Posts Tagged ‘F1’

Masterclass: Sir Stirling & The Cooper

Monday, January 9th, 2012

Down tools for ten minutes and enjoy with us this inform­ative and enter­taining video of Sir Stirling Moss threading a beautiful little Cooper around Donington Park. The car is similar to the one in which Sir Stirling won the 1958 Argentine Grand Prix — and also the one in which Jack Brabham won the 1959 World Driver’s Championship.

We can’t be sure exactly which desig­nation is the car in the video, a T45 or a T51 — but pedantry aside we think you’ll agree it’s a very lovely piece of machinery.

This is the sort of light­weight, rear-​​engined car that ushered in an area of Empire dominance and loosened Ferrari, Mercedes and Masterati’s stranglehold on the sport.

Despite its lack of torsional rigidity and safety features it still managed to top 160 on a long straight, and achieved amazing performance for such a small car.

Little wonder the guys, like Stirling, who raced these machines were made of rakish, swash­buckling stuff.

New Jersey Grand Prix?

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

We think road and street circuits are the quint­essence of good motor racing. That’s why we love the Monaco GP, and regret the passing of truly classic events like the Targa Florio and the Mille Miglia.

One can under­stand though, that with the mad velocities of the current F1 cars, its difficult to sanction top-​​level racing on streets meant for the sedate pace of hybrids and buses.

But, according to a number of sources, but primarily this Wall Street Journal article, it seems that there have been plans afoot to create a street circuit along the edge of the New Jersey shore, with the totemic Manhattan skyline as a backdrop.

As many of you will know, next year will see the first in a long awaited return of the US Grand Prix, which will be held in (relat­ively) left-​​field Texan city of Austin.

Though the Austin franchise is appar­ently a ten-​​year deal, given the continual wax and wane of the world’s economy and the high-​​stakes circus that is the official Formula 1 tour, who knows whether Bernie’s boys will really accede to a second US based event in Jersey.

All we know is that a double dose of US style racing might actually stand a chance of knocking the burly but simplistic Nascar scene of its well-​​worn stateside perch.

Here’s hoping!

Jackie Ickx

Tuesday, August 2nd, 2011

OK. We know Sebastien Vettel is going to win the champi­onship. Again.

And though we all know his bottle clearly goes when you’re able to get up his tailpipe– he’s undoubtedly a very quick lap-​​maker.

But that doesn’t mean we have to love him.

That’s because a) he’s driving a car with the name of a soft drinks company and b) he’s a bit of a geek.

Now we know this may ruffle the feathers of some of our readers who believe that style is all fluff and no substance — but we truly believe style is, far from being insub­stantial, represents the difference between doing something well and doing something badly.

That’s why we love Jackie Ickx. He may not have won an F1 title, but man, did he look good (almost) winning in 1970. He could even make Zundapp motor­cycles (above) seem somehow appealing.

Call us shallow, but if Vettell could wear a button-​​down and a cardigan as well as Jackie, we would love him too.

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Austin A35 - classic sleeper...

Friday, May 20th, 2011

Died in the wool fans of the legend that is James Hunt may recognise this little beauty. Yes, it’s the great man’s 1967 Austin 35 Countryman conversion.

For sale at Silverstone Auctions’ 23 July event, the car has been in storage for 18 years since its current owner acquired it in 1993, when it still had the champion driver’s last cigarette butts in the ashtray and a sprinkling of Trill in the rear where he trans­ported his beloved budger­igars to shows.

Still used by Hunt as his daily transport at the time of his death in 1993, James loved this car — and many a biographer has documented his on-​​the-​​limit exploits in this unassuming little pocket-​​rocket.

According to the auctioneers the car starts and runs, but would likely need some mechanical attention before being put back on the road, and a “well-​​worn interior bears testament to its bird-​​loving owner”.

The lucky purchaser with get a regis­tration document in James’ name as well as a bunch of receipts for work carried out to the car during James’s ownership, plus books and magazines making reference to both James Hunt and his A35.

The Austin A35 van joins Hunt’s ‘other’ car, his 1975 Dutch Grand Prix-​​winning Formula One Hesketh 3082, also for sale.

This is a slice of F! of history — as well as a great bird-​​puller.

The Impossible Dream...

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

Honda’s F1 history dates back to the early sixties when the company looked to translate its motor­cycling success onto four wheels.

Honda tried to strike a deal with Lotus and Colin Chapman, which had won the world champi­onship with Jim Clark in 1963 but when Chapman decided against it, the Japanese pressed ahead with their own car and engine. The Honda RA271E, with a load-​​bearing transversely-​​mounted V12, made its debut at Nurburgring in 1964 with young American Ronnie Bucknum driving.

Starting a trend that would continue, F1 Hondas were prodi­giously powerful if sometimes heavy. The RA272 gave around 230bhp, estimated to be 10% more than its rivals, and allowed ex-​​Ferrari driver Richie Ginther to win the company’s 11th race, the 1965 Mexican GP, the last race for the 1.5-litre F1 category.

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The new 3-​​litre V12-​​engined car ran second on its debut in ’66 and the following year Honda elected to run a single car for John Surtees — the only man to win world champi­on­ships on two wheels and four – who had fallen out with Ferrari. Lola’s Eric Broadley designed the RA301 chassis, dubbed the Hondola, which first raced in the ’67 Italian GP at Monza. Surtees battled with Jim Clark and Jack Brabham and when one ran out of fuel and the other ran wide, the car won its first GP having led the one and only lap it would ever lead!

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In 1968 there was pressure to run an air-​​cooled V12 to promote air-​​cooled road cars and the RA302, using light­weight magnesium parts, was built. On testing it, Surtees declared it dangerous and refused to race it. Honda France brought in Jo Schlesser to drive it in the French GP after Johnny Servoz-​​Gavin turned it down. The unfor­tunate Schlesser died in a horrible fireball accident when he crashed on the second lap of the last F1 race to be run at Rouen. Surtees finished second in the RA301. Surtees again refused to race the 302 at Monza and shortly after­wards Honda announced a ‘temporary withdrawal’ from F1.

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That lasted until 1983, when Honda returned as an engine supplier with the new Spirit team, which graduated from F2 amid F1’s turbo era. The RA163E engine showed enough promise for Williams to do a deal to run Hondas the following year. Keke Rosberg found on/​off turbo power delivery and a flexing chassis a tricky combin­ation, but took the Williams-​​Honda to victory in Dallas.

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At the end of 1985, Rosberg and Nigel Mansell won the last three grands prix in Williams-​​Hondas. The team was dominant in ’86 as Mansell and Nelson Piquet won nine races and the constructors champi­onship but lost out in the drivers champi­onship to Alain Prost when Mansell suffered a spectacular tyre blow-​​out 18 laps from the end of the season finale in Adelaide.

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The team won 11 of 16 races in ’87, with Piquet claiming his third drivers’ title. Honda, however, switched allegiance to McLaren in ’88 as the RA168 engine gave Ayrton Senna his first world title in a year that saw the Brazilian and team mate Prost win 15 of 16 races for McLaren-​​Honda.

It would have been a clean sweep had not Senna tripped over a backmarking Williams-​​Judd a handful if laps before the end of the Italian GP. In a great irony, the Williams was driven by Jo Schlesser’s nephew Jean Louis who, standing in for Mansell, who had chicken pox, was making his first F1 start on the eve of his 40th birthday…

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In an era of continuing McLaren domin­ation Prost (89) and Senna (90) took world titles with V10 Honda power, then Senna repeated the success and took his third and final crown in ’91 with the V12 Honda RA121E-​​engined McLaren MP4-​​6. At the end of ’92, however, with the active suspension Williams-​​Renault now dominant, Honda withdrew once again.

They were due to return with a chassis being tested by Jos Verstappen and developed by Harvey Postlethwaite in ’99 but the project was stillborn and Postlethwaite died shortly after­wards from a heart attack at a Barcelona test.

Again as engine suppliers only, Honda returned with British American Racing and Jordan, eventually buying out BAR in 045 and returning solely as the Honda Racing F1 Team in ’06. Jenson Button gave them a first win in nearly 40 years with the RA806 in a mixed-​​condition Hungarian GP, but the going was tough.

It got tougher still in 07 – 8 with no sign of a compet­itive car. Ross Brawn had been recruited, however, and early in a hopeless 08 season, the decision was taken to concen­trate on next year’s car. During that time a Japanese aerody­nam­icist came up with the double diffuser that was key to the ’09 season. Suddenly though, in a shock announcement in December 08, with the worldwide recession taking hold, Honda pulled the plug. Button went on to win six of the first seven ‘09 races en route to the champi­onship. Honda reputedly injected over £90m running budget to avoid having to close down the Brackley factory. The car though, ran as a Brawn and carried a Mercedes engine. If only they’d known…

Cockpit Porn

Monday, January 31st, 2011

Still reeling from the breath­taking beauty of the McLaren display at the recent Autosport Show, we couldn’t help but share with you this delectable pic of the cockpit of McLaren’s 1989 successor to the all-​​conquering MP4/​4.

We’re not sure wether this car is Ayrton’s or team mate Alain Prost’s. Eiither way we think you’ll agree there’s something spine tingling at the prospect of sitting here.

There’s Alcantara wheel trim, manual shift and a clutch pedal: just enough to make you feel like a real racing driver.

1989 was the year when turbochargers were outlawed in F1, the season after Mclaren’s Franco Brazilian dream team had won every single victory possible with their wheezing, wailing blown beauty.

That said, they didn’t do too badly that season either, taking 10 GP firsts places (6 for Ayrton Senna and 4 for Prost). By this time Ayrton and Alain couldn’t stand each other by all accounts, and the intense compet­ition the person­ality clash inspired pushed McLaren engineers to make a truly unbeatable platform.

Even though the Brazilian genius won more races than the Frenchman and more often than not placed better than him, shunts and mechan­icals made him finish behind his French rival in the championship.

Race fans were the real champions that year.

This onboard footage will make your neck ache

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Toleman: F1's Last Romantics

Monday, November 30th, 2009

Senna

Small, unfash­ionable, short of money – Toleman racing was the the last of its kind to become a force in Grand Prix racing.

This was the team that took Ayrton Senna into Formula 1 for the first time and for whom he demon­strated his early master­piece of the art of driving at Monaco in the 1984 season (see tribute video below).

Toleman was also the team that launched the career of Derek Warwick, one of the most popular and accom­plished men in British motor sport – as well as bringing Ferrari’s design genius Rory Byrne to sudden prominence.

The new book from Veloce retraces the narrative from the very beginning and covers the dramas, heart­breaks and triumphs of each racing season in detail. It is full of poignant memories never published before, as well as the requisite anecdotes and insights you’d expect from one of the most inter­esting stories in F1 history.