It's the Cooper Climax T60, chassis F1-17-61, that was introduced in 1962 and was driven by Bruce McLaren and Tony Maggs that season. The book 'Great Racing Cars of the Donington Collection' says this about the car:
When Cooper's V8 won
McLaren's Monaco success
3 June 1962 saw the Monaco Grand Prix run
around the tortuous street circuit of Monte Carlo. The race began with a
terrific multiple pile-up on the first corner, and from the seventh lap Graham
Hill led in his new BRM V8. After ninety laps around this gruelling course the
BRM began to sicken, and three laps later Hill retired and surrendered a
48-second lead to Bruce McLaren's reliable Cooper-Climax V8.
The popular New Zealander paced himself to the
finish to win by 1.3 seconds from the reigning World Champion Phil Hill's
Ferrari V6, and as the chequered flag signalled him home it heralded Cooper's
last Championship race win for nearly five years.
Once Lotus, Ferrari, BRM and the other major
teams had become converted to building their racing cars with the engines
behind the driver, Cooper found it more and more difficult to hold their own.
Their cars were solid, safe and workmanlike, but as the advantage moved -
particularly to Lotus - so Cooper found themselves more and more out on a limb.
No longer did they receive the best engines, the best attention or backing, and
after Bruce McLaren scored a win in the non-Championship Marne Grand Prix at
Reims in mid 1962 the remainder of the 1½ litre Formula saw a long hard drought
for the former double-World Champion team.
Bruce's car in this last unsuccessful season
was the Cooper T60, perhaps the most handsome Grand Prix car ever produced by
the Surbiton firm. It suffered some failures in its Cooper-Knight six-speed
gearbox, but McLaren was third in the year's World Championship and team-mate
Tony Maggs was seventh. Bruce's Monaco winner was raced by the private Bob
Gerard team in 1964-65, after which it joined the Wheatcroft stable.
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