50 years since Stirling Moss breaks land speed record

Posted on Tuesday 7 August 2007

mg_ex181_main01.jpg

It was fifty years ago that British racing legend Stirling Moss broke the class F land speed record at Utah’s Bonneville Salt Flats in the streamlined MG EX181. The Class F rules stipulated that the engine had to displace between 1.1 and 1.5L. Moss reached an amazing 245.64mph in the tadpole shaped car, shattering the previous record of 203mph set by Goldie Gardner just before WW2.

The EX181 was a mid-engined machine built purely for speed. The pint-sized engine featured double twin cams and a supercharger, allowing it to reach 290bhp at 7,300rpm.

MG saw the marketing potential of being able to claim that it was the manufacturer of one of the most fastest cars in the world at the time. Today, the EX181 sits at the Motor Heritage Centre museum in the English Midlands.

Related Posts

No comments have been added to this post yet.

Leave a comment

(required)

(required)


Information for comment users
Line and paragraph breaks are implemented automatically. Your e-mail address is never displayed. Please consider what you're posting.

Use the buttons below to customise your comment.


RSS feed for comments on this post | TrackBack URI

 


Close
E-mail It