News
You may have noticed that McLaren ’s official brand color is a bright shade of orange. That dates back to Bruce McLaren’s M6A Can-Am race car of 1967, the first to feature the all-orange paint ...
Back in the 1960s, Bruce McLaren was still trying to put his racing team on the map. The Kiwi racing driver, designer, and engineer decided on the M6A as his challenger for the 1967 Can-Am ...
One of those was the M6A, and the car that Bruce McLaren drove to the championship in the 1967 Can-Am Challenge Cup just hit the track 50 years later.
Despite McLaren's incredible success in Can-Am racing with the M6A, the M6GT project never took off, leaving us only to wonder about its potential.
The McLaren Elva M6A theme is the second racecar-themed Elva the comes from MSO. The color used on the car isn’t directly from the racing car of the late 60s.
McLaren has revealed an Elva livery that honors the M6A race car that competed in the 1967 Can-Am season.
McLaren won the series, only in its second season, that November in his FIA Group 7 M6A race car that was painted a vibrant Papaya orange color.
McLaren has taken to social media to show another distinctive Elva with a classic livery from McLaren Special Operations (MSO). The Elva in question pays tribute to the M6A Can-Am race car from ...
Based on the M6A, which won the championship in 1967, the M6B hit the track during the 1968 season, when McLaren's main team had switched to the M8A.
One of the first cars to wear this famous color was the McLaren M6A-Chevrolet that was used during the 1967 season of the Canadian-American Challenge Cup.
The Petersen Automotive Museum welcomes a new exhibit this summer to celebrate McLaren and its founder, acclaimed New Zealand racecar driver Bruce McLaren.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results