Famous members include Colin Chapman, Eric Broadley, Adrian Reynard, Arthur Mallock, Derek Bennett, Tony Southgate, Brian Hart, Gordon Murray, Jem Marsh, Frank Costin and Mike Pilbeam.
These engineers and designers produced the first Lotus, Lola, Chevron, Speedex, Marcos, Pilbeam and other sports and racing cars between the 1940s and 1960s.
Joining the club in 2020, the Alfa Romeo Championship caters for all types of the marques cars, classified in three categories - Modified, Power Trophy and Twin Spark Cup.
Primarily a motor racing community for Service personnel and veterans, AFRC rewards consistency as well as outright pace and achieved championship status in 2017.
There is championship status for 2019 and classes catering for all four-cylinder, six-cylinder and differing levels of M-powered cars.
Three classes separated by power to weight allow the vast majority of cars to be eligible, with outputs monitored by 750MC's own mobile rolling road.
The championship previously known as Formula Jedi joined the 750 Motor Club in 2019 and has established itself as the premier bike-engined, single-seater category in the UK and provides some of the fastest lap times in the country.
Re-launched in 2016 to follow on from the original, but now with power-to-weight rather than capacity class limits to ensure costs are tightly controlled.
All cars use the 1,300 cc (79.3 cu in) Ford Crossflow engine mated to a 4-speed Escort or 4/5-speed Sierra Type 9 gearbox.
[8] Formerly known as simply 'RGB' (Roadgoing Bike-engined), the highly competitive championship was re-launched in 2018 to reflect what the cars had developed into over the years.