CHANCING upon a silver Rolls Royce crawling with snakes, waltzing around the Italian countryside sandwiched between million-dollar automobiles and designing winning racing cars—Mohinder ‘Chubi’ Lalwani has done it all. The Big Daddy of Vijay Mallya’s vintage wheels, likes racing cars more—he can still smell the burning tyres on the Sholavaram racing circuit, when he raced alongside F1 steward Nazir Oosein. In fact, Lalwani didn’t care that the Prince of Wales toured Canada in a Buick or the fact that a Darracq looked like a horse carriage until he met Mallya. This was in 1980, when Mallya prepared to race a 911 Porsche at Sholavaram, only to find that its oil cooler was acting up. ‘‘I told him that it meant instant death if we opened up the damn thing right there, so I worked on it later in Kolkata,’’ recalls Lalwani. The deal was that Lalwani would fix the engine if Mallya would sponsor his car at the rallies, and the duo soon set up a team. He admits Mallya is a wizard behind the wheel. ‘‘He’s a good driver and learns fast. He’s also got great coordination skills,’’ he says. Remembering the time when a mechanic went into panic when Mallya hadn’t practised driving on a 1898 Mors he says, ‘‘You need four hands to drive that car, because it has more levers and hand brakes than anything I’ve seen.’’ The nouveau driver in question mastered the machine 15 minutes before the annual London-Brighton run. Incidentally, the carriage-like car was considered a menace with a max speed of four mph! While he’s pored over volumes of literature on vintage cars, racing has been Lalwani’s calling since the ’80s. ‘‘I still prefer modern racing cars,’’ he says. His last Indian project was a convertible called San Storm. He’s also designed 12 racing cars for a racing school in Chennai. ‘‘It’s not frightening, but it’s quick,’’ Lalwani says of the machine that’s fitted with a Maruti 800 engine. More recently, he designed a single-seater Formula Maruti for a track at Coimbatore. There’s still a long road ahead before the 63-year-old takes a break.