From Briggs Cunningham’s 1950 Cadillac ‘Le Monstre’ to the wild 2012 DeltaWing, Le Mans has had its fair share of curious racing cars.
But, flicking through the January 1985 issue of Classic and Sportscar (as it was then), via C&SC’s digital archive, I spotted an endurance oddball that I hadn’t seen before: the 1965 Rover-BRM racer.
I soon realised that I’d met its older sibling, the Rover P4-based JET1, at the Science Museum in London, but was unaware that the marque’s turbine-engine technology – developed during WW2 – had also found its way into a Le Mans racer.
The turbine-powered Rover-BRM has since returned to the Circuit des 24 Heures du Mans; the restored car was demonstrated at Le Mans Classic in 2014
It was the first gas-turbine car to be campaigned in a serious competition and it impressed on its debut – despite being designed and built just 10 days ahead of the Le Mans 24 Hours test day in April 1963.
Its 10th-place finish wasn’t classified because technically the Rover-BRM’s outing was a demonstration run, not a proper entry.