Jaguar V 12 User Manual To The Bce3f43d Fedd 4474 9d2e 96bfd7477925

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Performance Builder’s Guide:
Jaguar E-Type Series III V-12

By Mark J. McCourt
Photography courtesy Stew Jones Restorations and Track Time Photos

P

opular wisdom states that of all
the E-Type variants built between
1961 and 1974, the first series of
lighter, triple-carbureted straight-six cars
make the best racers; the V-12-powered ETypes built between 1971 and 1974 were
too plush, too heavy, too complex. While
the Series III cars, both Open Two Seaters
(OTS) and 2+2 Fixed Head Coupes (FHC),
may have been larger and less agile than
their short-wheelbase predecessors, their
12-cylinder engines featured impressive
engineering and a torquey, smooth power
delivery, and they still wore aerodynamic
bodywork considered by some to be the
most beautiful of the era. Although the
steel-roofed FHCs are a natural choice for
high-speed race cars, OTSs perform admirably with judicious body reinforcements,
and both are virtually guaranteed to be the
prettiest cars on the track.
The design of this company’s road-going
5,343cc, single overhead-cam 60-degree
24 HEMMINGS SPORTS & EXOTIC CAR

• october 2007

V-12 was influenced by the 4,994cc V-12
in 1966’s stillborn XJ13 Le Mans racer.
This aluminum-bodied car’s mid-placed
engine had an 86.87 x 69.85mm bore and
stroke, and its Brico pistons and Dykes
piston rings were moved in their castiron dry cylinder liners by a nitrited steel
seven-main-bearing crankshaft and forged,
polished connecting rods. Dual overhead
cams actuated the valves, and dry sump
lubrication and mechanical Lucas fuel
injection circulated the fluids. The final
results of the XJ13 engine’s tuning were
502hp at 7,600 rpm and 386-lbs.ft. of
torque at 6,300 rpm.
Using lessons learned from the XJ13
engine, Jaguar developed the Series III EType’s V-12 to maintain their customary
level of power in the face of ever-stiffer
emissions regulations. Smooth and balanced, the aluminum block and head V-12
featured a number of performance-biased
components, including high-flow, flat-top

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combustion chambers with optimally situated inlet and exhaust valves, seven main
bearings and replaceable, cylinder-cooling, cast-iron wet-sleeve cylinder liners.
This engine would gain fuel injection and
be redesigned twice before V-12 production ceased in 1996, the first time in 1981
when it became the H(igh) E(fficiency) with
a redesigned “swirl” combustion chamber
design, and the second time in 1994 when
the HE was stroked to 6.0 liters of displacement.
Considered by many to be overbuilt,
the Jaguar V-12 can withstand significant
cylinder boring, notably raised compression and is adaptable to numerous fuel
delivery solutions. Although Jaguar may
have intended their often air-conditioned,
power-assisted Series III cars to be Grand
Tourers, as opposed to the pure sports cars
of the first E-Type iteration, there are some
enthusiasts who feel otherwise. Stew Jones,
president of Stew Jones Restorations in

Select Component Prices
Engine
Rob Beere Racing Fast Road
V-12 cylinder head and camshaft kit............................................................ $4,938 (£2,400)
Rob Beere V-12 block conversion for 96mm liners............................................ $850 (£415)
Hayward & Scott stainless steel exhaust system........................................ $1,208 (£587.50)
SNG Barratt V-12 ignition conversion....................................................... $594.70 (£289.05)

Drivetrain
Medatronics JT5 5-Speed kit, inc. Borg Warner T5 gearbox,
shifter, new driveshaft, clutch disc and hydraulics,
hardware and bellhousing...........................................................................................$4,700

Suspension
SNG Barratt uprated torsion bars, pair.............................................................. $760 (£371)
Koni adjustable shock absorbers................................................................. $129 (£63) each

Safety
Kirkey Intermediate Road Race seat...............................................................................$725
Simpson five-point pull-down racing harness................................................................$105

Specifications

Dimensions

Engine: 	7.3-liter, 450-cubic-inch
V-12, alloy block and
head, six 44mm Weber
IDF carburetors, 11.6:1
compression ratio
Horsepower: 600 @ 6,043 rpm
Torque:
578-lbs.ft. @ 3,922 rpm
Gearbox: 	Five-speed Getrag 265
Ratios
1st: 3.822:1
2nd: 2.200:1
3rd: 1.398:1
4th: 1.000:1
5th: 0.813:1

Length:
180 inches
Width:
68 inches
Height:
48 inches
Wheelbase: 105 inches
Curb weight: 	2,760 pounds with roll
hoops and full fuel tank,
50/50 weight distribution

Racer Resumé:

“I

believe the E-Type Jaguar is the most
beautiful car ever made. I bought my
first E-Type, a 1972 V-12 roadster, in 1985,
and I had no intention of doing anything
to it. I joined the Jaguar Club [of North
America], and a few years later, they started
a slalom program. I started driving in that
program, and began thinking about SCCA
events. Stew was maintaining my original
car, and we decided that it would be fun
to have a car that would do really well in
these events. I didn’t want to further modify
my near-stock car, so we started with a 1973
roadster to make The Beast.
“This car is clearly pretty potent on the
track, and Stew’s wife, Karen, has turned the
best time ever in a Jag, beating the previous best time by a half-second. Bob Hebert
drives for Donovan [Motorcar Service in
Lenox, Massachusetts], and he’s turned a

58-second lap in The Beast at Lime Rock. He
comes back with good feedback for Stew…
tweak the torsion bars, lower the tire pressure… and as long as Karen’s autocrossing
it, Stew trucks it around for me. I can’t turn
those times at Lime Rock, so it’s great to
see what the car is able to do at the hands
of a good driver. I’ve hired Bob Hebert as
a coach, and I’m planning to continue to
do more track driving and probably get my
competition license.”
– By Jim Roberge

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october 2007

• HEMMINGS SPORTS & EXOTIC CAR

25

Engine

Driveline

Brakes

As fitted to a Series III E-Type, the stock 5.3liter V-12 is only 86 pounds heavier than its
4.2-liter straight-six predecessor, and uses
four Zenith-Stromberg 175 CD 2SE carburetors. The engine in The Beast is a highly modified 7.3-liter unit that uses an 84mm Jaguar
Racing forged crankshaft, 96mm Cosworth
pistons, Carrillo connecting rods and 1.8inch inlet/1.4-inch exhaust valves with .501
lift. With an 11.6:1 compression ratio and six
44mm Weber IDF carburetors, it makes 600hp
and 578-lbs.ft. of torque.
“The Beast is over the top, but there are a
lot of cost-effective ways to modify the Series
III V-12 for more power,” Stew says. “With
the short stroke, the 5.3-liter is a durable
engine that goes and goes. But instead of
trying to get more power from a 5.3, it’s
easy to increase the cubic inches without
giving away low-speed driveability. You can
combine the longer crank of the late 6.0-liter
engine with 6mm overbore pistons and liners
and a mild, streetable cam, and you’ll have
a 6.8-liter making between 350 and 375hp,
which is pretty exciting in a 3,200-pound car.
The Stromberg carburetors can be made to
work very well, and two-inch SUs are a midlevel upgrade before Webers.
“E-Types are notorious for overheating,
and I insist on cooling upgrades on every car
I work on, including a Ron Davis aluminum
radiator, electric cooling fans, a 165-degree
thermostat and an Airpax commercial-level
fan switch, which fits in a special housing
that I developed. The weak stock ignition system is cured with SNG Barratt’s Opus Ignition
Replacement HE upgrade.”

Stew notes that many Series III E-Types were
fitted at the factory with three-speed Borg
Warner M12 automatic gearboxes—he estimates that half of FHC models and roughly
a third of OTS models were so equipped. It
is possible to retrofit an automatic V-12 car,
as well as an original four-speed manual car,
with a modern overdrive five-speed transmission. “The most difficult part is finding
a good pedal assembly. Once you get the
assembly, everything else is available new,”
he explains. “Tremec T5s engineered for ETypes by Medatronics are readily available,
and T5s are common and relatively inexpensive. The cost for rebuilding a Jaguar fourspeed is halfway to a T5 conversion!”
The Beast uses a Euro-spec XJ-S-sourced
Getrag five-speed, a three-disc Tilton
Engineering carbon/carbon clutch and a
3.78:1 ratio Detroit Locker rear differential.
“The Beast is a slalom/autocross/track car
that is subjected to severe 80-foot turns, and
because of its Detroit Locker, it could chew
up output shafts. We use Mark Williams
hardened axles, but if you’re not building
a slalom car, this won’t be an issue, and
Jaguar’s positraction rear is quite sufficient.
I like running 3.54 rear gears with a fivespeed.”

Jaguars were using four-wheel disc brakes,
with ventilated 11-inch front rotors, for years
before their competition, and Stew feels
that, if properly cooled, the stock Series III
units are very capable. “The Beast uses 13inch front discs with six-piston calipers, and
the rear brakes are ventilated Porsche discs
with four-piston calipers. The only reason
I picked the Porsche discs was because of
their size and ventilation; Bob Green’s BG
Developments in England sells cost-effective
ventilated rear discs and spacers in the stock
diameter, ” he says. “There’s very little room
to expand brake size with the inboard suspension cage.”
Stew enhanced The Beast’s braking ventilation by rerouting the original passenger compartment air ducts to feed air to the front
brakes. “Jaguar designed bolt-on ducts that
stuck out below the car, ahead of the rear
wheels,” he says. “On most E-Types, these
are long gone, either smashed flat or possibly
never installed by the dealer. I added exit plenums that pull air from above the rear discs
and send it through hoses that exit where
the license plate lamp used to be.”

26 HEMMINGS SPORTS & EXOTIC CAR

• october 2007

hemmings.com

Resources
Stew Jones Restorations
860-379-1534
www.jaguarv12etype.com
SNG Barratt
800-452-4787
www.sngbarratt.com
Rob Beere Racing
+44-0-24-7647-3311
www.rob-beere-racing.co.uk

Chassis

Safety

While a rigid, aerodynamic coupe is the
obvious base for an E-Type racer, an issue of
helmet clearance pushed the 6-foot-4 Jim
to choose a roadster as The Beast’s starting
point. With the structural stresses of autocrossing in mind, Stew’s crew heavily trussed
and reinforced the car using original Jaguar
specification tubing, spending 2,000 hours in
the process. “Once we got started, there was
no point in doing ‘some,’ because everything
ties together,” he says. “If a car is making
350 or 400 horsepower, you can leave the
chassis alone, but with 600hp, all of that
braking and cornering stress starts to twist
the body.”
A number of suspension upgrades can
bring a V-12 E-Type into the 21st century,
and those include stiffer 7/8-inch torsion bars,
Harvey Bailey Engineering anti-roll bars and
adjustable Koni shock absorbers. “Urethane
bushings are the buzz word in racing,” Stew
explains, “but Jaguar’s stock upper A-arm
bushings are beautiful, and I never alter
them. I do use urethane in the lower A-arms,
although I remake the inside steel shell. I run
really fast cars with the OE rubber Jaguar
bushings without issue. The Beast uses Heimjointed radius arms and Spax shocks, and
while its bonnet and rear quarters look stock,
they were modified to allow fitting 18 x 11.5inch BBS wheels and 315/30-18 Hoosier slicks,
but we have a second set of wheels and
tires for the street. We’ve installed Jaguarsourced steering rack travel limiters to stop
the front wheels from interfering with the
suspension.”

Jim wanted his purpose-built autocrosser to
be streetable, and in that, not one that drew
undue “official” attention to itself. With this
brief, Stew and his team designed tall roll
hoops that would clear Jim’s helmet and bolt
into the car’s heavily reinforced underbody
structure, but are removable for street use.
The snug-fitting Kirkey racing seats can be
converted to accommodate Jim or Karen
Jones, who is Stew’s wife and the expert driver who piloted The Beast in 2006 to capture
the all-time JCNA slalom record of 38.390
seconds. Those seats are complemented by
securely mounted five-point Simpson racing
harnesses, and a low-high interior rear-view
mirror offers a glimpse at everything that The
Beast leaves behind. The Exide Orbital O6 gel
battery rests behind the passenger seat.
Its capacity selected with running the Lime
Rock race track in mind, The Beast’s trunkmounted “Fuel Safe” fuel cell holds 22 gallons of racing gasoline. This unit was also
chosen for its low-profile design, which maintains the car’s low center of gravity.

Winsted, Connecticut, is one of them.
A Jaguar restoration specialist since
1977, he enjoys bringing out the Series III’s
inherent sports car character with vehicles
like our feature car, “The Beast,” the Jaguar
Club of North America slalom record
holder and track racer that his team built
for Lincoln, Massachusetts, resident Jim
Roberge. Like many, Stew was a fan of the
early models, but working on a customer’s

Hayward & Scott
+44-0-12-6872-7256
www.haywardandscott.com
BG Developments
+44-0-15-2787-3716
www.bgdevelopments.co.uk
Classic Jaguar
512-288-8800
www.classicjaguar.com
Medatronics Corporation
561-743-5600
www.5speeds.com/jag.htm
Fuel Safe Racing Cells
541-923-6005
www.fuelsafe.com
Tilton Engineering
805-688-2353
www.tiltonracing.com
Mark Williams Enterprises
800-525-1963
www.markwilliams.com
Ron Davis Racing Products
623-877-5000
www.rondavisradiators.com
Harvey Bailey Engineering Ltd.
+44-0-13-3534-3018
www.jagweb.com/hbe/

V-12 car opened his eyes to its possibilities. “I believe in the twelves,” he says.
“There is a lot of competition in the Jaguar
world between six- and 12-cylinder cars,
and they’re an untapped source because
they’ve been overshadowed by the sixes
for so long. They have a lot of potential
and respond nicely to modifications, and
as the old saying goes, there’s no substitute
for cubic inches!”

Cosworth Pistons
310-534-1390
www.cosworth.com
Simpson Race Products
800-654-7223
www.simpsonraceproducts.com

hemmings.com

october 2007

• HEMMINGS SPORTS & EXOTIC CAR

27



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