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Video: Monsters of hillclimb

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Monster Porsche HillclimbThe idea of this video is to celebrate overpowered cars that are hard to control on the hillclimb. We approve.

Watch as a top-notch collection of Euro and Japanese hardware takes to the hills, more often than not in completely sideways fashion. It’s actually a preview for the Bergmonsters 2012 DVD, the name of which translates to either “Monsters of Hillclimb” or “Beasts of Hillclimb”. Either way, the shoe certainly fits!

Video: Monsters of hillclimb is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.


Video: Recreating the Lightweight Jag

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Jaguar E Type A brilliant in-depth look at one man’s passion for vintage racing, and his Jaguar.

With spectacular production quality typical of Petrolicious, this clip seeks to tell the story of Jason Len and his 1964 Jaguar E-Type, which he has spent four decades racing. The car is now a form of tribute to the ultra-rare factory Lightweight E-Type that raced at Le Mans, which as Jason explains is just part of the appeal of vintage motorsport. Jason talks of racing against big-block Corvettes, as well as the thrills and downfalls of the Jaguar chassis. It’s a great video and the sound of that straight-six engine is just magical, enjoy.

via: Petrolicious

Video: Recreating the Lightweight Jag is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Dakar 1988: The year the winning car was stolen – during the race!

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MSR Dakar finish Kankk Todt Vat milk Peugeot AH…and they still won. You won’t believe this happened!
Ari Vatanen is Mr Dakar Rally. He is the most successful racer in the car category with four wins. But as well as the ‘straightforward’ – if there is such a thing on the famously demanding rally raid – Vatanen has also experienced the downside of the event’s deserved reputation for the unexpected

The Dakar Rally is news every January, and has been since it first running 35 years ago from Paris in late December 1978 through Africa to its Dakar destination in the New Year. Adventurer Thierry Sabine’s brainchild was an instant success with not only motorsport-starved fans, but also with the newspapers and TV attracted by the spectacle and the danger of such a challenging, beautiful ‘race’.

By 1987, the manufacturers and superstars had arrived, as the marketing possibilities of winning the famous Paris-Dakar Rally Raid grew and grew. Peugeot had chosen to take on the event instead channeling its funds elsewhere. The event was newsworthy for a different reason though. Besides Peugeot’s debut, it was the first of the Dakar rallies to be run without its founder, Sabine, who lost his life in a helicopter crash on the race in 1986.

Right from the start in Paris, it was all about one man, 1981 World Rally Champion Ari Vatanen. Only 18 months before, the Finn had been in hospital on life support following a nasty crash on a world championship event in Argentina.

Now he was facing the most grueling motorsport event in the world – and he won – and beat a personal demon that had haunted him since his crash and extended hospital stay. See the previous Motorsport Retro story HERE.

Dakar RallyIf winning on his return in ’87 wasn’t headline-grabbing enough, nobody could have predicted what was due to unfold the following year. Peugeot had three works 205 T16s Vatanen being joined by a fellow Finnish world champion, Juha Kankkunen, and ex-Formula 1 driver and sportscar ace Henri Pescarolo.

While Vatanen dominated, the rally itself drew worldwide criticism, as the list of fatalities grew quickly, made worse by many of them being locals struck as the rally sped through their home regions. Even the Official Vatican newspaper got involved, condemning the race a “vulgar display of power and wealth in places where men continue to die of hunger and thirst.”

The politics were never far away – one of the reasons the event is now based in South America and not Africa.

Vatanen continued to do what he did best. Lead from the front, combining speed with caution. With victory in sight, and enough spares for Peuegot to fix almost anything the car could encounter, came the event’s most bizarre turn of events and the ensuing headline:

MSR Vatanen McKlein Photo AH“Vatanen’s car stolen”

They had parked in a football stadium where the locals, in amazement, could observe the cars at the end of the day’s leg. Vatanen and co-driver Bruno Berglund ate in the caravan campsite and retired to their sleeping bags and tents. They woke to find their leading car was missing, last seen being driven out of the compound during the night.

MSR Ari- no car Photo Bachelet AHJean Todt, then Peugeot team principal, revealed that he had been contacted and the ‘kidnappers’ demanded around US$90,000 for its return. The thoroughbred machine was found intact and undamaged, and returned to the parc fermé, with minutes to spare, the crew climbed aboard and set off for what would have been Vatanen’s second consecutive win.

The drama was not over though. Having not been at the start 30 mins before their scheduled departure time, the officials deliberated the Peugeot driver’s case, and decided Vatanen had broken the rules and was thrown out of the rally, handing victory to team-mate Kankkunen.

Without that glitch caused by the robbers, Vatanen would have won five in a row. Kankkunen, was not happy with his inherited win or the circumstances of the whole competition – especially the loss of life on the event. Struggling with the moral dilemma, he did not want to take part in the victory celebrations, but reluctantly he did after for the media throng and the estimated crowd of 50,000. Even before the calamity of his team-mate’s he declared: “I feel very sad about the way the race is going. People are taking too many risks. In January next year I plan to be somewhere on the other side of the world.”

Special thanks to Peugeot Sport and McKlein Photography

Dakar 1988: The year the winning car was stolen – during the race! is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Ford Customline 1955-59: In its prime before prime-time

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The Shannons Club

Ford Customline

Image: Chevron Publishing

Sold in Australia from 1952 to 1959, and cleverly adapted by Ford Australia for the local market, Ford’s Customline came out strong with a class-leading V8, luxurious interior, great price and good looks. And it quickly became a local motorsport hero.

Read about what made the big Ford such a special car in Australia’s motoring history, in Ford Customline 1955-59: In its prime before prime-time at the Shannons Club.

Image: Chevron Publishing

Thanks to the Shannons Club

Ford Customline 1955-59: In its prime before prime-time is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Widescreen: The best of Goodwood 2013

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resize_9270449114_ee7c646c3e_oAn impressive display drool-worthy nostalgic hardware.

If you’re a Motorsport Retro reader then you probably already know that Goodwood is awesome, for a whole host of reasons. One of the most significant of those reasons is of course the unbelievable collection of classic racing machinery which rolls out into the light. Some are parked, some are driven, some are raced and some are crashed, but all are appreciated. Take a look at some of the cars on static display thanks to Egarage.

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Widescreen: The best of Goodwood 2013 is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Video: McLaren GTR vs Group C & CanAm

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McLaren F1 GTR 1997 The McLaren F1 GTR won at Le Mans in 2005, but does it have the grunt to keep up with a field of Group C and CanAm greats?

Back in the day McLaren were responsible for some of the best CanAm cars around. Machines like the 8.8L M8F and the like were rocketships of the 1970s, sporting massive displacement and huge HP for a wild ride that only the bravest of drivers would dare. 20 years later in the mid 1990s, and McLaren were campaigning what would become their most iconic Sportscar, the F1 GTR. Each were incredible pieces of engineering in their own right, but what would happen if were each were to be on-track at the same time? Shot at Spa, that’s exactly what this video shows.

The F1 GTR featured in this clip is a later shape, “long tail” chassis built in 1997. It was driven by J Lehto and Soper as part of the factory BMW Motorsport Team, and in that year actually won at Spa whilst racing in the FIA GT Championship, as well as winning three other rounds to place 2nd overall in the season.

Fast forward a little over 15 years and this clip again sees the F1 GTR return to Spa, racing in the 6 hour Trans-Atlantic Prototype Challenge. Behind the wheel this time is Ralf Kelleners, an experienced driver who took out the GT2 class at the 24 Hour of Le Mans in 1996. Kelleners has also raced at Le Mans in the GT1 class, LMGTP, LMP675 and LMP900, however never in the McLaren F1 GTR.

Enjoy this fantastic clip, (Spoiler alert) our favorite part is that the aforementioned M8F CanAm (driven by Peter Hoffmann) ran a fastest lap only 1.3 seconds slower than the F1 GTR!

Video: McLaren GTR vs Group C & CanAm is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Video: The story of Joakim Bonnier’s fatal crash Le Mans 1972

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1972 Le Mans crash This unique video tells the story of a fatal racing accident from a fellow driver’s perspective.

In this vintage video we see Vic Elford tell the story of the fateful day he raced Le Mans in 1972, the day which Joakim Bonnier lost his life between the Mulsanne Corner and Indianapolis. Bonnier had collided with the Ferrari Daytona of Florian Vetsch and been catapulted into the bushes, Elford was competing in the race when he came across the wreck. This is his tale of accounts.

Video: The story of Joakim Bonnier’s fatal crash Le Mans 1972 is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Photo of the Day: Dakar – Adventure of a Lifetime


Video: WRC ace + Mk2 Escort RS1800 = completely sideways

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Escort sidewaysEight time WRC rally winner Jari-Matti Latvala shows us just what his Ford Escort MkII RS BDA can do – and then some!

Watch as this beautiful Escort absolutely flies through the forests of Southern Finland, dancing it’s way through the trees – sliding over the gravel and through junctions with heart-stopping precision at seemingly impossible speeds. There can be no truer indication of the risks at hand than the express concerns of the co-driver, but have no fear – Jari-Matti is here. Select full screen, turn the sound up and relish all 10800 rpm that the singing BDA has to offer.

Video: WRC ace + Mk2 Escort RS1800 = completely sideways is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Video: Starting Ayrton Senna’s 1988 McLaren MP4-4

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Starting the McLaren MP4-4 (Ayrton Senna)Mechanics at McLaren fire up Senna’s MP4-4, which last raced in 1988.

If you enjoyed the clip demonstrating the start-up process of a 1990 March-Judd, chances are you’ll love this too. The former car of none-other than Ayrton Senna, this McLaren MP4-4 last raced in 1988 – the year in which he won his first Formula 1 World Championship. Naturally this car is an item that McLaren and it’s mechanics hold extremely dearly today, so it’s quite special that we are afforded the opportunity to watch them reacquainting themselves with what the team describes as “an old friend”.

Video: Starting Ayrton Senna’s 1988 McLaren MP4-4 is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Video: The dusty alter-ego of the Porsche 911

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Paris Dakar PorscheA seven-times Pikes Peak champion drives the Paris-Dakar winning 953 of Jacky Ickx.

Predecessor to the 959, the Porsche 953 was a purpose built version of the 911 constructed with the 1984 Paris-Dakar in mind. It used a manually controlled four-wheel-drive system which at the time was in testing for the 959, and boasted 300hp to it’s 2750lb (1247kg) weight. Jacky Ickx drove it to victory 30 years ago, and this video shows it being driven in the dirt again three decades later, this time by seven-time Pikes Peak Champion Jeff Zwart.

Video: The dusty alter-ego of the Porsche 911 is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Races to remember: 1984 Monaco GP

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Toleman 1984A torrential downpour, a controversial early finish, the breakthrough of Senna and the emergence of a legendary duel that would span seasons. This video captures the memory of a truly significant Formula 1 Grand Prix.

One user makes the comment “Even God couldn’t drive a flooded Monaco”. Enjoy these short highlights from the 1984 Monaco Grand Prix, as McLaren’s Alain Prost wins an eventful rain-shortened race ahead of Ayrton Senna’s Toleman. Prost would go on to win at Monaco three more times during his Formula 1 career, however it would be for the incredible efforts of Senna and the controversy that surrounded the finish that the 1984 Monaco GP would best be remembered.

Races to remember: 1984 Monaco GP is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Video: Onboard with Alesi, Monaco 1995

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Alesi_1995_Monaco_03_PHCHold your breath and take a flying lap around Monaco with Jean Alesi in 1995.

This thrilling video delivers a real sense of Formula 1 speed. Rewinding the clock a touch under two decades, it takes us back to Monaco of 1995. The event saw Alesi qualified 5th with a blistering Q1 time, however failed to finish after spinning half way through the race – Michael Schumacher took the honors, and the season.

Video: Onboard with Alesi, Monaco 1995 is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Races to Remember: The 1971 Indianapolis 500

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1971 Al Unser Indy 500Fantastic 1970s footage takes us back to the glory days of Indy.

Saturday May 29, 1971 saw the 55th 500 mile race of it’s kind run at Indianapolis. It was a wild event, beginning with the pace car speering into the photographer tower and injuring 29 people, and ending with Al Unser Senior taking his second consecutive win (pictured).

Enjoy this terrific video recap from the period:

Races to Remember: The 1971 Indianapolis 500 is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Photo of the day: Bugattis first (and last) F1 attempt

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Bugatti 1956 French GPThe 1956 French Grand Prix saw Bugatti make a brief appearance amongst the Formula 1 field. The car was called a Type 251, and featured a 2.5L dual-cam straight-8 which was mounted transversely behind the driver. Unfortunately the car was uncompetitive, handled poorly and was underpowered. The car looked and sounded fantastic, however driver Maurice Trintignant was forced to retire with throttle issues after 18 laps. Just 3 examples were built, and Bugatti was never seen in Formula 1 again.

Photo of the day: Bugattis first (and last) F1 attempt is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.


Video: Multi-cam footage takes us on a thrill ride around Sebring

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Lola T-70Just listen to that big block Chevrolet powered Lola roar!

This killer mash-up of multiple camera angles makes for an awesome piece of onboard Can-Am footage. Shot at the CFRSCCA Vintage Weekend at the iconic Sebring Raceway, the roar of the Lola Can-Am couldn’t be more fitting. This video was uploaded by Jim Pace Motorsports and features the Heritage Motorsports Lola T-70 Coupe Can-Am car, driven by a mystery driver known only has DHR.

Video: Multi-cam footage takes us on a thrill ride around Sebring is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Gallery: Senna Williams FW08C

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MHowell066Awesome gallery showcases the first F1 car Senna ever drove.

One of the most popular pieces we’ve ever published surrounded the video footage and story of Ayrton Senna’s first time behind the wheel of a Formula 1 car, testing at Donington Park. As many would no doubt remember, Senna tested for McLaren, Brabham and Williams before starting with Toleman. It was Williams for whom he tested first, and this was the very car in which he did it.

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MHowell001aPhotos: Motorsport Magazine

Gallery: Senna Williams FW08C is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Video: Tail of a Superbird

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SuperbirdBig wings, long noses, 440 cubes and a 200mph ticket. These are the things for which the Plymouth Superbird are remembered.

This cool video by Bandit Films takes us inside the workshop of Murray Markwell, a self confessed car nut from Australia who absolutely loves vintage Nascar culture. He owns and drives a very faithful recreation of the Plymouth Superbird that was famously banned from the banks because it’s aero made it simply too fast. This clip sees Murray talk about the car and how it fits into Nascar culture, before taking us for a ride. Enjoy.

Video: Tail of a Superbird is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Gallery: Formula 1 Transformations

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F1 transformation_newTake a look at these six awesome moving images as they transform from one classic F1 racer to another.

Absolutely mesmerizing, these ‘gif’ images left us in an almost trance-like state. You might remember the artwork used to create these from the piece we ran recently surrounding the animated evolution of Formula 1.

We’d love to see an evolutionary piece crafted in this style, showcasing the development of Ferrari, Williams or similar!

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Gallery: Formula 1 Transformations is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

Art in Agusta: 1976 MV 750 Side Car Racer Up For Sale

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MV 750 Side Car Racer

Very likely one of, if not the only sidecar racer with an MV Agusta motor, this superbly-restored and storied sidecar racer will go up for sale at Artcurial’s Salon Rétromobile sale on the 7th of February.

The sidecar was built for ’77 and ’78 by Guy Bongiovanni, who fabricated a special frame to fit an Earles fork, very flat aluminium fuel tank, contoured body and the centrepiece – an MV four-cylinder 750 engine.

MV 750 Side Car Racer

After purchasing it in 1996, the current owner sent it to  MV 750 specialist Peppino Minervi in Italy, who restored the mechanicals, before it went to De Marchi for painting and reassembly.

The result of the superb restoration is a well-designed, hand-built, original and utterly unique machine with a great history in the world of racing sidecars.

Check it out on Artcurial’s site here. Their Salon Rétromobile sale takes place on the 7th of February at Salon Rétromobile, Paris, and you’ll need to bring between sixty and a hundred thousand euro with you if you want to go home with this work of art.

Via Artcurial

Images via Artcurial, copyright Motolegend

MV 750 Side Car Racer

MV 750 Side Car Racer

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MV 750 Side Car Racer

MV 750 Side Car Racer

MV 750 Side Car Racer

 

 

Art in Agusta: 1976 MV 750 Side Car Racer Up For Sale is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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