
By 1960, Jaguar had won the world’s most prestigious race, the 24 Hours of Le Mans, five times—twice with its original competition-tailored C-type and three times with the tail-finned D-type. At that juncture, company head Sir William Lyons decreed that it was time for this sporting pedigree to benefit production with an all-new semi-monocoque design, which was to emerge in 1961 as the E-type.
One prototype for this model—the “missing link” between D-type and E-type—was “E2A,” a fuel-
injected 3-liter sports racing two-seater that was to be raced by American sportsman Briggs Cunningham’s team at Le Mans in 1960. The new “E2A” was to test several features of the forthcoming E-type, not least its independent rear suspension system in place of the live-axle of both the C- and D-type designs. Visually, the new car’s contemporary tail-finned rear bodywork recalled the charismatic D-type, while its handsomely proportioned one-piece forward bodywork presaged...
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Keith Martin on Collecting Jaguar $19.95 |
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Vintage Jaguar XK-150 Gran Turismo Print $15.95 |
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Vintage Jaguar Advertisement Print $15.95 |