Its one thing lifting the heads on Fords V8 at 20 or 30k an engine (£50 a head gasket if there is one) with a bit of plastic round it, its another lifting the head on a 120k Aston race engine surrounded by wafer thin alloy & a car worth 10m upwards with an ultra expensive head gssket if there is one.Brynmor wrote: ↑Tue Sep 03, 2024 8:01 pm This is an interesting video from the Duke, wonder who or what prompted such a public talk ?
https://youtu.be/xOhZXh_kK-c?si=eDh9WXVSqmnp_j8X
Jake Hill commented that the engine in the HWM that he drove to a win in the last race of the day was an E type engine, hey E types were 3.8ltr which at that capacity didn't come out until 1957, the race was for 1952 to 1955 cars
Fix Or Repair Daily Galaxies won the BTCC in 1963 with Jack Sears, by 1964 they were obsolete as the Lotus Cortina's were faster, Holman & Moody started fitting GT40 brakes to them but in period I'll bet the Cortina's were still faster, the engines have probably never stopped being developed as have most racing engines.
Someone commented tears ago that DB2s could do a standing start lap quicker than Stirling could do a flying lap in a 3S 'back in the day', we have developed them much further now without any capacity increase other than the fitting of a 2.9ltr engine which was done in road cars in period, Jags are far worse.
Goodwood has always been lax in checking eligibility so its up to the competitors to keep it legal as the Duke said but everyone wants to win, its human nature, technology plays a big part in this and you can't stop progress.