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Above in typical four wheel drift the 2.5 litre four cylinder Vanwall takes the bend! The car was designed by Colin Chapman (Lotus) with very advanced aerodynamics by Frank Costin (later Marcos and Cosworth) - to our left on the bonnet you can see the NACA duct inlet for the engine, which relies on a region of high pressure air to obviate the need for a scoop. The engine manifold exits the bonnet in a spread pattern on the opposite side to the NACA duct to minimise drag. The drivers mirrors double as air scoops. It was the fastest F1 car in a straight line and won the first ever F1 constructors championship in 1958. Also in 1958 Stirling Moss almost won the drivers championship in the Vanwall losing out by a single point to Mike Hawthorn with his team mate Tony Brooks third.
The four cylinder engine was designed by Norton man Leo Kuzmicki and was closely based on the Norton GP motorcycle engine of the time. The Vanwall was the first F1 car to pioneer the use of alloy wheels in place of wire spoked wheels (Wikipedia describes them as steel wheels).
The Vanwall was the brainchild of Tony Vandervell the manufacturer of Vandervell thinwall bearings who previously backed BRM (British Racing Motors) and then a team of modified Ferraris known as "Thinwall Specials". It is amazing that a non-factory team could produce the fastest F1 car and win the F1 manufacturers championship.
I would like this car to battle against the Maserati 250F - the Vanwall had more speed and the Maserati had better handling.
A great machine and one of the last of the front engine F1 cars. More information from the Wiki link below:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanwall
Short clip from 1958: