Track-only Brabham BT62 revealed in London with $1.36m price tag

The Anglo-Australian racing car manufacturer has applied its 70-year heritage to the a new track-only supercar – the Brabham BT62

Brabham has revealed its new track-only supercar car called the BT62. Built in the same mould as the track-only Ferrari FXX-K or McLaren Senna GTR, the Brabham BT62 has been designed to offer a race car experience for the lucky few with the means to pay the $1.36m asking price.

Given the marque’s 70 year history of building racing cars, it comes as no surprise to see the Brabham BT62 is built using techniques common in motorsport. The chassis itself is constructed from what Brabham calls ‘tubular metallic architecture’, a method similar to that used in GT racing. 

Wrapped on top of this frame are carbonfibre body panels, with all of the external aero aids such as the rear wing, splitters and floor pan also constructed from the woven black stuff. Suspension is double wishbone at each corner, supported by pushrod Ohlins TTX coilover springs and dampers. The wheels are 18-inch centre-lock items, wrapped in competition Michelin tyres with varied tread patterns available dependent on conditions. The car’s dry weight has been quoted as 972kg.

Mounted aft of the driver is a naturally aspirated 5.4-litre V8 engine built by Brabham. The unit is pleasingly free of contemporary elements like turbocharging or electrical assistance. Peak power is around 700bhp, with torque rated at 492lb ft at 6200rpm. These figures suggest that the engine will perform best at the upper echelons of its rev range. Generating 98 dB at full chat, the Brabham will just about be able to sneak onto British track days, too. 

Connected to the engine will be a pneumatically controlled Holinger six-speed sequential gearbox, operated by paddles mounted on the steering wheel. 

The interior strikes a fine balance between stripped-out supercar and all out racing car. At first glance the green trim highlights and Alcantara almost look production car-like, but dig a little deeper and you’ll see that the carbonfibre finishes are a little workmanlike, with incongruous weaves peppered with rudimentary touch points that look like they’ve been taken straight out of a GT3 racer. The complex steering wheel compounds this feeling, the BT62 definitely looking more racing car than road car from the driver’s seat. 

Brabham plans on building an initial run of 70 vehicles, the first 35 finished in the corresponding livery of Brabham’s 35 Grand Prix wins. The second batch of 35 cars will be more personalised to their owners’ specification.

Without the need to meet any racing series regulations, nor the usual homologation requirements of a road-going supercar, Brabham’s engineers have been able to design with an uncommon freedom. At $1.36m, the BT62 will be lining up against some pretty big names from Ferrari, Aston Martin and McLaren in the track-only hypercar class, but with a 70-year heritage, Brabham might just have the experience and exclusivity to pull it off.

This article originally appeared at evo.co.uk

Copyright © evo UK, Dennis Publishing

Categories: Road

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