Ever since the ‘rear-engined revolution’ – which Cooper led through 1957-60 – the immense majority of truly purebred racing cars have had the engine behind the driver. The beneficial reasons are compelling. The last frontengined Grand Prix car to win a Formula 1 race was Stirling Moss’s four-wheel-drive Ferguson-Climax P99, in the damp 1961 Oulton Park Gold Cup.