
Tyrrell P34 - Wikipedia
The Tyrrell P34 (Project 34), commonly known as the "six-wheeler", was a Formula One (F1) race car designed by Derek Gardner, Tyrrell's chief designer. [1] The car used four specially …
Six appeal - 6 fascinating facts about Tyrrell’s six-wheeler
Jun 23, 2016 · A prototype Tyrrell P34 - essentially the six-wheeled design mated to the existing 007 chassis - in testing at Silverstone prior to its Grand Prix debut in 1976. © Sutton …
1976 Tyrrell-Ford P34
Denis Jenkinson describing the first time he laid eyes on the Tyrrell P34. To overcome the lack of advantage inherent in a sport where most competitors were using the same engine (then the …
Legendary 6-wheeled 1977 Tyrrell P34 F1 Car at Imola Circuit!
This video is about one of the most iconic F1 racer ever built: the Tyrrell P34.
Tyrrell P34 car-by-car histories - OldRacingCars.com
The second big surprise from Tyrrell came in 1976, with the amazing six-wheel Tyrrell Project 34. The P34 was very competitive in 1976, with one win and eight second places.
Tyrrell P34 - Model Information - Conceptcarz.com
To maintain grip, four wheels would be in the front, making their new F1 car - the Project 34 or P34 - a six-wheeler. At the time, the popular engine choice was the Ford/Cosworth V8 DFV …
Tyrrell P34 - F1technical.net
It's most striking feature of course was the use of four 10 in. wheels instead of the regular two. The front-end layout was intended to "... minimize induced drag by reducing lift at the front and …
The Tyrrell P34: When Six Wheels Almost Won the Championship
Jun 22, 2025 · In the wild world of 1970s Formula 1 innovation, one car stood out from the rest—not for its speed alone, but for its shape. The Tyrrell P34, with six wheels and radical …
Tyrrell P34 | Formula 1 Wiki | Fandom
The "P34" designation stood for "Project 34", or the 34th set of plans created by Tyrrell's design team, which included everything from new cars to revised aerodynamics and updated …
Cars of Futures Past – 1976 Tyrrell P34 - Hemmings
Sep 5, 2013 · In the sport’s modern era, perhaps no team better illustrates this risk-reward principle than Elf-Tyrrell, which stunned the sporting world with its radical six-wheel, four-in-the …