Blueprint Craft — 2 museum-grade prints that set the mood. Frazer Nash occupies a singular niche in British motorsport — a specialist builder that prioritized driver engagement and lightweight craft over factory scale, producing cars in numbers small enough that every Le Mans entry feels like a documented event. The Le Mans model name itself declares circuit intent, and the marque's Bristol-engine partnerships delivered reliable power in a package that punched above its displacement on twisty Sarthe sections even when Mulsanne straight speed favoured larger prototypes. The Porsche 906 Carrera 6 represents the moment Weissach committed fully to flat-six endurance engineering — a car light enough to dance through Tertre Rouge yet durable enough to survive twenty-four hours of Sarthe attrition against larger-displacement rivals. Its white-and-red livery, open-cockpit honesty, and blueprint-friendly proportions made the 906 a customer-racing success beyond factory entries, influencing the 910 evolution and the flat-eight 907 programme that followed.