of exhaust driven Garrett AiResearch turbochargers. After considerable development, the twin-turbo Chevy, boasting an impressive 860hp, was bolted into the rear of the Team VDS M8E, for the opening round of the 1972 Interserie at Imola.

    Unlike the Porsche 917/10, of which the entire car and its aerodynamics had been developed around the motor, the Team VDS turbo McLaren was much more a case of simply bolting a blown Chevy into the back of a chassis designed for a normally aspirated motor. Despite the M8E being replaced with a new M8F McLaren early in the ’72 season, the Team VDS machine would finish just one race throughout 1972 and ’73, and prove barely capable of even beating the normally aspirated sister car of Helmuth Kelleners, and neither machine had an answer for Leo Kinnunens 917/10. Pilette must have had frazzled nerves by the end of the second season, with the turbo McLaren suffering a spate of alarming failures and spins, and Team VDS moved away from the Interserie to concentrate its efforts in other racing divisions, such as Formula 5000, where it was enjoying far more success.

    Years later, I got to see this amazing machine in action, just once, in the early ‘90s, at which time it was owned by Peter Agg, of Trojan, and his son Charlie, who was himself racing a traditional normally aspirated McLaren M8F very successfully in European historic events. By this time, a ground-splitting 1300hp was being extracted from the now 8.5 litre twin-turbo Chevy motor in the ex-Team VDS M8F, but the chronic reliability issues still plagued it. It ran like a dog in practice, with throttle issues, and could barely conjure up 600hp, and was retired early. But it made more of a statement back in the pits, with its rear bodywork removed, and its massive turbo-chargers, intercoolers, and miles accompanying pipe work making for an elaborate sight.

    I believe the motor was eventually converted to a normally aspirated unit a couple of years later, and proved both faster and more reliable, if not nearly as interesting or charismatic.

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  3. #3
    Ah, Can-Am cars. I love the fact that the rules of the class were so free.

    I've just ordered the book, "Can-Am Challenger", the story of the designer Peter Bryant, who was responsible for a number of innovations, and Can-Am was just the place to do it.

  4. #4
    There is a very good Can-Am dvd available will ind the link and post it for you timbo

  5. #5
    link to Can AM dvd trailerhttp://www.canamfilm.com/trailer.html

  6. #6
    Hey thats a great look vid Angria. Most of the sound appears to be correct too, which is one of the biggest issues with old footage. The sound is often dubbed in over top, and is usually not remotely close to what it should be.

  7. #7
    Its normally aspirated these days, for reasons of reliability I assume, but here is the Team VDS McLaren for sale: http://rmd.be/index.php?option=com_s...235&Itemid=478

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  8. #8
    World Champion
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    Perhaps I should put in a bid !
    Hyndman & Graham Donaldson with the VDS McLaren. Trojan Works, Croydon. 1973.
    Name:  Trojan Works. VDS M8E Turbo.jpg
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    (Ken Hyndman photo )

  9. #9
    Hi Ken, if you look at the photos in the ad, one of them shows that bodywork in your picture, hanging on the wall.

  10. #10
    You get it Ken, I'll come and give you a hand. Fun times

  11. #11
    Semi-Pro Racer
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    Name:  turbos.jpg
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    Turbos are still with car all these years later...This was when car arrived in Launceston Tas form Europe a couple of years ago

  12. #12
    Semi-Pro Racer
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    Name:  trs.jpg
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    About to be test run on arrival in Tas

  13. #13
    Semi-Pro Racer
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  14. #14
    Wow, that sounds good Ellis! Are those open pipes?

  15. #15
    Semi-Pro Racer
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    Steve

    Yes...Open on arrival
    Failed noise at Philip Is 1st couple of visits
    Some mods were required

  16. #16
    Unusual to see an FP with outboard rear brakes.
    Quote Originally Posted by Ellis View Post
    Name:  trs.jpg
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    About to be test run on arrival in Tas

  17. #17
    Thats well spotted Duncan! Compare the photo by Ellis above to the photo I took of the car at Silverstone in 1993 at the top of the page.

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