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Marcos Engineering
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== Racing history == === Wooden wonders === Marcos started out with race cars, with the first Xylon cars being built specifically for the 750 motor club races. Among the drivers were [[Jackie Stewart]], [[Bill Moss (racing driver)|Bill Moss]], John Sutton, Jack Gates, John Mitchell and [[Jackie Oliver]], as well as [[Jem Marsh]]. The young Jackie Stewart achieved 4 victories in 1961, while Bill Moss managed 9 victories in 10 starts. John Sutton won the 1961 Autosport Championship, and together with Jack Gates and John Mitchell, Marcos won the team prize. When the car went into production as the Luton Gullwing many examples were bought for racing. In 1962 Stephen Minoprio was the Autosport 1000cc GT Champion in his Gullwing – setting 7 lap records in the process. The Gullwing in turn evolved into the GT Fastback, also known as the 'Breadvan'. All 18 fastbacks made in 1963 went into racing, and like the Xylon and Gullwing they were FIA homologated in the GT category. However, without the gull wing doors, the fastbacks were awkward to get in and out of. Drivers included [[Jackie Oliver]], Terry Sanger, and [[Derek Bell (racing driver)|Derek Bell]], and [[Jem Marsh]] of course. The sales brochure for the Fastback included options for 5 speed gearbox (Hewland), dry sump, 997cc (84 to 88 bhp) and 1148cc (102 to 104 bhp) full race engines, light alloy bellhousing, 72-litre fuel tank (for endurance racing), lightweight alloy oil cooler, and perspex windscreen (saving 15 lbs). The successor Marcos coupé road cars were popular track/day cars, and several were raced in the BARC and BRSCC Modsports championships, including [[Jonathan Palmer]] taking the 1977 Modsport championship in a V6.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.racing70s.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/racing70s/BritSports/marcosgt_1.htm |title=Marcos 3000GT |access-date=18 March 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20121223083511/http://www.racing70s.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/racing70s/BritSports/marcosgt_1.htm |archive-date=23 December 2012 }}</ref> [[Mark Hales]] also successfully raced a 1967 wooden chassis V6 in the Modsports class. The 1800 Volvo engined cars are accepted for historic racing under FIA Appendix K, where they are very competitive, and there are still wooden chassis Ford-engined cars being raced. The fact that the wooden chassis can take the stresses of racing for so many years shows what a successful design it was. === Mini Marcos === [[File:Nationale oldtimerdag Zandvoort 2010, 1967 MARCO S MINI MARCOS MKIII, AM-95-48 P-1.JPG|thumb|1967 Mini Marcos MkIII]] The [[Mini Marcos]] is also a very successful car on the race track. It made its debut at a rain soaked Castle Combe race track on 25 September 1965. Driven by Geoff Mabbs, it lapped all but one car to win the BRSCC race by 81 seconds at an average of 76 mph. In 1966 a French Mini Marcos, with Marcos support,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.minimarcos.org.uk/sport/lm66bd/index.html|title = Le Mans Mini Marcos 1966}}</ref> was the only British car to complete the Le Mans 24-hour race. For the 1967 Le Mans, Marcos entered their own Mini-Marcos (drivers were Marsh and Chris Lawrence). The car was clocked at 141 mph on the [[Mulsanne Straight]] in the April test, but failed to finish the race because of an oil pump failure. The same car was more successful in the Kyalami 9-hour race in Nov 1967, when Marsh and [[Brian Raubenheimer]] finished 15th, it appeared again in the 1968 race but did not finish. Mini Marcos cars were raced widely,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.minimarcos.org.uk/sport/records.html|title = Mini Marcos International Racing Records}}</ref> especially as a budget endurance race car, but also in local championships in many countries including Modsports in the UK. Mini-Marcos was also the chosen car for the "First Ladies International Race Team" (FLIRT), which competed at events such as the Nurburgring 1000 km race in May 1967, where they retired, the Grand Premio del Mugello in July 1967, coming 37th, and the Nürburgring 500 km race in September 1967 where two cars were fielded with Jackie Bond-Smith coming in 21st and 4th in class, and Joey Cook retiring. === XP prototype === [[File:Marcos Mantis XP.jpg|thumb|Marcos XP prototype]] The XP prototype was intended for the [[1968 24 Hours of Le Mans|1968 Le Mans]]. It was assembled with a stressed plywood monocoque chassis and Cooper suspension, and powered by a Brabham Formula 1 engine, later replaced by a [[Buick V8 engine#215|Buick 215]] V8. Raced at [[Spa Francorchamps|Spa]] as a shakedown test, it was one of many cars that retired with electrical problems in heavy rain. This proved to be its only race. Le Mans was postponed that year and the XP went to America. === Second generation race cars === [[File:Two Marcos Mantis Challenge race cars.jpg|thumb|right|Marcos Mantis Marcorelly race cars, built by [[Cor Euser|Cor Euser Racing]].]] After the company's resurrection in 1981 the emphasis was on road cars, although price lists for the early V8 cars included a competition specification for "circuit racing, hill climbs and sprints". Competition options include FIA-approved roll-over bar, limited-slip differential, rose-jointed suspension and full harnesses. In October 1993 Marcos unveiled its new competition car and announced a return to GT racing, including Le Mans. Based on the Mantara, the cars were designated LM400, LM500 and LM600. After some successes in the British GT championship in 1994, Marcos won it in 1995, 1996 and 2000. Two cars also competed at Le Mans in 1995. Both suffered electrical faults, one retiring and the other (driven by [[David Leslie (racing driver)|David Leslie]], [[François Migault]], and Jem Marsh's son Chris) finishing second to last, having completed 114 laps fewer than the winning [[McLaren F1]] GTR as its electrical problem stranded it on the Mulsanne Straight for two hours soon after the start. The year 1998 saw the launch of the Dunlop-sponsored Mantis Challenge, a one-make race series for the coupé version of the Mantis road car with a dry-sump version of its 4.6-litre quad-cam [[Ford Modular engine|Ford Modular V8 engine]]. Complete with FIA roll-cage the cars weighed 950 kg. Entries were few in 1998, and the cars were accepted for the Privilege GT series as GT2, and the French GT series as GT3, winning one of the races in France. In 1999 the field was stronger, and the Dutch Mantis Challenge was also strong, and some races combined both. The 1999 UK series was won by Edward Horner, and the Dutch series by Robert Knook.<ref>{{cite web| title=Marcos in GT Racing 1999| url =http://www.marcoscars.net/marrac99.htm| access-date =1 June 2012}}</ref> A total of 38 Mantis Challenge cars were built, but the series did not continue beyond 1999, after the GT Championship introduced the GT3 class. Many are still raced, including in the British Endurance Championship (Britcar), and at least one has been converted for road use. In 2000, the Marcos racing business was sold to longtime GT sponsor Eurotech, a Dutch engineering firm. By that time, all Marcos racing cars and road car chassis were built in the Netherlands, with road car assembly completed in Westbury by a much-reduced staff. An LM600 driven by [[Cor Euser]] competed in the [[Dutch Supercar Challenge]] and won the GT Championship in 2002 and 2004, and again in 2009, the 50th anniversary of the founding of Marcos. Euser also has the license to manufacture racing cars, and has done so with a GT3-spec Marcos Mantis, and did the same in a modified Marcos Mantis, named the Marcorelly. He has raced both of these cars in the Benelux-based [[Supercar Challenge (series)|Supercar Challenge]].
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