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Interview

My life in cars: Jamie Chadwick

The W Series champ and Indy NXT racer talks us through her car history

Published: 02 Aug 2023

I grew up on a bit of a farm, so when I was a lot younger we had a Land Rover Defender, which is what I first learnt to drive in. I’d do the gears sat on my dad’s lap and turn the steering wheel.

Then I had the cliché story really where I fell into motorsport by accident. My parents didn’t race themselves or anything like that. It was my older brother that dragged the family go-karting for the first time at our local track (Castle Combe) and I quite quickly followed him into it.

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Initially I wasn’t as quick as him. I think I just enjoyed the buzz and the whole atmosphere of go-karting, but it didn’t take me long to pick up that competitive sibling rivalry.

I graduated into racing cars quite a long time before I had a road licence. I started with Ginetta Juniors and won the Ginetta Junior scholarship when I was 14.

Then, when I was 16, I progressed into British GT with Aston Martin. I was racing a V8 Vantage before I could legally drive on the road. It was a bit of a culture shock when I took my road licence test at 17.

I took my test in what was my first car – a Volkswagen Polo. I passed first time, but I was surprised actually. I got a bit carried away because you normally have to wait four or five months to get a slot, but there was a cancellation for two weeks’ time so I thought ‘perfect, I’ll just book that and have a load of lessons between now and then’.

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Then of course it turned out that my instructor had gone on holiday and would only get back the day before my test. So, I basically had to run through everything the day before the test – I still haven’t properly learnt to park – and then I blagged my way through most of it.

I was prepared for the abuse I was going to get when I failed - I’d have to tell all of my friends and family that I’d failed first time.

After the Polo my second car was a Golf GTD. It was actually a really great car to be fair to it. In terms of what I used it for it was perfect – it churns out miles and is very comfortable.

It kept me going reasonable speeds on the road too, nothing outrageous. When you’re used to driving race cars on a track and then switch to driving on the road, especially in something like a Golf GTD for a couple of hundred miles, it’s never the most interesting journey. 

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I don’t really have a road car at the moment. I have a Renault Twizy that I drive in London, but I’m travelling so much that I get loan cars every now and then. So it’s a bit of an easier life. And then whatever rental car I seem to get given, but it's always 10 times the size of what I need in America.

The nice thing about my job is I’m fortunate enough to be loaned cars quite often – particularly by Aston in the past. A few years ago, when I’d just passed my test, I managed to somehow blag my way into a Vanquish for a bit. Although I think if I ran an Aston daily I’d live in a fuel station.

In terms of the future there’s a lot to be excited about at the moment. A lot of the cars that are being electrified are quite cool. As much as it takes away a bit of the excitement of driving, I think it is quite cool to see how the technology is developing so rapidly and how fast the tech is changing. Saying that though, my dream garage would definitely have a golden oldie in there…

Jamie’s dream three car garage

Porsche 911 Singer DLS
Having spent a lot of time at Williams, the Singer is something that I’d have in a heartbeat – if money were no object. The price tag is pretty scary. I think when I’ve got £1.8m to throw away that’ll be the first car I get.

Land Rover Defender
I'd need something a bit more practical, so I'd go for a Defender. Something you can fit bikes in. 

Land Rover Defender 110

Aston Martin Valkyrie
Once it’s launched that would definitely be in there. I’m still working on trying to convince Aston to let me get behind the wheel – I wouldn’t even want to imagine the insurance cost on that.

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