Brabham Automotive Brabham BT-62 Revealed


Brabham was an Australian maker founded in 2018. Known for the bespoke BT62 hypercar, the partnership with Fusion Capital dissolved in Jan 2024, ceasing operations.

Matski

Kraftwagen König
Staff member
Premium
Messages
11,484
Name
Matt
Finally shown after a number of teases... the Brabham BT-62

DcN5A6_XcAEb8go.webp


No details as yet but quite a lot of stuff happening here...

Brabham Automotive (@brabhamauto) | Twitter
 
I appreciate these track-only cars but they are getting so expensive that you might as well just buy a single seater car.
 
I appreciate these track-only cars but they are getting so expensive that you might as well just buy a single seater car.

You could buy an FIA Formula 2 car for a third of the price, and probably go faster too. Hyper cars haven't made sense as track toys for a long time in my humble opinion.

I do quite like this one though... I'd take mine in Dark Blue and White.... and with Parmalat written on the side :playful:
 
You could buy an FIA Formula 2 car for a third of the price, and probably go faster too. Hyper cars haven't made sense as track toys for a long time in my humble opinion.

I do quite like this one though... I'd take mine in Dark Blue and White.... and with Parmalat written on the side :playful:

Road legal hyper cars make sense and some track only GT versions of cars. Above that, the prices get stupid. No car I've driven, even a Cayman S on a track offer the exhilaration, precision and intimacy that I experienced driving a single seater at Silverstone.

Understandably, many of these limited edition track cars are purchased as collection objects or stores of value. Some will be paraded at events a few times a year, and others will never be driven.

Here's an almost 10 years old F430 Scuderia with only 74 miles on the clock: http://www.romansinternational.com/car/1110/ferrari-16m-430-scuderia-spider-lhd
 
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
Road legal hyper cars make sense and some track only GT versions of cars. Above that, the prices get stupid. No car I've driven, even a Cayman S on a track offer the exhilaration, precision and intimacy that I experienced driving a single seater at Silverstone.

Understandably, many of these limited edition track cars are purchased as collection objects or stores of value. Some will be paraded at events a few times a year, and others will never be driven.

That 16M Scud is delicious. Having sat in one years ago, I remembered how "right" it felt.

Regarding the Brabham, I don't consider it pointless as long there are buyers. But a great majority of these are going to be garage queens. I am keen to see how this develops.
 
... But a great majority of these are going to be garage queens.

I think that would be the case whether it's road legal or track only. At least in the Brabhams case it means the ones that get used, get used properly, rather than simply being #LikeWhore #SocialMediaBait for #Instajunkies

.. and at least it's genuine, rather than that last attempt to simply cash in on the name...
brabham-bt-92-based-on-the-bmw-m3_1.webp
 
So this is what would happen if you combined a Lamborghini Veneno with a Regera into one car.
 
That 16M Scud is delicious. Having sat in one years ago, I remembered how "right" it felt.

Regarding the Brabham, I don't consider it pointless as long there are buyers. But a great majority of these are going to be garage queens. I am keen to see how this develops.
Ferrari are good at hosting racing days for FXX owners happy to fly their FXX to the hosting track.

Both the FXX and Zonda Revolucion sound god like st full throttle. I look forward to videos of the Bramham in action.
 
This is cool. I've never been aware about this one before. Thanks for sharing (y)

Are we going to see a competitor for SCG 003C? Maybe another entry in SP-X in VLN?
 
This is cool. I've never been aware about this one before. Thanks for sharing (y)

Are we going to see a competitor for SCG 003C? Maybe another entry in SP-X in VLN?

Brabham have said that this is part of a journey to Le Mans, so it's not beyond the realms of possibility.
 
The Brabham BT62 is a £1.2m, 700bhp track-only supercar

The Brabham BT62 is a £1.2m, 700bhp track-only supercar
Ladies and gentlemen, introducing the newest member to the world of track monsters

Formula 1’s history resonates with a significance rivalled by few other motorsport disciplines. Everything can be traced back to the Old Country, as it were; those halcyon days of the 50s and 60s and tales of derring-do and otherworldly heroics.

Brabham understands this. The fabled former F1 team is as storied as the best of them, which is why today’s launch of its brand-new track-only supercar, dubbed the Brabham BT62, wears a big badge of honour. In name, in livery, and in spec.

So, the spec. It’s an entirely bespoke, clean-sheet design, dreamed up by Brabham purely to serve the race-track and nothing else. No road-going frivolity here. It’s a lightweight chassis with bespoke lightweight carbon fibre body panels and carbon Kevlar wheel housings.


Brabham has opted for double wishbones front and back, together with pushrod actuated four-way adjustable Ohlins dampers, adjustable anti-roll bars and something called ‘active bump control’. The whole thing weighs in at just 972kg dry, and measures up to around the same punchy dimensions as an Audi R8.



To this, a Brabham-designed 5.4-litre naturally-aspirated V8 is fitted in the middle, developing some Very Good Numbers. Like 700bhp and 492lb ft of torque. This engine is in turn matched up to a ‘motorsport exhaust system’ and a six-speed motorsport sequential gearbox promising “full power upshifts” and auto-blips on downshift. It’s rear-drive, naturally.

It’s also a bit… mad. Because it is specifically built for the track, Brabham’s engineers have gone a little wild with the aero. It’s all carbon fibre, and there are splitters, aeroblades, dive planes, barge boards and diffusers aplenty. And a wing. Overall, Brabham reckons this thing is capable of generating more than 1,200kg of downforce. We might gently recommend its drivers begin their ab exercises about now.

There’s just so much motorsport expertise thrown at the BT62. The brakes – Brembo six piston numbers front and back – get carbon fibre cooling ducts and motorsport-spec ABS and traction control. They’re housed behind centre-lock 18in racing wheels and bespoke Michelin competition tyres.

It’s business-like inside, too: a removable carbon fibre steering wheel, FIA-spec carbon fibre seat shells with a six-point harness, an adjustable pedal box, and a carbon dashboard with a 12in digital instrument cluster. There’s Alcantara. There are leather door pulls. And a fire extinguisher.

The price? A solid £1m plus local taxes, so £1.2m in the UK. Brabham is only building 70, in honour of its 70-year heritage in Formula 1. So we come to the livery. The first 35 cars will ‘celebrate’ Brabham’s 35 GP wins; indeed, the first one unveiled wears the green and gold colours of the BT19, which won the 1966 French GP. 1966 was also the year Sir Jack Brabham won the drivers’ world championship in a car of his own making. Like we say, history.

“I set out twelve years ago to re-establish the iconic Brabham name, determined to see it return to global competition,” explains David Brabham, boss of Brabham Automotive. “My father had an incredible determination to succeed and, like him, I’ve worked tirelessly through this time, drawing on my experience as a racing driver, leader and mentor, never once losing sight of that goal.

“It’s been challenging at times, but what we have achieved is simply staggering. Today’s unveiling makes me feel incredibly proud as the Brabham legacy enters a new era.”

This new machine is built “for those who want to challenge themselves and their limitations, to experience driving in its purest form”, and owners will join Brabham’s development programme accordingly. And it’s merely part one of a very distinct trajectory. Brabham Automotive ultimately wants to return to racing, to compete at the Le Mans 24-hour race…

Must admit, the specs are tantalizing and the design is functional and pleases the eyes.
 
Brabham have said that this is part of a journey to Le Mans, so it's not beyond the realms of possibility.
Joining Le Mans in the GTE class means Brabham needs to build at least 25 copies since they are a small manufacturer, which is possible, but the regulations mention that if the car has a carbon chassis (which this BT 62 has) then the number should rise to 300. Does that apply for the small manufacturer or just for the big ones?

Other than that, I'm all for more GTE cars.
 
Joining Le Mans in the GTE class means Brabham needs to build at least 25 copies since they are a small manufacturer, which is possible, but the regulations mention that if the car has a carbon chassis (which this BT 62 has) then the number should rise to 300. Does that apply for the small manufacturer or just for the big ones?

Other than that, I'm all for more GTE cars.

70 I think they've said, but with the WEC super season in effect I think they're not targeting an entry any sooner than 2020... so who knows.
 
70 I think they've said, but with the WEC super season in effect I think they're not targeting an entry any sooner than 2020... so who knows.
The information of the production numbers is from European Le Mans Series website, so I don't know if the data is old because the WEC website doesn't specify such details.

If the required number is 70 I think it's gonna be difficult to build and sell every copy.

EDIT:
I've just read on @hoffmeister_fan post that Brabham INTENDS TO BUILD 70 cars.

This means that the car will comply with the homologation rules if the number will be reached.

The first paragraph of this post is meaningless.
 
Really looks fantastic, it has a little of Ferrari and Ford GT40 in the front styling but is much more aggressive.

I don't understand why they didn't make a road version as I am sure most owners will leave it in the garage and maybe twice a year take it to some track event. The price is huge in a league with some road going exotics.
 
Really looks fantastic, it has a little of Ferrari and Ford GT40 in the front styling but is much more aggressive.

I don't understand why they didn't make a road version as I am sure most owners will leave it in the garage and maybe twice a year take it to some track event. The price is huge in a league with some road going exotics.

I costs a lot more to build and certify a car for street use than it does for track only. But I suspect if they went to the trouble of designing their own V8, they aren't going to do it for a production run of 70 cars, this is going to be the first of many, so give it a year of so and a street version of this will be available.

I wonder if the V8 is entirely there own design or have they taken a Ford V8 and modified it.

My question is is Brabham a suitable name, Jacks been dead a while, most people wouldn't know who he was, the brand has been dead in F1 for over 20 years.
 

Trending content


Back
Top