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McLaren M7A

The McLaren M7A and its M7B, M7C and M7D variants were Formula One racing cars, built by McLaren and used in the world championship between 1968 and 1971. After two relatively unsuccessful years of Formula One competition, the M7A was used to score McLaren's first win at the 1968 Belgian Grand Prix.

McLaren M7A
Denny Hulme (1936–1992) in a McLaren M7A at the 1968 United States Grand Prix
CategoryFormula One
ConstructorMcLaren
Designer(s)Robin Herd
Gordon Coppuck
PredecessorMcLaren M5A
SuccessorMcLaren M9A / McLaren M14A
Technical specifications
ChassisAluminium alloy and magnesium alloy monocoque
Suspension (front)Upper and lower top links, radius arms and outboard coilover springs and dampers
Suspension (rear)Lateral top links, twin radius arms, reversed wishbones and outboard coilover springs and dampers
EngineFord-Cosworth DFV 2993cc V8 naturally aspirated Mid-engine, longitudinally mounted
TransmissionHewland DG300 5-speed manual
FuelShell (McLaren)
Gulf (Anglo)
TyresGoodyear (McLaren)
Dunlop (Anglo)
Competition history
Notable entrantsBruce McLaren Motor Racing,
Anglo American Racers
Notable drivers Bruce McLaren
Denny Hulme
Dan Gurney (Anglo)
Debut1968 Spanish Grand Prix
RacesWinsPolesF/Laps
22400
Constructors' Championships0 (Best: 2nd – 1968)
Drivers' Championships0

Designed by Robin Herd and Gordon Coppuck, the M7A was the first McLaren to be powered by the Cosworth DFV engine, which went on to be used by the team until 1983. The M7B had outboard fuel tanks and the M7C a modified chassis, whilst the M7D was powered by an Alfa-Romeo engine.

The M7A made its Grand Prix debut at the second race of the 1968 world championship. After its victory in Belgium, it took another two wins that year, helping to place McLaren second in the Constructors' Championship.

Background edit

Bruce McLaren Motor Racing was founded in 1963;[1] Bruce McLaren was a factory driver for the Cooper motor racing team which competed in Formula One, the highest level of international single-seater competition. Since 1966, McLaren and his team had been building and racing their own Formula One cars.[2] Their first two seasons had been relatively unsuccessful, with six points scored (out of a potential 180[nb 1]) and a best result of fourth.[3][4] The lack of a suitable engine caused problems: the 1966 M2B car's Ford and Serenissima V8 engines both lacked power[5][6] and the 1967 M5A's British Racing Motors V12 did not arrive until mid-season.[7]

In 1967 Cosworth debuted their DFV engine which was supplied exclusively to the Lotus team. It was immediately successful, winning its first race, and in 1968 it became available for purchase by any manufacturer.[7] McLaren bought five DFV engines at a cost of 7,500 pounds sterling each.[8] Designer Robin Herd was recruited to the team in 1965 before which he had been an aerospace engineer at the National Gas Turbine Establishment (NGTE) where he worked on the Concorde project. His assistant Gordon Coppuck was another ex-NGTE employee.[9][10] Herd began the design of the M7A towards the end of 1967 but left to join Cosworth before its completion, leaving Coppuck and Bruce McLaren to complete the work.[9][11]

Design edit

The M7A was an open-wheeled single-seater with a mid-mounted engine driving the rear wheels. The chassis was a bathtub-type (i.e. open-topped) monocoque made from 22-gauge aluminium alloy and 20-gauge magnesium alloy panels glued and riveted together and to three steel bulkheads. The monocoque terminated behind the driver's seat and the engine was used as a stressed part of the chassis, bolted directly to the rearmost bulkhead. The gearbox was then attached behind the engine, and the rear suspension – consisting of lateral top links, twin radius arms and reversed wishbones– attached to the gearbox and the rear bulkhead. The front suspension – upper and lower lateral links and radius arms – and the steering column were attached to the two bulkheads in front of the driver. Coilover springs and Koni dampers mounted outside of the body were employed front and rear.[11]

 
A M7A on display in the Donington Collection

The outer bodywork was mostly formed by the monocoque, except for the nose and cockpit which were covered by glass-reinforced plastic (GRP) panels; the engine sometimes also had a GRP cover.[12] The wheelbase was 94 inches (2,400 mm); the front track 58 inches (1,500 mm) and the rear track 57 inches (1,400 mm); weight was 1,140 pounds (520 kg).[13] McLaren's own magnesium alloy wheels were used; they were 15-inch (380 mm) diameter at the rear and 15- or sometimes 13-inch (330 mm) diameter at the front.[11][14][15]

Fuel was stored in tanks running down the side of the chassis, above the driver's legs and behind their seat, totalling 40 imperial gallons (180 L) capacity. Full capacity was not required for most races so the tank above the driver's legs was usually almost empty.[11] For the M7A's first two world championship races, Bruce McLaren's car was fitted with outboard "pannier" fuel tanks at the side of the cockpit. McLaren had a theory that sports racing cars' handling was superior to that of single-seaters because of the weight distribution of their fuel; the pannier tanks were an attempt to replicate this. According to McLaren mechanic Tyler Alexander this idea was developed in discussion with Lotus boss Colin Chapman. After the car was damaged at the 1968 Monaco Grand Prix, it was rebuilt without the pannier tanks.[16][17]

The 10+12-inch (270 mm) disc brakes were unusual both in being made by Lockheed when most British Formula One teams used Girling brakes, and in being ventilated. Ventilated discs – which have a hollow area between the two outer disc surfaces to aid cooling[18] – had been tried by Lotus who had suffered from cracking problems caused by rapid heating and cooling. The McLaren team hoped that by being mounted well within the wheels, their discs would retain a more constant temperature.[19]

During the 1968 season, wings – which press the car and tyres towards the ground thereby increasing cornering speeds and reducing braking distances[20] – first appeared on Formula One cars in races. Teams experimented with various wing set-ups and the governing body of the sport, the CSI, regulated their use.[21] McLaren had first experimented with wings on their 1965 M2A Formula One development car but didn't use them on the following season's racing car, the M2B.[9] The M7A and its variants wore a variety of wing configurations, as described in the racing history section.

The DFV engine, whose development was funded by Ford and which was designed and constructed by Cosworth, was normally aspirated with eight cylinders arranged in a v configuration (i.e. a V8) of 90 degrees. The block was made from aluminium alloy and the cylinder liners from iron. It had four valves per cylinder, actuated by double overhead camshafts.[22] Liquid-cooling was provided by a radiator situated in the nose which vented through ducts in the upper body surface whilst the engine oil was cooled by a radiator mounted on top of the gearbox at the rear.[19] Peak power was 410 bhp (306 kW) at 9,000 rpm. The gearbox was a Hewland DG300.[23]

The works cars were painted in an orange hue known as papaya; it was not a national racing colour, however, the colour would continue to be used on works McLaren cars until Yardley sponsorship was obtained in 1972.

Variants edit

M7B edit

The M7B was a one-off conversion of an M7A chassis with the fuel stored low and centrally in integral tanks at the sides of the cockpit. This was another result of Bruce McLaren's theory about improving the car's handling by altering the fuel weight distribution.[16] Author and former McLaren secretary Eoin Young said that another purpose of the outboard tanks was to make room for a four-wheel-drive system.[12][nb 2]

M7C edit

The chief distinguishing characteristic of M7C was its fully enclosed monocoque which gave greater torsional rigidity than the bathtub chassis. It was based on McLaren's M10A Formula 5000 car, which itself was derived from the M7A.[12][25] One was made.[26]

M7D edit

The M7D was commissioned by Alfa Romeo's Autodelta competition department and was powered by a 3.0 litre V8 engine from Alfa Romeo's T33 sports car. The engine is variously cited as producing peak power of between 410 bhp (306 kW) and 430 bhp (321 kW) (the highest figure said to be produced at 10,500 rpm), with good levels of torque, but McLaren found that performance varied significantly between units. To accommodate the engine, the wheelbase was lengthened to 96 inches (2,400 mm) and a new mounting point was created for the alternator which, unlike on the DFV, was not integrated with the engine. One was made, although it is unclear whether this was a new chassis or a rebuilding of the M7B chassis.[12][26][27][28]

Racing history edit

 
Bruce McLaren (1937–1970) in an M7C in the 1969 German Grand Prix

For the 1968 Formula One season, after two years of driving the team's sole entry,[29] Bruce McLaren was partnered by Denny Hulme. Hulme was world champion with the Brabham team in 1967 and had raced for McLaren that year in Can-Am, a North American sports car racing series.[30][31] For the first round of the 1968 world championship – the South African Grand Prix, which was held in January, four months before the second round – only Hulme competed, using the M5A to finish fifth. The M7A's first race was the Race of Champions at Brands Hatch, run to Formula One rules but not part of the world championship. There, McLaren won from pole position while Hulme was third. Another victory came at the non-championship BRDC International Trophy at Silverstone, this time with Hulme finishing first and McLaren second. In the M7A's championship debut in Spain, Hulme was second and McLaren retired, then in Monaco McLaren crashed and Hulme was fifth and last. At the Belgian Grand Prix, they were fifth and sixth on the grid. Hulme took the lead and held it until a half shaft failed two thirds of the way in. McLaren was then second behind Jackie Stewart's Matra but Stewart had to make a pit stop for fuel on the final lap, giving McLaren the win, although he initially believed he had finished second.[32] It was the McLaren team's first world championship victory and Bruce McLaren became the second driver, after Jack Brabham, to win in a car bearing their own name; it was also the last win of his career.[13][33]

After Belgium, McLaren's Goodyear tyres suffered a slump in competitiveness and the team and their car fell behind rivals Graham Hill in his Lotus and Stewart in his Matra.[13][34] At the Dutch Grand Prix McLaren crashed out and Hulme retired with ignition failure.[35] After Lotus had begun the first experimentation with wings in Monaco and Ferrari and Brabham had debuted full height wings in Belgium, McLaren fitted a rear wing to their car for the French Grand Prix.[35][36] However, mounted above the engine on the sprung mass of the car, it was not as effective as Lotus's wing mounted on the unsprung suspension components.[13] In France Hulme was fourth, then fifth in Britain but both cars were out of the points-earning positions at the German Grand Prix.[37][nb 3]

 
The M7B is seen here with Vic Elford in the cockpit at the 1969 German Grand Prix; he crashed in the race

An improvement in form came at the Italian Grand Prix where the cars ran without wings and Goodyear brought their new G9 specification tyre. McLaren qualified on the front row and led to begin with until he slowed at the scene of an accident and was caught by Stewart, Hulme and Jo Siffert in a Lotus. A slipstreaming battle ensued; McLaren retired with an oil leak at mid-distance but Hulme went on to win.[13][39][40] From the Canadian Grand Prix onwards, a third M7A was driven by Dan Gurney whose Anglo American Racers team – for whom Bruce McLaren had driven for three races in 1967[41] – had run out of funding for their own Eagle cars. Gurney retired with overheating in Canada, but Hulme and McLaren continued their success by finishing first and second respectively, albeit after their strongest challengers had all retired. Hulme was then jointly in the lead of the Drivers' Championship with two races to go. He ran competitively towards the beginning of the United States Grand Prix but ultimately retired via a spin, pit stops to repair damaged brake lines and a gearbox output shaft failure which spun him again, this time into a crash. McLaren was sixth, Gurney fourth. Going into the final race in Mexico, Hulme retained a chance of defending his title. McLaren finished second there, but Hulme crashed out because of a broken suspension damper allowing Hill to win the Drivers' Championship.[42]

 
Bruce McLaren (white balaclava) prepares to take his seat in his M7C, prior to the 1969 Dutch Grand Prix

For 1969 McLaren, with an unchanged driver line-up, designed a new four-wheel drive car, the M9A, but whilst that was being readied, continued with the old car. The M9A was eventually unsuccessful and appeared only once, driven by Derek Bell at the British Grand Prix. At the South African Grand Prix Hulme scored a podium with the M7A; Bruce used the M7B version and the pair were joined by Basil van Rooyen in another M7A. In South Africa the works cars used rear wings mounted directly to the suspension on tall struts; at the Race of Champions Bruce McLaren's M7B was fitted with a similarly strutted front wing in the practice session but it was not used in the race. Hulme was third at the Race of Champions and then at International Trophy Bruce McLaren switched to the M7C variant. McLaren qualified 13th on the grid at the Spanish Grand Prix but took advantage of the crashes and breakdowns of those ahead of him to finish second. In the practice sessions at Monaco, high front wings were added to the cars but before the race the CSI banned wings altogether. This left the team to make do with a small "ducktail" rear spoiler, McLaren and Hulme racing to fifth and sixth respectively. Wings were then re-allowed, albeit not mounted on the suspension, and with teams searching for the best solution McLaren initially opted for a "tea tray" rear wing and later a more conventional, low-mounted aerofoil.[13][21][26][43]

Meanwhile, the Colin Crabbe Antique Automobiles team bought the M7B and Vic Elford drove it at the Dutch Grand Prix, finishing 10th. McLaren was fourth, third and third at the French, British and German Grands Prix respectively, but in each Hulme, who qualified on the first row in France and Britain, was sidelined into retirement by mechanical failure. Elford took a best finish of fifth in France but then crashed and destroyed the M7B at the Nürburgring in Germany. The Italian Grand Prix at Monza produced another slipstreaming battle; this time McLaren finished fourth, albeit only 0.19 seconds behind winner Stewart. More unreliability in Canada and the United States restricted the cars to a best finish of fifth before, at the season ending Mexico race Hulme scored the M7's only win of the year.[13][26][43]

With McLaren's introduction of the new M14A in 1970, the M7 had only one more works outing when Dan Gurney used an M7A at the 1970 British Grand Prix. Privateer John Surtees bought the M7C as a stopgap until his own Surtees TS7 car was ready. He raced it at four Grands Prix, retiring from three and finishing sixth in the Netherlands. The car then switched hands to Jo Bonnier who used it for two more races that year. The M7D was used intermittently with the M14D by Andrea de Adamich and Nanni Galli, qualifying for and starting only one race, the French Grand Prix where de Adamich finished unclassified. By 1971 the only type's only entrant was Bonnier with his M7C. He used it at five races and had a best result of 10th in the Italian Grand Prix.

World championship results table edit

(key)

Year Team Engine Tyres Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Points WCC
1968 Bruce McLaren Motor Racing Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8 G RSA ESP MON BEL NED FRA GBR GER ITA CAN USA MEX 49 2nd
Bruce McLaren Ret Ret 1 Ret 8 7 13 Ret 2 6 2
Denny Hulme 2 5 Ret Ret 5 4 7 1 1 Ret Ret
Anglo American Racers Dan Gurney Ret 4 Ret
1969 Bruce McLaren Motor Racing Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8 G RSA ESP MON NED FRA GBR GER ITA CAN USA MEX 38 4th
Bruce McLaren 5 2 5 Ret 4 3 3 4 5 DNS DNS
Denny Hulme 3 4 6 4 8 Ret Ret 7 Ret Ret 1
Colin Crabbe Antique Automobiles Vic Elford 10 5 6 Ret
Team Lawson D Basil van Rooyen Ret
1970 Bruce McLaren Motor Racing Alfa Romeo 3.0 V8 G RSA ESP MON BEL NED FRA GBR GER AUT ITA CAN USA MEX 0
 
9th
[nb 4]
Andrea de Adamich DNQ DNQ NC DNS
Nanni Galli DNQ
Ecurie Bonnier Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8 Jo Bonnier DNQ Ret 35
 
5th
[nb 5]
Team Surtees F John Surtees Ret Ret Ret 6
1971 Ecurie Bonnier Ford Cosworth DFV 3.0 V8 G RSA ESP MON NED FRA GBR GER AUT ITA CAN USA 10
 
6th
[nb 6]
Jo Bonnier Ret DNQ DNS 10 16
Helmut Marko DNS
Refs [29][38][44][45][46][47][48][49][50][51][52][53][54]

Non-championship results table edit

(key)

PC simulation edit

In 2005, a driveable, detailed replica of the McLaren M7B was released as part of the free '69 Mod' for the pc-based racing simulation Grand Prix Legends.

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ A total of 20 Formula One world championship races were held in 1966 and 1967, for each of which a maximum of nine points was awarded.[3][4]
  2. ^ Young (1995) refers to the "side-tank" version with "pannier fuel tanks" as the M7C,[17] apparently in error, although it is unclear whether the author is discussing the M7B or the earlier M7A with pannier tanks. Elsewhere in Young (1995), the author identifies the version fitted with integral pannier tanks as the M7B, as do Nye (1988) and Taylor (2009).[12][13][16][24]
  3. ^ Points were awarded to cars finishing in positions from first to sixth.[38]
  4. ^ Points were awarded separately for each combination of chassis and engine. Therefore McLaren-Ford were fifth in the world championship with 35 points whilst McLaren-Alfa Romeo were 9th with zero points. The McLaren-Ford total includes points scored with other models.
  5. ^ Points were awarded separately for each combination of chassis and engine. Therefore McLaren-Ford were fifth in the world championship with 35 points whilst McLaren-Alfa Romeo were 9th with zero points. The McLaren-Ford total includes points scored with other models.
  6. ^ All points were scored with other models.

Citations edit

  1. ^ . mclaren.com. Archived from the original on 28 May 2008. Retrieved 2 July 2010.
  2. ^ Henry 1999, pp. 15–18
  3. ^ a b . Formula1.com. Formula One Administration. Archived from the original on 21 June 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  4. ^ a b . Formula1.com. Formula One Administration. Archived from the original on 19 June 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  5. ^ . mclaren.com. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 24 May 2010.
  6. ^ Nye 1988, pp. 86–91
  7. ^ a b Young 1995, p. 107–108
  8. ^ Williams 1991, p. 24
  9. ^ a b c Nye 1988, pp. 52–54
  10. ^ Young 1995, p. 89
  11. ^ a b c d Nye 1988, pp. 150–151
  12. ^ a b c d e Young 1995, p. 207–208
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Taylor 2009, pp. 48–51
  14. ^ Nye 1988, p. 158
  15. ^ Nye 1988, p. 166
  16. ^ a b c Nye 1988, pp. 154–155
  17. ^ a b Young 1995, pp. 97–98
  18. ^ Lane, Keith (2002). Automotive A-Z: Lane's Complete Dictionary of Automotive Terms. Veloce Publishing. p. 306. ISBN 1-903706-40-8.
  19. ^ a b Nye 1988, p. 152
  20. ^ Williams 1991, p. 25–26
  21. ^ a b Tremayne, David; Hughes, Mark (1998). The Concise Encyclopedia of Formula One. Dempsey Parr. pp. 210–211. ISBN 1-84084-037-4.
  22. ^ Galpin, Darren (22 June 1999). "Customer power: the Cosworth DFV story". 8W. Retrieved 2 July 2010.
  23. ^ Pritchard, Anthony (1986). Directory of Formula One Cars 1966-1986. Aston Publications. pp. 153–154.
  24. ^ Nye 1988, p. 161
  25. ^ Nye 1988, Appendix 2
  26. ^ a b c d Taylor 2009, pp. 56–59
  27. ^ Young 1995, p. 193
  28. ^ Williams 1991, p. 40
  29. ^ a b Nye 1988, Appendix 3
  30. ^ Donaldson, Gerald. . Formula1.com. Formula One Administration. Archived from the original on 20 June 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  31. ^ Hughes, Mark. . Bruce McLaren Trust. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 20 June 2010.
  32. ^ Nye 1988, p. 153–156
  33. ^ Nye 1988, p. 157
  34. ^ Williams 1991, p. 25
  35. ^ a b Nye 1988, p. 156
  36. ^ "Grand Prix Results: Monaco GP, 1968". grandprix.com. Retrieved 4 July 2010.
  37. ^ Nye 1988, p. 156–158
  38. ^ a b . Formula1.com. Formula One Administration. Archived from the original on 21 June 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  39. ^ . Formula1.com. Formula One Administration. Archived from the original on 17 June 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  40. ^ Nye 1988, p. 158–159
  41. ^ Nye 1988, pp. 92–94
  42. ^ Nye 1988, p. 159–160
  43. ^ a b Nye 1988, pp. 161–166
  44. ^ Taylor 2009, p. 290
  45. ^ . Formula1.com. Formula One Administration. Archived from the original on 21 June 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  46. ^ . Formula1.com. Formula One Administration. Archived from the original on 21 June 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  47. ^ . Formula1.com. Formula One Administration. Archived from the original on 21 June 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  48. ^ . Formula1.com. Formula One Administration. Archived from the original on 11 July 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  49. ^ . Formula1.com. Formula One Administration. Archived from the original on 11 July 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  50. ^ . Formula1.com. Formula One Administration. Archived from the original on 17 July 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  51. ^ . Formula1.com. Formula One Administration. Archived from the original on 28 June 2010. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  52. ^ . Grand Prix Archive. Crash Media Group. Archived from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  53. ^ "All championship race entries, by Jo Bonnier, in a McLaren". Chicane F1. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  54. ^ . Grand Prix Archive. Crash Media Group. Archived from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 23 June 2010.

Bibliography edit

mclaren, variants, were, formula, racing, cars, built, mclaren, used, world, championship, between, 1968, 1971, after, relatively, unsuccessful, years, formula, competition, used, score, mclaren, first, 1968, belgian, grand, prix, denny, hulme, 1936, 1992, 196. The McLaren M7A and its M7B M7C and M7D variants were Formula One racing cars built by McLaren and used in the world championship between 1968 and 1971 After two relatively unsuccessful years of Formula One competition the M7A was used to score McLaren s first win at the 1968 Belgian Grand Prix McLaren M7ADenny Hulme 1936 1992 in a McLaren M7A at the 1968 United States Grand PrixCategoryFormula OneConstructorMcLarenDesigner s Robin HerdGordon CoppuckPredecessorMcLaren M5ASuccessorMcLaren M9A McLaren M14ATechnical specificationsChassisAluminium alloy and magnesium alloy monocoqueSuspension front Upper and lower top links radius arms and outboard coilover springs and dampersSuspension rear Lateral top links twin radius arms reversed wishbones and outboard coilover springs and dampersEngineFord Cosworth DFV 2993cc V8 naturally aspirated Mid engine longitudinally mountedTransmissionHewland DG300 5 speed manualFuelShell McLaren Gulf Anglo TyresGoodyear McLaren Dunlop Anglo Competition historyNotable entrantsBruce McLaren Motor Racing Anglo American RacersNotable driversBruce McLaren Denny Hulme Dan Gurney Anglo Debut1968 Spanish Grand PrixRacesWinsPolesF Laps22400Constructors Championships0 Best 2nd 1968 Drivers Championships0Designed by Robin Herd and Gordon Coppuck the M7A was the first McLaren to be powered by the Cosworth DFV engine which went on to be used by the team until 1983 The M7B had outboard fuel tanks and the M7C a modified chassis whilst the M7D was powered by an Alfa Romeo engine The M7A made its Grand Prix debut at the second race of the 1968 world championship After its victory in Belgium it took another two wins that year helping to place McLaren second in the Constructors Championship Contents 1 Background 2 Design 3 Variants 3 1 M7B 3 2 M7C 3 3 M7D 4 Racing history 4 1 World championship results table 4 2 Non championship results table 5 PC simulation 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 BibliographyBackground editBruce McLaren Motor Racing was founded in 1963 1 Bruce McLaren was a factory driver for the Cooper motor racing team which competed in Formula One the highest level of international single seater competition Since 1966 McLaren and his team had been building and racing their own Formula One cars 2 Their first two seasons had been relatively unsuccessful with six points scored out of a potential 180 nb 1 and a best result of fourth 3 4 The lack of a suitable engine caused problems the 1966 M2B car s Ford and Serenissima V8 engines both lacked power 5 6 and the 1967 M5A s British Racing Motors V12 did not arrive until mid season 7 In 1967 Cosworth debuted their DFV engine which was supplied exclusively to the Lotus team It was immediately successful winning its first race and in 1968 it became available for purchase by any manufacturer 7 McLaren bought five DFV engines at a cost of 7 500 pounds sterling each 8 Designer Robin Herd was recruited to the team in 1965 before which he had been an aerospace engineer at the National Gas Turbine Establishment NGTE where he worked on the Concorde project His assistant Gordon Coppuck was another ex NGTE employee 9 10 Herd began the design of the M7A towards the end of 1967 but left to join Cosworth before its completion leaving Coppuck and Bruce McLaren to complete the work 9 11 Design editThe M7A was an open wheeled single seater with a mid mounted engine driving the rear wheels The chassis was a bathtub type i e open topped monocoque made from 22 gauge aluminium alloy and 20 gauge magnesium alloy panels glued and riveted together and to three steel bulkheads The monocoque terminated behind the driver s seat and the engine was used as a stressed part of the chassis bolted directly to the rearmost bulkhead The gearbox was then attached behind the engine and the rear suspension consisting of lateral top links twin radius arms and reversed wishbones attached to the gearbox and the rear bulkhead The front suspension upper and lower lateral links and radius arms and the steering column were attached to the two bulkheads in front of the driver Coilover springs and Koni dampers mounted outside of the body were employed front and rear 11 nbsp A M7A on display in the Donington CollectionThe outer bodywork was mostly formed by the monocoque except for the nose and cockpit which were covered by glass reinforced plastic GRP panels the engine sometimes also had a GRP cover 12 The wheelbase was 94 inches 2 400 mm the front track 58 inches 1 500 mm and the rear track 57 inches 1 400 mm weight was 1 140 pounds 520 kg 13 McLaren s own magnesium alloy wheels were used they were 15 inch 380 mm diameter at the rear and 15 or sometimes 13 inch 330 mm diameter at the front 11 14 15 Fuel was stored in tanks running down the side of the chassis above the driver s legs and behind their seat totalling 40 imperial gallons 180 L capacity Full capacity was not required for most races so the tank above the driver s legs was usually almost empty 11 For the M7A s first two world championship races Bruce McLaren s car was fitted with outboard pannier fuel tanks at the side of the cockpit McLaren had a theory that sports racing cars handling was superior to that of single seaters because of the weight distribution of their fuel the pannier tanks were an attempt to replicate this According to McLaren mechanic Tyler Alexander this idea was developed in discussion with Lotus boss Colin Chapman After the car was damaged at the 1968 Monaco Grand Prix it was rebuilt without the pannier tanks 16 17 The 10 1 2 inch 270 mm disc brakes were unusual both in being made by Lockheed when most British Formula One teams used Girling brakes and in being ventilated Ventilated discs which have a hollow area between the two outer disc surfaces to aid cooling 18 had been tried by Lotus who had suffered from cracking problems caused by rapid heating and cooling The McLaren team hoped that by being mounted well within the wheels their discs would retain a more constant temperature 19 During the 1968 season wings which press the car and tyres towards the ground thereby increasing cornering speeds and reducing braking distances 20 first appeared on Formula One cars in races Teams experimented with various wing set ups and the governing body of the sport the CSI regulated their use 21 McLaren had first experimented with wings on their 1965 M2A Formula One development car but didn t use them on the following season s racing car the M2B 9 The M7A and its variants wore a variety of wing configurations as described in the racing history section The DFV engine whose development was funded by Ford and which was designed and constructed by Cosworth was normally aspirated with eight cylinders arranged in a v configuration i e a V8 of 90 degrees The block was made from aluminium alloy and the cylinder liners from iron It had four valves per cylinder actuated by double overhead camshafts 22 Liquid cooling was provided by a radiator situated in the nose which vented through ducts in the upper body surface whilst the engine oil was cooled by a radiator mounted on top of the gearbox at the rear 19 Peak power was 410 bhp 306 kW at 9 000 rpm The gearbox was a Hewland DG300 23 The works cars were painted in an orange hue known as papaya it was not a national racing colour however the colour would continue to be used on works McLaren cars until Yardley sponsorship was obtained in 1972 Variants editM7B edit The M7B was a one off conversion of an M7A chassis with the fuel stored low and centrally in integral tanks at the sides of the cockpit This was another result of Bruce McLaren s theory about improving the car s handling by altering the fuel weight distribution 16 Author and former McLaren secretary Eoin Young said that another purpose of the outboard tanks was to make room for a four wheel drive system 12 nb 2 M7C edit The chief distinguishing characteristic of M7C was its fully enclosed monocoque which gave greater torsional rigidity than the bathtub chassis It was based on McLaren s M10A Formula 5000 car which itself was derived from the M7A 12 25 One was made 26 M7D edit The M7D was commissioned by Alfa Romeo s Autodelta competition department and was powered by a 3 0 litre V8 engine from Alfa Romeo s T33 sports car The engine is variously cited as producing peak power of between 410 bhp 306 kW and 430 bhp 321 kW the highest figure said to be produced at 10 500 rpm with good levels of torque but McLaren found that performance varied significantly between units To accommodate the engine the wheelbase was lengthened to 96 inches 2 400 mm and a new mounting point was created for the alternator which unlike on the DFV was not integrated with the engine One was made although it is unclear whether this was a new chassis or a rebuilding of the M7B chassis 12 26 27 28 Racing history edit nbsp Bruce McLaren 1937 1970 in an M7C in the 1969 German Grand PrixFor the 1968 Formula One season after two years of driving the team s sole entry 29 Bruce McLaren was partnered by Denny Hulme Hulme was world champion with the Brabham team in 1967 and had raced for McLaren that year in Can Am a North American sports car racing series 30 31 For the first round of the 1968 world championship the South African Grand Prix which was held in January four months before the second round only Hulme competed using the M5A to finish fifth The M7A s first race was the Race of Champions at Brands Hatch run to Formula One rules but not part of the world championship There McLaren won from pole position while Hulme was third Another victory came at the non championship BRDC International Trophy at Silverstone this time with Hulme finishing first and McLaren second In the M7A s championship debut in Spain Hulme was second and McLaren retired then in Monaco McLaren crashed and Hulme was fifth and last At the Belgian Grand Prix they were fifth and sixth on the grid Hulme took the lead and held it until a half shaft failed two thirds of the way in McLaren was then second behind Jackie Stewart s Matra but Stewart had to make a pit stop for fuel on the final lap giving McLaren the win although he initially believed he had finished second 32 It was the McLaren team s first world championship victory and Bruce McLaren became the second driver after Jack Brabham to win in a car bearing their own name it was also the last win of his career 13 33 After Belgium McLaren s Goodyear tyres suffered a slump in competitiveness and the team and their car fell behind rivals Graham Hill in his Lotus and Stewart in his Matra 13 34 At the Dutch Grand Prix McLaren crashed out and Hulme retired with ignition failure 35 After Lotus had begun the first experimentation with wings in Monaco and Ferrari and Brabham had debuted full height wings in Belgium McLaren fitted a rear wing to their car for the French Grand Prix 35 36 However mounted above the engine on the sprung mass of the car it was not as effective as Lotus s wing mounted on the unsprung suspension components 13 In France Hulme was fourth then fifth in Britain but both cars were out of the points earning positions at the German Grand Prix 37 nb 3 nbsp The M7B is seen here with Vic Elford in the cockpit at the 1969 German Grand Prix he crashed in the raceAn improvement in form came at the Italian Grand Prix where the cars ran without wings and Goodyear brought their new G9 specification tyre McLaren qualified on the front row and led to begin with until he slowed at the scene of an accident and was caught by Stewart Hulme and Jo Siffert in a Lotus A slipstreaming battle ensued McLaren retired with an oil leak at mid distance but Hulme went on to win 13 39 40 From the Canadian Grand Prix onwards a third M7A was driven by Dan Gurney whose Anglo American Racers team for whom Bruce McLaren had driven for three races in 1967 41 had run out of funding for their own Eagle cars Gurney retired with overheating in Canada but Hulme and McLaren continued their success by finishing first and second respectively albeit after their strongest challengers had all retired Hulme was then jointly in the lead of the Drivers Championship with two races to go He ran competitively towards the beginning of the United States Grand Prix but ultimately retired via a spin pit stops to repair damaged brake lines and a gearbox output shaft failure which spun him again this time into a crash McLaren was sixth Gurney fourth Going into the final race in Mexico Hulme retained a chance of defending his title McLaren finished second there but Hulme crashed out because of a broken suspension damper allowing Hill to win the Drivers Championship 42 nbsp Bruce McLaren white balaclava prepares to take his seat in his M7C prior to the 1969 Dutch Grand PrixFor 1969 McLaren with an unchanged driver line up designed a new four wheel drive car the M9A but whilst that was being readied continued with the old car The M9A was eventually unsuccessful and appeared only once driven by Derek Bell at the British Grand Prix At the South African Grand Prix Hulme scored a podium with the M7A Bruce used the M7B version and the pair were joined by Basil van Rooyen in another M7A In South Africa the works cars used rear wings mounted directly to the suspension on tall struts at the Race of Champions Bruce McLaren s M7B was fitted with a similarly strutted front wing in the practice session but it was not used in the race Hulme was third at the Race of Champions and then at International Trophy Bruce McLaren switched to the M7C variant McLaren qualified 13th on the grid at the Spanish Grand Prix but took advantage of the crashes and breakdowns of those ahead of him to finish second In the practice sessions at Monaco high front wings were added to the cars but before the race the CSI banned wings altogether This left the team to make do with a small ducktail rear spoiler McLaren and Hulme racing to fifth and sixth respectively Wings were then re allowed albeit not mounted on the suspension and with teams searching for the best solution McLaren initially opted for a tea tray rear wing and later a more conventional low mounted aerofoil 13 21 26 43 Meanwhile the Colin Crabbe Antique Automobiles team bought the M7B and Vic Elford drove it at the Dutch Grand Prix finishing 10th McLaren was fourth third and third at the French British and German Grands Prix respectively but in each Hulme who qualified on the first row in France and Britain was sidelined into retirement by mechanical failure Elford took a best finish of fifth in France but then crashed and destroyed the M7B at the Nurburgring in Germany The Italian Grand Prix at Monza produced another slipstreaming battle this time McLaren finished fourth albeit only 0 19 seconds behind winner Stewart More unreliability in Canada and the United States restricted the cars to a best finish of fifth before at the season ending Mexico race Hulme scored the M7 s only win of the year 13 26 43 With McLaren s introduction of the new M14A in 1970 the M7 had only one more works outing when Dan Gurney used an M7A at the 1970 British Grand Prix Privateer John Surtees bought the M7C as a stopgap until his own Surtees TS7 car was ready He raced it at four Grands Prix retiring from three and finishing sixth in the Netherlands The car then switched hands to Jo Bonnier who used it for two more races that year The M7D was used intermittently with the M14D by Andrea de Adamich and Nanni Galli qualifying for and starting only one race the French Grand Prix where de Adamich finished unclassified By 1971 the only type s only entrant was Bonnier with his M7C He used it at five races and had a best result of 10th in the Italian Grand Prix World championship results table edit key Year Team Engine Tyres Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Points WCC1968 Bruce McLaren Motor Racing Ford Cosworth DFV 3 0 V8 G RSA ESP MON BEL NED FRA GBR GER ITA CAN USA MEX 49 2ndBruce McLaren Ret Ret 1 Ret 8 7 13 Ret 2 6 2Denny Hulme 2 5 Ret Ret 5 4 7 1 1 Ret RetAnglo American Racers Dan Gurney Ret 4 Ret1969 Bruce McLaren Motor Racing Ford Cosworth DFV 3 0 V8 G RSA ESP MON NED FRA GBR GER ITA CAN USA MEX 38 4thBruce McLaren 5 2 5 Ret 4 3 3 4 5 DNS DNSDenny Hulme 3 4 6 4 8 Ret Ret 7 Ret Ret 1Colin Crabbe Antique Automobiles Vic Elford 10 5 6 RetTeam Lawson D Basil van Rooyen Ret1970 Bruce McLaren Motor Racing Alfa Romeo 3 0 V8 G RSA ESP MON BEL NED FRA GBR GER AUT ITA CAN USA MEX 0 9th nb 4 Andrea de Adamich DNQ DNQ NC DNSNanni Galli DNQEcurie Bonnier Ford Cosworth DFV 3 0 V8 Jo Bonnier DNQ Ret 35 5th nb 5 Team Surtees F John Surtees Ret Ret Ret 61971 Ecurie Bonnier Ford Cosworth DFV 3 0 V8 G RSA ESP MON NED FRA GBR GER AUT ITA CAN USA 10 6th nb 6 Jo Bonnier Ret DNQ DNS 10 16Helmut Marko DNSRefs 29 38 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 Non championship results table edit key Year Team Engine Tyres Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 81968 Bruce McLaren Motor Racing Ford Cosworth DFV 3 0 V8 G ROC INT OULBruce McLaren 1 2 DNADenny Hulme 3 1 DNA1969 Bruce McLaren Motor Racing Ford Cosworth DFV 3 0 V8 G ROC INT MAD OULBruce McLaren Ret 6Denny Hulme 3 Ret1970 Bruce McLaren Motor Racing Alfa Romeo 3 0 V8 G ROC INT OULAndrea de Adamich DNAFord Cosworth DFV 3 0 V8 Peter Gethin 6Reine Wisell 51971 Ecurie Bonnier Ford Cosworth DFV 3 0 V8 G ARG ROC QUE SPR INT RIN OUL VICCarlos Reutemann 3Jo Bonnier DNAA G Dean Chevrolet 5 0 V8 Tony Dean 7PC simulation editIn 2005 a driveable detailed replica of the McLaren M7B was released as part of the free 69 Mod for the pc based racing simulation Grand Prix Legends References editNotes edit A total of 20 Formula One world championship races were held in 1966 and 1967 for each of which a maximum of nine points was awarded 3 4 Young 1995 refers to the side tank version with pannier fuel tanks as the M7C 17 apparently in error although it is unclear whether the author is discussing the M7B or the earlier M7A with pannier tanks Elsewhere in Young 1995 the author identifies the version fitted with integral pannier tanks as the M7B as do Nye 1988 and Taylor 2009 12 13 16 24 Points were awarded to cars finishing in positions from first to sixth 38 Points were awarded separately for each combination of chassis and engine Therefore McLaren Ford were fifth in the world championship with 35 points whilst McLaren Alfa Romeo were 9th with zero points The McLaren Ford total includes points scored with other models Points were awarded separately for each combination of chassis and engine Therefore McLaren Ford were fifth in the world championship with 35 points whilst McLaren Alfa Romeo were 9th with zero points The McLaren Ford total includes points scored with other models All points were scored with other models Citations edit McLAREN IN FORMULA 1 mclaren com Archived from the original on 28 May 2008 Retrieved 2 July 2010 Henry 1999 pp 15 18 a b 1966 FIA Formula One World Championship Formula1 com Formula One Administration Archived from the original on 21 June 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2017 a b 1967 FIA Formula One World Championship Formula1 com Formula One Administration Archived from the original on 19 June 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2017 The M2B mclaren com Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 24 May 2010 Nye 1988 pp 86 91 a b Young 1995 p 107 108 Williams 1991 p 24 a b c Nye 1988 pp 52 54 Young 1995 p 89 a b c d Nye 1988 pp 150 151 a b c d e Young 1995 p 207 208 a b c d e f g h Taylor 2009 pp 48 51 Nye 1988 p 158 Nye 1988 p 166 a b c Nye 1988 pp 154 155 a b Young 1995 pp 97 98 Lane Keith 2002 Automotive A Z Lane s Complete Dictionary of Automotive Terms Veloce Publishing p 306 ISBN 1 903706 40 8 a b Nye 1988 p 152 Williams 1991 p 25 26 a b Tremayne David Hughes Mark 1998 The Concise Encyclopedia of Formula One Dempsey Parr pp 210 211 ISBN 1 84084 037 4 Galpin Darren 22 June 1999 Customer power the Cosworth DFV story 8W Retrieved 2 July 2010 Pritchard Anthony 1986 Directory of Formula One Cars 1966 1986 Aston Publications pp 153 154 Nye 1988 p 161 Nye 1988 Appendix 2 a b c d Taylor 2009 pp 56 59 Young 1995 p 193 Williams 1991 p 40 a b Nye 1988 Appendix 3 Donaldson Gerald Denny Hulme Formula1 com Formula One Administration Archived from the original on 20 June 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2017 Hughes Mark Clockwork Orange McLaren Domination Bruce McLaren Trust Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 20 June 2010 Nye 1988 p 153 156 Nye 1988 p 157 Williams 1991 p 25 a b Nye 1988 p 156 Grand Prix Results Monaco GP 1968 grandprix com Retrieved 4 July 2010 Nye 1988 p 156 158 a b 1968 FIA Formula One World Championship Formula1 com Formula One Administration Archived from the original on 21 June 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2017 1968 Italian Grand Prix Formula1 com Formula One Administration Archived from the original on 17 June 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2017 Nye 1988 p 158 159 Nye 1988 pp 92 94 Nye 1988 p 159 160 a b Nye 1988 pp 161 166 Taylor 2009 p 290 1969 FIA Formula One World Championship Formula1 com Formula One Administration Archived from the original on 21 June 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2017 1970 FIA Formula One World Championship Formula1 com Formula One Administration Archived from the original on 21 June 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2017 1971 FIA Formula One World Championship Formula1 com Formula One Administration Archived from the original on 21 June 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2017 1968 All Teams Formula1 com Formula One Administration Archived from the original on 11 July 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2017 1969 All Teams Formula1 com Formula One Administration Archived from the original on 11 July 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2017 1970 All Teams Formula1 com Formula One Administration Archived from the original on 17 July 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2017 1971 All Teams Formula1 com Formula One Administration Archived from the original on 28 June 2010 Retrieved 21 May 2017 1970 Italian GP Results 6 9 1970 Grand Prix Archive Crash Media Group Archived from the original on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 23 June 2010 All championship race entries by Jo Bonnier in a McLaren Chicane F1 Retrieved 23 June 2010 1971 German GP Results 1 8 1971 Grand Prix Archive Crash Media Group Archived from the original on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 23 June 2010 Bibliography edit Henry Alan 1999 McLaren Formula 1 Racing Team Haynes ISBN 1 85960 425 0 Nye Doug 1988 1984 McLaren The Grand Prix Can Am and Indy Cars New ed Guild Publishing ISBN 0 905138 54 6 Taylor William 2009 2008 Tremayne David ed McLaren The Cars 1964 2008 Second ed Coterie Press ISBN 978 1 902351 34 6 Williams Geoffrey 1991 McLaren A Racing History The Crowood Press ISBN 1 85223 603 5 Young Eoin 1995 1971 Bruce McLaren The Man and His Racing Team Patrick Stephens ISBN 1 85260 511 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title McLaren M7A amp oldid 1217571425, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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