Rover-BRM

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Rover-BRM an entity of type: Thing

El Rover-BRM fue un prototipo de automóvil de carreras con motor de turbina de gas, desarrollado conjuntamente a principios de la década de 1960 por las empresas británicas Rover y British Racing Motors (BRM). rdf:langString
La Rover-BRM est une automobile de Sport-prototypes britannique dessinée en 1964 dans l'objectif de concourir aux 24 Heures du Mans et ainsi remporter une récompense offerte par l'Automobile Club de l'Ouest. rdf:langString
Rover-BRM Turbine är en gasturbindriven sportvagn, tillverkad av de brittiska biltillverkarna Rover och BRM 1963. rdf:langString
The Rover-BRM was a prototype gas turbine-powered racing car, jointly developed in the early 1960s by the British companies Rover and British Racing Motors (BRM). The car is part of the collection at the British Motor Museum. The first test runs were at the MIRA track in April 1963, driven by Graham Hill who described it thus, "You’re sitting in this thing that you might call a motor car and the next minute it sounds as if you’ve got a 707 just behind you, about to suck you up and devour you like an enormous monster." The top speed is quoted to be 142 mph (229 km/h) rdf:langString
rdf:langString Rover-BRM
rdf:langString Rover-BRM
rdf:langString Rover-BRM
rdf:langString Rover-BRM Turbine
rdf:langString Rover-BRM
rdf:langString Rover-BRM
xsd:integer 19961847
xsd:integer 1118557544
rdf:langString Gas turbine
xsd:integer 1963
rdf:langString El Rover-BRM fue un prototipo de automóvil de carreras con motor de turbina de gas, desarrollado conjuntamente a principios de la década de 1960 por las empresas británicas Rover y British Racing Motors (BRM).
rdf:langString La Rover-BRM est une automobile de Sport-prototypes britannique dessinée en 1964 dans l'objectif de concourir aux 24 Heures du Mans et ainsi remporter une récompense offerte par l'Automobile Club de l'Ouest.
rdf:langString The Rover-BRM was a prototype gas turbine-powered racing car, jointly developed in the early 1960s by the British companies Rover and British Racing Motors (BRM). The car is part of the collection at the British Motor Museum. Rover had already been working with gas turbines for road vehicles since World War II. A series of potential road cars had also been produced, from the early prototype Jet 1 through the more developed examples T2, T3 & T4. T4 had even displayed demonstration laps around the Le Mans circuit, before the 1962 race. Seeing an opportunity for even more prestige, Rover decided to enter a gas turbine car into the race. A prize was to be awarded for the first gas turbine car to complete 3,600 km over the 24 hours, an average speed of 93 mph. A crucial step in this plan was a chance meeting between William Martin-Hurst, MD of Rover, and Sir Alfred Owen of Rover's component supplier Rubery Owen, but more relevantly also of the Formula 1 constructors BRM. BRM supplied the chassis of Richie Ginther's crash-damaged car from the 1962 Monaco Grand Prix. A custom open-top spyder body was then built in aluminium, with the turbine mid-mounted ahead of a single-speed transaxle. The first test runs were at the MIRA track in April 1963, driven by Graham Hill who described it thus, "You’re sitting in this thing that you might call a motor car and the next minute it sounds as if you’ve got a 707 just behind you, about to suck you up and devour you like an enormous monster." The top speed is quoted to be 142 mph (229 km/h)
rdf:langString Rover-BRM Turbine är en gasturbindriven sportvagn, tillverkad av de brittiska biltillverkarna Rover och BRM 1963.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8369
xsd:gYear 1965
xsd:gYear 1963

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