BRM 15
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The BRM 15 was a famous - perhaps notorious - Formula One racing car of the early 1950s, and the first car ever produced by the British Racing Motors consortium. The car was fitted with a revolutionary supercharged 1.5 litre V16 engine which produced considerably more power than any of its contemporaries. In addition the incredible noise of the car made it a favourite with crowds wherever it appeared, despite many disappointing race performances.
[edit] Development
BRM founder Raymond Mays floated the idea of an all-British racing car project a couple of months before the end of the Second World War, and in July 1947 the British Motor Racing Research Trust was formed with the V16 engine already under development with designers Peter Berthon with Eric Richter expecting 500bhp and at least 12,000rpm from their design. Mays had access to several of the Mercedes and Auto Union designs that had dominated racing in the late 1930s, as well as other relevant German wartime technology. Mays then set about persuading British engineering businesses of the merits of being associated with the project and in all more than a hundred companies backed the project with cash and help in kind in the form of parts, access to testing equipment and technical information. This lead to an organisational nightmare which, combined with the difficult financial conditions of post-war Britain, meant that the first car did not take to the track until December 1949.
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