
OHV and OHC valvetrain
Formula 1 usually using S/DOHC valvetrain engines traditionally since its' inception in 1950 but has any F1 cars ever used OHV valvetrains?
Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑05 Jun 2020, 10:29the last pushrod engine in F1 ?
remember ERAs and Talbot-Lago won in 1948-1954 F1
remember 1952-3 WDC was for F2 so had Cooper-Bristols etc (developed BMW engine)
and there were many non-championship F1 races until c. 80s (eg 22 in 1962)
certainly in F1 in UK - Bob Gerard's rear engined Cooper-Bristol in 1957 WDC (and 1958 in non-WDC)
in F1 in Australia - Brabham's pioneer rear engine Cooper-Bristol Reg Smith then Max Stephens owned it
https://en.ascottcollection.com/coopert40-fr
NOTE 'Black Jack' Brabham so called after his early striking black beard and hair combo
the car won the Australian GP in 1956 and raced there in 59 - but this GP was always FLibre not F1
https://primotipo.com/tag/cooper-t40-bristol/
1961-65 1.5 litre saw a lot of F1 pushrodding (many races in SA - afaik for the national championship) ....
eg 1962 Rand GP (non-WC but many WC entries)
Brausch Niemann's 127 mph 1958 Lotus 7 (shortened to F1 rules) with 1.5 pushrod ohv Ford finished 10th (on the road)
famously slipstreaming Jim Clark's V8 Lotus
https://grassrootsmotorsports.com/forum ... 225/page1/
the engine was the UK 1340 cc '109E' Ford bored to 1475 (with 65mm stroke plausible against 1961-2 Climax F1 4cyl 72 mm)
like the 1100 FJunior Ford/Cosworth etc (a bored out '105E' 1000) - the blocks were identical ie 109E replacing 105E
BN then drove a Lotus 22 FJ 109E getting good places in non-WC F1 GPs Mozambique and Pietermaritzburg etc
and qualified for the WC SA GP at the end of 1963 (pushrod cars dnq'd the next SA GP - in Jan 1965)
others in 109E engined Lotus FJ cars in SA included Bernie Podmore and Dave Charlton
other FJs used 'twin-cam' (dohc) 'Lotus' Fords as did Hawkins & Prophet Brabham BT10s SA GP 1965
(some wrongly call these 109E - though a twin-cam is a 1.6 on a pushrod 116E block so 1.5 tc via a 109E block is conceivable)
1961 (UK/US invented) Intercontinental Formula allowed 3 litre ohc/dohc vs 5 litre pushrod - only IC 7 races held
2.5 (but not 4.5 litre) UK Daimler pushrod hemi V8s did hillclimbs but eg as 2.5+ never F1 used even as 1966 stopgap
similarly Armstrong-Siddeley had in later 50s pushrod hemi 4s and 6s (tried in a race sportscar)
Riley and Lea-Francis hemi 4s somewhat earlier