The engine first publicly appeared in the Daimler Dart but, after Chrysler objected to use of that name, it was called the
Daimler SP250, a
fibreglass bodied sports car aimed at the American market. In December 1961 Daimler announced a marine version of their 2.5-litre V8. The 2.5-litre engine, only long and developing @ 5,800 rpm, gave better performance than Jaguar's own 2.4-litre DOHC in-line six, and after the 1960 merger the opportunity was taken to create an up-market Daimler V8 version of the
Jaguar Mark 2. Between the years 1962 and 1969 17,620 Daimler/Jaguar V8s were built. Initially called the Daimler 2.5 V8, it was later called the Daimler V8-250. The 4.5-litre engine was used in the
Daimler Majestic Major DQ450, which is now rare, but was a respected high performance saloon in its day. The engine was also used in the Majestic Major's limousine derivative, the
DR450. The 4.5-litre was tested in a
Jaguar Mark X and there are some unauthenticated reports that this car lapped the
Motor Industry Research Association's high-speed test track at but was reportedly not put into production precisely because its performance was better than the original 3.8 Mark X's. However, the more likely explanation is that there was not the production capacity for the engine, and in any event the 4.2 litre mark X gave superior acceleration. All 4.5-litre V8 models sold were automatic, which makes connection to a manual transmission difficult.
Felday-Daimler hillclimbing special Peter Westbury, an engineer from Surrey, England, competed in
hillclimbing events in cars powered by Daimler V8 engines. Between the end of the 1962
RAC Hillclimb Championship season, in which he finished seventh in a V8-powered
Cooper, and the beginning of the 1963 season, Westbury built a new hillclimbing special called the Felday-Daimler powered by a 2.5-litre Daimler V8 with a SU carburettor and a Roots supercharger. Westbury won the 1963 RAC Hillclimb Championship in the Felday-Daimler, setting course records at Craigantlet in Ulster and Dyrham Park in Gloucestershire.
Glacier Grenade drag racing special In 1970, Russ Carpenter and Tony Anderson built the "Glacier Grenade," a rear-engined dragster. It was the first "All British" rear-engine dragster of its type. Powered by a 2.5litre Daimler V8 it would compete in drag racing from March 1972 until 1989 when the car was outlawed from European racing. Russ began to drive the car in 1974 taking over sole driving duties after Tony's retirement from the sport in 1976 due to a spinal injury. Russ continued the car's development all the way through its racing life. In 1980 it became the first drag car under 5.5 litres, and the first all-British car to complete a quarter-mile race in less than eight seconds. By the time of its retirement, the car, using mainly stock engine parts, produced 1400 bhp and ran the standing quarter mile in 7.2 seconds at 180 mph. The car was restored and was to be displayed at Dunsfold Aerodrome near Guildford in April 2014. In 2014 Russ Carpenter was inducted into the British Drag Racing Hall of Fame for his development of this engine and influencing others to use a British engine in a largely American engine focused Motorsport. ==End of production==