Explore 60 thrilling years of Mc Laren Formula 1 race cars in this handsome volume, complete with detailed specs, stunning photography, a foreword by twice World Champion Mika
Häkkinen,
and the full competition record for every car.
Mc Laren has been a top Formula 1 competitor and innovator since it fielded founder and driver Bruce Mc Laren’s first car, the M2B, in 1966. Just two years later, Bruce scored the team’s first grand prix win. Tragically, he was killed in 1970 while testing his Can-Am car at Goodwood.
Despite the heavy loss of its founder, Mc Laren carried on, scoring its first of twelve championships in 1974 with Emerson Fitipaldi. Mc Laren’s roster of F1 Champions includes such greats as James Hunt, Niki Lauda, Ayrton Senna, and modern master Lewis Hamilton.
Equally legendary are the cars themselves, including the:
- 1960s M7A
- 1970s M23
- 1980s MP4/2
- 1990s MP4/5
- 2000s MP4-23
- Today’s MCL 60
As the second longest-running team in F1 (surpassed only by Ferrari), Mc Laren holds twelve Drivers Championships and eight Constructor’s titles.
Mc Laren Formula 1 Car by Car chronicles every Mc Laren Formula 1 car in chronological order, featuring an overview of each car’s significant features and evolution, its technical specifications, and its competition record accompanied by historic and contemporary images.
Featuring a Foreword from two-time F1 World Champion Mika Häkkinen,
Mc Laren Formula 1 Car by Car details the amazing race cars and drivers that have cemented Mc Laren’s reputation as one of the most dominant manufacturers in F1 history making this book a must-have for every Mc Laren and F1 fan.
लेखक के बारे में
Formula 1’s defining ‘Flying Finn’ of the 1990s, Mika Häkkinen learned his craft on the kart tracks of his native Finland, where his father would mark the braking points of specific corners with a Coca-Cola can…then move it closer to the apex every lap. Having won the Nordic Formula Ford series in 1987 he also claimed the Opel-Lotus Euroseries and prestigious British Formula 3 championship before graduating to F1 with Lotus in 1991. After moving to Mc Laren in 1993 he grew with the team as it rebuilt from a competitive slump, winning the world championship in 1998 and 1999–and developing a rivalry with Ferrari’s Michael Schumacher which would define the era.