IMSA Championship ;1981 's T600 that raced at the
1981 24 Hours of Le Mans Cooke-Woods Racing entered chassis #HU01 for the fifth race of 1981 season, at
Laguna Seca, with Redman driving. The team achieved victory in its debut race, followed by wins at
Lime Rock,
Mid Ohio,
Portland and
Road Atlanta. The car proved extremely reliable, winning the IMSA title and knocking Porsche from the top of the championship standings for the first time since 1977. Lola Cars sold 11 additional T600s on the strength of this performance. Among the drivers fielding T600s were
Chris Cord and
John Paul Jr. (chassis #HU04 and #HU05), though neither achieved the success of Cooke-Woods effort. ;1982 Cooke-Woods Racing became Cooke Racing after Roy Woods and Redman left the team and never again approached its dominant form of 1981. J.L.P. Racing and Cord Racing returned, while additional Lolas from Interscope appeared in the grid, raced by
Danny Ongais,
Ted Field and
Bill Whittington. Interscope won four races but John Paul Jr. took the Championship driving both a T600 and Porsche 935s, scoring one of his seven victories in the Lola. Field finished second in standings. ;1983 Ted Field fitted a 700 hp
Chevrolet V6 3.4L turbo engine in one of the Interscope T600s, which proved to be a fast but unreliable combination. Other Lolas fielded by John Kalagian and Conte Racing employed the ubiquitous Chevy V8, while Bayside Racing installed a Porsche 935 turbo engine in their T600. Newer GTP designs from
March and
Jaguar, however, eclipsed the aging Lola. T600s scored a handful of podium finishes, but its days as a front-running chassis were numbered. ;1984 onwards Largely reduced to the role of grid filler, Lola T600s occasionally posted top-ten finishes, powered variously by engines from Chevy,
Ford and Porsche, but the design proved too outdated to be competitive. A T600 appeared for the last time at an IMSA race in 1987. ==References==