Volvo S60 (V8 Supercar)

Volvo S60
CategoryV8 Supercars
ConstructorGarry Rogers Motorsport
Volvo Polestar Racing
Technical specifications[1]
SuspensionÖhlins coilovers
Suspension (front)Double-wishbone
Suspension (rear)as front
EngineVolvo B8444S 4,989 cc (304.4 cu in) V8 (60°) naturally-aspirated, eight throttle bodies, 7,500 RPM limited, front-mounted
Torque487 ft-lb
TransmissionXtrac transaxle, 6 forward speeds + 1 reverse manual sequential
Power485 kW (659 PS; 650 hp)
Weight1,410 kg (3,108.5 lb)
FuelE85
LubricantsValvoline
BrakesAP Racing 4-piston calipers and discs
TyresDunlop Sportmaxx, 18" x 11" forged aluminium rims
Competition history
Notable entrantsGarry Rogers Motorsport
Notable driversNew Zealand Scott McLaughlin
Sweden Robert Dahlgren
Australia David Wall
Australia James Moffat
France Alexandre Prémat
Australia Greg Ritter
New Zealand Chris Pither
Australia James Golding
Debut2014 Adelaide 500
First win2014 Perth 400[a]
Last win2016 Phillip Island SuperSprint
Last event2016 Sydney 500
EntriesRacesWinsPodiums
42103623
PolesF/LapsTitles
1770

The Volvo S60 was a silhouette touring car built to compete in the V8 Supercars championship. Based on the second-generation Volvo S60 road car, the vehicle – designed and assembled by Garry Rogers Motorsport in conjunction with Volvo Cars and Polestar Racing – was constructed to the "Car of the Future" V8 Supercars regulations introduced in 2013, with the car used across the 2014, 2015 and 2016 seasons of Australian touring car racing.[3]

Background

V8 Supercars announced a new regulation set, titled Car of the Future, in 2010 as part of future-proofing discussions.[4] Intended to halve costs through control parts, the series mandated a standardised chassis and roll cage combination designed to attract new manufacturers to compete alongside the existing Holden and Ford products, whilst maintaining the popular 5.0L V8 engines – the base platforms would then be homologated to achieve technical parity, and teams allowed to develop certain components on top of that.[5] The regulation set came into effect in 2013, initially planned to be 2012, with Nissan and Mercedes-AMG models confirmed to participate; Nissan as a factory effort using Altima L33s homologated by Kelly Racing, and Erebus Motorsport building E63-derived models without factory support.[6]

Volvo announced their entry into V8 Supercars in June 2013, partnering with Garry Rogers Motorsport on a three-year deal – marking the brands' first foray into Australian touring car racing since it won the 1986 championship with Robbie Francevic driving a 240T for Mark Petch Motorsport and the Volvo Dealer Team.[7][8][9] Rogers had been in "very, very close" discussions with Chrysler about using the 300C model since January 2012, before ultimately signing with the Swedish manufacturer.[10][11] The second-generation S60 model was chosen to represent the brand from 2014, using panels and fixings based on the original design of the S60 but modified in various places (such as the raising and pushing back of the roofline) to fit the control chassis.[12] The V8 Supercar included the fitment of the Yamaha-designed B8444S engine, with an increased bore and stroke from 4.4L to 5.0L to meet series requirements – its' flat-plane crank and 60° cylinder block produced a distinctive, deeper tone compared to its' pushrod 90° counterparts.[13][14][15]

Competition history

2014

The car was launched on 13 February 2014, having been driven via police escort over the Sydney Harbour Bridge at sunrise. It was liveried predominantly in Volvo's cyan, with a Swedish flag on the roof and black patches on the doors – primary sponsorship came from long-time Garry Rogers supporter Valvoline.[16] Scott McLaughlin was retained by GRM for his sophomore season in the category, and was joined by long-serving Volvo Sweden factory driver Robert Dahlgren; reigning STCC champion Thed Björk had requested the drive, but was instead tasked with testing Volvo's upcoming WTCC TC1 car based on the same road-going model.[17][18] The cars' liveries received a minor tweak mid-season, with NASCAR-style door numbers added to the #33 and #34 at the Ipswich and Eastern Creek rounds respectively.[19]

Robert Dahlgren at the V8 Supercars pre-season test in 2014.

The cars' first outings were surrounded by controversy, as rivals claimed it had an aerodynamic and power advantage.[20] This was exacerbated by the B8444S engine, which was substituted with a Holden Commodore VF-derived Chevrolet unit during homologation at RAAF Base East Sale, producing so much power in the pre-season test at Sydney Motorsport Park that it was catching rival cars without reaching full throttle.[21] At the opening round in Adelaide, McLaughlin qualified 5th and 2nd for the opening two races whilst Dahlgren qualified outside the top 20. Having finished the first race seventh, McLaughlin then held off a late charge from Jamie Whincup in the evening heat to finish 2nd behind Craig Lowndes.[22][23][24] Both cars retired from the final race of the weekend with mechanical problems; Dahlgren with an engine failure, and McLaughlin with electrical issues.[25] McLaughlin then claimed the S60's first race win in the final heat of the non-championship V8 Supercars Challenge, a support event to the Australian Grand Prix.[2][26]

Ahead of the second round in Tasmania, Volvo were instructed to move 20kg of ballast in their engine bay to adjust its' centre of gravity.[27][28] McLaughlin scored top 10 finishes in all three races at Symmons Plains, before both cars suffered a spate of mechanical failures at Winton.[29][30] McLaughlin then claimed two pole positions and two podiums in his home event in New Zealand, before taking the first championship race win for the S60 in Perth despite a cracked header.[31][21][32] Following 5 out of 6 top-ten finishes for McLaughlin across Darwin and Townsville, the Kiwi then collided with Michael Caruso in a battle for the lead at Queensland Raceway.[33] At the following round in Western Sydney, McLaughlin had an engine failure early in the first race before losing a wheel in the second after starting from pole, with the issues compounded after Dahlgren crashed out of the second race and had to sit out the remainder of the weekend – McLaughlin then bounced back to win the Sunday race, narrowly beating Nick Percat.[34]

McLaughlin and Dahlgren were joined by Alexandre Prémat and Greg Ritter for the endurance races.[35] McLaughlin and Prémat finished 8th at Sandown following an early battle with David Reynolds.[36] McLaughlin and Prémat then led 70 of the first 120 laps at the Bathurst 1000 before Dahlgren crashed at the Cutting, and on the subsequent safety car restart McLaughlin then crashed in the same place – #33 was ultimately the last classified finisher, 11 laps down in 17th.[37][38] Dahlgren finished a season-best 12th in the first race on the Gold Coast, whilst McLaughlin/Prémat scored pole and finished 2nd in the final enduro of the season.[39][40] McLaughlin then won the first race at Phillip Island ahead of Lowndes and Whincup, before taking a last-gasp win in the third race of the weekend after Garth Tander ran out of fuel in the final metres.[41][42] The final round at Sydney Olympic Park was overshadowed by stormy weather, but McLaughlin managed to equal Whincup on 10 pole positions apiece for the season in the final qualifying session.[43]

McLaughlin finished the 2014 drivers' championship in 5th, and Dahlgren 25th (last of the regular drivers). Garry Rogers Motorsport finished 6th in the teams' championship, narrowly beating Erebus Motorsport by 23 points. Prior to the final round of the season, Dahlgren was confirmed to be leaving the team at seasons' end and returning to Sweden.[44][45][46]

2015

In November 2014, Dick Johnson Racing's David Wall was confirmed to replace Dahlgren at Garry Rogers Motorsport for the 2015 season.[47] The 2015 livery was launched on 6 February, featuring a predominantly similar design but with Wilson Security replacing Valvoline as the primary backer – from the Townsville round onwards (excluding the Bathurst 1000), Wall's car was primarily sponsored by Payce Consolidated.[48][49][50] Volvo had expressed interest in expanding to four cars in mid-2014, but ultimately opted against it in order to "focus on the [car] speed".[51][52][53] In 2021, Lee Holdsworth confirmed that Erebus Motorsport had been in line to switch from Mercedes to Volvo for the 2015 season before the deal collapsed at Bathurst.[54]

McLaughlin competing in the 2015 Sydney SuperSprint.

McLaughlin did not start the opening race of the season after suffering an oil pump failure on the warm-up lap.[55] The team could only muster a best finish of 9th during the rest of the Adelaide weekend, a result replicated at Symmons Plains after McLaughlin suffered an engine failure in the first race of the weekend.[56] Prior to Symmons Plains, Chris Pither replaced Wall at the non-championship Australian Grand Prix event after the Sydneysider suffered burns in Adelaide.[57] Only three top-ten finishes followed in the next nine races; McLaughlin then finished 4th in the first race in Townsville before claiming the S60's first pole position of the season in the second race, however the team were denied another strong finish after his car threw a power steering belt during the race.[58][59][60] The Townsville results did lead to a minor turnaround in fortunes, with McLaughlin taking a podium finish in Ipswich as well as top-five finishes in two of the races at Eastern Creek.[61][62]

McLaughlin and Prémat again teamed up for the endurance races, whilst Pither joined Wall in Car #34.[63] McLaughlin and Prémat finished 14th at Sandown after a mistake in the pit-stop led to the car leaving its' bay with the air-jack still attached.[64] Wall and Pither retired from Bathurst after suffering another engine failure inside the first 100km, whilst McLaughlin and Prémat managed a fifth-place finish having been in contention throughout.[65] McLaughlin then claimed another pole position on the Gold Coast, leading Volvo Global to express "positivity" about continuing in the series beyond 2016 despite dismal race results that weekend.[66] Following the Gold Coast round, Wall was confirmed to be out of a full-time drive at the end of the season.[67] McLaughlin then finished the season with eight top-ten finishes in the last nine races, including four podiums and two pole positions – Wall scored his best race result, a 15th place, in the penultimate round at Phillip Island.[68] McLaughlin and Wall finished 8th and 23rd in the drivers' championship, whilst GRM finished 7th in the teams' championship.[69]

2016

In November 2015, James Moffat from Nissan Motorsport was confirmed as David Wall's replacement for 2016.[70] The livery was launched on 20 February, retaining the same sponsors but replacing the black patches with white cut-out sections.[71]

McLaughlin competing in the 2016 Sydney SuperSprint.

McLaughlin started the season with a pair of fourth-places in Adelaide, and scored another one at the following round in Launceston.[72][73] McLaughlin then dominated the next round at Phillip Island, taking a grand slam in both races whilst team-mate Moffat finished 7th in the first race.[74][75] Following the success, Volvo renewed their support for another three seasons on 27 April, whilst McLaughlin was given a cameo drive for Volvo in the STCC season-opener on 1 May.[76][77]

On 4 May, a week after Volvo's support was renewed, the Swedish company backflipped on the deal and opted to quit the category at the end of the season.[78][79] Following suggestions that GRM could run the existing cars privately for 2017 and beyond, Cyan Racing clarified that all Volvo IP – including chassis, engines and panels – had to be shipped to Sweden at the conclusion of the season.[80][81]

Two podiums in two events followed for McLaughlin in Perth and Winton.[82] After power steering issues for Moffat in Darwin and a collision for McLaughlin with Dale Wood in Townsville, at least one car finished in the top ten in the four races across Ipswich and Eastern Creek – although Moffat was denied a strong finish in Race 19 after spinning Shane van Gisbergen.[83][84][85]

For the endurance races, McLaughlin was joined by former team-mate Wall, whilst GRM protégé James Golding made his début alongside Moffat.[86] The Sandown 500 marked the series first "Retro Round", and both Volvos were re-liveried to honour their 1986 championship win – rookie Golding suffered a heavy puncture-induced crash at the end of the back straight on the opening lap, leading to a red flag, whilst McLaughlin and Wall finished 4th.[87][88][89] The throwback livery was retained for Bathurst, where McLaughlin qualified on the front row; however, Moffat suffered a fiery engine failure just past the 100-lap mark, whilst McLaughlin was taken out of contention in a controversial late-race crash involving Whincup and Tander.[90][91] Having reverted both cars back to the regular livery, McLaughlin and Wall rounded out the Enduro Cup with two podiums on the Gold Coast, whilst Moffat and Golding also scored a top-five finish in the first race – McLaughlin also gained viral notoriety during this event after he made an out-of-control pass on Mark Winterbottom.[92][93][94]

The S60s rounded out their tenure in V8 Supercars with top-ten finishes in all of the last six races, including two podiums for McLaughlin at Pukekohe.[95] McLaughlin's strong finish to the season saw him finish 3rd in the drivers' championship ahead of Lowndes, whilst Moffat finished 20th outright after two top-tens in the last three races – Garry Rogers Motorsport meanwhile claimed 3rd in the teams' championship, their best teams' championship result since 2010.[96]

Aftermath

Following the conclusion of the 2016 season, two of the three chassis used in the Volvo program – as well as the associated Volvo componentry – were sent to Sweden. One bare chassis remained in Australia as a reserve for GRM, whilst the other two cars went into Volvo and Cyan Racing's museum collections in Gothenburg.[97]

Having run Holden Commodore VFs in the first season of Car of the Future regulations in 2013, GRM reverted to the Commodores for the 2017 season.[98] Scott McLaughlin was poached by DJR Team Penske following Volvo's exit, and he was replaced with former GRM driver Garth Tander.[99][100]

In 2024, GRM director Barry Rogers claimed that the project had been set back by culture clashes between Volvo Sweden and the "ocker-type" GRM outfit, and that both sides were "protective" of their IP. Both parties however admitted that Volvo Cars in Australia had benefitted from the program, with a 62% increase in vehicle sales in the first half of 2014.[101][102]

Complete V8 Supercars results

No. 33 car

V8 Supercars results
Year Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 Pos. Pts
2014 New Zealand Scott McLaughlin ADE
R1

7
ADE
R2

2
ADE
R3

Ret
SYM
R4

5
SYM
R5

4
SYM
R6

6
WIN
R7

Ret
WIN
R8

25
WIN
R9

16
PUK
R10

8
PUK
R11

6
PUK
R12

3
PUK
R13

2
BAR
R14

1
BAR
R15

4
BAR
R16

17
HID
R17

4
HID
R18

5
HID
R19

8
TOW
R20

6
TOW
R21

14
TOW
R22

9
QLD
R23

3
QLD
R24

19
QLD
R25

19
SMP
R26

Ret
SMP
R27

Ret
SMP
R28

1
SAN
R29

8
BAT
R30

17
SUR
R31

7
SUR
R32

2
PHI
R33

1
PHI
R34

6
PHI
R35

1
SYD
R36

4
SYD
R37

3
SYD
R38

8
5th 2509
France Alexandre Prémat 30th 522
2015 New Zealand Scott McLaughlin ADE
R1

DNS
ADE
R2

9
ADE
R3

18
SYM
R4

Ret
SYM
R5

9
SYM
R6

7
BAR
R7

11
BAR
R8

Ret
BAR
R9

18
WIN
R10

25
WIN
R11

9
WIN
R12

9
HID
R13

Ret
HID
R14

9
HID
R15

11
TOW
R16

4
TOW
R17

Ret
QLD
R18

2
QLD
R19

9
QLD
R20

13
SMP
R21

8
SMP
R22

4
SMP
R23

5
SAN
R24

14
BAT
R25

5
SUR
R26

21
SUR
R27

6
PUK
R28

9
PUK
R29

3
PUK
R30

6
PHI
R31

3
PHI
R32

2
PHI
R33

2
SYD
R34

8
SYD
R35

5
SYD
R36

19
8th 2205
France Alexandre Prémat 35th 492
2016 New Zealand Scott McLaughlin ADE
R1

4
ADE
R2

4
ADE
R3

12
SYM
R4

26
SYM
R5

4
PHI
R6

1
PHI
R7

1
BAR
R8

11
BAR
R9

2
WIN
R10

2
WIN
R11

11
HID
R12

10
HID
R13

7
TOW
R14

24
TOW
R15

5
QLD
R16

15
QLD
R17

6
SMP
R18

5
SMP
R19

6
SAN
R20

4
BAT
R21

15
SUR
R22

2
SUR
R23

3
PUK
R24

3
PUK
R25

7
PUK
R26

7
PUK
R27

3
SYD
R28

4
SYD
R29

5
3rd 2806
Australia David Wall 29th 602

No. 34 car

V8 Supercars results
Year Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 Pos. Pts
2014 Sweden Robert Dahlgren ADE
R1

21
ADE
R2

23
ADE
R3

Ret
SYM
R4

20
SYM
R5

16
SYM
R6

23
WIN
R7

Ret
WIN
R8

24
WIN
R9

24
PUK
R10

22
PUK
R11

Ret
PUK
R12

21
PUK
R13

23
BAR
R14

24
BAR
R15

24
BAR
R16

21
HID
R17

23
HID
R18

18
HID
R19

Ret
TOW
R20

19
TOW
R21

22
TOW
R22

22
QLD
R23

23
QLD
R24

22
QLD
R25

16
SMP
R26

19
SMP
R27

Ret
SMP
R28

DNS
SAN
R29

17
BAT
R30

Ret
SUR
R31

13
SUR
R32

17
PHI
R33

22
PHI
R34

23
PHI
R35

21
SYD
R36

18
SYD
R37

18
SYD
R38

Ret
25th 921
Australia Greg Ritter 46th 234
2015 Australia David Wall ADE
R1

17
ADE
R2

15
ADE
R3

16
SYM
R4

20
SYM
R5

20
SYM
R6

Ret
BAR
R7

23
BAR
R8

22
BAR
R9

21
WIN
R10

21
WIN
R11

19
WIN
R12

18
HID
R13

15
HID
R14

17
HID
R15

20
TOW
R16

18
TOW
R17

22
QLD
R18

22
QLD
R19

19
QLD
R20

20
SMP
R21

22
SMP
R22

20
SMP
R23

23
SAN
R24

21
BAT
R25

Ret
SUR
R26

16
SUR
R27

Ret
PUK
R28

18
PUK
R29

22
PUK
R30

20
PHI
R31

23
PHI
R32

23
PHI
R33

15
SYD
R34

19
SYD
R35

19
SYD
R36

17
23rd 1118
New Zealand Chris Pither driver switched teams 48th‡ 264‡
2016 Australia James Moffat ADE
R1

17
ADE
R2

15
ADE
R3

22
SYM
R4

20
SYM
R5

16
PHI
R6

7
PHI
R7

15
BAR
R8

14
BAR
R9

17
WIN
R10

26
WIN
R11

19
HID
R12

Ret
HID
R13

10
TOW
R14

17
TOW
R15

19
QLD
R16

9
QLD
R17

11
SMP
R18

12
SMP
R19

18
SAN
R20

Ret
BAT
R21

Ret
SUR
R22

5
SUR
R23

12
PUK
R24

20
PUK
R25

14
PUK
R26

12
PUK
R27

10
SYD
R28

24
SYD
R29

10
20th 1419
Australia James Golding 52nd 180
  • ‡ – Includes points scored with other teams.

The Volvo S60 V8 Supercar appeared as a playable vehicle in Forza Motorsport 6 alongside other V8 Supercar models from the 2015 season.[103]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The vehicles' first race win came in the non-championship 2014 V8 Supercars Challenge at Albert Park, but this is not counted towards its' official statistics.[2]

References

  1. ^ "The 650-hp Volvo engine for V8 Supercars by Cyan Racing". Cyan Racing on YouTube. 16 September 2018.
  2. ^ a b "McLaughlin hands Volvo maiden V8 win". Speedcafe. 16 March 2014.
  3. ^ "Volvo S60 V8SC". Volvo Polestar Racing. Retrieved 27 November 2024.
  4. ^ Noonan, Aaron. "The New Generation of V8 Supercars". V8Supercars.com.au. V8 Supercars Australia. Archived from the original on 21 January 2013. Retrieved 19 February 2013.
  5. ^ Gunther, Briar (29 March 2010). "Car of the Future released". V8Supercars.com.au. BigPond Sport. Archived from the original on 1 April 2010. Retrieved 19 February 2013.
  6. ^ Bartholomaeus, Stefan (22 February 2013). "Nissan and Mercedes teams to debut with power deficit". SpeedCafe.com. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
  7. ^ "Volvo Cars to join Australian V8 Supercars Championship". Volvo Cars. 17 June 2013.
  8. ^ "Volvo Car Australia Joins V8 Supercars". V8 Supercars. 17 June 2013.
  9. ^ "Saturday Sleuthing: the Aussie-Built Volvo 240". V8 Supercars. 3 June 2016.
  10. ^ "V8 team boss confirms Chrysler interest". Sydney Morning Herald. 30 January 2012.
  11. ^ "HOW CHRYSLER SPARKED GRM'S VOLVO SUPERCARS DEAL". V8 Sleuth. 17 November 2021.
  12. ^ "FAQs: Volvo and V8 Supercars". V8 Supercars. 17 June 2013.
  13. ^ "Polestar Seeks Driveability for Volvo V8". V8 Supercars. 18 June 2013.
  14. ^ "Volvo reveals V8 Supercars engine". Racecar Engineering. 11 February 2014.
  15. ^ "Volvo V8 Supercar Pure Sound Compilation - Trackside and Onboard". TassieLorenzo on YouTube. 27 September 2017.
  16. ^ "Volvo S60 V8 Supercar Makes its Debut". V8 Supercars. 13 February 2014.
  17. ^ "Robert Dahlgren gets Volvo V8 Supercars seat". Autosport. 16 January 2014.
  18. ^ "The champion who begged for Volvo Supercars seat". V8 Sleuth. 8 November 2023.
  19. ^ "Look out for #34". V8 Supercars. 20 August 2014.
  20. ^ "Special investigation shows V8 Supercar engines are evenly matched". Fox Sports. 3 May 2014.
  21. ^ a b "McLaughlin's cheeky ploy to hide Volvo's speed advantage". V8 Sleuth. 5 August 2020.
  22. ^ "McLaughlin shines at Clipsal". New Zealand Herald. 1 March 2014.
  23. ^ "Mclaughlin vs Whincup Awesome Finish! - 2014 Clipsal 500". AusMotorsportMadness on YouTube. 1 March 2014.
  24. ^ "McLaughlin: Clipsal 2014 changed my life". V8 Supercars. 21 February 2015.
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  27. ^ "Engine test centres on gravity". V8 Supercars. 9 April 2014.
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  31. ^ "McLaughlin on pole for Pukekohe feature". Radio New Zealand. 27 April 2014.
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  35. ^ "Nissan GT driver confirmed for V8 enduros". Speedcafe. 27 May 2014. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  36. ^ "Whincup and Dumbrell defend Sandown 500 title". Motorsport.com. 14 September 2014.
  37. ^ "McLaughlin emotional after race ending crash". V8 Supercars. 14 October 2014.
  38. ^ "From Shane van Gisbergen's dead stop to Scott McLaughlin hitting the wall, Bathurst was full of heartache". Daily Telegraph. 12 October 2014.
  39. ^ "Redemption for Tekno with Gold Coast victory". Speedcafe. 25 October 2014. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  40. ^ "Victory secures Pirtek Enduro Cup for Whincup/Dumbrell". Speedcafe. 26 October 2014. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  41. ^ "McLaughlin holds off Lowndes for Race 33 victory". Speedcafe. 15 November 2014.
  42. ^ "Scott McLaughlin wins Phillip Island V8 Supercars race as Garth Tander runs out of fuel". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 16 November 2014.
  43. ^ "McLaughlin takes pole position for final V8SC race of 2014". Motorsport.com. 7 December 2014.
  44. ^ "Volvo confirms Dahlgren's V8 Supercars exit". Speedcafe. 21 November 2014.
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  47. ^ "David Wall to pilot Volvo's second V8 Supercar in 2015, replacing Robert Dahlgren". Fox Sports. 27 November 2014.
  48. ^ "2015 Volvo Polestar Racing V8 Supercar revealed". Practical Motoring. 6 February 2015.
  49. ^ "Volvo livery unleashed on team video". V8 Supercars. 6 February 2015.
  50. ^ "David Wall: Paid, not pay driver". V8 Supercars. 1 December 2014.
  51. ^ "Volvo considers adding cars in 2015". V8 Supercars. 4 August 2014.
  52. ^ "Volvo to field four S60s in 2015 V8 Supercars Championship". motornews.co.nz. 8 September 2014.
  53. ^ "Volvo wants more speed not more cars". V8 Supercars. 20 October 2014.
  54. ^ "EREBUS' LOST VOLVO DEAL LED TO HOLDSWORTH'S EXIT". V8 Sleuth. 27 January 2021.
  55. ^ "Bad luck for Volvo's Scott McLaughlin as his car catches fire on the warm up lap". Adelaide Advertiser. 28 February 2015.
  56. ^ "Craig Lowndes leads lights to flag to score career win No. 99". Fox Sports. 29 March 2015.
  57. ^ "Chris Pither replaces injured David Wall at Volvo for Melbourne". Touring Car Times. 10 March 2015.
  58. ^ "Scott McLaughlin secures pole for Volvo and Garry Rogers Motorsport". Fox Sports. 12 July 2015.
  59. ^ "McLaughlin deflated by mechanical woes". Speedcafe. 14 July 2015.
  60. ^ "Scott McLaughlin hoping Volvo reliability problems won't travel with him to Ipswich". Herald Sun. 29 July 2015.
  61. ^ "Mark Winterbottom wins both races at V8 Supercars in Ipswich". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 1 August 2015.
  62. ^ "Scott McLaughlin "We are back on board"". autodeadline.com.au. 24 August 2015.
  63. ^ "GRM confirms Chris Pither for Pirtek Enduro Cup". Speedcafe. 11 May 2015.
  64. ^ "Prodrive scores one-two in Sandown 500". Speedcafe. 13 September 2015.
  65. ^ "Craig Lowndes takes his sixth win at the 2015 Bathurst 1000". Touring Car Times. 11 October 2015.
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