RE: Savagely awesome Lola T70 Spyder for sale

RE: Savagely awesome Lola T70 Spyder for sale

Tuesday 19th November

Savagely awesome Lola T70 Spyder for sale

Fast as hell on a race track - and it's road legal to boot


It isn’t hard to be swept up in the idea of racing a classic sportscar. The romance of the era is undeniable, when the great names of the past would wrestle with wild machines on iconic circuits in the name of sport. And a jolly good time. For all the advances made in racing in the decades since, there’s something about the '50s and '60s that remains so enchanting, when top-level GT cars were road-ready as well. Just look at how popular the RAC TT Celebration is at Goodwood; those cars are beautiful, and seriously fast, but also relatively simple by the standards of what followed. 

All looks tremendously good fun, although the racing spectacle of course overlooks all the hassle that must go into campaigning a 50-year-old competition car. Support for historic racing is probably better than ever now, but imagine how hard certain parts must now be to get hold of for really special stuff. Before even thinking about the cost. Must take some of the fun out of racing, even for the super-rich, if every minor fix becomes an expensive one. 

Which is why the Lola T70 always had (and continues to hold) so much appeal. Because as well as being ruddy fast and properly competitive against its rivals (a one-two at the Daytona 24 hours in 1969 was the most memorable T70 triumph), they’re relatively simple beasts even by the standards of the era. A small block V8 maybe didn’t have the prestige of a V12, but it meant dependable power now and then. There’s surely a lot to be said for that when you want to race a car as much as possible. This one has a 5.7-litre Chevrolet V8 with 450hp; more than enough in something that’ll weigh as much as a toboggan. 

This T70 has period-specific racing history, too; chassis SL73/104 was built in 1967 and raced during that year and the 1968 season of the United States Road Racing Championship. In that time this very car secured podiums at Laguna Seca and Bridgehampton, which certainly can’t be said for every old racing car. The Lola even ran in some Can-Am events. It was restored during its time in a collection during the early '00s, and features in John Starkey’s book “Lola T70: The Racing History & Individual Chassis Record”. It’s a proper piece of '60s sportscar racing history. 

While later T70 coupes will be even faster around a track, there’s something incredibly evocative (not to say a little bit scary) about the purity of these Spyders. It’s you, the honking great V8, a chassis with a very pretty body on top… and that’s it. The power and the challenge of it have drawn people back to T70s for decades. The Lola’s reputation certainly won’t have been harmed by just how perfect it looks, either. 

This Spyder is especially interesting as a road-registered example, and a T70 on the public highway promises to make most new supercars feel a tad sterile. It’s really intended to race, though, and Le Mans Coupes - selling this Lola on behalf of a customer - can detail what’s required for a new Historic Technical Passport. With one of those it’ll be eligible for competition across the globe, and what a privilege that’ll be. Easily worth whatever getting a new HTP will cost. Racing something like a T70 will never be a truly affordable endeavour, though it’ll surely offer spectacular value for the exhilaration on offer. It’s Price on Application for the moment; best pick up the phone for a 2025 classic racer before somebody else does. 


See the original ad here

Author
Discussion

edoverheels

Original Poster:

404 posts

112 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
That’s it. My perfect car, a road legal T70. Just look at it. Just listen to it.
If you want an ‘event’ every time you went out then try and beat that.

Not that practical, probably not an only car.

chirurgus

195 posts

223 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Spectacular in every way

86wasagoodyear

552 posts

103 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Is anyone of this parish lucky enough to have a missus who understands why no cup holder & no 12V socket isn't a problem in one of these ?

Simoninspalding

98 posts

18 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
86wasagoodyear said:
Is anyone of this parish lucky enough to have a missus who understands why no cup holder & no 12V socket isn't a problem in one of these ?
Remove the second seat, then it's not her problem?beer
For my other half it would be the fact that I had made us homeless to buy it that would cause a bit of friction!biglaugh

MHWM5

35 posts

129 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Definitely a brick under the fast pedal road car if ever there was one. Two bricks in the wet.

dinkel

27,176 posts

265 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
And it can get even better:

Late 60s McLarens and Lolas are the absolute bomb to watch.

ducnick

1,926 posts

250 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
I would take that over any new car currently on sale from any of the established supercar brands…. Although in a nod towards practicality , I would prefer a later T70 with a roof for use in the U.K. weather.

Hairymonster

1,520 posts

112 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
No hatchback and folding rear seat means it's a hard pass from me.

200Plus Club

11,177 posts

285 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
https://www.gdcars.com/product-page/gd-t70-brandne...

Ready to go, road legal, circa /sub £100k generally.
I've had one and they are a fantastic "homage" to the can am cars, but have a little modern usability with ecu/fuel injection. Absolute monster on track.

GreatScott2016

1,467 posts

95 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
That is a pretty profile smile

200Plus Club

11,177 posts

285 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
GreatScott2016 said:
That is a pretty profile smile
Same designer as the GT40, it's a beautiful car.

dinkel

27,176 posts

265 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
ducnick said:
I would take that over any new car currently on sale...
Savage piece of kit and you will die

WPA

10,134 posts

121 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
chirurgus said:
Spectacular in every way
+1

BigChiefmuffinAgain

1,217 posts

105 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Back in the day my father bought a T70 chassis and engine and then got Michelotti to design a road going body for it. Sounded like a wonderful idea at the time. It wasn't....

sideways man

1,396 posts

144 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Always been a huge T70 fan; they look fantastic , sound awesome and are certainly quick enough. I’d love to be rich enough to be an owner.

Sway

29,304 posts

201 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
200Plus Club said:
https://www.gdcars.com/product-page/gd-t70-brandne...

Ready to go, road legal, circa /sub £100k generally.
I've had one and they are a fantastic "homage" to the can am cars, but have a little modern usability with ecu/fuel injection. Absolute monster on track.
True, but this'll get an invite to the Whitsun at Revival...

Which is worth a hell of a lot. I've been fortunate enough to crew for a Whitsun car, and standing on the pit wall feeling the ground vibrate as they start is an experience in itself!

AmyRichardson

1,498 posts

49 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
200Plus Club said:
Same designer as the GT40, it's a beautiful car.
Even closer, it's the car (the even better looking hardtop) Broadley wanted the GT40 to be, but for reasons lost to history FAV wanted the steel chassis version. And then they built the mk.iv (which I can't imagine didn't borrow heavily from the ally Lola) - so go figure...

Geoffcapes

822 posts

171 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
dinkel said:
ducnick said:
I would take that over any new car currently on sale...
Savage piece of kit and you will die
But what a way to go!!!!!

Gerard Thibault

23 posts

23 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Ooof look at the rust on those brake discs. You'll definitely be told you need to replace those next time you take it to KwikFit....

Still Mulling

13,430 posts

184 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
I'm sure I can feel the ground rumbling as I read the article. cloud9