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Chevron B8 Climax FPF
Chevron B8 Climax FPF

Brand

Chevron

Produced from

1968

Portal

Sports Cars

Vehicle category

Group 4

Model line

Chevron B8

Model generation

Chevron B8

Predecessor

-

Sucessor

-
About this submodel
Read more

Derek Bennett’s 1968 Chevron B8 was a masterpiece of pragmatism, a car that served as a near-perfect “universal soldier” for the privateer racer. It was a chassis so brilliantly conceived—so light, so strong, so forgiving—that it was offered as a blank canvas, ready to accept whichever 2.0-litre engine the customer deemed best. The new, high-revving Cosworth FVA was the 1.6L class-winner. The BMW M10/M12 was the 2.0L torque-rich workhorse, the giant-killer of the Nürburgring. And then, there was the traditionalist’s choice. This was the Chevron B8 Coventry Climax FPF, a car that represented a bridge between two distinct eras of motorsport: the most advanced privateer chassis of the late 1960s, powered by the most legendary privateer engine of the late 1950s.

The Coventry Climax FPF engine was, by 1968, a living legend. This was not a new, unproven unit; it was a grizzled veteran. This was the engine, designed by Wally Hassan, that had won the Formula 1 World Championship with Jack Brabham. It was the engine that had powered Stirling Moss’s agile Rob Walker Coopers and Lotuses to giant-killing F1 victories. It was, in short, one of the greatest four-cylinder racing engines ever built. By the mid-1960s, the 2.0-litre FPF Mk.II was a known quantity. It was a DOHC, all-aluminium, four-cylinder unit, fed by two large Weber carburettors, producing a reliable and potent 185-195 hp. Its best days in F1 were long gone, but for a privateer sports car team, it was a proven, powerful, and, crucially, available engine.

Derek Bennett’s genius was in creating a chassis that could harness this “old guard” engine and make it competitive against the new generation. The B8’s foundation was its robust, TIG-welded steel space frame. This was a deliberate, pragmatic choice. While rivals like Porsche were using exotic, fragile monocoques, Bennett knew his customers were not factory teams. They were “clubmen” who needed a car that could survive a 1000km race and be repaired in their own garage after a shunt. This strong, stiff frame was wrapped in a breathtakingly beautiful, low-drag fibreglass body, a shape that was as slippery as it was elegant. The B8’s sophisticated, fully independent, double-wishbone suspension and four-wheel Girling disc brakes provided handling that was forgiving and, in the right hands, world-beating.

The B8-FPF was a “pure” Chevron in that it was a simple, light, and perfectly balanced package. While the B8-BMW was defined by its high-torque grunt, the B8-FPF was a more classic, high-revving experience. It was the quintessential “momentum” car, its drivers needing to keep the FPF engine “on the boil” in its narrow powerband. But what it gave up in torque, it made up for in proven, unburstable reliability.

The B8-FPF’s competition history is not one of a single, spectacular, “giant-killing” international victory, as was the case with its BMW-powered sibling. Instead, its legacy was written in the trenches of national motorsport. This was the “clubman’s” hero. In the 1968-1969 British Sports Car Championship, the B8-FPF was a dominant force. On the fast, flowing circuits of the UK—Brands Hatch, Silverstone, Oulton Park—the B8-FPF, often in the hands of privateer heroes like John Lepp, was the car to beat. It was the backbone of the B8’s early reputation, the car that won every weekend. It proved the B8 chassis concept was sound, reliable, and, above all, fast, paving the way for the more exotic (and expensive) BMW and Cosworth FVA-powered cars to take on the world championship.

The B8-FPF was a transitional machine, the last gasp of the legendary Climax engine in a front-line sports car. It was quickly overshadowed by the more modern, powerful, and better-supported BMW M12 and Cosworth’s own FVC (the 1.8L evolution of the FVA). Many B8-FPF chassis were, in later life, converted to these more modern engines to remain competitive, making an original FPF-powered car a rare and wonderful sight today. It remains a “connoisseur’s” B8, a perfect, short-lived marriage of 1950s engine royalty and 1960s chassis-design genius.

 

Read more

Brand

Chevron

Produced from

1968

Portal

Sports Cars

Vehicle category

Group 4

Model line

Chevron B8

Model generation

Chevron B8

Predecessor

-

Sucessor

-

Brand

Chevron

Produced from

1968

Portal

Sports Cars

Vehicle category

Group 4

Model line

Chevron B8

Model generation

Chevron B8

Predecessor

-

Sucessor

-
About this submodel

Derek Bennett’s 1968 Chevron B8 was a masterpiece of pragmatism, a car that served as a near-perfect “universal soldier” for the privateer racer. It was a chassis so brilliantly conceived—so light, so strong, so forgiving—that it was offered as a blank canvas, ready to accept whichever 2.0-litre engine the customer deemed best. The new, high-revving Cosworth FVA was the 1.6L class-winner. The BMW M10/M12 was the 2.0L torque-rich workhorse, the giant-killer of the Nürburgring. And then, there was the traditionalist’s choice. This was the Chevron B8 Coventry Climax FPF, a car that represented a bridge between two distinct eras of motorsport: the most advanced privateer chassis of the late 1960s, powered by the most legendary privateer engine of the late 1950s.

The Coventry Climax FPF engine was, by 1968, a living legend. This was not a new, unproven unit; it was a grizzled veteran. This was the engine, designed by Wally Hassan, that had won the Formula 1 World Championship with Jack Brabham. It was the engine that had powered Stirling Moss’s agile Rob Walker Coopers and Lotuses to giant-killing F1 victories. It was, in short, one of the greatest four-cylinder racing engines ever built. By the mid-1960s, the 2.0-litre FPF Mk.II was a known quantity. It was a DOHC, all-aluminium, four-cylinder unit, fed by two large Weber carburettors, producing a reliable and potent 185-195 hp. Its best days in F1 were long gone, but for a privateer sports car team, it was a proven, powerful, and, crucially, available engine.

Derek Bennett’s genius was in creating a chassis that could harness this “old guard” engine and make it competitive against the new generation. The B8’s foundation was its robust, TIG-welded steel space frame. This was a deliberate, pragmatic choice. While rivals like Porsche were using exotic, fragile monocoques, Bennett knew his customers were not factory teams. They were “clubmen” who needed a car that could survive a 1000km race and be repaired in their own garage after a shunt. This strong, stiff frame was wrapped in a breathtakingly beautiful, low-drag fibreglass body, a shape that was as slippery as it was elegant. The B8’s sophisticated, fully independent, double-wishbone suspension and four-wheel Girling disc brakes provided handling that was forgiving and, in the right hands, world-beating.

The B8-FPF was a “pure” Chevron in that it was a simple, light, and perfectly balanced package. While the B8-BMW was defined by its high-torque grunt, the B8-FPF was a more classic, high-revving experience. It was the quintessential “momentum” car, its drivers needing to keep the FPF engine “on the boil” in its narrow powerband. But what it gave up in torque, it made up for in proven, unburstable reliability.

The B8-FPF’s competition history is not one of a single, spectacular, “giant-killing” international victory, as was the case with its BMW-powered sibling. Instead, its legacy was written in the trenches of national motorsport. This was the “clubman’s” hero. In the 1968-1969 British Sports Car Championship, the B8-FPF was a dominant force. On the fast, flowing circuits of the UK—Brands Hatch, Silverstone, Oulton Park—the B8-FPF, often in the hands of privateer heroes like John Lepp, was the car to beat. It was the backbone of the B8’s early reputation, the car that won every weekend. It proved the B8 chassis concept was sound, reliable, and, above all, fast, paving the way for the more exotic (and expensive) BMW and Cosworth FVA-powered cars to take on the world championship.

The B8-FPF was a transitional machine, the last gasp of the legendary Climax engine in a front-line sports car. It was quickly overshadowed by the more modern, powerful, and better-supported BMW M12 and Cosworth’s own FVC (the 1.8L evolution of the FVA). Many B8-FPF chassis were, in later life, converted to these more modern engines to remain competitive, making an original FPF-powered car a rare and wonderful sight today. It remains a “connoisseur’s” B8, a perfect, short-lived marriage of 1950s engine royalty and 1960s chassis-design genius.

 

Read more

Tech Specs

Discover the technical specifications
Full model list

Tech Specs

Discover the technical specifications

Engine

01

03

Internal combustion engine

Configuration

Conventry Climax FPF, Inline-4

Location

Mid, longitudinally mounted

Construction

Cast iron block, aluminium alloy head

Displacement (cc)

2,751 cc

Displacement (cu in)

167.8 cu in

Compression

-

Bore x Stroke

96 mm x 95 mm

Valvetrain

-

Fuel feed

2 x Weber DCOE carturettors

Lubrication

Dry sump

Aspiration

Naturally aspirated

Output

Power (hp)

+200 hp

Power (kW)

+149 kW

Max power at

-

Torque (Nm)

-

Torque (ft lbs)

-

Max torque at

-

Drivetrain

02

03

Chassis

Type

Tubular frame

Material

Steel and aluminium

Body

Material

Fibreglass

Transmission

Gearbox

5-speed manual

Drive

Rear Wheel Drive

Suspension

Front

Double wishbones, coil springs over dampers, anti-roll bar

Rear

Lower wishbones, top links, twin trail arms, coil springs over dampers, anti-roll bar

Steering

Type

Rack and pinion

Brakes

Front

Discs

Rear

Discs

Wheels

Front

-

Rear

-

Tires

Front

-

Rear

-

Dimensions and performance

03

03

Dimensions

Lenght (mm)

4,070 mm

Lenght (in)

160.2 in

Width (mm)

1,690 mm

Width (in)

66.5 in

Height (mm)

940 mm

Height (in)

37 in

Wheelbase (mm)

2,340 mm

Wheelbase (in)

92.1 in

Weight (kg)

-

Weight (lbs)

-

Performance

Power to weight

-

Top speed (km/h)

-

Top speed (mph)

-

0-100 km/h (0-60 mph)

-

Submodels

Other variants of this model
Full model list

Submodels

Other variants of this model

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Lola T70 Mk III Chevrolet 5.7L (350) V8 Coupe

Lola T70 Mk III Chevrolet 5.7L (350) V8 Spyder

Lola T70 Mk II Chevrolet 5.9L (359) V8 Spyder

Lola T600 Chevrolet Small Block 5.7L (350) V8 Coupé

Lola T298 BMW M12/7

Lola T290 Ford Cosworth FVC

Lola T286 Ford Cosworth DFV

Lola T280 Ford Cosworth DFV

Lola T212 Ford Cosworth FVC

© 2016-2026 Colabrio. All rights reserved | Purchase
Security | Privacy & Cookie Policy | Terms of Service