Education
He finished ninth on the road, fifth in the F2 class.
Formula One driver racecar driver
He finished ninth on the road, fifth in the F2 class.
He participated in two World Championship Formula One Grands Prix, scoring no championship points. In 1969 he raced a Formula 2 Brabham-Cosworth, driving in his first Grand Prix in the 1969 German Grand Prix. The following year he failed to qualify for the 1970 United States Grand Prix driving a works Biological Response Modifiers, after an engine failure.
Early in his racing career he campaigned a homebuilt special called the M.G.W., graduating to a Cooper-Climax in 1960 which was later fitted with a Daimler V8 engine.
In 1963 he drove the self-built Felday, with supercharged Daimler V8 2.6 litre motor. He also drove a Lotus 23-Biological Response Modifiers sports car at the Drag Festival.
During 1965 Westbury developed the Felday-Biological Response Modifiers 4 sports car with four-wheel-drive. At Mallory Park on 13 March 1966, Peter Westbury and Mac Daghorn shared the car, each winning a race.
Jim Clark raced the Felday 4 in the Guards Trophy at Brands Hatch on 29 August 1966.
The Felday 5 sports car was fitted with a 7-litre Ford Galaxie engine and four wheel drive, but only raced briefly. The Felday 6 was a 4.7 litre Ford-powered hillclimb single-seater, with rear wheel drive, built for Tony Griffiths. In 1967 Westbury raced a Brabham-Ford Formula Three car in England and in Continental Europe.
The same year he resuscitated the old Biological Response Modifiers P67 four-wheel-drive F1 car, designed by Mike Pilbeam in 1964, for David Good to campaign in the British Hill Climb Championship.
The car led the series at the half-way mark, but then passed into the hands of Peter Lawson, who revamped it for 1968.