Cooper T39

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cooper_T39

Der Cooper T39 war ein Sportwagen, der 1955 bei der Cooper Car Company entwickelt wurde und bis 1964 bei Sportwagenrennen zum Einsatz kam. rdf:langString
The Cooper T39, nicknamed the "Bob-Tail", is a successful lightweight, mid-engined, sports car, designed and developed by Owen Maddock at Cooper Cars, for sports car racing in 1955. The car debuted in active racing competition at the , being driven by Ivor Bueb, and was later entered into the 1955 24 Hours of Le Mans, being driven by and , but was unfortunately not classified, because even though the car managed to complete 207 laps around the 8.4-mile Le Mans circuit, it didn't manage to finish within 70% of the winners' race distance. However, between 1956 and 1962, it did manage to rack up and tally an incredible streak of domination and competitiveness, scoring 91 total wins and clinching 236 podiums finishes; an incredible record. It was powered by the 1,098 cc (67.0 cu in) Coventry- rdf:langString
rdf:langString Cooper T39
rdf:langString Cooper T39
xsd:integer 70980964
xsd:integer 1096279568
rdf:langString June 2022
rdf:langString unclear which ref covers which fact
rdf:langString Der Cooper T39 war ein Sportwagen, der 1955 bei der Cooper Car Company entwickelt wurde und bis 1964 bei Sportwagenrennen zum Einsatz kam.
rdf:langString The Cooper T39, nicknamed the "Bob-Tail", is a successful lightweight, mid-engined, sports car, designed and developed by Owen Maddock at Cooper Cars, for sports car racing in 1955. The car debuted in active racing competition at the , being driven by Ivor Bueb, and was later entered into the 1955 24 Hours of Le Mans, being driven by and , but was unfortunately not classified, because even though the car managed to complete 207 laps around the 8.4-mile Le Mans circuit, it didn't manage to finish within 70% of the winners' race distance. However, between 1956 and 1962, it did manage to rack up and tally an incredible streak of domination and competitiveness, scoring 91 total wins and clinching 236 podiums finishes; an incredible record. It was powered by the 1,098 cc (67.0 cu in) Coventry-Climax four-cylinder engine.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 9180

data from the linked data cloud