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Jarama Registry
Particular Jarama
#10350
Since 1977, I have a passion for Lamborghini. At first,
buying magazines and later Lambo books I was impressed and dreaming about
the only one Jarama featured in most of them : Bob Wallace Special or Rally.
For ever, race attraction is leading many guys to invest
money and time in order to compete against each other or to build an awesome
racing car. Well, I’ve lived this too as you may have read it in my
Introduction. I know pretty well what Wallace was surely thinking by that
time : “Building a competitive racing car”.
Some sources indicated Jarama Special was standing at factory
in 1973 & 1974. Then it went to France to end in Saudi Arabia. By late ‘80s,
it was discovered by an English guy in really bad shape who had brought it
back to UK at Portman’s place in order to restore it. Jarama Special rebirth
was featured in 3 issues of Supercar Classic magazine that leads me to
believe by that time it will be for sale one day or another. Unfortunately,
I never saw the “For Sale” advertising...and I’m still expecting to meet
Wallace Special Jarama one day or another.
Here are the 3 articles of Supercar Classic :
December 1990 : "Not yet
available"
January 1991 : "Not yet
available"
February 1991 : "Not yet
available"
Here is another story : Racing Orange Lamborghini Jarama by
Roberto Giordanelli
Copyright © 2001 International
Lamborghini Registry
Copyright © 2001 Auto Italia
“Ferrucio Lamborghini had a 'no racing’ policy, but this
didn't stop his chief engineer Bob Wallace from building competition cars.
If this car were a motorcycle, it would be a cafe-racer. You
remember the sort of thing: modified, lightweight, uncomfortable, rebellious,
anti-social and most important of all FUN. However, in this case you don't
need to get wet when it rains or race to the roundabout and back before the
Eddie Cochran record on the juke-box has finished.
The first Jarama were the 400 GT versions made in 1970, they made 250 cars
before the 400 GTS arrived in 1972. Jarama production ceased in 1976. Only
150 GTS were built. To put this in perspective, the first of a total of 900
Miura was built in 1966 and the first Countach in 1973. These were two-seaters
while the Jarama was a four-seater. The Bertone styled Jarama replaced the
Marazzi styled 400 GT Islero while another four-seater, the Espada
overlapped them from 1967-78. This is where we need the period's top
financial journalist to explain how all this exotica could have been
produced in such low numbers. The 1990s financial mind boggles.
'Our' one-off RS Jarama was originally the creation of Bob
Wallace, a New Zealander, who was Lamborghini's development mechanic and
chief test driver in the 1960s and 1970s. Lamborghini were never officially
involved in motor racing although there were many in the Company who wanted
it. Wallace never missed an opportunity to help with the development of
quicker Lamborghinis. One suspects that Lamborghini allowed the RS's
development to happen just to keep Wallace happy. Even if it did not race,
it did attract press attention. Wallace wanted to see lighter, faster
Lamborghinis. He thought that their comfort should be compromised for out
and out performance, but Ferrucio Lamborghini thought otherwise. Wallace was
pro-racing. In fact many of Lamborghini's engineers were drawn from other
famous competition orientated companies in the Modena Triangle. However,
Ferrucio Lamborghini recognised the risk of financial suicide and kept out
of motor sport. At least he can console himself and rest peacefully with the
fabulous Miura, a serious contender for the 'Best Car Ever Made' prize, even
though it could literally take-off at 180+ mph.
In 1972, during a quiet period in a tough economic climate, Bob Wallace took
the bull by the horns (get it?). He built the car from a bare shell, re-welding
where necessary to stiffen it. A lightweight steel rear roll-cage was also
fabricated to aid stiffness. The engine bulkhead was cut away to allow the
engine to be mounted further back to improve weight distribution. This
necessitated a new dash and transmission tunnel which intruded further into
the cockpit. The battery was relocated into what was a rear passenger seat
and a cut-off switch fitted. The standard car had a weight distribution of
53/47 front/rear which was not bad for a front engine car. Wallace's Jarama
had a near 50/50 weight balance. Centre-lock Miura wheels, 8 and 10 inches
wide, were fitted with 215/70 and 225/70 VR Michelin XWXs. Four standard
ventilated disc brakes were used with extra ducting to the front. The double
wishbone, independent suspension was modified with Koni racing shock
absorbers with adjustable spring platforms. This not only makes the ride
height easily adjustable, it makes corner-weight adjustment possible. If you
don't understand the need for corner weight adjustment, think of a wobbly
restaurant chair. With a car of course, you can't wedge a folded up napkin
under one of the wheels.
Chunks of the floor pan were cut away and replaced with
aluminium. This is not as bad as it sounds, since the floor has more than
its fair share of box sections. In fact the aluminium was fitted over the
box sections from underneath to smooth the airflow under the car. Aluminium
doors and bonnet were also fitted. The bonnet incorporated huge extraction
ducts to carry the hot radiator air over the car rather than around the
engine and underneath. Further ducts to reduce under-bonnet temperature were
made in the scuttle just ahead of the windscreen. The aluminium doors were
fitted with sliding Plexiglas windows and contributed greatly to the weight
reduction. Apart from the windscreen, all the glass was changed for
Plexiglas. A startling snow plough of a front spoiler jutted out brazenly.
The headlamps were moved down and the swivelling shifty-eyed covers welded
closed saving the weight of their motors, etc. A large aluminium petrol tank
was made and fitted above the rear axle. The interior was trimmed in
lightweight materials and Miura low-back seats were fitted with 3-point
harnesses.
In standard form, the four- litre V 12 produced a claimed 365bhp at a
wailing 7,800rpm. In those days it was not unknown for dynamometers to be,
shall we say, optimistic. Speedometers were also prone to exaggerate.
However, if you do your sums and estimate a conservative volumetric
efficiency, then four litres pumping at nearly 8,000rpm will produce not far
short of 1OObhp/litre, i.e. about 365 bhp. For the Wallace RS Jarama this
was not good enough. Larger (42 DCOE) Weber carburettors were used with
longer ram-pipes to bring back the torque lost through the larger venturis.
No air filters were fitted, just wire gauze to keep out the really big
rocks. Flywheel, pistons and conrods were lightweight and balanced. A larger
oil cooler was fitted while the gearbox and differential remained standard.
A
standard Jarama GTS weighed about 1,470 kgs.(dry weight). The one-off 'RS'
has lost around 300kgs. weighing in at an estimated 1,170kgs (dry weight),
about the same as a modern 1.8-litre saloon car.
The Jarama RS was used by Wallace to frighten the motoring journalists of
the period. He had little time for most of them or their opinions since he
believed they were unable to drive fast cars anywhere near their limit.
For many years the Wallace Jarama RS lay forgotten and derelict. It was
discovered about five years ago (1990) in the Saudi Arabian desert and was
shipped to Portman, the UK Lamborghini Concessionaires, who had the job of
restoring the car. This was overseen by the very capable, hands-on and
no-nonsense engineer Del Hopkins. The car has undergone a full ground-up
restoration. Originality has been respected up to a point. Superior 1990s
two-pack paint has been used. The cooling fans have been changed for
Countach items and the interior retrimmed in modern materials.
For this test, the car was collected from the showroom of Talacrest in
Surrey where, apart from being in distinguished company, it is for sale (WAS
for sale at the time of this article!). Whether or not it is to your taste,
it is quite striking in its bright orange and matt black. While from the
rear it looks quite tame (for a Lamborghini), from the front it looks like a
mouse-trap. Its prominent looks attract much attention, although without
spotting the badge, few know what it is.
The lightweight doors open and close faster and easier than you are ready
for, an instant reminder of what this car is about. The interior has that
home-made racer feel. The tunnel is trimmed in that fab '60s "cocktail bar"
quilted PVC which is so hard to find these days. Black Alcantara suede
covers just about everything else. A huge 300km/h speedo and 10,000 rpm
tacho dominate the special RS dash. The minor instruments are mounted well
back in the binnacle and unless you have eyes in your neck you won't see
them.
My experience with Jarama goes back to the 1970s when I first drove a GTS in
anger and then again in the mid '80s when I drove another. The starting
procedure is the same with all carburettor Lambos. Ignition on, wait for the
note-change of pumps to finish filling the carbs. Pump the throttle pedal
its full travel four or five times allowing the twelve pump jets to squirt
fuel through the twelve butterflies, engage the starter and 'catch' the
engine with a light throttle when it fires.
When the water temperature needle has moved off its stop you are ready to
move off gently through the inevitable crowd of "what'll it do mister?"
onlookers. With the Jarama RS, the non-powered steering, which is difficult
to turn at parking speeds, comes into its own at speed, the worm and roller
box damping out the high frequency shocks without loss of feel to the
driver. Geometry calibrations are critical on Lamborghinis. They are
transformed into terrific driving machines when correctly set-up. So many
are set-up wrongly and in many cases the owners are oblivious to what they
are missing.
The RS rides firmer than a normal Jarama as you might expect. The spring-rate
frequency is less than in a racing car but firm enough to enable you to
throw the car into bumpy road turns safely. Turn-in response is average, not
loading up too much maybe because of reduced castor angle. Fast cornering
brings neutral handling, with oversteer if you go mad. Because it is a high
geared GT car, power induced oversteer will require quick reactions to cope
with the massive wheel-spin available. Body-roll is less than with a
standard car although the anti-roll bar diameters are unchanged; an effect
of lightening the car.
Braking and down-changing are excellent. The pedal effort and travel is just
right, leaving your right foot perfectly positioned to twist and blip the
jerk-free throttle pedal. The gearbox synchros work perfectly, encouraging
you to change gear just to hear the exhilarating sound of an unrestricted
high revving V12. Going too slow or in the wrong gear brings on detonation.
Either the ignition is too advanced or the fuel is not good enough, all the
more reason to keep the revs up.
A
non-original red line has been stuck on the outside of the tacho glass at
5,500rpm, no doubt as an insurance against an expensive blow-up. As
previously mentioned, a standard Jarama GTS produces 365bhp at 7,800 rpm.
The mods to this car should show around 380bhp at 8,000 rpm. From
experience, I can tell you that to be an anti-social menace and have fun,
you need to keep the needle between 5,000-7,500rpm. At these revs, with its
open induction tracts, the Jarama RS wails and whoops from both ends.
While Jaguar and Mercedes make smoother, torquier and more reliable V12s,
these old Lamborghini engines make the best music. With these cafe-racers,
you take the juke-box with you.
Additional Note: This car sold
on June 20, 1996 for $47,795 and has since been in the hands of a German
owner though still registered on British plate and occasionally run on
German dealer plates.”
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TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS
Lamborghini Jarama RS
(GTS Figures in brackets) |
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ENGINE |
Front Mounted 60° V12 all alloy,
double overhead camshafts per bank
2 valves per cylinder.
Bore/Stroke
82mm x 62mm
Displacement 3,929cc
Compression Ratio 10.7:1 |
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FUEL SYSTEM |
Bendix Pumps
6 Twin-choke Weber 42 DCOE carbs (6 Twin-choke 40 DCOE). |
|
IGNITION |
2 Marelli distributors (single Marelli
distributor). |
|
POWER |
*380bhp at 8,000rpm (365bhp at 7,500rpm). |
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GEARBOX |
Lamborghini 5-speed. |
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DIFFERENTIAL |
Lamborghini LSD. |
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WHEELS |
Chromodora
Front: 8 x 15 (7 x 15)
Rear: 10 x 15 (7 x 15) |
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TYRES |
Michelin XWX
Front: 215/70 x VR 15
Rear: 225/70 x VR 15 |
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BODY |
Bertone, 2 seats. (2+2 seats) |
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PERFORMANCE |
0-60 mph: *6 sec. (6.8 sec.)
0-100 mph: *15 sec. (16 sec.)
Top Speed: *165 mph (162 mph) (* denotes
estimated figure) |
Text
and photos courtesy of

2007 Copyright by
Jaramaregistry - N Club Sport - NCS
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