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Miniature Porsche Powerplant – Video

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Mini Porsche Boxer

Porsche’s Boxer engines are a defining aspect of the great motorsport marque. Fierce, and fiercely reliable, the flat engines have catapulted many of Porsche’s greatest machines to motorsport glory.

But do they get any less awesome if you shrink them down in size? Check out this brilliant 1:3.2 scale Porsche engine and find out!

This fully operational 1:3.2 scale Porsche 911 engine was built by a Dutch Porsche fan more than four decades ago. He built it by hand working from original factory drawings, and it’s magnificent. The workmanship is exquisite and he has every little detail absolutely nailed.

Classic 911 motors are, for me at least, some of the most instantly-recognizable that I can think of, and this one is no different. It’s a thing of beauty. The glorious engine note from its twin straight exhausts just pushes it over the edge!

Hit play, turn it up and enjoy!

Miniature Porsche Powerplant – Video is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

The post Miniature Porsche Powerplant – Video appeared first on Motorsport Retro.


For Sale: 1966 Lola T70 Mark II

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1966 Lola T70 Mark II

Images: Fantasy Junction

An excellent example of Lola’s lovely lines and competition history, this 1966 Lola T70 Mark II is up for sale over at Fantasy Junction.

The car, SL71/46, began its life as a Mark II set up for Can Am racing. At some point in its career it was fitted with Mark III closed bodywork and bigger brakes.

1966 Lola T70 Mark II

Jerry Grant had the honour, and the car raced at Bridgehampton, the Monterey GP, the Los Angeles Times GP, Road America and the Stardust GP. The car would also race in the United States Road Racing Championship, contesting rounds at Riverside and Kent.

SL71/46 enjoyed an active and extended period competition career in California, clocking up some ten years of competition. It’s barely had a chance to slow down in its retirement, picking up its competition career as an active participant in historic events. It’s been frequently involved in the Wine Country Classic, visited the Monterey Historics, shown at the Hillsborough Concours d’Elegance and more.

The engine has been recently rebuilt by Crowther and fitted with ported cylinder heads and a new crank that allow it a displacement of 385 cid. This refreshed configuration put out 598 horsepower on the dyno.

SL71/46 has also received a new clutch and gearbox rebuild, suspension work and a conscientious schedule of maintenance preparing it for each race weekend.

1966 Lola T70 Mark II

It’s in great condition, demonstrating some of the wonderful patina that a race car of its age and experience should have earned. All that’s required before you hit the track is a standard check over and service. Speaking of hitting the track – the car will be welcome wherever good racing events are held, including the greats such as the Le Mans Classic and Monterey Historic Reunion.

Competitive, with a period history and Lola’s good looks, this looks like a magnificent machine to take racing. Head to Fantasy Junction for the full details.

Images via Fantasy Junction

1966 Lola T70 Mark II

1966 Lola T70 Mark II

1966 Lola T70 Mark II

1966 Lola T70 Mark II

For Sale: 1966 Lola T70 Mark II is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

The post For Sale: 1966 Lola T70 Mark II appeared first on Motorsport Retro.

Photo Gallery: The Return of the Retro Speedfest

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Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Images: Seth Reinhardt

Sydney Retro Speedfest returned to Sydney Motorsport Park this weekend for its sophomore outing with the HSRCA. It was a smörgåsbord of golden age of motorsport goodness, and we have a great set of photos from the event for you to enjoy.

Now in its second year, Sydney Retro Speedfest was held at Sydney Motorsport Park over Australia’s Queen’s Birthday long weekend. It brought some magic machinery to the historic Sydney racetrack, including magnificent examples from twelve historic racing categories, many rare and storied machines and even a handful of historic cars which made their Aussie historic motorsport debut over the weekend.

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

The cars were beautifully prepared, and it’s wonderful to see these classic machines so well cared-for and in top racing condition. It’s even better to see them full-tilt out on the track, where competitors aren’t afraid to wring every single horsepower they can out of their machines and use every inch of the circuit to put on brilliant races all weekend long.

These races, especially in the packed Formula Vee and Formula Junior, Group S and Group N fields, are as exciting to watch as they were when the cars were new, and it’s a joyful thing to see.

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

When not fighting for their lives out on the track, the cars recover in the pits and paddock. Here their owners fine-tune setup, perform maintenance and make sure they’re good to go for the next race. This is a great opportunity for spectators to get up close and personal with the cars and chat with owners and competitors. It’s a relaxed and social atmosphere and everyone is approachable and happy to chat life, cars and everything.

Take a few minutes to enjoy the shots, soak in the atmosphere and catch up with the on track action in this gallery, thanks to Seth Reinhardt. Head to the HSRCA’s website and Facebook page for more.

Via the HSRCA

Photography by Seth Reinhardt

MORE: Photo Gallery: The 2014 Sydney Retro Speedfest

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Sydney Retro Speedfest 2015

Photo Gallery: The Return of the Retro Speedfest is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

The post Photo Gallery: The Return of the Retro Speedfest appeared first on Motorsport Retro.

Saving the best for last – By Jochen Mass

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Jochen Mass

Throughout the many years of his career – alongside successful touring car racing and a few years in Formula 1 – Jochen Mass was always happy and just as successful in sportscar racing. Starting in 1971 with a two-litre Chevron in the South African Springbok Series, through Georg Loos’ Gulf Mirage, an Alfa Romeo 33 TT 12 in Willi Kauhsen’s team and sportscar service with Porsche, where he was contracted as a works driver in 1976 and drove with Jacky Ickx for many years, his career also brought him into Peter Sauber’s team. This is where he crowned his CV with a Le Mans victory and became definitively one of the most successful sportscar drivers in the world.

Thanks to AUTOMOBILSPORT, Jochen Mass reminisces for  on his time with the Sauber team, his Le Mans victory in 1989 and on his time with Mercedes juniors Michael Schumacher, Heinz-Harald Frentzen and Karl Wendlinger.

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Inch perfect in 1991

I had already had eleven successful years as a Porsche works driver and had a good season in 1987 with the Bruce Leven Porsche 962 in the IMSA Series, where we secured victories or podium places in almost every race.

I also had a reputation in Europe as a reliable driver, which caused Peter Sauber to come knocking and ask if I would like to come and drive for him.

At Porsche, the works activities in Group C were gradually nearing an end, so I thought to myself that this was good timing and I switched to Sauber for the 1988 season.

There was already unofficial factory support from Mercedes-Benz for the Sauber team in 1987, but it was still through the back door. Peter Sauber – extremely conservative, as I knew him – had intentionally kept the team small in the beginning, to ensure it didn’t grow too fast and become unwieldy. Overall, it was a very positive story, although it also initially led to situations that we can all smile about from today’s perspective. When we trained at the start in England, I said over the radio that I was about to drive out. I sat in the car and was ready to go.

Suddenly I heard ‘wait a minute, Jochen, until the second car is back in the pits. We don’t have enough mechanics’. This conservative approach may perhaps have gone a bit too far sometimes, but it certainly didn’t do us any harm..

Over the years, Peter Sauber had gradually pieced together a good team of people, among them Leo Ress, who was a brilliant designer. I really liked Leo; he really was an excellent aerodynamicist, engineer and suspension man. When Walter Näher joined us later from Porsche as race engineer, he worked with us drivers to put all of that into practice.

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Mechanics at work as Mass takes notes 1989

The Tyres are the Achilles Heel

As a new member of the team, I was obviously eagerly anticipating the task ahead. We had our first test day in Jerez, which went really well, despite the C9 not exactly being an easy drive in the beginning. There was still a lot to do on the suspension peripherals, including tuning the shocks. I asked if the team had already done any damper testing – so we went with the Bilstein people to Hockenheim and retuned the suspension. We were able to test a lot there and it brought us a good deal further forward. This fine-tuning of the grey areas could only be done with the Bilstein people.

It was remarkable to see how the car noticeably developed and its handling characteristics improved. I had complete faith from the very beginning in the Sauber team, which had already been successful in 1987. It was quickly apparent, however, that the Achilles heel was the Michelin tyres, because they weren’t a good match for our car. It took quite a while to get that sorted out.

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On the way to victory at Jerez in the C9 with Jean -Louis Schlesser

Our engineers were obviously thinking about how to achieve maximum downforce with as little drag as possible, i.e. a good compromise between top speed and the high downforce for high cornering speeds – that’s generally not always compatible with a car’s tyres. Michelin had basically made good tyres, but, in this case, for other cars. These tyres just didn’t work on our car. They weren’t in harmony with our car’s colossal downforce. Again and again, this caused the tyres to start deforming and it was for this reason alone that we ultimately withdrew our cars from the Le Mans grid. Klaus Niedzwiedz blew a tyre during training on the Thursday at around 300 km/h in the braking zone at the end of the long straight.

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3rd at Brands Hatch in 1989

Thankfully, not too much happened; he was able to keep hold of the car, but the risk of starting the race like that was obviously far too great.

The Mercedes team was officially back racing for the first time. And especially after the serious accident in Le Mans in 1955, I and a few others pleaded not to run. We got the tyre problems under control in 1989 through testing in Clermont-Ferrand. In these tests, I drove over a measuring device that was able to measure the weight of the vehicle at different speeds. Over the course of several runs, I drove at up to 350 km/h, each time faster than the last, along a wall with markings leading me to a gate where ultimately the weight was measured. The tyres weren’t changed as a result of this, but instead, the Michelin people told us where we had to reduce the downforce so that the tyres worked better with the car.

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The start of the 24 Hours of Le Mans 1989

We went back to Le Mans in 1989, with our cars set up with very little downforce as a result of the tyre tests. We were very fast on the long straights – around 406 km/h in qualifying – but not particularly fast through the slow corners due to the lack of downforce. I often had Streitzel Stuck and his Porsche breathing down the back of my neck braking into the bends. That got to be a bit of a pain after a while. I thought:

My god, now we have such a good car and the tyres aren’t playing ball!

However, the extra speed on the straights enabled me to stay in front of him and we were able to win the race in the end. The Le Mans victory that year was another highlight for me personally; it really was a dream come true. I mean, I’d been driving for a long time – around eleven hours altogether. Manuel Reuter drove five hours, Stanley Dickens – a good guy, very solid – drove eight hours. Manuel also drove really well, but he had the misfortune to drive over an exhaust on the track, causing severe damage to the right underside. He was also a bit nervous – after all, it was his first time racing at Le Mans.

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Le Mans 1989

After Le Mans, the next stop in the 1989 race calendar was Dijon-Prenois, a very demanding track. The Michelin tyres were truly awful there. We had to battle with porpoising [editor’s note: a pumping, up-and-down rocking of the car], so we drove with a lot of downforce, which sucked the C9 hard to the asphalt and made the tyres ever flatter due to the increasing pressure. We had to lift off in the bends until the car rose back up a bit. That’s why the Porsches won – we couldn’t drive right. The Michelin people filmed the car in Dijon for the first time and suddenly realised with a shock that the tyres were being pressed right down to the rim. The tyres really had pressed all the way down to the tread; the flank was almost completely gone. That, of course, always comes with the danger of a tyre breaking up and exploding. The plan was therefore to do some test driving in Monza. Schlesser and Baldi took on the test – at 340 km/h, each of them had a set of tyres flying around their heads. The car sustained a lot of damage from the exploding tyres, but otherwise, thankfully, nothing happened.

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Mass played critical role in developing the C11

I recommended to Peter Sauber that we run on Goodyears. “Do you think so?”

he asked. “I know so,” I said. From my time at Porsche and my Formula 1 experience, I knew what a massive difference the structure of a tyre can make. We changed to Goodyear and didn’t look back – our tyre problems were dealt with in a single blow. Obviously, I had nothing against Michelin, but the tyres simply weren’t a match for our car.

We made a lot of positive progress with the Sauber C9 – we were able to win Le Mans and the first world championship. Then came the C11 – for me, the best Group C car to date. However, there were no plans for us to go to Le Mans in 1990; the disputes between the ACO and the F.I.A. were boiling over. They were already noticeable in 1989, with the result that, despite our win, we didn’t get a single point and no prize money – nothing. For the Le Mans victory, I received a little trophy and a glass car – for winning a 24-hour race, mind you! It was a joke.

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Victory at the Nurburgring in 1989

It was also a shame, because I would otherwise have won the driver’s championship that year – but the withheld points meant I was denied it in 1989. It really annoyed me that, in 1991, we then broke the engine in the

C11 because an alternator bracket that also supported the belt drive for the water pump broke off. It was a part that cost pennies! It wasn’t so much about me, although I would obviously have liked to win one more time, but about the fantastic C11 and the success for the team – we had a four lap lead up until that point.

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Spa 1990

Mentor for three juniors

Ahead of the 1990 season, Jochen Neerpasch summoned me – he had a proposal to make. He explained his plans for a junior team. He had already asked Jean-Louis Schlesser and he had turned it down right away – it wasn’t for him, and the other drivers weren’t in the frame at all. Heinz-Harald Frentzen, Karl Wendlinger and Michael Schumacher had already been picked as the drivers. I have to go back a couple of years at this point. I had a Formula Opel-Lotus team in 1987. Together with Opel, we had organised a tryout course, with around 30 drivers invited to attend. Three stood out from the pack – Marco Werner, Heinz-Harald Frentzen and Jürgen von Gartzen. I brought Werner and Frentzen into my team. Marco Werner, honest as he is, came to me and said, “Listen, there’s a faster guy out there.

His name is Michael Schumacher”.

Schumacher was driving in Formula Ford at the time. His manager Willi Weber was very consciously keeping him there – he was waiting for a better offer. Michael asked me a few years later in jest why I didn’t want to have him in Formula Opel-Lotus – I told him that, if it had been up to me, I would have wanted him, but Willi had other plans at the time. At Sauber, I obviously didn’t have to teach the juniors how to drive fast; the three of them could do that well enough. They only came to us in the first place because they were already fast in Formula 3 – and I knew that these three would also be fast in Sauber Group C. The cars were fundamentally not difficult to drive. And also because I already knew Heinz-Harald and, more distantly, Michael Schumacher, I took on the task. I wasn’t supposed to play the part of driving instructor, but mentor the youngsters in appropriate behaviour within a team, demonstrating the willingness to compromise and to work together with a team partner and their driving desires and sensitivities.

My area of responsibility also included a substantial proportion of the fine-tuning work, which was initially handled by us older drivers because we knew the cars better. I generally brought the cars to a point where they were good to drive for all of us. But I also often gave the juniors input and we tried out different settings together. The junior team was really good, although Heinz-Harald left us really early because he couldn’t make up his mind. It really annoyed me that this lad was so stubborn and got himself into such a fix. He was determined to get into Formula 3000, signed for an obscure team that also wanted to get into Formula 1. It was a Dutch team, a dodgy bunch that influenced him a bit too much. Heinz-Harald then hired a new manager, Ortwin Podlech, who set about looking through all his contracts, cancelling most of them, tightening them up and modifying them – then things began to move forwards for him.

I later talked to Heinz-Harald about this at length during a flight. It was clear as day that a works contract with Mercedes-Benz for such a young driver would at some point lead to Formula 1. I later brought him to Williams, where he was given the chance to try out. Frank Williams called me afterwards and said, “Your boy here, he’s really good!”

Michael, on the other hand, was a very focused driver and always working on improving himself. Occasionally, in one of those few cases when I was actually faster than him, he came to me and asked how I managed to be faster. I said, Michael, presumably because I’m stronger than you are.

That was all the motivation he needed to get into power training – that’s what he was like. He always needed that kind of trigger, but then he got on with it right away.

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Final iteration C291

Later, when the C291 engine came along, the engineers were thinking about how to integrate a twelve-cylinder engine into a car with the most effective underbody. The engine gave the car a low centre of gravity. It was a really complicated 180-degree V engine, with its ancillaries mounted on top, which made access difficult for the mechanics. The mechanics initially needed a very long time to be able to work on the engine.

However, within a few months, things had developed so that, instead of the initial six hours, we needed ‘just’ two for an engine change.

The Sauber team was great, the cars ran fantastically well and we also had really good engine people at Sauber. If the task had been to build a ten-cylinder with a sensible cylinder angle, they would have achieved everything demanded by the rules in no time at all. The problem with the

C291 was the big diffuser that complicated the engine construction. It was because of this alone that all the ancillaries had to be mounted on top of the flat-twelve, with the exhaust system running upwards away from it – overall a pretty thankless task.

In spite of all this, the C291 was fantastic. Above all, it was light. The other Group C cars with turbocharged engines had to weigh 1000 kg, although they would perhaps have weighed 840 kg without the additional weight. The C291 weighed 740 kg and had a power output of around 650 hp.

The engine ran like a turbine. It was set up for 15,000 rpm and we ran it at 13,500 rpm. Things developed very well. The car was so fast at the end of the season with Michael Schumacher in Autopolis – it was sensational.

And the win by Michael and Karl was a great way to finish.

Originally Published in issue 4 of AUTOMOBILSPORT

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Saving the best for last – By Jochen Mass is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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On Board the Ex-Alan Jones Lola T332 for a Lightning Lap

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Lola T332 Sydney Retro Speedfest

Speaking of Sydney Retro Speedfest, get ready to strap in for one of the fastest laps of the weekend as Alex Davison sets a new fastest Formula 5000 lap to take pole on Saturday in the Ex-Alan Jones Lola T332.

MORE: Ex-Alan Jones Lola Formula 5000 – Widescreen Gallery

He qualified ahead of John Bowe and Tom Tweedie for the Group Q & R Racing & Formula 5000 event. John Bowe was at the wheel of a 1974 March 741 with Tom Tweedie in a 1973 Chevron B24/28.

Other retro royalty in the field included a 1985 Ferrari 156/85, 1986 Benetton F1, 1986 March 86C, 1974 March 741 and plenty more.

Do we even need to remind you to turn it up for a Formula 5000 on-board video? You know what time it is!

MORE: Photo Gallery: The Return of the Retro Speedfest

On Board the Ex-Alan Jones Lola T332 for a Lightning Lap is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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Video: The MGB reimagined

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Mad For MG

Frontline Developments got their start because Tim Fenna was racing an MG Midget that was quick and fun to drive, but had a gearbox that kept quitting out on him half way through events.

So they built a better one, and now they’re doing the same, and a whole lot more, for other cars. These are some seriously impressive machines – the MGs of dreams.

Clients come to Frontline Developments with cars, and hopes and dreams of where they’d like those cars to be. The workshop puts their considerable engineering experience and technologies to work, and builds a car to meet them. They build cars that are driveable, balanced and practical, but which will come alive when you open them up to reveal the real monster within.

One such car is the Abington Edition. Under the bonnet lies a two and a half litre, 304 horsepower, engine. It’s driveable and enjoyable on everyday roads, but it’ll also do naught to sixty in 3.8 seconds, and it make a wonderful sound when it does!

This video from /DRIVEN takes you into the workshop to get to know their story, and some of their mad MGs. Hit play!

MORE: A Record-Breaking 254MPH in an MG in 1959

Video: The MGB reimagined is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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For sale: Porsche RS Spyder

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Porsche RS Spyder

Images: Canepa

We’re running hot with Porsche sportscar racing fever, so let’s celebrate by taking a look at this glorious 2007 Porsche RS Spyder, which is up for sale at Canepa.

Porsche’s RS Spyder made a significant input into their sportscar racing history, claiming the ALMS LMP2 Championship for three years on the trot from 2006 until 2008 and collecting class wins at Le Mans in 2008 and 2009. Only eleven complete cars were built, of which this car, 9R6-704, is one.

Porsche RS Spyder

A youngster in our world, the car’s no less a seasoned veteran of the gauntlet of motorsport. Its competition career spanned four years from 2007 to 2010. Dyson Racing was first to let it loose in anger and in it would collect five podiums, including a second in overall in the 2008 12 Hours of Sebring.

Muscle Milk Team Cytosport took over the car for the second half of its competitive career, running it from 2009 to 2010, adding a further eight podiums to its tally. Amongst these were a class win at Sebring in 2010 and an overall win at Lime Rock in 2010.

Porsche RS Spyder

Since then it’s been cosmetically restored in its Muscle Milk livery and fitted with the engine, transmission and suspension that ran the car to its class win at Sebring in 2010.

Well sorted and ready to race, this beautifully-engineered soon-to-be classic is an awe inspiring machine. It’s up for sale at Canepa, and you can head to their website here for more information.

Images via Canepa

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Porsche RS Spyder

Porsche RS Spyder

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Porsche RS Spyder

Porsche RS Spyder

Porsche RS Spyder

For sale: Porsche RS Spyder is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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Shannons Club: Jaguar Mk 2: Bob Jane’s 4.1 litre 151 mph Super Cat!

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Shannons Club

Jaguar Mk2

Image via www.autopics.com.au thanks to the Shannons Club

Bob Jane’s Jaguar Mk 2 won the Australian Touring Car Championship for two consecutive years in 1962 and 1963. It became known as the fastest Jaguar saloon in the world when it clocked 151 miles per hour during a mighty run down Conrod Straight – a feat that would not be surpassed for nearly a decade.

That record would only fall in 1972 when Ford’s legendary 3.8-litre V8 Falcon GT-HO Phase III nudged ahead by three miles per hour.  And despite the break-neck pace of motorsport innovation, the Jaguar didn’t seem in any rush to slow down, staying competitive all the way through until 1965.

During that time it won seventy races, setting new lap records at every circuit it competed on.

It was only the arrival of Ford’s Mustangs that signalled the end of the mighty Mk 2’s racing career, with Bob Jane switching to a V8 Mustang in 1965.

Its story is one of the classics, tied to one of Australia’s motor racing greats in the form of Bob Jane, and you can enjoy it over at the Shannons Club in Jaguar Mk 2: Bob Jane’s 4.1 litre 151 mph Super Cat!

Image via www.autopics.com.au thanks to the Shannons Club

Shannons Club: Jaguar Mk 2: Bob Jane’s 4.1 litre 151 mph Super Cat! is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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Peter Brock interview by Andrew Denton – video

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Australia’s greatest interviewer Andrew Denton grills Australian racing legend Peter Brock.

In this fascinating, probing and candid interview from Enough Rope in July 2005,  about a year before Brock’s tragic death, Brock opens up about his great rivals, being a vegan, driving lows, and his infamous polarizer.

Enthralling viewing

Peter Brock interview by Andrew Denton – video is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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Driving the Perfectly Musical Ferrari 212

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Ferrari 212 Barchetta

Take a few minutes and spend them with the effusive Chris Harris getting to know an absolutely stunning Ferrari 212 Export Barchetta by Touring. You’ll want to make sure you have your finest headphones or speakers around for this one!

“This is the Ferrari 212 Barchetta dream! Open roads, a 2-and-a-half-litre 160 horsepower V12 yowling away in front of me. I mean, the grin doesn’t lie.”

Is this the dream life? Banging around the Italian countryside in one of the country’s great sports cars, listening to its most stirring of songs? The only way to improve on the scenery to gaze at the lovely lines of the Ferrari underneath you; its understated interior and shapely bonnet beckoning you further down the road.

If it isn’t, I can’t think of what is!

“I’ve got about a hundred and sixty horsepower, and I haven’t got much grip. Which is just perfect!”

In the video, Chris Harris goes for a spin in the Ferrari, reveling in the twists and turns of the Italian hills, before heading back to the workshop to get to know the car and its history. As good as the drive is, the chat is equally engaging and interesting.

Make sure turn it up for the good bit with the engine noise around four and a half minutes in!

Driving the Perfectly Musical Ferrari 212 is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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Driving a Porsche 911 through Downtown LA With Magnus Walker

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Magnus Porsche 911 Los Angeles

Nothing but the sweet sounds of a very well-sorted Porsche 911 and the evocative aesthetic of the streets of downtown Los Angeles. This video is the spirit of driving condensed into its purest form. Magic.

I think everyone who lives in a big city can appreciate those wonderful, and all too few, hours deep in the night when the streets are empty and the city becomes a blank canvas for automotive exploration.

It’s nothing to do with speed, and everything to do with freedom. Big cities are magic places, full of variety, life and atmosphere. The only problem is that they’re also full of traffic! But when that subsides, suddenly you’re free to roll down the windows and actually drive, unrestricted by the constrictive clutches of everyday traffic; to revel in the feel of the city, the simple joy in hooking new gears when the car or the moment feels right, and not when the traffic requires it.

This video from eGarage and Magnus Walker captures that driving freedom perfectly. Pure and simple, it’s just Magnus, the Porsche and the city of Los Angeles. Turn it up!

Video: Urban Outlaw – Rebel Porsche Customiser

Driving a Porsche 911 through Downtown LA With Magnus Walker is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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For Sale: 1956 Lotus Eleven Le Mans Sports Racer

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1956 Lotus Eleven Le Mans

Images via Bonhams

This gorgeous 1956 Lotus Eleven Le Mans sports racer has had many amazing motorsport adventures in its lifetime and quite a lot of detective work has gone into unraveling the mysteries of its history. It’s believed to have won the 1.1-liter Sports class of the 1956 24 Hours of Le Mans.

It’s heading to auction at Bonhams’ upcoming Quail Lodge auction.

1956 Lotus Eleven Le Mans

Three cars were built for the 1956 24 Hours of Le Mans. Two ran with 1100cc Climax motors; one driven by Reg Bicknell and Peter Jopp, and the other with Cliff Allison and Keith Hall at the wheel. The third car had a 1500cc engine up front and was piloted by Colin Chapman and Mac Fraser.

That car made it through twenty of the twenty four hours before dropping out thanks to an engine failure. The second, chassis 211, was forced out of the race after Cliff Allison collided with a dog that had wandered onto the Mulsanne straight.

The third car went on to finish seventh overall, winning the 1.1-liter Sports class. The car we’re talking about today, chassis 210 (XJH 902), is believed to be that car.

1956 Lotus Eleven Le Mans

Like many cars from the history of motorsport, picing its story together requires a bit of investigation work. Chassis 210 was raced by Peter Hannen at Silverstone, in Spain and in the Czech Republic before being sold to Joe Sheppard in the US. At this point, it disappeared.

In 1974 a Lotus Eleven was found in a barn in the Southeastern United States with no chassis plate. Back in 1956 Chapman had arrived at Le Mans with his Elevens only to be knocked back by scrutineers who deemed the base cars too narrow. So – he widened them, resulting in just five wide-chassis Elevens built for racing in that period. The three cars which raced at Le Mans back in 1956 all had distinguishing features, however, including secondary headlamps on the nose and a ‘Vee’ windscreen. The car which popped up in the barn matched their description.

1956 Lotus Eleven Le Mans

 

This got people wondering. It was a wide-chassis car, of which only one was not accounted for, with evidence on its nose of where its secondary Le Mans headlamps had once been and a rivet pattern on its tail. On the inside of the tail was the name of Stan Brown, panel-beater at Williams & Pritchard.

The car went back to the UK in ’89 and was inspected by Lotus historian Graham Capel, who found some discrepancies but concluded that, without a positive chassis plate identification and by process of elimination, the car was likely to be the 1956 Le Mans class-winning car.

1956 Lotus Eleven Le Mans

Chassis 210’s current owner took ownership of it in 2006 and had it fully restored by Steve Hart Racing in Norfolk, giving it a new alloy body shell. The original shell was retained and will be included in the car’s sale. The original engine was also replaced, but that was way back in 1957 by a FWA Climax, and the car uses an MGA gearbox. This motor has received an overhaul by Crossthwaite and Gardner.

The car’s back in British Racing Green, fighting fit and ready to race. With its interesting, and likely significant, Lotus motorsport history, we’re glad that it’s no longer hidden away in a barn, and hope to see it back on track in fighting form.

It will head to auction on August the 14th, 2015, at Bonhams’ Quail Lodge Sale. Head to their site here for more information.

Images via Bonhams

1956 Lotus Eleven Le Mans

1956 Lotus Eleven Le Mans

1956 Lotus Eleven Le Mans

1956 Lotus Eleven Le Mans

 

For Sale: 1956 Lotus Eleven Le Mans Sports Racer is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

The post For Sale: 1956 Lotus Eleven Le Mans Sports Racer appeared first on Motorsport Retro.

Livestream the 2015 Goodwood Festival of Speed!

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The Goodwood Festival of Speed is off and running for 2015, and you can catch all of the action right here on Motorsport Retro!

The stream will run for all three days of the event, keeping you up to date and entertained with all the action in this annual celebration of all things motorsport. Just hit play, and enjoy!

EVENT TIMETABLE  – All times British Summer Time
Friday 26th June 2015

0830hrs Titans, Pre-War, Classic Endurance, Post-War GP, Alpine – 50 cars
0920hrs Saloons, Rally, Drift, NASCAR – 45 cars
0930hrs RALLY – Stage Opens – cars to run in chronological order
1005hrs Cosworth, Turbo, Flat-Broke, Americana – 50 cars
1030hrs GAS COMPETITION – Warm Up Session
1055hrs Bikes, Contemporary F1 – 60 bikes + 6 cars
1100hrs Bonhams Fine Automobilia Auction
1135hrs Sports 65-81, Derek Bell, Group C, post-Group C, Modern GTs – 50 cars
1145hrs GAS – TRIALS (Ice House Area)
1200hrs Air Display – RED ARROWS
1225hrs Supercars + First Glance – 60 cars
1300hrs RALLY – Stage closes for lunch / service break
1310hrs Cosworth, Turbo, Flat-Broke, Americana – 40 cars
1315hrs GAS ARENA – Show
1345hrs Titans, Pre-War, Classic Endurance, Post-War GP, Alpine – 40 cars
1400hrs Bonhams Motor Cars Auction
1400hrs RALLY – Stage Opens – cars to run in chronological order
1420hrs Practice Shoot-Out – 50 cars
1500hrs GAS – TRIALS (Behind Park 1 Grandstand)
1510hrs Bikes, Contemporary F1 – 60 bikes + 6 cars
1530hrs Air Display – Typhoon
1550hrs Sports 65-81, Derek Bell, Group C, post-Group C, Modern GTs – 50 cars
1600hrs GAS ARENA – Show
1630hrs Saloons, Rally, Drift, NASCAR – 30 cars
1700hrs GAS – TRIALS (GAS Arena)
1705hrs Supercars + First Glance – 60 cars
1730hrs GAS ARENA – FMX Best Trick
1730hrs RALLY – Stage closes
1900hrs Hill climb Closes

Saturday 27th June 2015

0830hrs Cosworth, Turbo, Flat-Broke, Americana – 50 cars
0930hrs RALLY – Stage Opens – cars to run in chronological order
0920hrs Titans, Pre-War, Classic Endurance, Post-War GP, Alpine – 50 cars
1010hrs Supercars + First Glance – 60 cars
1030hrs GAS COMPETITION – BMX Dirt
1055hrs Bikes, Contemporary F1 – 60 bikes + 6 cars
1135hrs Sports 65-81, Derek Bell, Group C, post-Group C, Modern GTs – 50 cars
1145hrs GAS – TRIALS (Ice House Area)
1200hrs Air Display – RED ARROWS
1225hrs Saloons, Rally, Drift, NASCAR – 45 cars
1300hrs RALLY – Stages closes for lunch / service break
1310hrs Sports 65-81, Derek Bell, Group C, post-Group C, Modern GTs – 50 cars
1315hrs GAS ARENA – Show
1400hrs RALLY –  Stage Opens – cars to run in chronological order
1350hrs SUPERCAR SHOOT-OUT (+ First Glance – 60 cars)
1450hrs Bikes, Contemporary F1 – 60 bikes + 6 cars
1500hrs GAS – TRIALS (Behind Park 1 Grandstand)
1530hrs QUALIFYING SHOOT-OUT (All timed cars – 50 cars)
1600hrs GAS ARENA – Show
1630hrs Cosworth, Turbo, Flat-Broke, Americana – 50 cars
1700hrs Air Display – Typhoon
1700hrs GAS – TRIALS (GAS Arena)
1705hrs Titans, Pre-War, Classic Endurance, Post-War GP, Alpine – 50 cars
1730hrs GAS ARENA – FMX Best Trick
1730hrs RALLY – Stage closes
1740hrs Saloons, Rally, Drift, NASCAR – 45 cars
1830hrs Hillclimb Closes

Sunday 28th of June 2015

0830hrs Saloons, Rally, Drift, NASCAR – 45 cars
0930hrs Forest Rally Stage Opens – cars to run in chronological order
0915hrs Titans, Pre-War, Classic Endurance, Post-War GP, Alpine – 50 cars
1005hrs Cosworth, Turbo, Flat-Broke, Americana – 50 cars
1030hrs GAS COMPETITION – FMX
1055hrs Supercars + First Glance – 60 cars
1100hrs Air Display – TYPHOON
1140hrs Bikes, Contemporary F1 – 60 bikes + 6 cars
1145hrs GAS – TRIALS (Ice House Area)
1220hrs Sports 65-81, Derek Bell, Group C, post-Group C, Modern GTs – 50 cars
1300hrs Forest Rally Stages closes for lunch / service break
1315hrs GAS ARENA – Show
1310hrs Titans, Pre-War, Classic Endurance, Post-War GP, Alpine – 50 cars
1345hrs Saloons, Rally, Drift, NASCAR – 45 cars
1400hrs Forest Rally Stage Opens – cars to run in chronological order
1430hrs Sports 65-81, Derek Bell, Group C, post-Group C, Modern GTs – 50 cars
1500hrs GAS – TRIALS (Behind Park 1 Grandstand
1505hrs Bikes, Contemporary F1 – 60 bikes + 6 cars
1600hrs GAS ARENA – Show
1600hrs Shoot-Out (50 cars
1700hrs GAS – TRIALS (GAS Arena
1715hrs Supercars + First Glance + Fos Tech – 60 cars
1730hrs Air Display – RED ARROWS
1730hrs GAS ARENA – FMX Best Trick
1730hrs Forest Rally Stage closes
1755hrs Cosworth, Turbo, Flat-Broke, Americana – 50 cars
1845hrs Hill climb Closes
1900hrs Prize Giving

Livestream the 2015 Goodwood Festival of Speed! is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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Gilles Villeneuve: A Canadian Legend by Peter Windsor

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Gilles Villeneuve 1980

Gilles Villeneuve in France, 1980, thanks to the Cahier Archive

The Formula 1 paddock rolled into Canada over the first weekend of June to crown a winner of the 2015 Grand Prix du Canada. To celebrate Canada’s Formula 1 history, and its great drivers, Formula 1 got together with Jacques Villeneuve to recount the legend of his father Gilles.

“Gilles Villeneuve knew only one way to drive, and that was flat out.”

Picking up his first win in immense style in the inaugural Canadian Grand Prix in 1978, Gilles Villeneuve earned six wins, thirteen podiums and second in the 1979 Formula 1 World Drivers’ Championship. A favourite of the sport taken too soon, his mark on motorsport extends far beyond even these impressive numbers.

“The passion of pushing the envelope, and pushing the mechanical pieces of the car.” – Jacques Villeneuve

This brilliant video takes a look back at the man and his influence and is made all the more impactful by the input of his son. It’s a wonderful piece, well worth your time.

MORE: Video: Gilles Villeneuve driving blind

YOU NEED TO CLICK THROUGH TO YOUTUBE ON THE SCREEN BELOW TO VIEW THE VIDEO

Gilles Villeneuve: A Canadian Legend by Peter Windsor is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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Red Bull’s Animated guide to the 24 Hours of Le Mans

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24 Hours of Le Mans History

For just shy of a century, the 24 Hours of Le Mans has been thrilling motorsport fans and forging motorsport legends. So, give it another 240 seconds and let Mark Webber guide you through its history!

From the original Bentley Boys to Ford and Ferrari’s legendary tiff, Porsche’s dominance in the ’70s and ’80s and Audi’s more recent run, the great race has never lacked for great stories.

It’s been consistently good, too. Its incredibly grueling nature, and the majestic highs and crushing lows that go along with that, give it a compelling unpredictability. Then there’s the iconic Circuit de la Sarthe circuit, and the out-there aesthetics of the sportscars and prototypes that hurtle around it. It’s a festival of motorsport competition, and it captures the imagination and kicks the coals of the inner motor racing fire.

Take a few minutes to get to know that history in this excellent short film by Red Bull. It’s animated in their signature style, and narrated by our hometown hero – Mark Webber. A lighthearted look at the great 24 Hours of Le Mans.

MORE: Video: The last lap of the 1991 24 hours of Le Mans

Red Bull’s Animated guide to the 24 Hours of Le Mans is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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Mega Photo Gallery & Report: Peter Auto Spa Classic 2015

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Marcel Hundscheid/Speed-O-Graphica.com

Spa hosted the fifth edition of the Peter Auto Spa Classic during the weekend of 22nd, 23rd and 24th of May. This edition was visited by 20.000 spectators, a new record with no less than 1500 classic cars taking part.

The fifth edition saw some very interesting grids featuring the popular Classic Endurance Racing series, the Heritage Touring Cup, Sixties Endurance and the Trofeo Nastro Rosso, all hosted by Peter Auto. Another crowd puller seen in Europe is Group C Racing from the United Kingdom. Compared with the grid from last year just 14 classic prototypes lined up.

A real tribute to the legendary Spa 24 Hours was a night race on Saturday evening with iconic touring cars from the Heritage Touring Cup. Along with touring cars from the seventies and eighties, classic touring cars from an earlier decade found their way for the 2nd consecutive year.

British auctioneer Bonhams was also present, featuring some interesting classic cars such as a Porsche 962C that participated in the Le Mans 24 Hours from 1990 (sold for € 1,495,000), and a 1970 Ferrari 365 GTB/4. (sold for € 667,000)

Highlights seen on track at the 5th edition of this great event were, amongst others, a Ferrari 250 GT Breadvan, McLaren M6GT, Alfa Romeo 33/3, a Jaguar XJR-14 and a ALD C289.

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Sixties Endurance

No less than 70 historic GTs and touring cars entered the track for their first free practice on Friday. The grid hosted a vast variety in cars from the Shelby Cobra, Porsche 911, Jaguar E-Type, to the Porsche 904/s and Lotus Elan.

During the qualifying session it was clear that the final battle for the podium would be a Shelby Cobra party, with 12 cars on the entry list. Karsten Le Blanc and Nigel Greensall put their Shelby Cobra 289 (1963) on pole, followed by the same car driven by Michel Lecourt and well known French Porsche GT-driver Raymond Narac. Third spot on the grid went to the Lotus Elan 26R (1964) of Grant Tromans and Richard Meaden.

The race started surprisingly with a jump start made by the experienced Carlos Monteverde, who was sharing his Shelby Cobra (1963) with Gary Pearson. The Brazilian was penalized with a drive through penalty seeing him finally finishing the race in 33rd place. As Monteverde served his drive through the lead was taken over by Karsten Le Blanc and Nigel Greensall who drove a race in their own league. Second place went to the Cobra of father and son Pierre-Alain and Erwin France. The all Cobra podium was completed by Andrew Beverly.

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Classic Endurance Racing

As usual Classic Endurance Racing hosted a large grid of prototypes and GTs from both the sixties and seventies. For several years the grid is split into two categories comprising CER1 and CER2. CER1 features prototypes and sports cars up to 1971 as well as GTs of up to 1975.

Forty-two cars entered the qualifying session on Saturday seeing a battle for the pole position between a bunch of quick Lola T70s, a Chevron B19 and a splendid Alfa Romeo 33/3. Romain Belleteste and Eric Jamar drove their Chevron B19-FVC (1971) to the best place on the starting grid. One second slower was the Lola T70 Mk.IIIB of Carlos Monteverde and Gary Pearson.

Five times Le Mans Winner Emanuele Pirro and Gianluca Ratazzi drove the splendid looking Alfa Romeo 33/3 to a third place on the grid. As Monteverde and Pearson didn’t make it to the start, the Alfa was promoted to second place.

Pirro immediately took the lead but was haunted by Eric Jamar in the Chevron who claimed the leading position. The Frenchman however suffered technical problems and couldn’t make it to the finish. In the meantime, former ski-legend and ADAC GT Masters driver Toni Seiler took the lead in his 1968 Lola T70 Mk.III. As the race was stopped after just forty-eight minutes due to a red flag, Seiler took the overall victory. Serge Kriknoff finished second in his 1971 Lola T212-FVC, as Richard Mille and Carlos Antunes Tavares crossed the finish line third in their 1968 Lola T70 Mk.III.

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Classic Endurance Racing 2 is open to sportscars and prototypes from 1973 up to 1979 and GTs from 1972 up to 1979.

Thirty-six legends entered the qualifying session including a large amount of Lola and Chevron prototypes. In the GT division four mouth watering Porsche 935s appeared as well as two 934s. The battle for the pole resulted in a close fight between the Lolas of Frenchmen Patric Lafargue and Didier Guenat. In the end it was Lafargue in his Lola T298-BMW (1979) lapping the Ardennes rollercoaster in 2:22.489. Nearly sixth tenths slower was Didier Guenat in his Lola T286-DFV (1979).

Although Lafargue is usually very quick, it was Philippe Scemama who had the best start and took a commanding lead. After the pit stop the Swiss driver suffered from a rear suspension failure and failed to make it to the finish line. Patrice Lafargue claimed the leading position and scored victory in front of Yves Scemama in a TOJ SC304 (1976) and Frederic da Rocha in a 1979 Lola T298-BMW.

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Group C Racing

As mentioned earlier in this article, Group C is definitely one of the crowd pullers.

For their single race on Sunday only thirteen cars made it to the grid. During the first qualifying session on Friday Katsuaki Kubota crashed his Nissan R90CK heavily. Luckily the Japanese driver was unhurt, his Nissan however was heavily damaged.

Amongst the participants on Sunday was a Sauber-Mercedes C11, several Porsche 962s, a Nissan RC93, different Spice prototypes, an ADA and a ALD from the legendary period of sports car racing. Fastest during the first qualifying session was the very rare Jaguar XJR-14 of Christophe D’Ansembourg, equipped with a Cosworth F1 engine. Sadly for all the fans the Belgian had to cope with technical problems during the second session, resulting in a Did Not Start on Sunday. Pole position went to the Spice SE90 GTP of Michael Simpson and Steve Tandy. Bob Berridge drove his Nissan RC93 to the second place on the grid, followed by the Sauber-Mercedes C11 of Kriton Lendoudis and Rui Aguas.

The Portuguese stormed into the lead during the race on Sunday, followed by Michael Simpson and Bob Berridge. The experienced Berridge however proved to be much quicker after the pit stops and overtook both Steve Tandy and Kriton Lendoudis to claim victory. Steve Tandy crossed the finish line in second position, followed by Kriton Lendoudis.

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Heritage Touring Cup

A real tribute to the Spa 24 Hours was the splendid grid of the Heritage Touring Cup, open for touring cars up to 1984. The Heritage Touring Cup featured two races including a night race on Saturday evening. BMW CSLs, Ford Capris, Rovers, Ford Escorts and more made up the field.

In a field a thirty-eight cars it was the Rover Vitesse (1981) of Tim Summers and Richard Meaden claiming the pole position. Less than seven tenths slower was the immaculate sounding Ford Capri RS3100 of Chris Ward and Andrew Smith. Douglas Titford and Trevor Reeves managed to drive their Capri 2600 RS to a third place. During both races the Capri of Chris Ward and Andrew Smith proved to be too quick for the rest of the field.

They won both races easily finishing no less than forty seconds quicker than second place. Steve Dance finished second during both races with his Capri RS2600, Christophe van Riet and Rafael Borman scored a third place in their quick Ford Escort RS1600. Andrew Beverly managed to drive his Volvo 240 Turbo to a third place during the second race of the weekend.

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Historic Motor Racing News U2TC

Just like the Heritage Touring Cup, the touring cars entered for Historic Motor Racing News U2TC had two sixty minute races, both in the afternoon and evening. The grid saw Ford Lotus Cortinas, Alfa Romeo GTAs, BMW 1800s and a single Mini battling it out.

Amongst the participants was former Formula 1 driver Jackie Oliver from the UK, who shared a BMW 1800 TiSA with fellow countryman Richard Shaw. Despite the fact that the BMW quickly lapped the track it was the Ford Lotus Cortina of Richard Meaden and Grant Tromans who grapped pole position.

Sadly the Cortina suffered from a technical issue and didn’t make it to the start. Richard Shaw and Jackie Oliver scored two crushing victories. Second place went to the Ford Consul Cortina of Carlos Monteverde and Gary Pearson, Alan and Geoffrey Lets finished third in their Ford Lotus Cortina. During the second race on Sunday Tromans and Meaden managed to get their Cortina on the grid, finishing second. David Tomlin managed to score a third place in his Ford Lotus Cortina.

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Trofeo Nastro Rosso

Fans of Italian sports and GTs could eat their harts out with a bunch of thoroughbreds including a Ferrari 250 GT Breadvan, Ferrari 250 Berlinetta and 275 GTB/C, Maserati 300s, Alfa Romeo TZs and more making up the field for the Trofeo Nastro Rosso.

Although not the largest grid of the weekend, it was perhaps one of the most valuable. Local hero Vincent Gaye qualified his gorgeous Ferrari 275 GTB/C on pole position for both races. As expected Gaye won both races without a single threat from his fellow opponents. Jan Gijzen finished second, Lukas and Martin Halusa from Austria scored a third place in their immaculate Ferrari 250 GT Breadvan. On Sunday both Gaye and Gijzen scored another first and second place, as Jean Brandenburg and Raphael Favaro in a Bizzarrini 5300 GT.

The 5th edition of the Spa Classic was again an event not be missed. Although we have to wait for nearly 12 months, we already eagerly await the 6th edition!

© Marcel Hundscheid/Speed-O-Graphica.com

Mega Photo Gallery & Report: Peter Auto Spa Classic 2015 is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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A 130mph Ride up the Goodwood Hill in a Toyota Celica

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Toyota Celica Pikes Peak

Buckle up for a 130 mile-per-hour thrill ride up the Goodwood hill, courtesy of Rod Millen and his 850 horsepower Pikes Peak-winning Toyota Celica.

To say Rod Millen is a bit of a legend may be understating things. He’s been the New Zealand rally champion multiple times, won the North American Race and Rally Championship, won the SSCA National Rally championship a handful of times and competed successfully in World Rally Championship events. He even won the Grand National Sport Truck series three years on the trot, and the list goes on!

He’s best known for his efforts climbing Pikes Peak, where he opened his account in 1991 by winning the Open Class and followed it up a year later by topping the Showroom Class. In 1994 he broke the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb record by forty seconds to set a 10:04:06 on the old dirt version of the climb. Then from the mid to late ’90s the climb was all but his as he went on to win it outright for four consecutive years from 1996.

The last win he clocked in that streak was in this magnificent Toyota Celica, which he unleashed for some monster laps during the Goodwood Festival of Speed over the weekend.

Hop on board for this absolutely nailed run up the hill, and hold on tight!

A 130mph Ride up the Goodwood Hill in a Toyota Celica is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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Onboard with Alain Prost Around Monaco in 1981

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Alain Prost France 1981

Image: Alain Prost in France on the way to the first Grand Prix victory of his career in 1981, thanks to the Cahier Archive

Hop on board with The Professor, Alain Prost, for a unique perspective on the streets of Monaco in 1981.

This video puts you up above the driver’s seat of Alain Prost’s Renault RE30 as he takes punters for a tour of the Monaco circuit on the eve of the car’s racing debut mid-way through the 1981 season. It’s a great shot, showing off the claustrophobic walls of Monaco and the glittering scenery that surrounds them, along with Prost’s inputs at the wheel and the wheels and suspension hard at work keeping everything on the black stuff.

The 1981 Formula 1 season was a bi-polar one for Alain Prost and he either finished a race on the podium or didn’t finish it at all. It was not, however, unsuccessful and played a formative role in his career. He picked up his first pole position in the German Grand Prix, took the first Grand Prix win of his career at home in the French Grand Prix and would also win the Dutch and Italian Grand Prix.

Monaco, however, would be of the unsuccessful variety for both him and teammate René Arnoux. Arnoux left the race after a spin on lap 32 and Prost followed with an engine failure thirteen laps later.

MORE: Video: Alain Prost drives an F1-powered Minivan

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For Sale: A Le Mans-Winning 2007 Aston Martin DBR9

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Aston Martin DBR9

Images: Fiskens

In 2007 David Brabham, Darren Turner and Rickard Rydell drove this 2007 Aston Martin DBR9 to victory in the GT1 class in the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Today, it’s up for sale at Fiskens, and could be yours.

“It will be hard for anyone to deny that [Le Mans] is the greatest motor race in the world, and the fact that it is once a year gives it a special feeling. You have a long time to anticipate it, a long time to train for it and you have only 24 hours to get it wrong.” – David Richards, Aston Martin Racing Chairman

Aston Martin DBR9

The car, 009, was the first Aston Martin to secure a win in the great race since their DBR1 won it outright back in 1959. They were so chuffed with the performance that they retired it after the race, its first, and put it on display in the Aston Martin Racing Heritage Centre. It’s stayed there ever since!

The DBR9 uses the DB9’s aluminium block and cylinder head, adds 150bhp and produces a 600bhp V12. That motor sits low in the chassis and pulls air via a series of carbon fibre intakes. The exhaust runs through the side sills, lighting up when the car backfires at night. An Xtrac six-speed gearbox is mounted longitudinally to the rear axle and pushes power through purpose-built magnesium wheels. Carbon fibre disks have the job of keeping all of this in check.

Aston Martin DBR9

It borrows from the DB9’s bonded aluminium chassis as a basis, which sits on double wishbone suspension and is wrapped in a body hand made from carbon fibre panels.

The whole thing tips the scales at just 1150 kilograms, so the ACO added a further 25kg of ballast before it ran in Le Mans.

Its sold with an Aston Martin Racing book that chronicles the 2007 race and the car’s journey, including commentary from the team’s key members.

A very special car with a very special history, this machine is only going to get better with age. Head to Fisken’s website here for more information.

Images via Fiskens.

For Sale: A Le Mans-Winning 2007 Aston Martin DBR9 is a post from Motorsport Retro, bringing you classic motorsport, cars, motorcycles and gear every day.

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Le Mans 1969 – Porsche misses glory by metres

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Ford vs Porsche: 4998km against 4997.88km

by Helmut Zwickl

Thanks to AUTOMOBILSPORT, we take a look back at the fierce battle between Porsche and Ford in the 1969 24 Hours of LeMans.

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Three days after the Nuerburgring, they decided at Porsche to start in Le Mans even though at this stage no CSI message clearly taking a stand on the movable flaps had been received. Principal Ferry Porsche cut the number of Le Mans cars to five. In the little country village of Teloché, about 8 kilometres from the Le Mans circuit, eight cars were unloaded from the transporters nonetheless. Four 917’s (one already in the ownership of wealthy amateur racing driver John Woolfe), three 908 long-tail Prototypes and a brand new streamlined 908 Spyder. The long-tail 908 destined for Mitter/Schuetz bore chassis number 30. Multiplied by the material cost of DM 200,000 each this yields a DM six million effort for the contingent of 3-litre 908 coupes alone, although the first 20 cars had been built for the 1968 season. Ing. Ferry Piëch, who had moved into private quarters with his wife Corena near the garage rented in Teloché, offered: “You can’t gain more than the World Championship. Here, we can only lose. What would hurt us would be an accident. After perennial success messages, an accident would be most convenient for the press…”

During scrutineering the hoary technical inspectors left themselves wide open. They tried to stuff a suitcase into the Porsche 908, even though luggage boots are no longer requested in the 1969 Prototype regulations. Practice started at half past four on Wednesday in scorching heat. While the Ferrari pilots idly waited for their two 312P coupes, Porsche’s eight car armada rested lined-up in front of the pits. At this moment it was certain that Elford/Attwood as well as Stommelen/Ahrens were to drive the 917. Hans Herrmann was to have Gérard Larrousse as his co-pilot; after the April test session Hans had opted for a 908. Willi Kauhsen and Rudi Lins stood around idly. They were registered as reserve drivers and had little hope of a start, especially since just five cars were to be campaigned.

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While Stommelen experimented with the 917, continuously modifying the position of the rear flaps, Siffert switched from the long-tail 908 into the Spyder and the Mitter/Schuetz car suffered clutch failure; Kurt Ahrens was to circulate in John Woolfe’s private 917. Ahrens did three laps, the third in 3:36.4 despite ignition trouble. This time was to remain ninth fastest, becoming springboard into the last lap of his life for John Woolfe. 37-year- old John Woolfe slipped into his DM 140,000 jewel for the first time on the Thursday. When he returned, the engine had been over-revved – to 9,400 rpm. “I missed a shift”, he shrugged.

Around 7:45 pm I stood at the right-hand kink on the Mulsanne straight. The newly installed guardrails started to vibrate as the big bangers sucked up the 5 km asphalt strip. John Wyer’s Ford GT40s, thrusting through this kink as on rails in excess of 300 kph, Jo Bonnier’s red Lola heralded from far afield by its hammering engine sound, the two works Ferraris, unable to work to capacity because their rear spoilers didn’t fit, the blue narrow-gauged 3-litre Renault Alpine’s with their screaming eight-cylinder engines, and finally the Porsche 917, since the Nuerburgring race featuring a new front suspension with revised geometry effecting better road holding under deflection and hopping. For this mightily roaring 12-cylinder the computer had calculated a lap time of 3:25.76 over the 13.49 km long circuit. The electronic brain estimated the speed through the kink in the long straight at 319 kph and left it to the driver’s courage to improve this speed – if he dared to grope his way up to the 917’s ultimate centrifugal force, a maddening balancing act at such speed. Stommelen said: “You can’t apply full throttle, you have to lift slightly!

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Stommelen corrected the computer at 7:45 pm when he succeeded with a lap time of 3:22.9 and an average of 238.970 kph which obliterated any previous Le Mans standards. Stommelen recalled: “Suddenly it was eerily quiet in the cockpit. Along the straight the rev counter needle rose up to 8,200 rpm in 5th…” According to the diagram this correlates to 340 kph. To that one should add the x-factor of the tyres’ so-called ‘blow up’. For the Porsche technicians the 331 kph top speed for the Stommelen car officially recorded by the organisers at post 44 seemed too low. They say: “350 to 355 kph would be correct” Looking back, 3:23.6 read Denny Hulme’s lap record in 1967, established with a 7-litre Ford Mk IV Prototype. Meanwhile, a corner has been incorporated into the final straight by means of Ford-money – a so-called chicane hardly permitting 115 kph, forcing all cars into the lower gears and extending the lap times compared with 1967 by approx. 10 seconds. Despite the chicane Stommelen was seven tenths quicker than the Ford two years before without it. In doing so, the chicane had been installed not only to reduce speed along the final straight in front of pits and grandstands but also to reduce lap times. A misapprehension; like many things in auto racing devised by hoary officials.

During the practice runs in the evening it was established that the 917 with moveable flaps (mechanically operated by the rear suspension) were by far more stable in a straight line and also in fast corners was more stable, signalling more safety to the drivers than with blocked flaps which would have conformed to the CSI ban. This was recorded by the Porsche drivers in a communiqué. The organisers had satisfied themselves as well that aerodynamic aids in this form represented a valuable contribution to safety. They supported this construction even more so, as Porsche announced they would not start unless the flap system would be allowed. To what extent Porsche would have realised this threat remains to be seen. The CSI was at least forced to revise the general wing ban they had panicked into in Monte Carlo and puzzle out a solution for Le Mans. The chase for best times during Wednesday practice was fought-out amongst the Porsches. Behind Stommelen, Elford recorded the second-best lap for a 917 on 3:28.3, averaging 232.78 kph. Siffert did 3:23.3 in the open Spyder, Udo Schuetz 3:33.8 in the same car, Hans Herrmann 3:35.6 in a long-tail 908.

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Vic Elford during a pitstop

Blond ‘Beatle’ Johnny Servoz-Gavin did the quickest Matra lap in 3:36.4. Matra had concentrated on Le Mans for months, the name Matra standing for Mécanique, Aviation et Traction, a company founded in 1941 and involved with building rocket launch pads, remote-controlled rockets and space satellites. By now it had expanded into an industrial group, manufacturing high-class electronic devices and executing arms orders for the French government and other countries. Around 90 people work in Matra’s racing department. The co-operation with the aircraft technicians is very close; any self-development for motor racing takes advantage of the unlimited technical and financial capabilities of the group. After the first day of practice in Le Mans it became clear that the power output of the V12-engine had been reduced in favour of reliability; the times achieved during the April test days could no longer be achieved. What Matra had lost with regard to speed Porsche had gained with the 3-litre. Apparently also reduced was the engine power of the Ferraris, as Pedro Rodríguez informed Peter Schetty: “The engine appears to be less powerful than in Monza! Ferrari intended to recover the reduced power another way. A reduction of fuel consumption by almost 9 percent increased the driving range of the cars.

When qualifying started under a cloudless sky at 6 pm on Thursday, the light glimmered over the pine forests, which are separated by the wide asphalt band of the Le Mans track. Ing. Piëch was convinced that Stommelen would get close to 3:20 this time. Rolf tried everything to beat his fabulous lap achieved the day before. When this didn’t work out, he began to revise the whole settings of the tail flaps. In the end, everything was misaligned but the previous days’ time could not even be matched, let alone improved on. The high speeds introduced tyre problems on the 917 for the first time. Kurt Ahrens was frightened on the straight by “a crosswind which despite calm almost blew the car of the road”. In fact tread delamination on the left front wheel of the 917 threatened to blow the car off course. A little later the same happened to Elford’s 917: on the left front chunks of rubber separated from the Dunlop tyre.  The tyre specialists recommended a wider tyre for Elford and higher pressure for Stommelen/Ahrens, but this would not be a resolution for the slightly concerned drivers. Since the Firestone debacle during the Monza 1000 km race Porsche allowed the 917 pilots free tyre choice. Both during the short appearance at Spa and on the Nuerburgring the ‘White Giant’ remained Dunlop- shod; safety took priority over speed. For Le Mans Dunlop tyres were fitted, even though it had been found on the rolling test bed in Stuttgart that the Dunlop tyre shed some rubber at 350 kph whereas the Firestone remained intact. Had the 917 drivers been aware of that, they would certainly have opted for Firestones for Le Mans. But apparently Porsche’s technical governing board didn’t want to oust Dunlop completely. There was no contract inhibiting this, but in Zuffenhausen they felt they owed gratitude for special developments that had been performed.

A remarkable incident happened around the private 917 of Briton John Woolfe. His co-driver Digby Martland, a British racing driver who had only minor experience with a 2-litre Chevron-BMW, exited after one lap. Entirely scared off he stated what others might have withheld: “I can’t control this 917. It is too fast for me”. Woolfe found himself without co-driver, so Porsche helped out – they partnered Herbert Linge with him, the racing master craftsman from the research department, pal of a whole generation of Porsche racing cars. That Rudi Lins and Willi Kauhsen donned their helmets on Thursday evening meant the deployment of a sixth works Porsche but Ing. Piëch corrected that with a smile: “It is only five nonetheless. The Siffert/Redman Spyder is running with the Hart-Ski Racing Team…”

Lins did only three laps, the third in 3:42 and Kauhsen did 3:41 in his fourth lap. The 14 km of recently erected guardrails proved their worth for the first time when a Ferrari Dino left the road at the end of the Mulsanne straight. Drivers like Lucky Casner, Robby Weber and Lucien Bianchi had to die in Le Mans until they decided to render the straight safe by dint of guard rails. Up to then the cars had been flying into the woods. At 10 pm the chequered flag brought practice to an end. The lights on the home stretch went out, the crowds dissipated. According to the organisers, 15 percent more spectators than during the time of Ford’s big engagements in the years 1966 and 1967 had come on both practice days. All the technical equipment disappeared from the pits. The Sports cars and Prototypes were loaded upon trucks or driven to the garages under their own power. Exposed to the sound of a Bavarian costume band and the smell of bratwurst and sauerkraut the Porsche mechanics feasted in a huge beer tent.

The evening prior to the 24 hour race the Porsche works drivers gathered at Porsche’s headquarters in Teloché for a final briefing. They casually assembled in a garden around a corroded 30-year-old Renault saloon leaning on a garden wall. Ing. Piëch implored the drivers to go easy on the clutch. One hour before a ‘phone call concerning the ‘White Giant’s’ Achilles’ Heel had been received from Stuttgart. The lining of the Borg&Beck clutch, which had withstood the torque of the 7-litre Ford Prototype, had given up after three hours’ running time on the 917 test bed. That meant once more removing engines and changing clutches. Not good news for the mechanics. The plan of action was simple as always: they were to drive according to predetermined lap times. For the 917 drivers the practice time plus 10 seconds applied, for the 908 folks practice time plus 5 seconds. Rico Steinemann translated for the English-speaking drivers. The tourist in the background, who didn’t pass up the opportunity of Porsche’s ‘pillow-talk’ under the sky was no less than Huschke von Hanstein. Had he still been in office, he would have thrown me out of the garden, but Porsche’s ‘pillow-talk’ was not as intimate as one might guess. Everything was repeated factually. A RED signal means slower, GREEN means faster, the drivers were reminded of the regulations and they were told which tools lay in the car and what they could do in case of trouble.

“Any more requests? was Steinemann’s final question. “Give 10 Francs to anybody” proposed Kurt Ahrens, raising his hand as in school, “in case we drop out on the circuit…” Ing. Piëch responded: “This retainer is granted”. John Woolfe also stood in the garden, jacket draped over his shoulders. Must be wealthy, this Woolfe, they said. How does he make money?

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The Jo Siffert / Brian Redman Porsche 908 (DNF: Position 33)

Kauhsen knew he was in the textile trade, and then he is director of an American food company. In Twickenham he once ran for the Liberals. He got married recently, a versatile and kind man. Herbert Linge makes him an offer: “I can do the first turn if you wish”, but Woolfe responded “Oh no, I would like to start”. He was fascinated by the Porsche 917, despite the problems during both days of practice. David Yorke too held a briefing for his four drivers at the headquarters in La Chatre, in the absence of John Wyer. There was not much to say. Maximum revs for the good old Ford GT40 was, as usual in endurance races, 6,000 rpm. This was 1,000 rpm below the limit. Thereby the lap times for Ickx/Oliver and Hobbs/Hailwood were defined. They knew from qualifying that, depending on the driver, a Porsche 908 was up to 8 seconds faster (Siffert in the 365 HP Spyder weighing 628 kilos) around the 13 km circuit than the Ford GT40 (1025 kilos without fuel but with water and oil). Both Ferraris (755 kg, 400 HP) were roughly as quick as most of the 908s, the Matras a bit slower. Faster than anybody else were the two 917’s. The 580 HP had to shift a dry weight of 850 kilos. Porsche’s one win at Le Mans ought to be the one over the FIA’s International Sporting Commission (CSI). According to Rico Steinemann the “proclamation of sentence” was a charter for the Porsche 917’s movable flaps, which read: “In light of the fact that this car has been homologated as a Sports Car with these flaps already, that Porsche would withdraw its works cars from the start, which would be a big detriment for the organisers now that they had undertaken big investments to improve track safety, and in light of the fact that the competition declared themselves willing to withdraw from possible protests and that Porsche agrees to fix the flaps on the 908 as spoilers, the Porsche 917 is allowed to start with moveable flaps at Le Mans”.

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The Vic Elford / Richard Attwood Porsche 917L  (DNF: Postion 16)

Half a million people surge into the pine forests on race day, they come on foot, by car, by train and hitchhiking, a pilgrimage from all over Europe. They camp, occupy all the hotels, spend the night in the open air, playing guitar, fuelling fires, opening cans and beer bottles, romping with their girlfriends in the sand. Someone once said that not an to be underestimated percentage of the French nation has been fathered during this dusty garden party around a 24 hour race!   

The cars are aligned on the home straight for the Le Mans-start, side by side according to their practice times. The drivers are quite talkative, surprisingly eloquent. Vic Elford says: “You can’t imagine what strengths you have to mobilise to take this Porsche 917 to its limits for 20 laps”, and Jean Claude Killy, the former Jim Clark of ski slopes, driving a 1,500 cc Renault Alpine, claims: “Before such a race I am completely relaxed. After all it takes 24 hours. Before a ski race things were different. You have to be excited and tense to literally explode for the couple of seconds the race lasts”. Ing. Bott advises Stommelen and Elford: “Conserve the clutch”. They nod and forgot it immediately. “Conserve the brakes; you will be fast enough to stay out front anyway…”. They nod automatically. Ferrari team manager Franco Ghozzi opens a telegram sent by Enzo Ferrari. The Commendatore confirms that they will not protest against the latest CSI decision to legalise Porsche’s moveable flaps, but in the future the CSI should take care that decisions once taken will be observed. Otherwise Ferrari would withdraw from racing.

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The Vic Elford / Richard Attwood Porsche 917L  (DNF: Postion 16)

Chris Amon has the safety belts suspended with rubber bands like a corset, so he can slip into easily at the Le Mans-start. Four Porsches stand in front: Stommelen, Elford, Siffert and Rudi Lins will sprint towards their cars, fourth fastest practice time of the Lins/Kauhsen 908 was achieved by Siffert. Beside it crouches the red Ferrari 312P coupe Pedro Rodríguez will jump into, next to it stands Herrmann’s 908, followed by Amon’s Ferrari, then the 908 to be fired up by Udo Schuetz and the next car belongs to John Woolfe. “I will try to keep up with 3-litre Porsches at least”, he had just told Herbert Linge; an insane idea.

As the flag drops at 2 pm, the home straight resembles a canyon of people as the drivers sprint towards their cars as fast as they can. Only Jacky Ickx walks leisurely over the track, his personal protest against the Le Mans-start. Stommelen takes advantage of ‘pole position’; he is the first to arrive at the Dunlop-corner. Woolfe also gets away fine. He immediately tries to gain time during the first lap; it was to cost him his life… At the exit of the fast Maison Blanche S-bend taken by the top drivers at 240 kph, the 917 bangs against the fence because it had been going too fast too soon In a huge explosion the car is ripped into two, the engine compartment is torn off. A closely following Chris Amon’s Ferrari torpedoes a fuel tank lying in the middle of the road. Hundreds of thousands of people watch the black pillar of smoke raise into the grey afternoon sky. One of the last to get through Maison Blanche before it happened was Rudi Lins. “As I braked for the Ford-chicane, I noted that people were all pointing against the direction traffic. I knew something horrible had happened”. Rolf Stommelen, the leader, was the first to arrive at the scene of the accident in the second lap. Long in advance he had been warned by flag marshals. “I had to engage first gear; debris was shattered across the track, coated with white fire extinguisher foam”. Udo Schuetz recalls “an inferno of oil, steam, fire and excited people. Lins saw the Porsche still alight. John Woolfe was hospitalised by helicopter but was already dead. When Woolfe once won a minor club race at Snetterton with his Cobra and an adversary he hardly knew totalled his car, Woolfe, slowly cruised through the public, making a collection with his helmet for this man.

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Chris Amon pitted visibly shaken. Ashen-faced, his eyes watering from smoke, petrol fumes and tiny metal splinters and he seemed so haggard as if he had just survived a mine disaster. Nervous Ferrari personnel surrounded him, pushing everything else away. “I didn’t wear goggles. Therefore my eyebrows were scorched! John Woolfe’s accident posed the question as to whether they should sell such sophisticated cars like the Porsche 917 to amateur drivers. Woolfe had experience with bigger cars gained in 7-litre Cobra, Ford GT40 and Chevron-Repco, but he didn’t have a chance to familiarise with the Porsche 917 in Le Mans.   

A clear answer to the question should be prefixed with the following facts: The manufacturers are forced by the CSI regulations: a) to build a 5-litre Sports Cars, with chances of victory being higher than with a 3-litre Prototype in the long term, b) to issue a ready-to-use series of 25 examples, involving horrendous investments, c) to gross these investments by sales.

If Porsche releases for sale ten out of 25 917 built, and Ferrari issues a 5-litre 12-cylinder, of which let’s say 15 examples are being sold and now Lola and McLaren produce sports cars, the range of such racing sports cars costing DM 140,000 to 170,000 is wider than the contingent of qualified drivers capable of controlling such fast cars. If you eliminate the elite of Grand Prix and long distance works drivers, not many drivers capable of handling such projectiles remain. Good manufacturers have to sell though. They will sell to anybody paying cash, whilst they still prefer to give a car to John Woolfe than for instance to a Herbert von Karajan, eventually the car was built for the race track and not to boast. For so much money it is up to oneself if one will win or kill himself.

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The David Hobbs/ Mike Hailwood GT40 leads car 17 and the Rolf Stommelen /Kurt Ahrens, Jr. Porsche 917

The Le Mans entry list is troubling though. You are facing many unqualified people, who only got a position on the grid because they can afford to drive any desired car. Therefore the question should be: Which standards should be applied so that inexperienced people in extremely fast cars are not allowed to start in a Le Mans 24 hour race? The answer ought to be much stricter ones than before.

When dusk set in – in June at Le Mans you have to wait until 9 pm – more has happened at Porsche than the worst pessimists would have guessed. The 917 of Stommelen/Ahrens is leaving a trail of oil smoke. Oil is leaking through a gasket on the underside of the crankcase, the oil is permanently sprayed onto the left rear wheel. They tried to seal the leak during a 24 minute stop. It didn’t work out completely. Only the unbelievably large oil reservoir and the relatively small oil consumption of the engine helped the ‘White Giant’ over the 25 lap distance after which oil may be topped up at the earliest. As early as 5:36 pm a gearbox oil line had chafed through on the leading Siffert/Redman-908. The gearbox withstood the loss of oil only until 5:57 pm, then it seized. Siffert’s comment: “Finally, a Sunday without a race…”

As early as 7:37 pm Kurt Ahrens had to note that the clutch of the 917 was in agony. Ahrens: ”Rolf has been pushing right from the start as if this were an airfield race! At the same time the Herrmann/Larrousse 908 parked in the pits because of a defect which hadn’t appeared since Zeltweg 1968 – a wheel bearing had to be changed. This car stood still for 39 minutes – and in the end they were only 3 seconds shy of victory. At 8:23 pm the clutch of the Stommelen/Ahrens 917 had to be adjusted. For the last time, they said. A little later Rico Steinemann held a protest against this car in his hands, posed because of the trail of oil smoke fogging the opponents’ windscreens. After ten hours, at midnight, Elford/Ahrens in the 917 were leading with 161 laps in front of Mitter/Schuetz (158 laps) and Lins/Kauhsen (157). Three laps behind was the Matra of Beltoise/Courage, another lap behind came the Ickx/Oliver Ford. The average was 217 kph. Wisps of fog came up and drifted across the track. One could see this in the lap times. All of a sudden no one was lapping in less than 4 minutes. In the Porsche-bus Gerhard Mitter ordered a juicy steak from Corena Piëch. Two 22- lap night stints night shift together with the fog had visibly sapped him. Every driver is slightly groggy after two such stints. Elford climbs out of the 917 each time as if he had done a leg of the Tour de France in the Pyrenees. Inside the 917 cockpit it is said to be hotter than in the 908 cheese cover. Kurt Ahrens has cut soles to shape for his shoes from asbestos because the pedals are heating-up like a flat-iron after a few laps. Mitter contemplates whilst chewing the steak: “24 hours are definitely too long. Occasionally you discover a lack of concentration – you are less wide awake when braking for the corners. And you un-learn driving during such endurance races, because you cannot drive at the limit as in a Formula-car race…” Since 11 pm they have been working on the Stommelen/Ahrens car, the clutch plate is being changed. Not until 1:48 am can Ahrens buckle up. The car is in last place. “For what reason do we drive at all? grumbles the man from Brunswick and jolts away into the night. Mitter is sleeping in the trailer as Ahrens arrives in the pits at 2:48 am, reporting a burning car on the Mulsanne Straight. They ask him where “In the kink”, he replies. Schuetz is missing. Might Schuetz be involved in this accident? Masten Gregory arrives in the pits by foot. By now the Chevrolet engine in Bonnier’s Lola has finally breathed it’s last after some difficult cylinder head surgery. Then they get confirmation: It is the Schuetz Porsche which burned out on the straight. Driver is unharmed, they say. I wake up Gerhard Mitter. He is quite drowsy. “Udo is OK”, I tell him, and Gerhard damns this Le Mans.

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Siffert and Redman talk handling

Towards 3:45 am Udo Schuetz appears in the dark corridor behind the pits. “That’s how a man looks like who just miraculously escaped death”, I thought. A sedative injection has dampened the shock; his face has been treated with tinctures and ointments. Udo’s eyes are bleary. A couple of mechanics stand in the corridor, Herbert Linge is leaning against the wall. Udo Schuetz speaks slowly; the sedation has lulled this bad memory: “Larrousse was following me for four laps. First I thought it was you”, he tells Hans Herrmann, who arrives as if on cue. “Just before the quick right-hander the car drew abreast of me and I see that Larrousse is at the wheel. He fell back and I felt an impact”. Schuetz pauses, then continues: “My car hit the guardrail in an acute angle. It started to play ping-pong, turned over. I saw flames and kicked out the door. I had not been buckled in. Then I jumped out, I ran into the forest and behind me the car exploded…”

Ten minutes later Larrousse’s Porsche is in the pits for refuelling. They inspect the car quickly. There should be traces if it hit the Schuetz car. The bodywork is dirty but there is no damage. Herrmann takes over. Larrousse and Schuetz make toward each other, Schuetz tells his version. Larrousse replies: “That’s not true. I was clearly behind you when you veered off the track…” It’s his word against Schuetz’.

At four in the morning an extremely exhausted Elford climbs out of the leading 917. He says a single word, meant for the car: “Perfect”. Elford/Ahrens sit on a five lap advantage over the Austro-German team of Lins/Kauhsen, they being three laps ahead of the Hobbs/Hailwood Ford. Herrmann/Larrousse have worked themselves up to sixth place. The Stommelen/Ahrens 917 is standing in the scrap yard of all Le Mans hopes – the paddock. On Sunday morning Ferrari also loses the Rodríguez/Piper car because of gearbox damage. Between four and five in the morning it had appeared in eighth place. The Scuderia Ferrari packs up its stuff. The mechanics remove the small mobile radios from their pockets which connected all members of the team, the red oil-stained Ferrari is stowed away in the transporter. Ferrari’s last win in Le Mans dates back four years. In 1965, Jochen Rindt/Masten Gregory drove a 275 LM of the American Racing Team to victory after all the works Ferraris had been eliminated by material defects in the brake discs.

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Sunday morning rolls past like honey. Any half hour turns into an hour. The only moment of tension – has the engine cover on Attwood’s car been closed? – dissipates after three laps. It has been closed otherwise it would have flown away. Watches tick, tired out people in the pits yawn. You feel chilly even though it is not cold. All of a sudden events come to a head. The end of the clutch on the Elford/Ahrens car is audible during shifting, you hear how it slips as the clutch housing is broken. Therefore, Attwood has to pit at 10:04 am. They try to adjust it but Attwood can hardly get under way. “We can write off this car, too”, say the faces of the Porsche people. That would mean Lins/Kauhsen take over the lead, this being only a matter of time anyway, as Attwood is carrying the 917 with 4:30 laps around the course. At 10:16 Lins hands over to Kauhsen. Willi is aware how Porsche is currently doing. He feels the responsibility suddenly resting on him. In secret he might fancy amongst the sparse Sunday morning traffic what he might do with the tidy sum should he win this race indeed – ah, rubbish, no means of winning yet. As Bott’s phrase goes: “Divine service isn’t over as long as they are singing”. In the pits, Lins is pleased now 3rd gear is working again. Ickx/Oliver are four laps behind. Under normal circumstances they cannot overcome this deficit. But circumstances don’t stay normal. After only one lap Kauhsen stops again. “Gear change problems” he reports, embarrassed. “Why, that’s impossible” reckons Lins. At 10:31 am the telephone rings in the Porsche pits, an old wooden box with a crank, their hotline to the signal pits at the end of the Mulsanne straight. “Kauhsen has stopped” reports Ing. Falk and hangs up. Piëch and Bott check the lap chart, Herrmann is on the same lap as the now-leading Ford of Ickx/Oliver. “What have we got to lose? they say. Then they show Herrmann the GREEN. While accelerating out of Mulsanne corner he notes the request that is hardly ever used at Porsche. Herrmann toughens his stance. 3:39, 3:39, 3:42, 3:40 are his lap times, the Ford does 3:43, 3:45, 3:46.

“What else could we do with the 917? muse Porsche’s engineers. They wonder, “Maybe we could stiffen the clutch? says Ing. Piëch, but the idea is rejected. At 10:58 Attwood finally gets out. Herrmann’s deficit on the Ford is 175 seconds. At 11:10 the Ford is being refuelled, John Wyer’s mechanics in their orange-coloured Gulf overalls change brake pads; all told this takes almost 3 minutes. Zooming past the parked Ford Herrmann gains the lead. Jacky Ickx is now at the wheel of the Ford, and Herrmann receives a 47 second advantage signal. The gap remained constant, but at 11:27 Herrmann had to refuel. Will they let him continue or will Larrousse relieve him? The Frenchman has performed splendidly so far, which hadn’t been expected in view of his practice times. But will he stand up to this nervous strain? Anyhow, Larrousse relieves Herrmann and after 47 seconds the car is back in the race. Ickx is in the lead again though. “Larrousse will regain these few seconds”, somebody says. At 11:31, 10 seconds separate Larrousse from Ickx. “Perhaps he will destroy the car? a voice asks. Obviously Larrousse is inferred, and Herrmann asks him to remember that the engine only revs to 7,800 instead of 8,200 rpm on the straight. At 12:09, two hours prior to the end of the race, Ickx leads by six seconds. At 12:36 Larrousse is in the Ford’s slipstream, by the next lap the Porsche is leading and Ickx has to head for the pits to refuel, which increases the Porsche’s advantage to 56 seconds. But, no more refuelling stops are intended for the Ford whereas the Porsche has to pit another time. Reporters and photographers surround the Porsche pit. The media scrum gets more intense. “Rico”, bellows a plump reporter. They surrender Steinemann to the hungry pack of journalists to avoid their intrusion into the pits. Outside Steinemann conducts a press conference in English-German-French. The back door of the pit is locked. Ing. Falk is busy with the slide rule. “Will there be enough petrol for the final dash? is the question. Hans Herrmann laughs subtly. This is his fifteenth time at Le Mans, but he has not yet experienced such a fight to the finish here. Hans is totally calm, almost apathetically calm as he dons his helmet. Ing. Bott is organising the final refuelling stop; any second can make or break victory. At 12:42 Larrousse is braking for the pits. Petrol seems to trickle into the tank like resin. 30 seconds, 35 seconds are up. The Ford appears in the chicane, Herrmann jumps into the cockpit. The Ford is at last being revved to the maximum, up to 6,500 and beyond that. The Porsche’s door is slammed, the fuel hose is being pulled off the filler neck. Herrmann catapults himself away, the Ford has already gone past so, Herrmann grabs for his slipstream. Fatal in the beginning, fascinating in the evening hours, lyrically floating during the night, rippling in the morning – Le Mans showed us all his colours. But now, during the final five quarters of an hour, it ends up what it has never been by this time: A race. (5593)   

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Herrmann looking relaxed

Hans Herrmann

John Frankenheimer, Hollywood’s creator of the movie “Grand Prix”, seemed to direct this Le Mans finale, the screenplay could come from Alfred Hitchcock. The duel which started in the final 78 minutes of the 1,440 minute long race was that of Ford versus Porsche. The duel of young daredevil Ickx, who reminds me of the English saying “a racing driver gets better and better, until he kills himself”, versus a man, who survived a complete Grand Prix-grid: Hans Herrmann. In 1952 he took up racing and in 1953 he was recruited by Porsche. He will never forget the 1954 Mille Miglia. A blind right-hand corner, they are running with 160 kph, a railroad crossing and the gates are closed. The train is approaching, puffing and blowing. It is all too late. Herrmann slaps on co-driver Herbert Linge’s helmet, both duck their heads, the Porsche Spyder slides underneath the gates. Hermann says today: “We were tongue-tied for a long time”. 1954: The big comeback of Mercedes-Benz. Three “Silver Arrows” with Fangio, Kling and Herrmann start at Reims. Hans does the fastest lap at 195 kph. In the Swiss Grand Prix the placings are Fangio – Gonzales – Herrmann. In the Italian Grand Prix Hans Herrmann finishes fourth. Today he says: “At that time I got wise that I had to put my heart and soul into it to stay in the business”. 1955: The Mille Miglia is being held again. Fangio, Moss, Kling und Herrmann pilot the Mercedes 300 SLR.

“Engine wise all of us were equal, each car had between 292 and 298 HP – an exciting prospect at that time”, says Herrmann. With a sound car he was lying behind Moss. “I could have won”, he thinks ever after. Worse was to come; with a thunderclap the loose fuel filler cap flew away, alcohol fuel poured into the cockpit.  One spark would have been enough… Shortly afterwards he had a serious accident with the Mercedes Formula 1-car in Monte Carlo: The brakes seized. Herrmann was with Borgward in 1957-58, then came the successful time at Porsche – overall winner at the Targa Florio with Bonnier and winner of the Sebring 12 Hours with Olivier Gendebien (1960). Between 1962 and 1965 Herrmann drove for Carlo Abarth, who sounds as pithy as his exhausts. He once said about Herrmann: “Pity that he is no longer as hungry as the young ones. If he were still hungry, he would win many more races. Then again he is winning many races because he drives gently, conserves the engine and thus always finishes”. Abarth perhaps characterises Hermann best: “There is no other racing driver in the whole world capable of driving a car so fast with such little risk”.

No one will be able to prove a driving error by Hans Herrmann, only mechanical problems got him into dangerous situations. In 1959 on the AVUS, the brakes of his BRM Grand Prix-car seized and at 200 kph the BRM nailed itself into the rain-sodden straw bales and somersaulted twice. At Porsche Herrmann never wrecked anything either, apart from the mishap in Imola, where he slipped off the road during a rain shower on dry tyres. Twice he faced broken wheels – but he dealt with such situations. He doesn’t grumble aloud at such mishaps. His good nature and calmness are proverbial, nothing can provoke him, something even his wife Madeleine finds provocative sometimes: “Boy, take a vase and drop it on the floor, do something at least…”, she begs her Hans. In endurance races he has the best fuel consumption as well as brake and tyre wear within the Porsche team. Almost dozy, he sits behind the wheel with his head tilted back. With regard to preparation of his car he is fussy. His seat adjustments can take up to 20 minutes; he detects the minutest variations on the car and is able to locate any noise without being a crafty technician. And he is the only driver within the Porsche team to be on familiar terms with test department manager Helmuth Bott. If roused, Hans can laugh at silly jokes, but he is not rated amongst early risers. Between races and test drives he applies himself to his café in downtown Stuttgart. The doors of the Herrmann’s magnificent villa in Maichingen are always open for guests.

Just 78 minutes prior to the end of the Le Mans 24 hour race this 41-year-old Swabian Hans Herrmann (born February 23, 1928), who is always seen off by his little son Dino with the words “Daddy, drive slowly”, saw himself virtually ordered to drive faster than he wanted in order to save a Pyrrhic victory for Porsche. Millions of Europeans watched this final dash at Le Mans spellbound. What they were unable to see was that after two laps the red brake warning light started to glow on the dashboard of Herrmann’s Porsche. “That means”, explained Herrmann, “you have to pit immediately during the next laps as the brake pads are worn out”. But Herrmann drove for a full final hour. At the beginning of the straight, in fourth and fifth gear, he was able to stay in the Ford’s slipstream, even push forward. As the engine remained more than 400 revolutions below its peak revs, Ickx pulled away from the Porsche on the final part of the straight. Herrmann used any tricks; he tried things he hadn’t tried since his early days. “Against a man driving as well as Ickx you can try such things without fearing to trigger a boomerang effect”, Herrmann later remarked. Side by side they dived into the corners, using any slipstreaming tricks on the straights. The Ford was fit as a fiddle still; it had been treated relatively conservatively for 23 hours after all. Of all cars – this could have been another Hitchcock idea – the Ickx-Herrmann duo closed the gap on the second John Wyer Ford, driven by Ickx’ stable mate Mike Hailwood, at 1:10 pm. Ickx went by without delay, Herrmann had to queue up. “Two Porsches versus one Ford would just as likely have tried to take advantage of this situation”, Herrmann admitted after the race. Ickx threatened to pull away, when Herrmann noted that “the Hailwood Ford was in better shape than Ickx’s”. Thus he hung his Porsche into Halewood’s slipstream “which tore my engine open to in excess of 8,000 revs! Hailwood unconsciously hauled Herrmann back to Ickx again. But Herrmann’s brakes got worse and worse. “What a pity”, Steinemann said, “Siffert should currently be driving against Ickx…”.

Twelve minutes prior to the end Hans still led at the start-finish line. There was nothing I could risk under braking, he regretted. The French audience is very anti-German minded. You only had to watch the spectators; if jubilation dominated, Ickx was leading. If the people stood stiff and silent, Herrmann was in front. In the end, they were jubilant. Jacky Ickx won, with only a drop left in his fuel tank, but with three seconds advantage. Then the surge of enthusiasm closed over the couple of cars, whose tired engines were switched off. Upon John Woolfe’s private Jaguar E-Type, which stood forlornly, coated by a thick layer of dust, a long-haired loafer had scribbled the French word “laver”. Wash it – a loafer, of all people!

resize_1969 24 Hours of LeMans, France, 1969. IckxOliver Gulf GT40 just yards ahead of a Porsche 908 with one lap to go

The margin at the finish!

Originally Published in issue 1 of AUTOMOBILSPORT

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