How much is a McLaren F1 GTR?
How much is a McLaren F1 GTR?
Street-Legal McLaren F1 GTR Longtail Has Rich History, $15 Million Asking Price. The McLaren F1 GTR Longtail you’re looking at represents the absolute pinnacle of the iconic British car manufacturer and is up for sale from Tom Hartley in the UK.
Is the McLaren F1 GTR road legal?
1. It’s the first longtail version of the GTR version of what many consider the greatest car ever made. Despite its track-intended build, it’s road-legal, and it’s currently up for sale in the United Kingdom. The special nature of 19R goes beyond the fact of its birth order.
How fast is a McLaren F1 GTR?
Take a look at its specs below: McLaren F1 LM Engine: S70/2 GTR LM V12. McLaren F1 LM 0-60 mph: 2.9 seconds. McLaren F1 LM Top Speed: 225 mph.
How many McLaren F1 GTR are there?
28 F1 GTR
A total of 28 F1 GTR chassis were built. Nine were built in 1995-spec, nine in 1996-spec, and ten more in 1997-spec. Some cars were upgraded from one spec to another, but this count only includes cars built from scratch to that specification.
Is the McLaren F1 GTR a race car?
The BMW McLaren F1 GTR Race Car ’97 is a Race car labeled as a BMW and produced by McLaren. It appears in Gran Turismo 4 Prologue, Gran Turismo 4, Gran Turismo PSP, Gran Turismo 5 and Gran Turismo 6 .
Is the McLaren GTR a street legal car?
The McLaren Gtr is the race version of the F1, some have been modified for Street use, ie made Street legal (model photo not for sale) The McLaren super cars keep beating records, but generally Sellers want next years price and Buyers want a price from the past.
When did Andy Blackmore design McLaren F1 GTR?
Once on board, one of my first tasks for 1995 was to design a number of liveries for the McLaren F1 GTR. Some designs never got past the sponsorship proposal stage, but I was extremely lucky to see so many on track. Come back soon for a full feature on the Liveries of the McLaren F1 GTR
Who was the original owner of McLaren F1?
Leading them was racing driver Ray Bellm who, together with fellow F1 owner and German banker Thomas Bscher, approached McLaren with an idea to race the cars in the BPR Karcher Global Endurance GT series. Initially McLaren was not taken with the idea, so Bellm went direct to Dennis, an old friend.