The new Stevens-designed car – set to be the world’s first carbonfibre production vehicle – was far and away a more salubrious machine than the racing car from which it derived.
As well as a raised ride height, a passenger seat was fitted, along with door seals for better refinement.
A fixed windscreen replaced the racer’s clip-on item, and the XJR-15’s headlights and tail-lights met roadgoing type approval – a general requirement that was mirrored throughout the vehicle.
Finally, the XJR-9’s mid-mounted, 7-litre, 750bhp, all-alloy V12’s displacement was reduced to 6 litres, while its output dropped (at least in road specification) to 450bhp.
Bare carbonfibre adorns the JaguarSport XJR-15’s cockpit
JaguarSport said it was to improve the car’s tractability, but the fact that it carried only around two-thirds of the XJ220’s weight meant that it would have put the road car’s performance too far in the shade.
Just prior to the XJR-15’s launch in 1990, two years ahead of the XJ220 reaching production, it became clear that a roadgoing Le Mans rep and a high-powered GT, both mid-engined, both with phenomenal performance and both built by the same company, had great potential to clash with one another in the marketplace.
As Peter remembers: “Andy Morrison was tasked with explaining how Jaguar appeared to be developing two high-performance sports cars at the same time.
“He came up with the idea of a three-race Intercontinental Challenge for XJR-15s, as support races for the Monaco, Silverstone and Spa Grands Prix.”
The XJR-15’s bare carbonfibre seat
Entries were open to all XJR-15 buyers, with the winning prize a brand-new Jaguar XJR-S (see below) for the Monaco and Silverstone races, and $1m – equivalent to the cost of the XJR-15 – for the winner of the final at Spa.
As such, the XJR-15 went from being a race-derived road car to an out-and-out racer at its official launch.
In the end, 50 XJR-15s were produced, plus two R9Rs – the prototype and the final car – but only 16 of the 50 were prepared for the race series; most of the remainder were converted to road specification, which was a relatively easy process.
‘Our’ car is chassis number 048, first purchased by Lee Kun-hee, the owner of Samsung, and driven by Juan Manuel Fangio II, nephew of the five-time Formula One World Champion.
Road-legal lights on the JaguarSport XJR-15’s elegant nose
Fangio won the Silverstone race in ’91, hence why this XJR-15 is being offered for sale with its original XJR-S prize.
As a racer, chassis 048 used a six-speed dog ’box instead of the roadgoing car’s five-speed synchromesh transmission.
The car was also stripped of unnecessary weight – reputedly 100-200kg – and given a marginal improvement in power.
But Peter’s thrilling homage to a Group C racer remains. “I don’t believe there’s anything I would change,” he says. “Not because the car is perfect, but because it is what it is.”
The JaguarSport XJR-15’s pedalbox is straight from the track
I ask whether the rear wing, which integrates so well with the body, serves a purpose beyond the aesthetic.
“It was purely for aerodynamic stability,” he admits. “The car had only a small amount of downforce; the wing balanced front and rear loads roughly 60% rear, 40% front.”
Not that we’ll be taxing the XJR-15’s aero today, when even our tracking car is going sideways on the greasy track.
The JaguarSport XJR-15’s clear instruments
Listening to the XJR-15 come to life from outside, photographer Jack nails the soundtrack perfectly: “Just like a Spitfire’s Merlin on start-up.”
And once you’ve performed the acrobatics needed to install yourself in the driver’s bucket seat (outstretched legs first, contorted torso second) that noise is amplified through every pore of the car’s carbonfibre innards. Earplugs are a must.
Behind a three-spoke wheel a simple leather-topped binnacle faces you, containing six VDO clocks.
Floor-mounted pedals, a bank of four switches (ignition, injectors, pumps and ‘start’) is set into the carbonfibre by your right knee, below which sprouts the stubby gearlever for the six-speed ’box.
The JaguarSport XJR-15’s switchgear swaps luxury for functionality
You sit near the car’s centre line due to its wide sills, but once the Willans harness has you in its grip, the driving position is excellent.
Engage first with commitment – this is a dog ’box – and use plenty of revs to avoid a stall, and once again the gearing is epically high for this short track.
Once you’re accustomed to the painful, glorious din from the V12 and start to work some heat into its Pirelli P-Zero road tyres (slicks were used in competition), this is one of the sweetest-handling racing cars I’ve driven, albeit briefly: light, communicative steering, finely balanced body control, superlative brakes and meteoric acceleration within the track’s tight confines.
Parallel development paths, but idiosyncratic and quite different end products: both the XJR-15 (right) and XJ220 define an era for Jaguar
You can only imagine what a piece of work the XJR-15 would have been in road specification.
But better than the XJ220? It’s an apples or pears question, really.
The XJR-15’s light weight and pared-back design philosophy give it a purity with which the XJ220 cannot compete.
Faced with a 1000-mile schlep to Monaco, though, there would only be one leather-lined, 200mph-plus choice.
Images: Jack Harrison
Thanks to: Pendine Historic Cars; Peter Stevens
The winner’s Jaguar XJR-S
Jaguar XJR-15 chassis 048 has remained with its owner’s XJR-S prize since the 1991 British Grand Prix
Given that it was also produced by JaguarSport, there couldn’t have been a more appropriate prize for the victors of the 1991 Intercontinental Challenge than a Jaguar XJR-S.
Gifted to the owner of the winning Monaco and Silverstone XJR-15s – ‘our’ car being for the latter event – the XJR-Ss were later models, fitted with the larger 6-litre engine, up from the previous version’s 5.3 litres.
A higher compression ratio (of 11.0:1) and a modified air intake and exhaust system liberated 328bhp and 365lb ft.
The Jaguar XJR-S has a 328bhp V12
Externally, the XJR-S wore a bespoke bodykit, set off by 16in Dunlop alloy wheels.
The suspension used uprated springs and Bilstein dampers, while on the inside the cars were trimmed in Connolly Autolux leather.
This winner’s car, in Mica over grey, has remained with XJR-15 chassis 048 since its 1991 Silverstone win, and it has covered just 600 miles.
Factfiles
JaguarSport XJR-15
(figures for road car)
- Sold/number built 1990-’92/50 (plus two R9Rs)
- Construction carbonfibre/Kevlar monocoque, carbonfibre panels
- Engine all-alloy, sohc-per-bank 5993cc 60° V12, with two valves per cylinder, Zytek sequential fuel injection and coil-on-plug ignition management system
- Max power 450bhp @ 6250rpm
- Max torque 420lb ft @ 4500rpm
- Transmission five-speed manual, RWD
- Suspension independent, at front by pushrod-operated horizontal dampers, anti-roll bar rear telescopic dampers; double wishbones, coil springs f/r
- Steering rack and pinion
- Brakes ventilated discs
- Length 15ft 9in (4800mm)
- Width 6ft 2¾in (1900mm)
- Height 3ft 7¼in (1100mm)
- Wheelbase 8ft 10in (2718mm)
- Weight 2822lb (1050kg)
- 0-60mph 3.5 secs (est)
- Top speed 185mph
- Mpg n/a
- Price new £500,000
- Price now £1-1.5million*
Jaguar XJ220
- Sold/number built 1992-’94/286
- Construction aluminium honeycomb monocoque tub and floorpan, aluminium panels
- Engine all-alloy, dohc-per-bank 3498cc V6, with four valves per cylinder, twin Garrett T3 turbochargers and intercoolers, and Zytek multi-point fuel injection with electronic boost control
- Max power 542bhp @ 6500rpm
- Max torque 475lb ft @ 4500rpm
- Transmission five-speed manual, RWD
- Suspension independent, at front by pushrod-and-rocker-operated spring/damper units rear toe-control links, twin rocker-operated spring/damper units; double wishbones, anti-roll bar f/r
- Steering rack and pinion
- Brakes ventilated discs
- Length 16ft 2½in (4930mm)
- Width 7ft 3½in (2220mm)
- Height 3ft 9¼in (1150mm)
- Wheelbase 8ft 8in (2642mm)
- Weight 3209lb (1456kg)
- 0-60mph 3.6 secs
- Top speed 213mph
- Mpg 13.8
- Price new £361,000
- Price now £400-500,000*
*Prices correct at date of original publication
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Simon Hucknall
Simon Hucknall is a senior contributor to Classic & Sports Car