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Dispatches From Goodwood, Part I: Where Past Powers the Future

Dispatches From Goodwood, Part I: Where Past Powers the Future

Goodwood once again proved why it remains the world's definitive celebration of automotive heritage, innovation and performance.

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The Goodwood Festival of Speed returned to southern England this past weekend for another gathering of the world’s greatest cars from every era of motorsport. Despite scalding weather that bordered on torturously hot, the scene and setting on the property of the 11th Duke of Richmond still drew dense crowds eager to take in an unbelievable show featuring everything from the earliest horseless carriages to 1960s racing legends, Group B rally cars, modern electrics, and even motorcycles from every era.

Without a doubt, Goodwood FOS has transformed into one of – if not the – best motoring events in the world, highlighted by a hillclimb held right on site that keeps the paddock abuzz all weekend long. A timed shootout dictates that so much rolling automotive art needs to actually run well enough to race, all surrounded by centuries-old castle grounds dotted by displays and hospitality stands chock full of familiar and novel makes and models, many of which will never even reach the United States.

This year the combination of retro and modern aesthetics and performance coalesced more than ever into a unifying theme. Arguably the biggest name in the “restomod” industry, Singer, took the firm’s reimagined 911 sports cars a step further by mounting three on a sky-high statue reminiscent of the Gateway Arch in St Louis. But a series of modern recreations also revealed a burgeoning trend for enthusiasts who crave a renewed sense of analog delights whether racing up a hill, canyon carving on the weekend, or venturing out to the racetrack for some more hardcore fare.

McLaren M6GT

Fittingly, McLaren rolled out two new projects to display at Goodwood. Firstly, the 788HS debuted as the pinnacle of performance for the 750S platform, and as limited to only 200 units (all already sold) will somehow wind up more exclusive than the W1 hypercar. But the British racing giant also brought along a fun project, the M6GT. This historically relevant recreation of a prototype car harks back to Bruce McLaren’s first dream of a production model.

In this case, McLaren began work on a period-correct race car just seven months prior, using historic drawings and a set of “barn find” original body panels sourced from Specialised Mouldings. A small-block Chevy V8 with 48-millimeter Weber carburetors links to a ZF five-speed dog box, though the build required fully new fuel tanks and a custom wiring harness.

All told, the running and driving car reportedly required 4,000 labor hours to bring to life, though McLaren decided against entering it in the hillclimb. Instead, the M6GT will stay in the company’s private collection—though theoretically, could be one day made road-legal or may even inspire a line of continuation cars if customer response proves positive enough.

Bizzarrini 5300 Aperta Lusso

Though McLaren still dominates Formula 1 racing, defunct manufacturer Bizzarrini returns to life this year with the 5300 Aperta Lusso that arrived at Goodwood ready to run. The design carries on the Italian firm’s original low-slung sports car, albeit with body panels out of carbon fiber, carburetors replaced with fuel injection, and a host of additional modern creature comforts.

The concept from Bizzarrini appears to involve using the most advanced current technology to transform a vintage car into something absolutely prepared for daily driving – this exact example will wind up in Italy but recently finished an extensive shakedown run in Italy before coming out to Goodwood where driving for hours on end in the hot sun presented zero issues.

Bizzarrini eventually plans to build just 10 Aperta Lussos before focusing on a federally compliant car for sale in the United States, while a naturally aspirated V12 developed entirely in-house also fits into the mix.

Nichols N1A

As typical at a British automotive event, the influence of McLaren over many decades pervaded Goodwood. Case in point, the Nichols N1A fashioned by Steve Nichols, who designed the original McLaren MP4/4.

Today, the N1A takes lightweight performance to another level in the form of a tiny sports car weighing just 895 kilograms (1,973 pounds) but powered by a massive 427ci V8 built with custom throttle bodies and capable of pumping out an absurd 720 horsepower.

A gated six-speed manual gearshifter to the right of the right-hand driver’s seat features a replica of the shifter knob that Ayrton Senna apparently twisted off his MP4/4 after winning Monaco in 1988. Hydraulic power steering may not be necessary in something so tiny, but Nichols will option it regardless. And this analog featherweight can also come with air conditioning, features a front-axle lift system, with carbon brakes and wheels.

Nichols calls the N1A a “supercar” but in reality, a super driver will need to slide into the tiny cockpit to truly unleash every ounce of performance from something so radical.

RUF B8 “Erprober”

Not every car at Goodwood perfectly straddled the divide between vintage and modern, though the line always blurs while discussing RUF Automobile. This year, Ruf arrived with a fun prototype engine that traces back to Porsche’s own 908 race car, albeit slipped into a new chassis, as well.

Driver Tanner Foust spent the weekend trying to tame the twin-turbocharged 4.8-liter Boxer eight racing up the hill, with a rasping soundtrack and almost overwhelming turbo whine hinting at the claimed 1,000 horsepower and 737 lb-ft of torque on tap.

The new powerplant required lengthening the chassis of a RUF CTR3 test unit by 100 millimeters (3.93 inches). But even if the B8 “Erprober” (for “tester”) generally resembles a Boxster or Cayman, the entirely ground-up chassis from Ruf proves just how far a dedication to all-out performance goes with the right budget.

Porsche never built a flat-eight for a production road car, and the 908’s engine was naturally aspirated only during the late-1960s before wrapping up competition in 1971. So, if RUF decides to actually slip the B8 into a new model, these three days showing at Goodwood may wind up as a somewhat historically significant moment in and of themselves.

That's Part I done; in Part II we look at the HWA Evo.R and Kimera K39 Pikes Peak, and take a ride up the hill with IndyCar legend Dario Franchitti in Gordon Murray Automotive's new Le Mans GTR prototype.

Images by Michael Van Runkle, RUF Automobile, Nichols Cars, Bizzarrini

Michael Van Runkle

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