.

Jaguar D-Type: Difference between revisions

Wikicars, a place to share your automotive knowledge
Jump to navigationJump to search
mNo edit summary
 
(11 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{| border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=4 style="float:right; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:250px; background:#fff; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
{| border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=4 style="float:right; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:250px; background:#fff; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
|- style="text-align:center; background:#f0f0f0;"
|- style="text-align:center; background:#f0f0f0;"
| colspan=2 style="padding:0; background:#996; color:#fff; border-bottom:1px solid #999;" | [[Image:Jaguar XKSS 1957 Side.jpg|300px]]
| colspan=2 style="padding:0; background:#996; color:#fff; border-bottom:1px solid #999;" | [[Image:Jaguaddtype450.jpg|300px]]
|- style="color:#fff; background:#996; font-size:larger;"
|- style="color:#fff; background:#996; font-size:larger;"
! colspan=2 | '''Jaguar XKSS'''
! colspan=2 | '''Jaguar D-Type'''
|-
|-
! colspan=2 style="text-align:center; font-weight:normal; background:#ddb;" | [[Jaguar]]
! colspan=2 style="text-align:center; font-weight:normal; background:#ddb;" | [[Jaguar]]
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
| aka
| aka
| {{{Write aka here}}}
| Jaguar Type-D
|- style="vertical-align:top; background:#f0f0f0;"
|- style="vertical-align:top; background:#f0f0f0;"
| Production  
| Production  
|  
| 1954-1957
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
| Class
| Class
Line 20: Line 20:
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
| Length
| Length
|  
| 154.0 in.
|- style="vertical-align:top; background:#f0f0f0;"
|- style="vertical-align:top; background:#f0f0f0;"
| Width
| Width
|  
| 65.4 in.
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
| Height  
| Height  
|  
| 44.0 in
|- style="vertical-align:top; background:#f0f0f0;"
|- style="vertical-align:top; background:#f0f0f0;"
| Wheelbase  
| Wheelbase  
| {{{Write Wheelbase here}}}
| 90.9 in.
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
| Weight
| Weight
|
|2,460 lbs.
|- style="vertical-align:top; background:#f0f0f0;"
|- style="vertical-align:top; background:#f0f0f0;"
| Transmission
| Transmission
| {{{Write Transmission here}}}
| Four-Speed Manual
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
| Engine
| Engine
|  
| In-line 6
|- style="vertical-align:top; background:#f0f0f0;"
|- style="vertical-align:top; background:#f0f0f0;"
| Power
| Power
|  
| 250 bhp
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
| Similar
| Similar
| {{{Write Similar Vehicles here}}}
| Jaguar C-type, Jaguar E-type,Ferrari Daytona, Iso Grifo
|- style="vertical-align:top; background:#f0f0f0;"
|- style="vertical-align:top; background:#f0f0f0;"
| Designer
| Designer
|  
| [[Malcolm Sayer]]
|}
|}
The '''Jaguar D-type''', like its predecessor the [[Jaguar C-Type|C-Type]], was a factory-built [[race car]].  Although it shared the basic [[straight-6]] [[Jaguar XK6 engine|XK]] engine design (uprated to 3.8 litres) with the C-Type, the majority of the car was radically different. Perhaps its most ground-breaking innovation was the introduction of a [[monocoque]] [[chassis]], which not only introduced aircraft-style engineering to competition car design, but also an aeronautical understanding of aerodynamic efficiency. The D-type was introduced purely for competition, but after [[Jaguar Cars|Jaguar]] withdrew from racing the company offered the remaining, unfinished chassis as the roadgoing '''[[Jaguar D-type #The XKSS|Jaguar XKSS]]''', by making changes to the racers: adding an extra seat, another door, a full-width windshield and primitive folding top, as concessions to practicality. However, on the evening of 12 February 1957, a fire broke out at the Browns Lane plant destroying nine of the twenty five cars that had already been completed or in semi-completion. Production is thought to have included 53 customer D-types, 18 factory team cars, and 16 XKSS versions.
The '''Jaguar D-type''', like its predecessor the [[Jaguar C-Type|C-Type]], was a factory-built [[race car]].  Although it shared the basic [[straight-6]] [[Jaguar XK6 engine|XK]] engine design (uprated to 3.8 litres) with the C-Type, the majority of the car was radically different. Perhaps its most ground-breaking innovation was the introduction of a [[monocoque]] [[chassis]], which not only introduced aircraft-style engineering to competition car design, but also an aeronautical understanding of aerodynamic efficiency. The D-type was introduced purely for competition, but after [[Jaguar Cars|Jaguar]] withdrew from racing the company offered the remaining, unfinished chassis as the roadgoing '''[[Jaguar XKSS]]''', by making changes to the racers: adding an extra seat, another door, a full-width windshield and primitive folding top, as concessions to practicality. However, on the evening of 12 February 1957, a fire broke out at the Browns Lane plant destroying nine of the twenty five cars that had already been completed or in semi-completion. Production is thought to have included 53 customer D-types, 18 factory team cars, and 16 XKSS versions.


==Design==
==Design==
Line 64: Line 64:


The 1955 car incorporated the new long-nose bodywork, and the engine had been uprated with larger valves. The team again proved strong at [[1955 24 Hours of Le Mans|Le Mans]], and with no sand to worry about they were a good match for the [[Mercedes-Benz 300 SLR]] cars who were hotly tipped to win. Sadly the contest was curtailed by [[1955 Le Mans disaster|one of the worst accidents ever to occur in motorsport]]: after only three hours of the twenty-four had elapsed, [[Pierre Levegh]]'s SLR clipped the tail of an [[Austin-Healey]], sending the German machine into the hay-bale barrier. The Mercedes erupted into a flaming ball and sent burning wreckage and debris into the crowd. More than 80 people, including Levegh, were killed, and many more injured. Merceded withdrew from the race almost immediately, although at the time [[Juan Manuel Fangio]] was leading in his SLR, but Jaguar opted to continue. Some blamed [[Mike Hawthorn]] for causing the crash as he swerved his D-type in front of the Healey, setting off a chain off the tragic chain of events. Hawthorn and his co-driver [[Ivor Bueb]] went on to win the race.
The 1955 car incorporated the new long-nose bodywork, and the engine had been uprated with larger valves. The team again proved strong at [[1955 24 Hours of Le Mans|Le Mans]], and with no sand to worry about they were a good match for the [[Mercedes-Benz 300 SLR]] cars who were hotly tipped to win. Sadly the contest was curtailed by [[1955 Le Mans disaster|one of the worst accidents ever to occur in motorsport]]: after only three hours of the twenty-four had elapsed, [[Pierre Levegh]]'s SLR clipped the tail of an [[Austin-Healey]], sending the German machine into the hay-bale barrier. The Mercedes erupted into a flaming ball and sent burning wreckage and debris into the crowd. More than 80 people, including Levegh, were killed, and many more injured. Merceded withdrew from the race almost immediately, although at the time [[Juan Manuel Fangio]] was leading in his SLR, but Jaguar opted to continue. Some blamed [[Mike Hawthorn]] for causing the crash as he swerved his D-type in front of the Healey, setting off a chain off the tragic chain of events. Hawthorn and his co-driver [[Ivor Bueb]] went on to win the race.
[[Image:Jaguar XKD 606 1956.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Jaguar D-type ''XKD606'', the [[1957 24 Hours of Le Mans]]-winning car, respelendant in its [[Ecurie Ecosse]] metallic Flag Blue livery.]]


With Merecedes deciding to withdraw from motorsport at the end of the 1955 season, the field was clear for Jaguar to clean up at the [[1956 24 Hours of Le Mans]] race. However, it proved to be a bad year for the works team; only one of their three cars made it to the finish, and then only in 6th place. Luckily for the D-type's reputation, the small [[Edinburgh]]-based team [[Ecurie Ecosse]] were also running a D-type, driven by [[Ron Flockhart]] and [[Ninian Sanderson]], and this car came through to win ahead of works teams from both [[Aston Martin]] and [[Scuderia Ferrari]]. Away from Le Mans, the Cunningham Team raced several Jaguar D-types after being offered the automobiles by Jaguar's head, [[William Lyons|Sir William Lyons]], if [[Briggs Cunningham]] would stop building his own automobiles. In May of 1956, the Cunningham team's entries in the Cumberland circuit in Maryland included three of those D-type Jaguars — characteristically painted in the pristine white-and-blue Cunningham Team colors — for drivers [[John Fitch (driver)|John Fitch]], [[John Gordon Benett]], and [[Sherwood Johnston]].  
With Merecedes deciding to withdraw from motorsport at the end of the 1955 season, the field was clear for Jaguar to clean up at the [[1956 24 Hours of Le Mans]] race. However, it proved to be a bad year for the works team; only one of their three cars made it to the finish, and then only in 6th place. Luckily for the D-type's reputation, the small [[Edinburgh]]-based team [[Ecurie Ecosse]] were also running a D-type, driven by [[Ron Flockhart]] and [[Ninian Sanderson]], and this car came through to win ahead of works teams from both [[Aston Martin]] and [[Scuderia Ferrari]]. Away from Le Mans, the Cunningham Team raced several Jaguar D-types after being offered the automobiles by Jaguar's head, [[William Lyons|Sir William Lyons]], if [[Briggs Cunningham]] would stop building his own automobiles. In May of 1956, the Cunningham team's entries in the Cumberland circuit in Maryland included three of those D-type Jaguars — characteristically painted in the pristine white-and-blue Cunningham Team colors — for drivers [[John Fitch (driver)|John Fitch]], [[John Gordon Benett]], and [[Sherwood Johnston]].  
Line 71: Line 69:
Ironically, after Jaguar had withdrawn from motorsport at the end of the 1956 season, 1957 proved to be the D-type's most successful year. In the [[1957 24 Hours of Le Mans|1957 Le Mans race]] D-types took five of the top six placings; Ecurie Ecosse (with a large degree of support from Jaguar, and a 3.8L engine) again took the win, and second place. This was the high-water mark in the car's career however. With ever decreasing factory support and increasingly competitive cars from rival manufacturers, the D-type's star waned. Although it continued to be one of the cars to beat in club- and national-level races it never again achieved a podium result at Le Mans, and by the early 1960s had disappeared into obsolescence.
Ironically, after Jaguar had withdrawn from motorsport at the end of the 1956 season, 1957 proved to be the D-type's most successful year. In the [[1957 24 Hours of Le Mans|1957 Le Mans race]] D-types took five of the top six placings; Ecurie Ecosse (with a large degree of support from Jaguar, and a 3.8L engine) again took the win, and second place. This was the high-water mark in the car's career however. With ever decreasing factory support and increasingly competitive cars from rival manufacturers, the D-type's star waned. Although it continued to be one of the cars to beat in club- and national-level races it never again achieved a podium result at Le Mans, and by the early 1960s had disappeared into obsolescence.


==The XKSS==
==Photos==
[[Image:Jaguar XKSS 1957.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The road-going Jaguar XKSS]]
 
Following Jaguar's withdrawal from competition at the end of the 1955 season, a number of completed and partially complete D-types remained unsold at the Browns Lane factory. In an attempt to recoup some of the investment made in building these unused chassis, and to exploit the lucrative American market for high-performance European sports cars, [[William Lyons|Sir William Lyons]] decided to convert a number to full road-going specification. Only minor changes were made to the basic D-type structure: the addition of a passenger side door, the removal of the large fin behind the driver's seat, and the removal of the divider between passenger and driver seats. In addition, changes were made for cosmetic, comfort and legal reasons: a full-width, chrome-surrounded windscreen was added; sidescreens were added to both driver and passenger doors; a rudimentary, folding, fabric roof was added for weather protection; chromed bumpers were added front and rear (a styling cue later aped on the [[Jaguar E-type|E-type]]); [[Jaguar XK140|XK140]] rear light clusters mounted higher on the wings; and thin chrome strips added to the edge of the front light fairings. In total 16 XKSS variants were made, with most being sold in the USA, before the Browns Lane fire destroyed the remaining chassis.
<gallery>
Image:Dtype jag.jpg
</gallery>


The American actor [[Steve McQueen]] owned a Jaguar XKSS for personal use.
==See Also==


{{Jaguar}}
{{Jaguar}}
Line 83: Line 83:
*[http://www.ultimatecarpage.com/frame.php?file=car.php&carnum=1598 History at Ultimatecarpage.com]
*[http://www.ultimatecarpage.com/frame.php?file=car.php&carnum=1598 History at Ultimatecarpage.com]
*[http://www.mike-hawthorn.org.uk/d-type.php The Mike Hawthorn Tribute Site, the D-type]
*[http://www.mike-hawthorn.org.uk/d-type.php The Mike Hawthorn Tribute Site, the D-type]
*[http://www.motorauthority.com/news/news/jaguar-d-type-sets-record-price-at-auction/ Jaguar D-Type sets record price at auction]


{{commonscat|Jaguar XKD}}
{{commonscat|Jaguar XKD}}
Line 89: Line 90:
[[Category:Rear wheel drive vehicles]]
[[Category:Rear wheel drive vehicles]]
[[Category:Sports cars]]
[[Category:Sports cars]]
[[Category:Cars of England]]

Latest revision as of 13:48, 18 April 2009

Jaguaddtype450.jpg
Jaguar D-Type
Jaguar
aka Jaguar Type-D
Production 1954-1957
Class Sports Car
Body Style 2-Door Roadster
Length 154.0 in.
Width 65.4 in.
Height 44.0 in
Wheelbase 90.9 in.
Weight 2,460 lbs.
Transmission Four-Speed Manual
Engine In-line 6
Power 250 bhp
Similar Jaguar C-type, Jaguar E-type,Ferrari Daytona, Iso Grifo
Designer Malcolm Sayer

The Jaguar D-type, like its predecessor the C-Type, was a factory-built race car. Although it shared the basic straight-6 XK engine design (uprated to 3.8 litres) with the C-Type, the majority of the car was radically different. Perhaps its most ground-breaking innovation was the introduction of a monocoque chassis, which not only introduced aircraft-style engineering to competition car design, but also an aeronautical understanding of aerodynamic efficiency. The D-type was introduced purely for competition, but after Jaguar withdrew from racing the company offered the remaining, unfinished chassis as the roadgoing Jaguar XKSS, by making changes to the racers: adding an extra seat, another door, a full-width windshield and primitive folding top, as concessions to practicality. However, on the evening of 12 February 1957, a fire broke out at the Browns Lane plant destroying nine of the twenty five cars that had already been completed or in semi-completion. Production is thought to have included 53 customer D-types, 18 factory team cars, and 16 XKSS versions.

Design

The new chassis followed aircraft engineering practice, being manufactured according to monocoque principals. The central tub, within which the driver sat, was formed from sheets of aluminium alloy. To this was attached an aluminium tubing subframe carrying the bonnet, engine, front suspension, and steering assembly. The rear suspension and final drive were mounted directly onto the monocoque itself. Fuel was carried in deformable bags inside cells within the monocoque; another aircraft innovation.

The highly efficient, aerodynamic bodywork was largely the work of Malcolm Sayer, who joined Jaguar following a stint with the Bristol Aeroplane Company during World War II. Although he also worked on the C-Type, the limitations of the conventional separate-chassis did not allow full expression of his talent. For the D-Type, Sayer insisted on a minimal frontal area. To reduce its height, Haynes and former-Bentley engineer Walter Hassan developed dry sump lubrication for the XK engine. By also canting the engine over by 8° (resulting in the trademark, off-centre bonnet bulge) the reduction in area was achieved. Care was taken to reduce drag due to the underbody, resulting in an unusually high top speed; for the long Mulsanne Straight at Le Mans, a large vertical stabiliser was mounted behind the driver's head. For the 1955 season, factory cars were fitted with a revised, long-nose version of the bodywork, which increased top speed even further.

Mechanically, many features were shared with the outgoing C-Type. The ground-breaking disc brakes were retained, as was the XK engine. Apart from the new lubrication system, as development progressed during the D-Type's competition life the engine was also revised. 1955 saw the introduction of larger valves, and an asymmetrical cylinder head design within which to accommodate them. The Jaguar D-type was the second racing car to have Dunlop disk brakes. The Citroën DS, introduced a year later, was the first production car with disk brakes in Europe. The Crosley Hotshot was the first American automobile with disk brakes, in 1949.

Elements of the body shape were used in the iconic E-type which, despite the name, was not technically a descendant of this car.

Competition History

The D-type was produced by a team who always had at least one eye on the 24 Hours of Le Mans, the most prestigious endurance race of the time. As soon as it was introduced to the racing world in 1954, the D-type was making its presence felt. For the 1954 24 Hours of Le Mans the new car was expected to perform well, and perhaps even win. However, the cars were hampered by sand in their fuel. After the fault had been diagnosed and the sand removed, the car driven by Duncan Hamilton and Tony Rolt quickly got back on the pace, finishing less than one lap down on the winning Ferrari.

The 1955 car incorporated the new long-nose bodywork, and the engine had been uprated with larger valves. The team again proved strong at Le Mans, and with no sand to worry about they were a good match for the Mercedes-Benz 300 SLR cars who were hotly tipped to win. Sadly the contest was curtailed by one of the worst accidents ever to occur in motorsport: after only three hours of the twenty-four had elapsed, Pierre Levegh's SLR clipped the tail of an Austin-Healey, sending the German machine into the hay-bale barrier. The Mercedes erupted into a flaming ball and sent burning wreckage and debris into the crowd. More than 80 people, including Levegh, were killed, and many more injured. Merceded withdrew from the race almost immediately, although at the time Juan Manuel Fangio was leading in his SLR, but Jaguar opted to continue. Some blamed Mike Hawthorn for causing the crash as he swerved his D-type in front of the Healey, setting off a chain off the tragic chain of events. Hawthorn and his co-driver Ivor Bueb went on to win the race.

With Merecedes deciding to withdraw from motorsport at the end of the 1955 season, the field was clear for Jaguar to clean up at the 1956 24 Hours of Le Mans race. However, it proved to be a bad year for the works team; only one of their three cars made it to the finish, and then only in 6th place. Luckily for the D-type's reputation, the small Edinburgh-based team Ecurie Ecosse were also running a D-type, driven by Ron Flockhart and Ninian Sanderson, and this car came through to win ahead of works teams from both Aston Martin and Scuderia Ferrari. Away from Le Mans, the Cunningham Team raced several Jaguar D-types after being offered the automobiles by Jaguar's head, Sir William Lyons, if Briggs Cunningham would stop building his own automobiles. In May of 1956, the Cunningham team's entries in the Cumberland circuit in Maryland included three of those D-type Jaguars — characteristically painted in the pristine white-and-blue Cunningham Team colors — for drivers John Fitch, John Gordon Benett, and Sherwood Johnston.

Ironically, after Jaguar had withdrawn from motorsport at the end of the 1956 season, 1957 proved to be the D-type's most successful year. In the 1957 Le Mans race D-types took five of the top six placings; Ecurie Ecosse (with a large degree of support from Jaguar, and a 3.8L engine) again took the win, and second place. This was the high-water mark in the car's career however. With ever decreasing factory support and increasingly competitive cars from rival manufacturers, the D-type's star waned. Although it continued to be one of the cars to beat in club- and national-level races it never again achieved a podium result at Le Mans, and by the early 1960s had disappeared into obsolescence.

Photos

See Also

Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination
JAGUAR

Tata Group


Tata Motors | Jaguar | Land Rover | Hispano Carrocera SA | Tata Daewoo Commercial Vehicle | Daewoo Bus


Current Models: XF (R) · XJ (R) · XK (R)

Historic Models: X-Type · E-Type · XJS · XKSS · XK120 · XK140 · XK150 · XJ220 · 240 · 340 · Mk. VII · Mk. VIII · Mk. IX · Mk. X · Mk. V · Mk. IV · Mark 2 · Mark 1 · 3.5 Litre · 2.5 Litre · 1.5 Litre · S-Type (1963-1968) · 420 · S-Type · SS100 · XJR-15

Concept Cars: C-XF · R-Coupe · RD-6 · Fuore XF 10 · Pirana Concept · XK180 Concept · F-Type Concept · XK-RR Concept · XK-RS Concept · Concept Eight · XJ Limo Green Hybrid Study Concept · XJ75 Platinum Concept · C-X75 Concept

One-Offs: XJ13

Racing Vehicles: C-Type · D-Type · XJR-5 · XJR-6 · XJR-7 · XJR-8 · XJR-9 · XJR-10 · XJR-11 · XJR-12 · XJR-14 · XJR-16 · XJR-17 · XJ-S · R1 · R2 · R3 · R4 · R5 · XKR GT3 · XKR GT2 · RSR XKR GT


Daimler Corsica Concept


Sir William Lyons Corporate website A brand of the Tata Group


External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: