M8E
The McLaren M8E Can-Am features naturally-aspirated Chevrolet big-block 427 cubic-inch V8 producing approximately 740 horsepower through Hewland LG500 four-speed transmission with Tilton triple-disc clutch and rear-wheel-drive at approximately 650kg curb weight. Customer specification includes aluminum-head iron-block Chevrolet engine, fiberglass bodywork with revised rear wing regulations following high-mounted wing ban, tubular space frame chassis, independent suspension with adjustable geometry, ventilated disc brakes, open-cockpit single-seat configuration, and aerodynamic development optimized for high-speed oval and road course versatility in unrestricted formula.
M8E represents Trojan-built customer version of McLaren Can-Am dominance during 1967-1971 era when Bruce McLaren and Denny Hulme established orange papaya cars as championship-winning force in unlimited sports car racing before founder death 1970 and subsequent Porsche 917 challenge ending McLaren supremacy. The 1971 M8E customer cars provided privateer teams access to factory-derived technology competing in final years before turbocharged Porsche dominance transformed Can-Am from American big-block showcase toward European manufacturer technical arms race, with M8 series establishing McLaren racing credibility beyond Formula 1 success, demonstrating Chevrolet V8 power and British chassis engineering combination creating 200+ mph capability in era preceding comprehensive safety regulations, establishing legendary status as ultimate expression of unlimited racing philosophy before fuel crisis and insurance costs ended golden age of thundering naturally-aspirated prototype competition.