This car competed in the
Maserati UK Race for Pre 1961 Grand Prix Cars at the Coys International Historic
Festival meeting at Silverstone in July 2000.
Shown in the programme of the
event as a TecMec it's the 1959 Tec-Mec F415 designed by Valerio Colotti as a
lightweight version of the Maserati 250F. Colotti was employed by Maserati and
was working on the design when Maserati pulled out of racing at the end of the
1958 season. He set up his own company, Studio Tecnica Meccanica, and Italian
racing driver Giorgio Scarlatti encouraged him to continue with this work and
bought shares in the company. American Gordon Pennington then persuaded
Scarlatti to sell him the shares and arranged for Camoradi's Lucky Casner to
run the team for what had now become Tec-Mec Automobili. When finished the car
was entered for the 1959 US Grand Prix at Watkins Glen and Brazilian driver
Fritz d'Orey was chosen to drive it. The car had clearly not gone through
sufficient testing and Fritz d'Orey only qualified it in seventeenth place. It
only lasted for six laps in the race before it retired with a serious oil leak
and that turned out to be the only World Championship appearance by the car. It
lingered in a Miami garage until 1967 when it was acquired by Tom Wheatcroft
who brought the car back into working order and it was in his museum at
Donington Park for many years. It was eventually sold to Barrie Baxter who
drove the car at this Silverstone meeting and raced it successfully before
eventually passing the car on to Barry Wood. The number 53 car alongside is the
1½ litre 1961 Cooper T53 of Chris Bullimore who took part in the Maserati UK
Race for Pre 1966 Grand Prix & Tasman Cars while the number 39 car at the
back on the left is Peter Austin’s 1963 Brabham BT7A which was also one of the
competitors in that race. The red cr on the right at the back is George
Rozwadowski’s 1½ litre 1957 Lotus Eleven that
took part in he 1950s Sports Car Race.
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