Alexis

Alexis

Alex Francis began building trials cars in 1953 and in 1959 he set up Alexis with Australian Bill Harris to start producing customer cars including a Formula Junior model. Harris had previously been responsible for the Flather 500cc F3 Special. For several years the team produced a number of increasingly sophisticated F Junior cars, the Mk5 in particular going very well. In fact a Mk5 was sold to DAF to be fitted with their Variomatic transmission and it was raced in F3 in 1964. When Harris returned to Australia in 1965 Lotus 7 racer Allan Taylor took his place and Alexis became a serious racing car constructor, and Team Alexis ran cars in a number of formulae. Both F2 and F3 cars were constructed during the ’60s and some success was achieved, the highlight being Paul Hawkins winning the 1965 F2 Eifelrennen. The Jim Russell Driving School took 57 of the Alexis Formula Ford cars for its pupils to learn on in 1967-68, however by the start of the 1970s production began to slow down as other marques came to prominence and Alexis faded from the scene.

1964

The Mk6 was designed by Bill Harris for use both in F2 and F3 but both the chassis that were built were to F3 specification (The ’65 F2 car was built as the Mk7). The design was a continuation of the F Junior line and the results weren’t too encouraging with a best of 6th in a race at Monza for John Ampt. In addition a number of Mk 4 and 5 F Junior cars were converted to F3 spec, notably the MK5 that was run by the works in early season races. The Mk4 was the 1962 F Junior car, featuring disc brakes and a Hewland gear box for the first time. A single Mk5 was produced in 1963, similar but smaller than the Mk4 it also featured fibreglass bodywork. This was the car that would be sold to DAF.

1965

Another Bill Harris design and again it was intended as a dual-purpose F2/F3 design, the Mk8 used a shorter spaceframe than the Mk6, it finished in front of the driveshafts. Modified suspension with new uprights and revised Mk 6 bodywork was used. Three cars were built but again results were disappointing with a best of 4th and 6th in the same race at Monza for Maglia and Blokdyk.

1966

Allan Taylor was the new designer for the Mk9, it was apparently a stronger car than the Mk8 and used a further modified bodywork but it still showed no signs of competitiveness. Unhappy with the customer Cosworth MAE engines available Alexis began to develop their own but with no sign of any improvement.

1967

For the first time for several years Alexis didn’t produce a new model.

1968

Introduced part way through the season the Mk12 was once again a conventional design using a modern type space frame chassis with typical Alexis suspension employing wide based wishbones at the front, the team continued to persevere with their own version of the MAE engine. Three cars were produced but it was another year without a breakthrough, the best finish was a seventh at Chimay for Terry Ogilvie-Hardy who used a Novamotor-headed Cosworth engine.

1969

Once again it was a mid-season debut for the latest Alexis F3, the Mk17, the chassis is sometimes called a Mk16, this would seem to be an early designation with the Mk17 intended to be a F2/F5000 car that was never built. It had a more sophisticated tubular steel chassis than the Mk12 and it featured a slightly wedge-shaped body. On occasions it showed some promise although once again the home brewed engines seemed to lack in the horsepower department. Ken Crook did a lot of the driving but numerous niggling problems prevented any real progress being made. Transmission: Hewland Mk6 4-speed Brakes: Girling 10.25 in diameter discs front and rear. Suspension: Front, wishbones and coil springs: rear lower wishbones, top links, twin radius rods and coil springs. Dimensions: wheelbase 89 in. track front 54.5 in. rear 55.25 in. Wheels: 13 in. diameter front and rear.

1970

The Mk17 was used again in 1970 but despite the switch to a Holbay engine in the works car results weren’t noticeably better with Ken Bailey managing a best of sixth at Mallory Park early in the year.

1971

Based on the previous year’s Mk17 F3 chassis, the Mk 20 had revised front suspension, side radiators and a wedge nose that gave a very neat overall appearance, a Vegantune engine was fitted. Sadly it seemed that very little development work was carried out and this was the last F3 Alexis to be seen.
Alexis Mk4
Alexis Mk4
Alexis Mk5
Alexis Mk5
Akexis Mk12
Akexis Mk12
Ken Crook in the Alexis Mk17 at Brands Hatch in September 1969
Ken Crook in the Alexis Mk17 at Brands Hatch in September 1969
Ken Crook displays the neat lines of the Alexis Mk17
Ken Crook displays the neat lines of the Alexis Mk17
Ken Bailey at Oulton Park in 1970 in the Holbay-engined works Alexis Mk17
Ken Bailey at Oulton Park in 1970 in the Holbay-engined works Alexis Mk17
The Alexis Mk20 on Announcement
The Alexis Mk20 on Announcement
Another Shot of the Alexis Mk20
Another Shot of the Alexis Mk20

DRIVERS-

1964
Mk6
John Ampt, George Smith.

Mk5
John Ampt.

?
Bruno Deserti, Paul Hawkins, Roy Pike, George Smith, Henk van Zalinge.

1965
Mk8
Trevor Blokdyk, Jacques Maglia.

Mk6
Allan Taylor.

Mk4
George Smith.

?
Manfred Zeller.

1966
Mk8
Allan Taylor.

 

Mk6
Allan Taylor.

Mk5
Terry Ogilvie-Hardy.

Mk4
George Smith.

1967
Mk3
George Smith.

Mk6
Allan Taylor, Peter Watts.

Mk5
Terry Ogilvie-Hardy.

?
Dave Walker

1968 Mk12
David Cole, Trevor Fowler, Terry Ogilvie-Hardy.

1969 Mk17
David Cole, Ken Crook, Dick Barker.

1970 Mk17
Ken Bailey.

1971 Mk20
Alan McCully, Allan Taylor.

Abbott

Abbott

Originally built in 1966 and debuted by its driver Norman Abbott at a November Brands Hatch meeting where it ran in the midfield. Described in contemporary reports as “projectile like” it was 5 inches (12.5 cms) slimmer than the contemporary Lotus 41. Suspension was outboard with wishbones at the front and a top link and radius rods at the rear. It looks as if there was an “external” extension on the top of the spaceframe tub for the top radius rod to attach to, this is reminiscent of the later Chevron B34.


It would seem there was only ever a singleton chassis built, apparently it cost £1400 (a new “name” chassis would have cost in excess of £2000). It is not clear how often it raced but its moment of glory came in early 1970 at a slippery Forward Trust round at Silverstone when Abbott finished an impressive second behind the works Lotus of Dave Walker.

abbott
Norman Abbott tests the Abbott at Brands Hatch.

Drivers

1966 Norman Abbott

1967 Norman Abbott

1970 Norman Abbott

Alba

Alba

Designed by Giorgio Stirano, a former Osella engineer, he left the Italian F1 team in 1981 and built the one-off AR1 at the end of the year. He named it Alba meaning dawn and it raced without providing any results in 1982. After this Stirano switched to designing and building Group C Junior sports cars with more success.

1981

Appearing at Mugello in October 1981 the AR1 it was powered by an Alfa Romeo engine and was apparently conventional in design, unusually for the time it was fitted with Pirelli tyres. The bodywork shape is very reminiscent of Osella designs showing Stirano’s heritage. The same chassis was used in 1982.

Drivers


1981 Enzo Coloni.

1982 Giovanni Alberti, Davide Pavia.

1984 Gatta.

The Alba in action at Varano Melegar in April 1982 - Photo credit Filippo Rossi
The Alba in action at Varano Melegar in April 1982 - Photo credit Filippo Rossi

Ags

Ags

Formed by part-time racing car builder and driver Henri Julien and based at Gonfaron a small town 40kms north east of Toulon, Autombiles Gonfaronnaise Sportives began constructing cars in 1970 for the Formule France series. The first chassis was the JH1 designed by Christian Vanderpleyn and cars for other French categories followed, notably Formule Renault. By 1978 AGS began constructing cars for F2 and produced a number of neat and reasonably competitive cars, driver Richard Dallest winning at Pau and Zandvoort in 1980. F3000 cars followed and in 1986 AGS moved into F1 and for the next few years would struggle to make the grade in Grand Prix racing scoring the odd point until the financial realities caught up with them and they withdrew.

1972

In 1972 the JH5 was constructed for F3, consisting of a monocoque with a tubular sub frame for its Nova engine it had a front radiator and orthodox suspension. It only raced on two occasions when it was driven by future owner of the GPA Helmet company François Berthelot who would later be an AGS sponsor sadly it was not a great success and was to be AGS’s only F3 car.

Drivers

1972  François Berthelot.

Active

Active

The Active TA-31 appeared during the 1993 Japanese F3 Championship, it was entered by Active Motorsport and it was driven by Hidehiro Mochizuki. The car was powered by a Tom’s Toyota engine and it was never competitive generally qualifying around 20th and never finishing higher than 12th.

DRIVERS

1993  Hidehiro Mochizuki.

Abarth

Abarth

badge

Carlo Abarth was one of the Porsche project managers for the doomed Cistalia GP car and in this capacity he came to Turin in 1947. Following the failure of the Cistalia programme Abarth decided to stay in Turin where he started his own company producing high performance add-ons for Fiat, Lancia and Alfa Romeo. To advertise the effectiveness of his products Abarth began producing a number of racing and record cars using Fiat and Alfa engines fitted to attractive cars designed by many of the noted Turin stylists. Abarth began to specialise in tuning Fiats especially following the release of the Fiat 600. Through the 1960s and ’70s Abarth created and raced number of very potent saloon and 2-litre sports cars often with great success. However Abarth only ever dabbled in the world of single seaters, in 1964 they built a spaceframe F2 car with their own 995cc engine and six-speed gearbox but results were disappointing with the Abarth engine no match for the opposition Cosworth unit. In 1968 a F1 car was announced using an Abarth V8, it was to have been tested/raced by Jonathan Williams but in his opinion the car design was very outdated and rumours that the V8 was dreadfully underpowered meant the car never turned a wheel.

1964

The pictures of the 1964 Abarth F3 indicate that the chassis was the same as that used for the F2 design, in addition track and wheelbase dimensions were virtually identical. It was a conventional spaceframe design with wishbone-based outboard suspension front and rear. Front track was 1320mm, rear 1330mm, wheelbase 2300mm and the chassis weighed 400kg. The engine was a 982cc Fiat-based unit with a four-speed gearbox, a Weber 40DCD carburetor was used and power was quoted as 88bhp at 7900rpm.
For whatever reason, perhaps the F3 engine wasn’t up to the job, the Abarth never raced.

f3_1964
The Abarth F3 on its announcement.