- Jaguar C-Type
Infobox Automobile
name=Jaguar C-Type
manufacturer=Jaguar Cars
production=1951–1953
class=Competition-Sports car
body_style=Roadster
successor=Jaguar D-type The Jaguar C-Type (also called the Jaguar XK120-C) is aracing car built by Jaguar and sold from 1951 to 1953. Its aerodynamic body was designed byMalcolm Sayer , its lightweight, multi-tubular, triangulated frame designed by Bob Knight. A total of 52 were built.The "C" designation stood for 'competition', there being no A- or B-Type Jaguars.
Mechanically, it used the running gear of the contemporary XK120 sports car (the C in the official XK120-C name stands for 'competition'). The twin-cam,
straight-6 engine was tuned to around Auto bhp|205|0 rather than 160 to Auto bhp|180|0 of the road car. The custom, tubular chassis andaluminium body-panels, along with the elimination of all creature-comforts, helped the car to shed nearly Auto lb|1000|0 compared to a comparable Jaguar road-car. The later C-Types were more powerful, using triple twin-choke Weber carburettors and high-liftcamshaft . They were also lighter and better braked, by means of all-rounddisc brake s.The Jaguar C-Type won the
Le Mans 24 hours race at its first attempt in 1951, driven by Peter Walker and Peter Whitehead.Stirling Moss also drove one of the cars, but retired after running very strongly. In 1952 Jaguar, worried by reports of the speed of theMercedes-Benz 300SL , modified the aerodynamics to increase the top speed. However, this necessitated a rearrangement of the car's cooling system, and subsequently all three entries retired due to overheating. In 1953 the car won again, in a lightened, more powerful configuration, driven by Duncan Hamilton andTony Rolt . This victory marked the first time the race had been won at an average of over 100 mph {160 km/h} (105.85 mph {170.34 km/h}, to be precise). 1954, the C-Type's final year at Le Mans, saw a fourth place by theEcurie Francorchamps entry driven byRoger Laurent andJacques Swaters .When new, the car sold for approximately $6,000 - approximately twice the price of an XK120. In an article in the June 11, 2003 issue of
Autocar magazine ("Slick Cat Jaguar", p.70) the value of a "genuine, healthy" C-Type is estimated as £400,000, and the value of the 1953 Le Mans winner is circa £2 million while replicas are available from a variety of sources from £40,000.
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