To car enthusiast over the past generations, there
is one sports racing car that stands out. It is built on a great heritage,
has beautiful lines, only one was built and it never raced.
The Jaguar XJ13 was Jaguar's project to get back
into car racing in the mid 1960s, principally in the Le Mans 24-hour
event in France, so taking on the giant Ford outfit which created
the seven litre V8 Ford GT40 in turn to squash the exotic Ferraris.
The XJ13 secret weapon featured a mid-engine V12
engine capable of 375kW of power but the car was delayed in trying
to get it to handle as well as the GT40s. In the end, the rules on
engine size were changed and the car was put under a dust cover.
Subsequently, Jaguar introduced a V12 engine to
its road cars, the E-type and later the the XJ saloon. So in 1971,
the XJ13 was wheeled out into daylight for some secret filming as
publicity for the V-12 E-type launch. But it crashed and was once
again sent back to the dark sheds.
However, forms had been retained for the body
panels and restoration went ahead. Eight years after the car was built,
it was shown for the first time at the 1973 British Grand Prix and
wowed people.
Fast forward 14 years and the precious XJ13, for
which Jaguar has refused a $20 million offer, was brought to Adelaide
for the Australian Grand Prix. Stirling Moss drove it one the Adelaide
street circuit in 1987 and in the Climb to the Eagle.
"I heard about this car coming and then saw
Stirling Moss driving it", says Colin Sutton, now 64, of Stirling,
who was at the track that day.
"It was on display at the Wakefield St garage,
the engine was running and the noise was bringing down the silver
paint from the ceiling. I thought "This is an exciting motor
car and I was well and truly hooked."
"There have been a few look-allikes built
," he says, "But this one is almost identical. It's even
got the same number of rivets and has an aluminium body when other
look-alikes use fibreglass, it has a ZF gearbox just like the original
car and it is 38 inches(96cm) high," he says of the critical
factors.
Mr Sutton has since taken over the British racing
car and still marvels at its engineering and shape. It has 30cm wide
tyres and, designed for long-distance high-speed races, has radiators
to cool the gearbox oil, fuel and engine oil.
He's putting in a 7.6L, quad cam, V12 engine with
4 valves a cylinder, enough to match the original car's power.
"We think this is the only XJ13 in the world
which is road-registered," he says. He's driving it in this weekend's
Classic Adelaide Rally.
"When you sit in it you feel like you are
sitting in an aeroplane," he says. "It has an unusual sound.
Right behind our head you can hear the timing chains turning.
"You have to drive it. It has a mind of its
own. You have to be aware of what you are driving. It has a firm ride."
Performance aside, Mr Sutton loves the body shape.
"The body is a work of art," he says, rating it way above
his Jaguar saloon and his 1974 Jensen-Healey V8.
Stuart Innes, Adelaide Advertiser,
24 Nov 2007