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Tuesday 22 February 2022

1960 Jaguar E2A

I took this photograph at the Coys International Historic Festival meeting at Silverstone in July 1994 and noted at the time that it was the Jaguar E-Type prototype, E2A.
After Jaguar withdrew from motorsport at the end of the 1956 season the defunct racing department was charged with developing a road car based on the Jaguar D-Type which would be a replacement for the Jaguar XK150. The first prototype in 1957 was E1A which had an aluminium monocoque chassis with a 2.4 litre Jaguar XK engine and fully independent rear suspension. It was only used  for factory testing and was eventually scrapped when testing ended. The second prototype, built in 1960, was the one shown above, E2A, which had a steel chassis and aluminium body and was built with racing in mind as this was thought to provide a better testing ground. In line with the World Sportscar Championship's regulations at that time a 3-litre version of the Jaguar XK engine was fitted. American Briggs Cunningham was allowed to enter the car in the 1960 Le Mans 24 Hour race bearing the USA racing colours (as above) and was driven by Dan Gurney and Walt Hansgen, but failed to finish the race due to a blown head gasket. After Le Mans the car was given a 3.8 litre XK engine and raced in the United States by the Briggs Cunningham team till the end of the 1960 season when it was sent back to the Jaguar factory. The resultant production model was, of course, the Jaguar E-Type.

On all the other photographs I've seen of E2A the registration number VKV752 is shown across the nose of the car, as it is in this photograph I took at the 1988 Coys meeting at Silverstone.....
.....so I'm wondering now if the car I photographed in 1994 was a replica.

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