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BRM V16: How Britain's auto makers built a Grand Prix car to beat the world
 
 
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BRM V16: How Britain's auto makers built a Grand Prix car to beat the world [Hardcover]

Karl Ludvigsen (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

February 1, 2007
Few cars of any kind have a more exotic and exciting reputation among enthusiasts than the first BRM, a 16-cylinder wonder machine that was a bright beacon of promise in Britain’s drab post-war years. Heralded as a certain race winner and backed by the nation’s motor industry, exploiting the seized secrets of the 1930s Germans, the British Racing Motor bid fair to put the UK at the top of the Grand Prix tree. It did come good--producing more than 500 horsepower--but only after the Formula 1 for which it was built had expired. From the files of the Ludvigsen Library come more than 80 rare photos of the BRM, one of the handsomest, indeed sexiest, racing cars of all time. Related articles and ephemera round out the story of a bold but ultimately misguided British venture that delivered too much too late.


Editorial Reviews

Review

Road & Track, November 2007 - US magazine

Here is an in-depth, fascinating account of the fabled BRM V16, the first post-war Grand Prix car conceived and created in Great Britain. Criticized for being overambitious and under-financed, the BRM V16 was the product of an effort led by Raymond Mays to harness the technical strength of British industry and bring to Grand Prix racing a car on par with the world-dominating Silver Arrows from Mercedes-Benz and Auto Union of the late 1930s.

Author Karl Ludvigsen, renowned automotive journalist, introduces all the key players in the saga, providing quotes that give contemporary insights to the challenges of financing the enterprise and the determination to keep such a daunting undertaking moving forward. Detailed mechanical drawings and an assortment of photos help the narrative.

As you read about this Herculean effort to produce a car to represent British post-war prestige, it is easy to get caught up in the story, hoping that in some way the car would fight on equal terms with the Alfettas that were dominating the modern Grand Prix era. But as history plays out, you can see why the fantastic BRM V16 ultimately arrived too late to prove its potential and attain its goals.



Sports Car Market, 2008
US magazine
Circ: 20,000


World War II ended in Europe in 1945, but the effects lingered in Britain long after. As motor racing returned, British Racing Motors audaciously attempted to create a world-beating car built around a 16-cylinder supercharged engine, and with it excite a nation. Led by Raymond Mays, the BRM project was funded by donations from the British public, including the boy who became author Karl Ludvigsen.  While winning its first two exhibition races, the car only competed in four Grands Prix before the engine formula changed in 1954. In between, the story was of high expectations and lofty goals rarely met. Ludvigsen details the project from idea to collapse, filling the book with photos from his own library to support a well-told tale of plucky enthusiasm meeting hard racing reality.

Provenance: ****
Ludvigsen's attention to detail is on every page. Densely written and exhaustively researched, 'BRM V16' includes engine drawings, images, and a lively sense of the time and people who took on the daunting challenge.

Fit and finish: ***
Nicely reproduced photography is supported by clean design.

Drivability: ****
Not just an important bit of history, this is also a readable story filled with larger-than-life characters.



VSCC Bulletin, Summer 2008
The magazine for the Vintage Sports Car
Club, UK
 

This book was published about 18 months ago and initially evaded a Bulletin review.  Karl Ludvigsen has written a most readable and detailed account of the story of the legendary and perhaps notorious V-16 BRM. It is evident that its chances of success were very slim. From its inception it was "managed by committee" with wholly inadequate resources. Most of the components came from outside sources who were more interested in the need for post-war survival than the BRM project. The great Alfred Neubauer inspected in its early stages at the primitive Bourne works and told Raymond Mays that such a complex car would never succeed with the inadequate resources available.  Some of the responsibility for the over-complexity may rest with Laurence Pomeroy, a past President of the Club who postulated a 1500cc V-16 design in "The Motor" in 1938. Pomeroy's views and his authoritative technical explosion influenced Peter Berthon who designed the car, which like its predecessor, the E-type EPA had many inherent design faults. By the time it appeared, the World had moved on so the car only ran in one F1 Championship race before a formula change made it obsolete. The trials and tribulations of the design, development and the racing career are recounted by Ludvigsen who recognizes the remarkable dedication of the BRM mechanics and the enthusiasm of Raymond Mays. Without that enthusiasm the project would have died in the early stages, but Mays kept BRM alive, eventually leading to the F1 Constructors' Championship in 1962.  This is not a long book, but is a detailed and authoritative account of an important venture in British motor racing history. Recommended.

About the Author

Enthusiasts probably know Ludvigsen best as an author of books and articles on cars. At the precocious age of 22 he was the technical editor of Sports Cars Illustrated and three years later he was its editor, transforming it into Car and Driver. Karl later served Motor Trend as its east coast editor. He is the author of more than two dozen books on cars. His histories of the Corvette, Porsche and the racing cars of Mercedes-Benz are considered the standard works on those subjects. Ludvigsen's acclaimed series on racing drivers now includes such immortals as Alberto Ascari, Dan Gurney, Sir Stirling Moss, Sir Jackie Stewart, Emerson Fittipaldi, Bruce McLaren and the great Juan Manuel Fangio.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 96 pages
  • Publisher: Veloce (February 1, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1845840372
  • ISBN-13: 978-1845840372
  • Product Dimensions: 10.2 x 9.9 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,426,983 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Biographical Background
Karl Ludvigsen

In addition to his motor industry activities as an executive (with GM, Fiat and Ford) and head of a consulting company, Karl Ludvigsen has been active for over 50 years as an author and historian. As an author, co-author or editor he has some four dozen books to his credit. Needless to say, they are all about cars and the motor industry, Karl's life-long passion.
Since 1997 Ludvigsen has been drawing on the photographic resources of the Ludvigsen Library to write and illustrate books on the great racing drivers. His first title in this series was Stirling Moss ' Racing with the Maestro. He followed this with Jackie Stewart ' Triple-Crowned King of Speed and Juan Manuel Fangio ' Motor Racing's Grand Master. Fourth in this series for Haynes Publishing was Dan Gurney ' The Ultimate Racer and fifth was Alberto Ascari ' Ferrari's First Double Champion. Next came Bruce McLaren ' Life and Legend of Excellence and Emerson Fittipaldi ' Heart of a Racer.
Also in the field of motor sports Karl Ludvigsen has written about road racing in America, the cars of the Can-Am series, the AAR Eagle racing cars, the GT40 Fords and Prime Movers, the story of Britain's Ilmor Engineering. His introduction to At Speed, a book of Jesse Alexander's racing photography, won the Ken W. Purdy Award for Excellence in Automotive Journalism. Other motors-sports titles include Classic Grand Prix Cars, a history of the front-engined G.P. racer, and Classic Racing Engines, Karl's personal selection of 50 notable power units.
Four of Karl Ludvigsen's books concern the Chevrolet Corvette, one of them an industry best-seller. He has written three times about Mercedes-Benz, twice about its racing cars. His books on the latter subject have won the Montagu Trophy (once) and the Nicholas-Joseph Cugnot Award (twice), both recognising outstanding automotive historical writing. In 2001 he again received the Cugnot award from the Society of Automotive Historians for his book about the early years of the Volkswagen, Battle for the Beetle, a Robert Bentley publication.
Karl Ludvigsen's Porsche history, Excellence was Expected, is considered by many to be a model of the researching and writing of the history of an auto company. He has updated it twice in a three-volume format for Bentley Publishers for the new Millennium. He is the author of a series of monographs on great Maserati cars. His book BRM V16 for Veloce Publishing tells the story of one of the most controversial racing cars of all time. In The V12 Engine for Haynes he describes the creation and consequences of all the cars ever powered by the iconic vee-twelves.
In 1997 Ludvigsen researched and wrote the catalogue for a special exhibition of Ferrari technological innovations on the occasion of the company's 50th anniversary and contributed a major section to the company's official 50-year history. He has updated this for the company's 60th anniversary. Karl's understanding of the Ferrari world combined with his Library's holding of the Rodolfo Mailander photo archive to produce Ferrari by Mailander in 2005, a Dalton Watson publication. In 2006 with Dalton Watson Karl has published The Incredible Blitzen Benz, the story of six great record-breaking cars.
In co-operation with publisher Iconografix, Ludvigsen has established the Ludvigsen Library Series of 128-page books drawing on the holdings of the Ludvigsen Library. The series now numbers 19 titles, including books on Indy racing cars of 1911 to 1939, the 1940s, 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, the Indy Novis, Chevrolet's Corvair and Corvette, the Mercedes-Benz 300SL of 1952 and 1954-1964, the 300SLR of 1955, Porsche Spyders, Porsche 917, Jaguar XK120, XK140 and XK150, Land Rover Defender the Ferrari factory and American sports-racers: the Cunninghams, Chaparrals and Can-Am racing cars. More titles are in preparation.

Status: December 2006


 

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5.0 out of 5 stars BRM V16 review, October 4, 2007
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This review is from: BRM V16: How Britain's auto makers built a Grand Prix car to beat the world (Hardcover)
Anyone who knows about the BRM V16 can't help but be fascinated by this very unique car and a quantum leap in 1950. Someone has said that to build this car in 1950 was equivalent to the Victorians launching the Space Shuttle. Almost every aspect of this car is wildly different and the author does it justice. I've never seen this many detailed photos of the BRM V16, all of which will help me build a detailed model of this gorgeous sounding racer. A great book for the dedicated motor racing enthusiast.
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