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Video: Historic Motorsport is Dangerous


Get Ready for Big Bad Sandown this November

Gear: 2013 Motorsport Retro / Cahier Archive Classic Formula 1 Calendar

Video: Dirty Old Times

Photo Gallery: Trophées Historiques de Bourgogne 2012

Auction Review: 1958 Benelli 248cc Grand Prix Racing Motorcycle

Photo of the day: 1968 McLaren M6B

Video: The story of Phil Hill and his love of racing photography


Video: Tiff Needell Tests the Lotus 49

Not So Famous: The Original Beechey Holden Monaro

Video: India’s Formula 1 Racing history

For Sale: 1954 Lancia D24

Video: Vintage Motocross with Jamie and Wes on RideApart

Illustrations: Freehand technical drawings by Peter Hutton

Retro Gear: 8380 Laboratories’ Can-Am ’73 Unbesiegt

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CanAm73

“If you can make black marks on a straight from the time you turn out of a corner until the braking point of the next turn, then you have enough power.”

The CanAm series was home for the wildest of the wild, and in the early ’70s Mark Donohue and Penske Racing’s 1973 Porsche 917/30 was the wildest of them all. It took the pair two races to really get going, but from Watkins Glen they won every race in the series and took the drivers’ championship.

CanAm73

This stunning design comes from our talented friends at 8380 Laboratories, and celebrates that magical CanAm pairing. It’s bold, clean and beautiful; everything a great t-shirt design should be.

Check it out at their official site here, where you can put in a pre-order for a t-shirt or a hoodie featuring the design.

Via 8380 Laboratories

Images via 8380 Laboratories

Retro Gear: 8380 Laboratories’ Can-Am ’73 Unbesiegt is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.


Video: The 2012 Goodwood Revival In Super8

Photo Gallery and Report: The Vintage Sportscar Club Autumn Sprint Goodwood

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VSCC Goodwood

If you had turned up at Goodwood Circuit, in West Sussex UK, on the 27th of October, you might of thought that is was a museum car race outing on the classic old  circuit. But this is the annual visit to Goodwood for the VSCC for the Autumn Sprint.

Mind you would be forgiven for the mistake. Cars like the 1907 Wolseley Wolsit Coppa Florio, a fantastic name for any car, a car in the non-automobile engined Edwardian class, on a timed lap around the circuit. The most modern car on the circuit was a Riley 12 from 1940. All the cars are privately owned and are normally driven by the owner too.

Goodwood is a fitting place for these vintage machines, very little has changed and the daunting high speed curves remain. This was a very cold autumn meeting, a bright day with the sun very low in the sky adding to the drivers problems and adding a focus to their high speed runs. There might have been a number of mechanical failures (although surprisingly few for cars this old), but no cars crashed. Of course this is a sprint event, so the drivers could concentrate on their cars and line around the circuit to aim for the fastest lap.

Tim Surman

Images by Tim Surman

Via the VSCC

Photo Gallery and Report: The Vintage Sportscar Club Autumn Sprint Goodwood is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Video: Against All Odds Datsun 510 BRE Racing

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“I try to go as fast as I can and be smooth, and if I have to get a little unsmooth occasionally I’m perfectly willing to do that.”

In the late ’60s and early ’70s, the Trans American Challenge Series was in its plucky, grassroots glory days, with top drivers duking it out fender to fender and completely sideways in production sedans.

This video follows John Morton, the Datsun team and their Datsun 510 as they do battle with defending champions Alfa Romeo in attempt to usurp the title. It’s classic racing at its best, and a brilliant watch!

 

Video: Against All Odds Datsun 510 BRE Racing is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Video: Adrian Newey drives Leyton House March and 2009 Red Bull RB6

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Red Bull Racing’s Chief Technical Officer Adrian Newey recently had the unique opportunity to get behind the wheel of two F1 cars, born twenty years apart. Both the 1990 Leyton House March and 2012 Red Bull  RB6 were penned by the designer and his engineering teams during very different eras of the sport and they provided very different experiences.

 

Video: Adrian Newey drives Leyton House March and 2009 Red Bull RB6 is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Huge Field of Historic Racers Set for Tasman Revival Feature

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Tasman Revival Feature Race

We’ve reached the point where we can count the number of sleeps until the 2012 Tasman Revival on our fingers, and the Sunday feature events are looking brilliant.

The event kicks off on Friday the 23rd of November and builds up to a massive Sunday of feature events for all historic classes.

The namesake feature event, the Tasman Revival race, will bring together a grid of more than forty ’60s racing cars for a spectacular and hotly-contested fifteen-lap race.

Tasman Revival Feature Event

The storied racers from Brabham, McLaren, Chevron, Elfin and more can lap the classic circuit in around the same time as a modern V8 Supercar, and there’s no holding back when it comes to the racing. We can’t wait!

Read on and head to www.tasmanrevival.com for more info, and make sure to join in on the discussion on Facebook here.

Via The Tasman Revival

Images via The Tasman Revival

Huge Grid Set for Tasman Revival Feature Event

A grid of over 40 1960s racing cars is set to contest the Tasman Revival race at Sydney Motor Sport Park on the Sunday of the three day meeting.

Stephen Knox OAM, chairman of the HSRCA’s Tasman Revival committee said this year’s Tasman Revival race over 15 laps will be the most fiercely contested race for single seat racing cars seen in this part of the world for more than 30 years. Looking at the grid make-up, there is any one of around 15 car and driver combinations capable of winning the event.  With over 40 cars to make up the grid, not since the heady days of the 1960s and ‘70s were so many purpose built racing cars competing in the one race, it will make an incredible spectacle. Mr. Knox went on to say that Australian champion Frank Matich who is the Patron of the Meeting will be watching closely as many of the cars he competed against will be in the race.

Unfortunately, twice winner of the event John Smith is unable to attend and as a result the Lotus 49 will not be competing. John is slowly recovering from serious spinal injuries, the result of a recent motorbike accident in the US.

Amongst the estimated 15 cars capable of top rung on the podium, is the Brabham BT31 of Peter Strauss.  This very quick car was (Sir) Jack Brabham’s for the Tasman Series in 1969, powered by a Repco Brabham 2.5 litre V8, a close relative to the engine that carried Jack in 1966 and Denny Hulme in 1967 to F1 World Championships. From NZ comes Murray Sinclair with a Brabham BT29 powered by a Cosworth FVC, a larger variant of the FVA which is a 4-valve engine producing over 235bhp from 1600cc. At least one FVA engined car is expected to be on the podium and with such a diversity of marques including Brabham, McLaren, Chevron, and Elfin it will be very difficult to pick a winner. Amongst the drivers competing will be Bob Cracknell, the Chairman of the CAMS Historic Commission, in an Elfin 600. Chris Farrell will be hard to beat, his Brabham BT30 is a very quick as is Chris himself. Debutant Tasman Revival competitor, Damon Hancock in the family’s Brabham BT23 has shown tremendous form in recent times and will definitely be close to the front. Ray Stubber from WA drives a variety of cars, and has shown he is a real force to be reckoned with in the Brabham BT29. Dark horse for the event is Richard Carter who was the 1976 TAA Formula Ford Driver toEuropewinner, and has never been quicker in his Elfin Mono twin-cam.

Concurrently with these very quick cars will be the pre-1965 category of around a dozen cars. Again the winner here could come from any one of 6 cars. Ed Holly’s Brabham BT6 has dominated this category in recent times, but Peter Studer in his Lotus 32 all the way from Switzerland, Adam Berryman with Bruce McLaren’s Cooper T70, Scotty Taylor’s Cooper T53 and Don Thallon’s Cooper T53 will all make for a spirited early category race within the main event, especially as the last three cars are powered by 2.5 Coventry Climax engines.

The Tasman Revival race is an incredible spectacle.  These cars all lap theS ydney Motor Sport Park complex in about the same time as a V8 supercar. They do this with no aero aids, relying on mechanical grip from the tyres and suspension set-up alone. They accelerate to 100mph in around 7 seconds from a standing start and will attain speeds of around 165 miles per hour (265 kph) down the main straight. They invariably weigh under 450 Kg and the more powerful have around 300bhp on tap.

More information can be found at www.tasmanrevival.com and you can join in the discussions on Facebook at www.facebook.com/hsrca and Twitter at www.twitter.com/hsrca.

Huge Field of Historic Racers Set for Tasman Revival Feature is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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