Archive for the ‘F1’ Category

Charlie Dean’s Maybach 1 at Rob Roy in January 1949. The equipe behind is Micha Ravdell’s van and #38 Wyliecar Ford-A Special, still driven by its builder, Arthur Wylie. Number 9 on Maybach is a rego-disc (L Sims)

Even the contrarians amongst knowledgable Australian racing historians generally answer “the Maybach” when questioned about which racer was our greatest Australian Special.

It isn’t the Maybach though, but rather Maybachs – four of them – with no shortage of variants across the three chassis built. Whenever a photograph of a Maybach is uploaded onto social media there is always plenty of uninformed yibba-yabba about the specifications of the car in shot.

(Brian Caldersmith)
Charlie Dean and the brave Jack Joyce aboard Maybach 1 at Rob Roy in November 1947. The body is still to come. Wild road car! (L Sims)

One of our friends, John Ballantyne, prompted this article which I assembled to address the lack of accessible, accurate information about the specifications of Maybachs 1-4.

What follows is a copy of the technical specifications and evolution of the Charlie Dean and Repco Research built Maybach 1 published in an article of the Australian Motor Sports Annual 1958-59. The author’s name isn’t cited, but I’ve credited the editor of the book, Mr John Goode. The other two chassis – three cars – Maybachs 2, 3 and 4 will follow in my next post.

The article is focussed on technical information, not race results: this one that does that best, ponderous as it is: https://primotipo.com/2014/12/26/stan-jones-australian-and-new-zealand-grand-prix-and-gold-star-winner/ I hadn’t planned many photographs, but, as usual, my enthusiasm got the better of me…the period Repco ads are a visual device to assist in splitting one evolution of Maybach 1 from the next.

The photo choices are mine, so too are the ‘Notes’ sections, albeit almost all of that information is sourced from the same AMS article. I’m taking as-read a general knowledge of Maybach, if you need a refresher, click on the links at the end of this piece.

Six years later (from the 1947 shot) Stan Jones bolts away from the Europeans to win the October 1953 Victoria Trophy at Fishermans Bend in Maybach 1 S3. Behind is Doug Whiteford’s Lago Talbot T26C, George Pearse’s Cooper Vincent, and to the right, Ted Gray aboard Alta 21S Ford. Lex Davison’s Alfa Romeo P3 is partially obscured behind Maybach (L Sims)
John Fleming’s copy of The Argus report of the 1953 Victoria Trophy – the preceding shot

One final contextual word from Australia’s greatest motor racing historian, John Medley, about the Maybachs and their place in the Australian pantheon before we set off, quoted from the ’50 Year History of The Australian Grand Prix’, specifically John’s 1948 AGP chapter.

“HC (Horace Charles) Dean’s car, powered by a captured German scout-car engine, was little more than a year old, and had only been given a proper body in 1947: even so, in its brief career of trials, hillclimbs and sprints it had already attracted a lot of attention for its very willing performance and for its relatively advanced specification. It was, for example, one of just four runners in the 1948 AGP with independent front suspension, and of those four the Maybach was the only Australian special – the other three were factory-built cars of pre-war design: John Crouch’s Delahaye, Frank Pratt’s BMW, and Cec Warren’s Morgan.”

“The Maybach and Delahaye (135CS) actually had a lot in common, not least that both had been laid down not as pure racers, but as big-engined road cars with competition potential although another point which should not be overlooked is that both were essentially very conservative designs.”

“The significance of the Maybach was that it was Australian built, by a man at the centre of a small but talented team, and that the car had development potential – just how much was not realised at the time. Between 1948 and 1960, Maybachs in various forms were to contest eight AGPs and to lead – if sometimes only briefly – five of those races.”

Maybach 1 during June 1949, Charlie Dean and Jack Joyce on the way to FTD (D Stubbs)
Maybach 1 during Rob Roy #16 in May 1948 (D Stubbs)

MAYBACH 1 (1946-1949)

ENGINE: 6 cyl. inline single oh. camshaft. Bore and stroke: 90 × 100 mm. Capacity: 3,800 c.c., Compression ratio: 6.43 to 1. Output (initially on pool petrol: 69 octane) 100 B.H.P. at 3,000 г.p.m.

Single casting cast iron cylinder block and crankcase, with sump joint well below the crankshaft centre line. Crankshaft machined all over and fully counter balanced, running in eight white metal lined bearings, one between each crank throw and an extra one behind the camshaft drive pinion situated at rear end of crankshaft. Wet liners fitted to cylinder bores with lightweight balanced connecting rods and other reciprocating parts.

Single camshaft running in seven white metal bearings, opening valves by means of rocker arms fitted with eccentric bushes which could be rotated and locked to adjust valve clearances. Rockers had roller cam followers. Valves inclined at 65 degrees in hemispherical head and located on opposite sides. Helical timing gears with idler (originally compounded fabric, but replaced by steel).

Wet sump lubrication through filter with pressure fed oil supplied to centre main bearings, then to other caps, and through the crankshaft to big end bearings. Also fed to valve rocker shafts and camshaft bearings. Carburettors: Two marine Amal.

Charlie Dean and Maybach 1 during the January 26, 1948 AGP weekend at Point Cook RAAF Base just west of Melbourne. It was the cars first appearance with a body fitted, and painted white. DNF magneto failure on lap 12, the passenger decamped before the off. Note the Studebaker steel wheels at the front (AMS Review 1958-59)
Maybach 1 at Rob Roy in May 1948. A swag of these sensational, uber-rare Dacre Stubbs’ shots appear to have been taken immediately after Maybach was repainted, in the front garden of Dean’s Kew, Melbourne, home. Six Amals at this point, in November 1947 there were two…(D Stubbs)
(D Stubbs)

TRANSMISSION: Clutch: Fichtel and Sachs. Gearbox: Four speed crash type from a Fiat Model 525. Rear Axle: Lancia Lambda Series VIl in standard form.

CHASSIS: Frame: Tubular steel consisting of two parallel 4″ dia. steel tubes with independent suspension at the front (Dean’s own design) and conventional twin half elliptic springs at rear.

Suspension: Front Independent with transverse semi-elliptic spring and wishbones. Mainly 1937 Studebaker Commander parts. Steering: Cam and roller box (Marles) with two piece track rod.

Wheels and Brakes: Front: Studebaker bolt on pressed steel wheels with standard Studebaker brakes. Rear: Lancia centre lock 19″ dia. wIre wheels and brakes.

(D Stubbs)
(D Stubbs)

BODY: Two seat from welded sections of aircraft belly tanks.

LATER MODIFICATIONS: Included 6 carburettors, reduction of weight achieved by new front end. Minerva brake drums fitted with specially fabricated shoes, and new cast steel liners, mounted on light steel backing plates. Centrelock wire wheels with adapted hubs to replace Studebaker wheels. Body frame lightened.

(D Stubbs)
While all the one-liners down the decades credit Frank Hallam with the body, there is no way that’s correct. FH was apprenticed as a mechanic. Who built the body, it was clearly executed by a talented specialist, surely? (D Stubbs)
(D Stubbs)

NOTES: The car’s engine came from a German half-track vehicle that had been captured during the Middle East campaign and shipped to Australia for technical study by the military. Dean acquired it from a wrecker. Built as a sportscar, Dean was cajoled into turning it into a racing car by George Wade, a Repco mechanic/engineer, after recording 100mph in a Vintage Sports Car Club trial. The body was constructed in time for the 1947 AGP at Point Cook using aircraft belly tanks cut and shut by Frank Hallam, another Repco employee – so the story goes.

Cockpit shot shows the car was a ‘reasonably generous’ biposto in early spec. Twin-tube frame chassis, note diagonal bracing of the forward driver bulkhead. Revs, oil pressure and water temperature at a guess. Attractive – ahem – steering wheel, what is it off? (D Stubbs)
Neat remote shift – and locating stays to ensure easy accurate changes – to modified four speed Fiat 525 gearbox (D Stubbs)
(AMS Annual 1958-59)
Dean in Maybach 1 S2 competing in the Mornington Motor Races at the Balcombe army training base on Melbourne’s Mornington Peninsula in June 1950 (D Stubbs)

MAYBACH 1 Series 2 (1949 -1950/1)

Basically the same two seater sports/racing body and chassis with the following changes made from the original car.

ENGINE: 4.2-litre Maybach adapted to take developed parts from 3.8-litre original. Reground camshaft and special new main bearings. Original lead bronze bearings retained for big ends.

Supercharger: Ex G.M. diesel Roots type with three lobe rotors, mounted beside the motor driven by triple V-belts from the crankshaft nose; output 7 lb/sq. inch. Carburettor: Originally Claudel Hobson aircraft type replaced by Bendix-Stromberg aircraft type. Cooling System: Later sealed at blow off pressure of 4 p.s.i. Magneto: Adapted V-12 type but burnt out, subsequently Lucas.

TRANSMISSION: Differential: American Power Lock (1922 vintage truck) limited slip type fitted in modified Lancia housing.

CHASSIS: Rear Brakes: Special drums of original design using two leading shoes hydraulic system but replaced with leading trailing shoe hydraulics.

When Charlie Dean obliged Dacre Stubbs for the undated The Age (I think) article below he didn’t take Maybach 1 S2 too far, this shot is at the Willsmere Mental Institution in Kew. I grew up closeby, there were many occasions when Dad threatened to take us kids to The Nuthouse, as he sensitively referred to the place, when we misbehaved…(D Stubbs)
(J Fleming Collection)
Maybach 1 S2 at Rob Roy in June 1949 when Dean and Joyce bagged FTD. Wylie A-Ford Spl behind (L Sims)
(AMS Annual 1958-59)
Stan’s muscle-shirts were famous, here during the 1953 AGP at Albert Park. DNF with a variety of problems while leading in Maybach 1 S3 (S Griffiths)

MAYBACH I Series 3 (1951 – Early 1954)

Fundamentally similar in appearance to the two previous models, still a two seater but with suspension changes, three feet of rear chassis rails removed.

Modifications listed in order of introduction:

June 1950 – April 1951

Front suspension rebuilt: Studebaker parts replaced by Oldsmobile upper wishbones with integral shock absorbers. Transverse leaf spring redesigned to three leaf to reduce weight. Rear Suspension: Axle mounted on trailing quarter-elliptics with radius rods. It was this which necessitated cutting the rear end of the chassis.

Stan Jones awaits the off at Templestowe in September 1952, Maybach 1 S3, see photographer/racer/engineer John Fleming’s comments about his shot below
(J Fleming)
Posed The Age shot published on November 18, in the week before the ’53 AGP at Albert Park. Taken at Jones’ home garage in Yongala Road, Balwyn. From left, Ern Seeliger, Jones, Reg Robbins at the back, Charlie Dean and Lloyd Holyoak ‘working’ on Maybach 1 S3. Note the Oldsmobile top wishbones and (unsighted) lever arm shocks and transverse bottom leaf spring. One of the three big SUs is obscured by Stan’s arm
You can feel and smell Albert Park! Dacre Stubbs has tightly focussed his 1953 AGP start shot on Lex Davison, Jaguar powered ex-Moss HWM #3 and on Jones’ Maybach 1 S3; the ‘snappers framing of the shot heightens the drama. #7 is the legendary Frank Kleinig and Kleinig Hudson Spl with Cec Warren’s Maserati 4CLT alongside and #10, W Hayes’ Ford V8 Spl (D Stubbs)

Carburettors: Three marine Amals. Supercharger removed. Other Mods: Mild steel sheet head gasket fitted to engine raising compression ratio to 9 to 1.

Bodywork: Few obvious changes but considerable minor modifications. Framing modifled and lightened. Lighter radiator grille fitted, front cowl modified to give lower bonnet line.

June 1951 – September 1952

Carburettors: Three 1 3/4″ S.U. replacing Amals. Three special 2 3/16″ S.U. carburettors (originally designed for Lago Talbots) later fitted.

Tyres – Rear: 16 x 6.50 touring type (six ply). Subsequently four ply specially manufactured.

NOTES: Stan Jones bought the car off Charlie Dean in June 1951. Reports that the 1952 AGP would be held to F1 regs – 1.5-litres blown and 4.5 unblown, 1952-53 2-litre GP formula duly noted – meant the Maybach in 4.2-litre supercharged specs would have been ineligible so Repco Research developed a 3.8-litre unblown engine as noted above; three marine Amals fed the engine initially. Ultimately the ’52 AGP was held, as usual, to Formule Libre.

One of Jones’ pitstops at Albert Park in the 1953 AGP, Maybach 1 S3, Jag XK120 passes (D Stubbs)

The 1955 New Zealand Grand Prix programme recognised the achievements of Stan, the Repco Research team and Maybach 1 S3 in winning the 1954 event at Ardmore against international opposition the year before.

(AMS Annual 1959-60)

Etcetera…

(G McKaige)

Maybach 1 on Kew Boulevard at Studley Park, Melbourne before the start of the September 1947 VSCC One Day Trial. Alex Bryce’s Bentley 3-litre is behind. Note the twin-Amals, lump of wood to keep Charlie in-situ and slicks fitted up front!

(G McKaige)

By the time the VSCC Killara Park sprints were held at the Davison Lilydale farm in November 1947, Maybach 1 had grown four more Amals. The message to be taken is that Maybach(s), like all great racing cars, were in a perpetual state of development.

(J Montasell)

Charlie Dean at Rob Roy in January 1948, Maybach 1 obviously now bodied. Note the Studebaker pressed steel wheels and front drums compared with the shot of Maybach 1 in almost the same spot a year later below, with wire wheels and bespoke Minerva/PBR drums. Patons Brake Replacements – PBR – was another Repco Ltd subsidiary.

(J Montasell)
(G McKaige)

Charlie Dean cornering hard on Hurstbridge Hillclimb in April 1949, Maybach 1. He was second in the over 3-litre racing car class, Hurstbridge, to Melbourne’s east was used several times post-war.

(G McKaige)

Dean, Maybach 1 S2 competing in the Mornington Motor Races at the Balcombe military camp in June 1950.

Stan Jones in Maybach 1 S3 chasing Jack Murray’s Allard J2 at Parramatta Park, Sydney – the first meeting at the venue – on the Australia Day weekend in January 1952.

(J Fleming Collection)

Maybach 1 S3 this is The Age shot shown earlier, with the article as published. If somebody has a photograph of the Victoria Trophy we would all know if the annual for many years event was the Victorian, or Victoria Trophy. Both names are bandied around…

(Repco ad in the Motor Manual Australian Motor Racing Year Book No 4 1953-54)

Just how strongly Repco used the Maybach programme to promote their engineering excellence to the broader populace is unclear to me.

This ad in the horsepower-press below promotes some of the Repco subsidiary produced components used in Maybach, but pointedly fails to note that the car and driver shown are winning the 1954 New Zealand Grand Prix at Ardmore. Time to sack the ad agency and/or the internal copy-boy/girl!

Repco ad from the back cover of the November 4, 1952 Australian Hillclimb Championship, Rob Roy programme

Clearly – to the extent you can see the cars – Motor Manual’s cars and drivers of the year were Stan Jones and Maybach 1 S3, and Jack Brabham and his RedeX Special, aka Cooper T23 Bristol.

Reference and photo credits…

Australian Motor Sports Review 1958-59, Brian Caldersmith, ‘The 50 Year History of The Australian Grand Prix’, John Fleming Collection via Tony Johns, George McKaige and Chester McKaige via their superb two ‘Beyond The Lens’ books, Stan Griffiths, David Zeunert Archive, sensational and rare Dacre Stubbs photographs via Martin Stubbs, VSCC Vic Collection, John Montasell, Clem Smith, Motor Manual, Ivan Pozega Collection, Peter Moore

Tailpieces…

(C Smith)

The Maybach reality: Australia against the Europeans – ignoring the country of origin of the engine! – with Stan as often as not leading as chasing. Here Jones is aboard Maybach 1 on the Adelaide Hills, Woodside road circuit in October 1951, chasing arch-Melbourne-rival come fellow rough-nut, Doug Whiteford’s Lago Talbot T26C. Whiteford won this encounter in what were Stan’s early days in Formule Libre.

(I Pozega Collection)

Maybach 1’s mortal remains were tracked down or found by Jack McDonald in a South Melbourne wrecking/junk-yard in the early 1960s. He rebuilt the car – all of the required donor bits were easier to obtain back then – and soon the old-gal was back on track, in this case a Calder Drags meeting in 1968. Jack is being blown off by Des Byrne’s E-Type Ford V8.

For the last 32 years Maybach 1 has been in the very safe, caring hands of Melbourne racer/historian Bob Harborow, shown below competing at Goodwood in 2006.

(P Moore)

Finito…

(P&O Heritage)

Jack Brabham’s Cooper T45 Climax (F2-10-58) enroute to the hold of P&O Line’s 30,000 ton SS Arcadia while Stirling Moss’ similar Rob Walker car (F2-9-58) awaits its turn at Tilbury Docks.

It’s October 20, 1958, seven weeks before the Melbourne Grand Prix at Albert Park on November 30 where this pair of drivers and cars were the star attractions in a 19 car field. The Arcadia arrived 11 days before the race allowing plenty of pre-event promotion.

I was contacted by P&O Heritage in June last year requesting assistance in identifying the cars and the event to which they were travelling, with the assistance of my good friend, Cooper expert Stephen Dalton, that wasn’t a drama. With their exhibition now well over we can share the shots.

(P&O Heritage)

Arfur Daley! was my first reaction, look at them all with their peaked-caps to ward off the brisk River Thames air. It’s Stirling’s Rob Walker owned T45, chassis F2-9-58, no less than the car in which Maurice Trintignant won the ’58 Monaco GP, and with which Moss was victorious in the non-championship F1 Aintree 200 and Caen GP that year.

Brabham’s F2-10-45 was acquired from the British Racing Partnership: Alfred Moss and Ken Gregory. It had been raced in 1.5-litre F2 events continuously throughout 1958 by Stuart Lewis-Evans in between his Vanwall F1 commitments and Tommy Bridger otherwise. Lewis-Evans had many top-5 placings and one win at Brands in June.

Maurice Trintignant during the 1958 Monaco GP. The Walker T45 F2-9-58 won from the two works Ferrari Dino 246s of Luigi Musso and Peter Collins (MotorSport)
Stuart Lewis-Evans on the hop at Goodwood during the April 1958 Lavant Cup. He was fourth in BRP’s T45 F2-10-58 behind Brabham’s works Cooper T43 and Graham Hill and Cliff Allison’s works Lotus 12s; all cars 1475cc Coventry Climax FPF powered (unattributed)

Still fitted with 1.5-litre Climax FPF, BRP entered Bridger in the Moroccan Grand Prix at Ain Diab. His only GP start, in a six-Cooper F2 race within a race, ended in tears after Tommy spun and crashed on oil dropped by Tony Brooks’ Vanwall the lap before, Bridger completing 30 of the 53 laps. He wasn’t badly hurt, but poor Lewis-Evans died from burns sustained after a separate accident caused by his Vanwall’s engine seizure.

BRP returned the car to Coopers for repair, Brabham then bought it and installed a 2.2-litre Coventry Climax FPF to race in the Antipodes, while the Moss car was fitted with an Alf Francis built 2015cc Climax.

(AC Green)

The trip from Tilbury to Port Melbourne back then took on average, four-six weeks, here the new Arcadia (b1953-d1979) is tied up at Station Pier, Port Melbourne in late March 1954. The trailer leg to transport the cars to Albert Park is a short 6km.

(B King Collection)

The 32 lap, 100 mile Melbourne GP was the eighth of nine Gold Star rounds that year, Stan Jones in the #12 Maserati 250F won the ‘58 title.

Brabham is in #8, #7 is Moss, while another Jones, young Alan is the small white clad figure leaning on the nose of the Ford Zephyr. Moss won the race from Brabham with the very quick Doug Whiteford, Maserati 300S in third

Bib Stillwell was fourth in another 250F with Len Lukey fifth in a Lukey Bristol – Len’s evolution of a Cooper T23. Car #10 is Tom Clark’s 3.4-litre Ferrari 555, the car alongside him is Ted Gray, Tornado 2 Chev.

Moss and mechanic, name please? and T45 F2-9-58 on the Albert Park grid. That November 30, 1958 event was the last at Albert Park until the modern AGP era commenced in 1996 (S Dalton Collection)
NZGP, Ardmore, January 10 1959. The Schell, Bonnier and Shelby Maserati 250Fs used their 2.5-litre torque to lead for a bit on lap one. #4 is Brabham’s Cooper, with Moss #7 behind and between Jack and Carrol – and the rest (LibNZ)

Both cars were then shipped across the Tasman to contest the Kiwi Internationals. Moss won the New Zealand Grand Prix at Ardmore from Brabham in a big field that included Bruce McLaren, Carroll Shelby, Jo Bonnier and Harry Schell on Maserati 250Fs, and Ron Flockhart’s works-BRM P25.

Brabham aboard F2-10-58 at Ardmore in 1959, second to Moss (T Marshall)

Moss (and the Cooper) then returned to Europe for his other commitments while Brabham did the Lady Wigram Trophy and Teretonga International for second/third, then returned home to New South Wales where he won the South Pacific Trophy at Gnoo Blas.

Jack then travelled to Cordoba to begin his F1 season with the February 16 Buenos Aires GP, but not before selling F2-10-58 to Len Lukey. The Melbourne Lukey Mufflers manufacturer used it to good effect to win the 1959 Gold Star, the highlight of which was an epic dice between Len and Stan Jones’ 250F in the AGP at Longford (AMS cover below) which was resolved in Stan’s favour.

The T45 remained in Australia forever, and in a nice bit of Cooper T45/Albert Park symmetry, Stirling Moss drove his Dad, and Jack’s old car in the historic car demonstrations during an Australian Grand Prix carnival in the early 2000s. Both cars are extant…

Etcetera…

(MotorSport)

An unmistakable Aintree shot of Stirling Moss aboard Walker’s T45 F2-9-58 on the way to victory in the BARC 200, April 1958.

(unattributed)

Tommy Bridger holding off Bruce McLaren’s works Cooper T45 Climax and Ivor Bueb’s Lotus 12 Climax aboard the BRP T45 F2-10-58 during the May ’58 Crystal Palace Trophy. He was second, bested only by Ian Burgess’ works Cooper T45, in a great performance.

Credits…

P&O Heritage, Allan C Green-State Library of Victoria, Bob King Collection, Stephen Dalton Collection, sergent.com.au, MotorSport Images, unattributed shots via Bonhams photographers unidentified, Terry Marshall, National Library of New Zealand

Tailpiece…

(MotorSport)

Tommy Bridger in the 1.5-litre F2 BRP Cooper T45 Climax F2-10-58 chasing Gerino Gerini’s Centro Sud Maserati 250F at Ain Diab during the October 19, 1958 Moroccan Grand Prix. Gerini was 11th from Q17 and Bridger DNF from Q22 after the accident described earlier.

The race-within-a-race of six Cooper F2 cars comprised T45s raced by Salvadori, Brabham, McLaren, Bridger and Andre Guelfi, plus Francois Picard’s older T43. Bridger qualified behind the works-Coopers of Roy, Jack and Bruce…he was pretty handy. See more about him here: https://500race.org/people/tommy-bridger/

Finito…

When Stan Jones took the chequered flag at Ardmore to win the New Zealand Grand Prix seventy years ago today – on January 9, 1954 – he became the first Australian car racer to win an international Grand Prix. His weapon of war was the Charlie Dean built, then Dean/Repco Research developed and maintained Maybach 1.

That’s Ken Wharton in the BRM P15 V16 behind, he pitted with mechanical problems and finished second with Tony Gaze’ HWM Alta s/c third.

Victory spoils that much sweeter after the adversity of the previous 24 hours – Charlie Dean all smiles at right rear. Sportscar derivation of Maybach 1 clear (Lib NZ)
Maybach 1, Ardmore 1954. HC Dean in the light, short sleeve shirt. ‘Ecurie Australie’ is the sign below the tonneau. Repco always seemed pretty cute about their lack of signage on Maybachs 1-3 while noting the no-advertising-on-cars rules of the day (N Tait)

I’ve done Stan and this topic to death over the years, see the links at the bottom of this article. So much so, I’ve no photos on this race I haven’t already posted so let’s recognise the occasion and scale of the achievement and then jump to the very end of the Maybach program, in terms of the three cars being Maybach six-cylinder powered at least.

With Repco’s stash of blocks in short supply, Maybach 3 – first raced at Templestowe Hillclimb on April 11 1955 - was powered by a 260bhp @ 5000rpm, 3.8-litre variant of the German SOHC, two-valve engine, albeit the motor was now fuel injected, such work done by Phil Irving and Charlie Dean.

With Big Red Cars growing locally in number – Davison Ferrari 500/625, Hunt Maserati A6GCM and 250F – the big silver beast was hard pushed despite Stan’s undeniable skills at twiddling its steering wheel.

Jones on-the-hop, as always, aboard Maybach 3 at Gnoo Blas in January 1956 before she let go at bulk-revs. Mercedes Benz W196 stylistic influence clear from this angle (R Donaldson)
3.8-litre, direct-injected Maybach-six was mounted 60-degrees to vertical. Port Wakefield AGP paddock in 1955. Dean – the very fast Charlie Dean – at the wheel, Jones DNF in the race won by Jack Brabham’s Cooper T40 Bristol (E Gobell)

1956 opened with the international meeting at Gnoo Blas on January 30. Reg Hunt’s new Maserati 250F set the pace and won the South Pacific Championship easily against skinny opposition compared with previous years. Squeezing all that Maybach had to offer, on lap 23, with Stan 38 seconds adrift of the 250F, the engine let go in a major way.

Jones then got with the strength and bought a 250F. #2520 was demonstrated by Stan at the Geelong Sprints on May 27, first racing at Port Wakefield the following weekend.

While Stan got to grips with his new Italian Stallion, his mate, the brilliant engineer/racer Ern Seeliger set to work turning Maybach 3 into Maybach 4 inclusive of modified Chev 283cid V8, de Dion rear suspension and other mods.

Stan had an occasional steer of Maybach 4 Chev, winning a Gold Star round in it at Port Wakefield in 1959, but in essence, the Maybach Program of 1946-56 was at an end…oh-so-critical bits of Repco and Oz racing histories.

As Paul Cummins put it, “Stan with the NZ Trophy in one hand and a glass of champers in the other; or is that a martini shaken not stirred?” (Cummins Archive)
(Motor Manual May 1954 T Johns Collection)

Credits…

Auckland Star, Libraries NZ, Bob Donaldson, State Library of New South Wales, Naomi Tait, E Gobell, Tony Johns Collection, Cummins Archive

Tailpiece…

(R Donaldson)

Look out ladies!…

Stan was a good-lookin’ Rooster at 32, that portrait is the best! He’s at the wheel of Maybach 3 during the ’56 SouPac, Gnoo Blas meeting. With hair Brylcreemed back, Raybans and terry-towelling T-shirt sourced from Buckley & Nunn, Stanley really looks-the-goods. Jones had a life of great achievement, he was not a bloke who died guessing, bless him.

Tyre is a Dunlop R1.

Finito…

(J Manhire)

Superb shot of British International Peter Whitehead’s Ferrari 125 (#0114) enroute to winning the Lady Wigram Trophy in 1954.

He won the race from Tony Gaze’s HWM Alta 2-litre s/c and Ken Wharton’s BRM P15 1.5-litre V16 s/c. Whitehead’s mechanic brings the car back into the paddock to a most appreciative crowd below.

(VC Browne)

The Ferrari is shown in the Ardmore paddock below during the NZ GP weekend, that race was won by Stan Jones’ Maybach 1 after the star of the show, Ken Wharton’s BRM retired with mechanical problems. See here for a piece on the 1954 NZ GP: https://primotipo.com/2019/11/18/ken-wharton-and-brms-grand-turismo-south-in-1954/ and on Whitehead’s Ferrari 125, later sold to Dick Cobden, and later still one of Tom Wheatcroft’s first Grand Prix car purchases here: https://primotipo.com/2020/04/09/1955-south-pacific-championship-gnoo-blas/

Upon reflection, nobody did more to build the Ferrari brand in New Zealand way back then, than Peter Nield Whitehead. Others quickly followed mind you!

(N Tait)
Ferrari 125 (unattributed)
Ken Wharton, BRM P15, Wigram 1954 (G Nimmo)

Whitehead had a nice little earner going with his Grand Prix Ferraris. By carefully specifying his ex-F1 Formule Libre cars he made a nice little earner from start and prize money post-war, visiting New Zealand from 1954-57 and doing exceptionally well.

In 1955-56, Peter and his Australian buddy, Tony Gaze raced a pair of F1/F2 2-litre Ferrari 500s fitted with 3-litre Monza engines. With these Ferrari 500/625s they did rather well: at Ardmore Whitehead was second in the’55 NZ GP, and Gaze third, while Whitehead won at Wigram and Ryal Bush, and Gaze at Dunedin in 1956. Peter was third in the NZ GP that year in the race won by Moss’ Maserati 250F.

More about the Ferrari 500 here: https://primotipo.com/2019/06/24/1956-bathurst-100-lex-davison/

Whitehead at Ryal Bush in 1956, Ferrari 500/625 (J Manhire)
Ferrari 625 cutaway (G Cavara)
Whitehead’s Ferrari 500/625 in the Wigram paddock in 1956 (T Adams)
(K Brown)

The grid at Wigram in 1956 with the partially obscured Reg Parnell at left aboard the one-off Aston Martin DP155. Then Whitehead’s Ferrari 500/625, Lesley Marr’s Connaught B-Type Jaguar and Tony Gaze’s Ferrari 500/625. On row two is Ron Frost, Cooper 500, and Ron Roycroft’s Bugatti Jaguar

With no shortage of quick Maserati 250Fs racing in non-championship F1 and Formule Libre racing around the globe Whitehead returned to Maranello for a faster car. Unsurprisingly, wily Enzo Ferrari palmed Peter – no fool by any stretch – off with a pair of 3.5-litre Monza engined 555 Super Squalos, one of the unsuccessful series of cars that led Enzo to beg for the Lancia D50 programme after Gianni Lancia’s profligacy drove his family company into the wall at warp-speed.

These Ferrari 555/860s were driven with great skill by Whitehead and his new ‘teammate’ Reg Parnell. The factory Aston Martin racer was another worldly businessman who enjoyed his tour of NZ with an uncompetitive Aston Martin DP155 the year before and was keen to return for more with a competitive mount.

The pair finished one-two in the NZ GP with Parnell ahead of Whitehead after 120 laps/240 miles. Reg repeated the dose at Dunedin, while Whitehead won at Wigram and Ryal Bush.

Parnell in front of Whitehead at Ryal Bush in 1957, Ferrari 555/860 – chassis 555/2, later FL/9002 from 555/1 later FL/9001. Whitehead won from Parnell (Manhire/Woods)
Whitehead’s winning Ferrari at rest, Wigram 1957 (N Logan)
Ferrari 555 Super Squalo (G Cavara)

I love this ‘the times are a changin’ shot below, not that said paradigm shift was clear at the time. The big beefy Ferrari 555/860s of Reg Parnell and Peter Whitehead stand at left with no shortage of presence in the Ardmore pitlane during the January 1957 New Zealand Grand Prix weekend.

#3 is Jack Brabham’s Cooper T41 Climax 1.5 FWB, and at far right is Alex Stringer’s similar Cooper T41 Climax FWA 1100 he had leased from the by then dead Ken Wharton. #2 is Horace Gould’s Maserati 250F. It’s the sheer economy of the Cooper’s packaging – and ride height – that grabs the eye.

(B Sternberg)

Parnell won from Whitehead and Stan Jones’ Maserati 250F. Brabham and Stringer were 10th and 12th, while Gould dropped a valve in the 250F. As the Cooper’s Climax engines approached 2-litres the mid-engined packaging advantages became abundantly clear.

More on the Whitehead and Parnell Super Squalo’s here: https://primotipo.com/2015/08/25/arnold-glass-ferrari-555-super-squalo-bathurst-1958/ and on the epochal series of Coopers here: https://primotipo.com/2019/10/04/cooper-t41-43-45-51-53/

Tom Clark with the engine of his ex-Whitehead Ferrari 555 Super Squalo’s 860 Monza 3.5-litre four-cylinder, DOHC, two-valve engine (unattributed)

Etcetera…

(N Tait)

The front row of the Lady Wigram Trophy grid in 1954. Ken Wharton, BRM P15, Whitehead’s Ferrari 125, then Tony Gaze’ HWM Alta and on the far side, #12 Fred Zambucka, Maserati 8CM.

(G Woods)

Peter Whitehead ahead of Leslie Marr at Ryal Bush in 1956, Ferrari 500/625 and Connaught Jaguar. And below being pushed into the dummy grid.

(J Manhire)
Ryal Bush 1956 (G Woods)
(J Manhire)

Whitehead with the spoils of victory at Ryal Bush in 1956, and below aboard his Ferrari 555/860 in the two shots below in 1957.

(J Manhire)
(J Manhire)

Credits…

John Manhire, Graham Woods, Vic Browne, Tony Adams, Kelvin Brown, Gordon Nimmo, Milan Fistonic, Nigel Logan, Giuseppe Cavara, MotorSport Images, Naomi Tait, Robert Sternberg

Tailpieces…

(MotorSport)

Peter Whitehead didn’t start 1958 as he had the previous four years, but had one more great result before his untimely death.

Peter and his half-brother, Graham Whitehead contested the June 1 Nurburgring 1000km in a privately entered Aston Martin DB3S and finished eighth in a warm up to Le Mans, which was held three weeks later. Peter had won at Le Mans with Peter Walker in 1951, taking Jaguar’s first historic win aboard a C-Type.

There, the Whiteheads finished a magnificent second behind the winning Olivier Gendebien/Phil Hill Ferrari TR/58 – the two cars are shown in the shot above. It was an amazing save for Aston Martin after all three of the works DBR1 300s failed to finish.

(MotorSport)

On September 20 the pair were contesting the fourth stage of Tour de France Auto in a 3.4-litre Jaguar Mk1. They were leading the touring car category when Graham lost control on a dark, foggy transport section between Mont Ventoux and Pau. The Jag plunged off a bridge in Cros landing upside down in a stream in a ravine 35 feet below. Poor Peter, still only 43, was killed instantly, Graham survived with minor leg injuries.

It was a sad end for the popular, talented wealthy sportsman who served his country in the war and barely bent a panel on any of the cars he raced…

Finito…

(MotorSport)

Denny’s South African Office…

Cockpit shot of Denny Hulme’s second placed – Jack won in his Brabham BT33 – McLaren M14A Ford during the March 7, 1970 South African Grand Prix weekend at Kyalami.

Smiths instruments of course: the chronometric-tach telltale is on 10,100rpm, the DFV developed all of its punch from 8-10000. Oil pressure and temperature is the priority, fuel pressure and water temperature secondary and out of Hulme’s direct line of sight. Switches are for the rev limiter, ignition, electrical fuel pump (starting only) and the starter button. I’ve always liked a nice big ignition kill switch, but let’s not get picky.

Bruce and Denny M14As – with Jack out of focus – in the Brands paddock during the Race of Champions weekend in March 1970 (MotorSport)

The M14A was an evolution of Robin Herd and Bruce’s 1968 M7 design. A profitable Grand Prix winning design, not to forget the McLaren M10A and M10B F5000 cars which made McLaren and Trojan Cars plenty of dollars.

The cars had a few steerers in 1970: Bruce and Denny, then Dan Gurney after Bruce’s fatal Goodwood accident, and after that, Peter Gethin when conflicting oil company sponsorship contracts got in the way of Dan’s F1 and Can-Am McLaren drives.

Gurney’s qualifying best was a second adrift of Denny in the British GP, it would have been interesting to see if he could have got back his old Grand Prix race-pace had he finished the season with McLaren. He was right on-the-money in the Can-Am Cup mind you, winning the first two races at Mosport and St Joliet from pole in his M8D Chev – no doubt relishing the very first ultra competitive Can-Am car he had ever raced! – and qualified second on the grid at Watkins Glen, then faded with undisclosed dramas in his last race for the team.

Gurney’s M14A Ford, British GP July 1970 Brands Hatch (MotorSport)

There is no such thing as an ugly Papaya McLaren! Note the full monocoque aluminium chassis under that inspection hatch.

In a very tough year for the team, Bruce’s best was second place in the Spanish GP in M14A/1, and Dan’s best in three Grands Prix with that car, was sixth in the French at Clermont Ferrand.

Denny raced M14A/2 to second at Kyalami, and third in the Race of Champions at Brands Hatch and the German Grand Prix. He missed the Belgian and Dutch GPs after burning his hands at Indianapolis when an imperfectly secured quick-release cap on his McLaren M15 Offy leaked methanol and caught fire.

Peter Gethin then raced M14A/2, placing second in the Spring Trophy at Oulton Park and in the International Trophy at Silverstone.

Dan Gurney, McLaren M14A Ford, on the beautiful Clermont Ferrand road circuit, French GP 1970 (MotorSport)

M14A/3 became Peter Gethin’s car from the 1970 Italian GP until the Spanish in March 1971. In eight meetings his best was sixth in the Canadian GP at Mont Tremblant.

Ultimately the M14A fell a bit short in 1970, while noting again the mitigating factors. It was a rare GP season in which victories were spread far and wide amongst the Lotus 72 Ford, Ferrari 312B, Brabham BT33 Ford, BRM P153 and March 701 Ford! Jochen Rindt posthumously won the drivers title and Lotus the constructors.

Bruce in M7B Ford. Note the front wing support mounts directly to the upright, Race of Champions 1969 (MotorSport)

Hey you in the Big Banger…

No it’s not a single-seat M8 Can-Am car, in 1969 McLaren converted M7A/3 to ‘Lancia D50 spec’ by placing all the fuel centrally and low. By filling in the space between the wheels Bruce and Gordon Coppuck were also playing with the aerodynamics of the car; the car was then tagged M7B/3.

It didn’t work though, after racing the car on debut in the South African GP at Kyalami in January 1969, and then the Brands Hatch Race of Champions (above) the car was sold to Colin Crabbe, of Antique Automobiles, for Vic Elford to drive.

Vic was fifth in the French GP, then sixth in the British before crashing it at the Nurburgring in an accident not of his making. Mario Andretti crash-landed his Lotus 63 Ford 4WD and Vic collected one of its wheels, flipped and ploughed into the trees destroying the car and breaking his arm in three places. I guess the Ford DFV and Hewland DG300 gearbox from that car found their way into the new March 701 that Crabbe bought for Ronnie Peterson to race in 1970?

Vic Elford, McLaren M7B Ford, Nurburgring 1969 not long before his big, Mario inflicted crash (MotorSport)
Bruce McLaren, McLaren M7C Ford, British GP Silverstone 1969. Third, race won by Jackie Stewart’s Matra MS80 Ford (MotorSport)

Bruce drove a new car, M7C/1 for the rest of 1969. The major factor which enhanced this cars performance was the use of a full monocoque aluminium chassis derived from the M10A F5000 car, itself derived from the bathtub-monocoque M7A.

McLaren’s conventional 2WD cars didn’t get as much love as they otherwise would have in 1969 given the attention lavished upon their 4WD brother, the M9A. McLaren, together with Lotus, Matra and Cosworth pursued this blind-alley. Ultimately, very quickly, wings and the tyre company Polymer Chemists solved the ‘3-litre problem’ of too much power and too little grip far more cost-effectively than then complex mechanical 4WD mechanisms.

Derek Bell aboard – although he looks like he is trying to escape it – the McLaren M9A Ford 4WD during the 1969 British GP weekend at Silverstone. DNF suspension after five laps (MotorSport)

Bruce’s 1969 M7C – as we have seen, a lineal descendant of the 1968 M7A – begat the 1970 M14A. The major advances from M7C to M14A were inboard rear brakes, new front uprights and a smidge greater fuel capacity.

See Allen Brown’s Oldracingcars.com for more detail: here: https://www.oldracingcars.com/mclaren/m7a/ and here: https://www.oldracingcars.com/mclaren/m4a/ not to forget my own masterpiece on the M7A here: https://primotipo.com/2018/07/13/mclaren-m7a-ford-dfv/

Etcetera…

(MotorSport)

A few more shots of the wideboy McLaren M7B Ford during that March 16, Race of Champions weekend at Brands Hatch in 1969.

High wings were the rage but Lotuses ‘cavalier’ engineering of their wing supports and their repeated failures – the last straw the breakages of Rindt’s and Hill’s wings and resultant crashes of their Lotus 49s at Montjuïc – saw them banned during the Monaco GP weekend that year. More tightly controlled, they stayed.

The photographs in this article demonstrate the changes being made by the teams to adapt in a a period of about 12 months, not to forget the related 4WD adventures for the affected teams!

(MotorSport)
(MotorSport)

Credits…

MotorSport Images, oldracingcars.com

Tailpiece…

(MotorSport-Schlegelmilch)

Our pit-babe was at Clermont during the 1970 French GP weekend, the cars are Denny and Dan’s M14As and Andrea de Adamich’s M14D Alfa Romeo. Another of Rainer Schlegelmilch’s signature shots!

Finito…

Stewart, Lotus 33 Climax #R10, Rand GP 1964 (P Tempest)

Jackie Stewart on his way to victory in the second heat of the Rand Grand Prix aboard a works Lotus 33 Climax. Kyalami, December 12, 1964.

Stewart’s first drive of a Grand Prix car had been organised by Jim Clark during the 1964 British Grand Prix weekend at Brands Hatch on the July 11 weekend.

Dominant in one of Ken Tyrrell’s Cooper T72 BMCs that F3 season, Clark convinced Colin Chapman to give the young charger a few laps in Clark’s Lotus 33 Climax at the end of practice. The marshalls were asked to stay in situ for an extra 20 minutes to allow the test to take place. Using Jim’s car and his settings: pedals, seat etc, off went The Other Scot down the pitlane to complete only a few laps before the engine failed.

Despite the short session, JYS impressed, a week later Jackie had the first of a half-dozen meetings in a works-Ron Harris Racing Lotus 32 Cosworth SCA F2 car at Clermont Ferrand. The opportunity arose as a result of Peter Arundell’s misfortune.

Peter Arundell on his way to fourth place during the French GP at Rouen on June 28, Lotus 25 Climax. Only a week before his Reims near death experience (MotorSport)

Arundell was badly injured during the Reims F2 GP on July 5. In a slipstreaming group, he got onto the rough at the kink on the straight, corrected, but lost a bit of speed and was hit by Richie Ginther’s Lola T55 Cosworth SCA. Peter parted company with his car in mid-air, breaking an arm, thigh and collarbone and was comatose for a fortnight. At that time he was in joint third place in the F1 World Championship standings with Ginther, behind Clark and Graham Hill. Arundell eventually returned to F1 with Team Lotus in 1966, a tough place to be at the time: see here for a great summary of Peter’s career: https://www.f1forgottendrivers.com/drivers/peter-arundell/

Meanwhile, Jackie Stewart was immediately on the pace at Clermont, placing second behind Denny Hulme’s winning Brabham BT10 Cosworth SCA. Jackie then won at Snetterton, was second at Montlhery and third at Oulton Park.

So when Clark sustained a back injury at Cortina d’Ampezzo during a snowball fight at a Ford Cortina marketing event, it was an easy call for Chapman to engage Stewart to replace him in South Africa. Lotus had contracted to provide two cars to contest the Rand Grand Prix and touring car support races at Kyalami that weekend.

Jim briefing Jackie before heading out at Brands Hatch in July (F1GPDC)

Stewart at Snetterton, winning the Vanwall Trophy on the 26 September, British F2 Championship round, Lotus 32 Cosworth SCA (MotorSport)

Stewart initially thought that he should make his GP debut with BRM, to whom he was contracted for 1965, but “I telephoned Ken Tyrrell and asked his advice. He said ‘don’t be such a stick in the mud, you’ve got to get out and drive the thing sometime’ and pointed out that this Formula 1 scamper would calm my nerves rather than taking my first appearance in a full-scale Grand Epreuve. I think from that aspect I couldn’t have done better than drive at Kyalami and perhaps I wouldn’t have done it if someone hadn’t kicked me in the backside and told me to get on with it,” he told the F1 Grand Prix Drivers Club.

Chapman cleared the drive with BRM’s Tony Rudd and Stewart promptly qualified on pole in a brand new Lotus 33 Climax (R10). The field included his teammate Mike Spence, his soon to be teammate at BRM, Graham Hill in a Willment entered Brabham BT11 BRM, Bob Anderson’s BT11 Climax and two Brabham BT10 Lotus-Ford twin-cams raced by Paul Hawkins and David Prophet. There was a swag of competent locals too including John Love, Piet de Klerk and Sam Tingle.

Stewart, Kyalami (R Young)

Jackie’s Lotus broke a driveshaft on the line of the first heat – causing maximum chaos behind – but the Team Lotus mechanics, ever competent, had the car ready for the second heat which Stewart won from Hill. Graham won the Rand GP overall from Hawkins and Anderson. Mike Spence was second in the first heat but had a rose-joint fail after only one lap in the second.

See here: https://www.f1grandprixdriversclub.com/jackie-stewart-fifty-years-ago/ and here: https://velocetoday.com/jackie-stewarts-first-f1-drive/

Credits…

F1Grand Prix Drivers Club, VeloceToday.com, Robert Young, Peter Tempest, MotorSport Images, f1forgottendrivers.com

(R Young)

Tailpiece…

Paul Hawkins raced John Willment’s Brabham and Ford Galaxie that weekend, getting the better of Stewart’s Lotus Cortina in the touring car support races. Look at the size of that thing…

Finito…

(MotorSport)

Dan Gurney’s – Brabham Racing Organisation – Coventry Climax FWMV 1.5-litre V8 during the 1963 Monaco Grand Prix weekend. F1-1-63’s second race.

The car is a Brabham BT7, the second type of GP Brabham, Jack having debuted the BT3 Climax in 1962. Two F1 BT7s – there was also two BT7A Intercontinental/Tasman Formula cars – were built. Dan debuted BT7 F1-1-63 at the International Trophy, Silverstone on May 11, 63, and Jack first raced F1-2-63 at Zandvoort on June 23, 1963.

(LAT)

Dan in front of Tony Maggs (fifth) and Willy Mairesse (DNF final drive) at Monaco that year: Brabham BT7 Climax, Cooper T66 Climax and Ferrari Dino 156. Gurney was out with crown wheel and pinion failure in the race won by Graham Hill’s BRM P57 from teammate Richie Ginther’s P57. Bruce McLaren’s Cooper T66 was third.

(MotorSport)

Gurney on the way to an historic first Championship Grand Prix win for the Brabham marque aboard his BT7 at Rouen-les- Essarts, France in June 1964. Dan also won the non-championship 1964 Mexican GP with this F1-1-63, while Jack’s best in F1-2-63 was a pair of wins in in the Aintree 200 and the Silverstone International Trophy in April/May 1964.

Somewhat incredibly, Allen Brown records the last of 48 in-period race meetings for this (Jack’s) car was at Indianapolis, where Dave Rines won the SCCA Regional at Indianapolis Raceway Park in May 1968, at which point the car was powered by a 3-litre Coventry Climax FPF-four.

Dutch GP: second, Clark won in a Lotus 25 (MotorSport)

Credits…

MotorSport Images, LAT Photographic, oldracingcars.com: https://www.oldracingcars.com/brabham/bt7/

Tailpiece…

(MotorSport)

Coventry Climax FWMV 1.5-litre Mk3 V8: Lucas fuel injected, DOHC, two-valve, 195bhp @ 9500rpm. Early five speed Hewland HD gearbox with distinctive upside-down VW Beetle case, but not yet with neato, bespoke side-entry rear housing. The ‘vertical bomb’ is Lucas’ hi-pressure fuel pump. Rear end comprises mag alloy uprights, inverted wishbones at the top, single links at the bottom plus two radius rods doing fore-aft locational duties. Ron changed his mind about the respective locations of the wishbones and links pretty soon after this.

Finito…

The Ferrari pits during the Grand Prix des Nations weekend, Geneva, July 30, 1950.

Alberto Ascari at left with car #40, a 4.1-litre Ferrari 340, the car behind is Gigi Villoresi’s 3.3-litre Ferrari 375 with the man himself at right (I think). Typical of the era, factory Alfa Romeo 158s finished one-two-three: Juan Manuel Fangio from Emmanuel de Graffenreid and Piero Taruffi.

“It took me five years to get this Autocourse and a whole lot of others from the widow of the owner!” my friend Tony Johns said with a chuckle. I’ve always been an Automobile Year guy, by the time I realised Autocourse was THE racing annual I’d already got the Automobile Year bug and started what became a 20 year journey to collect a set.

It was another set, Blommie The Great 38’s fabulous tits that led me in the wrong direction. Camberwell Grammar School appointed 25 year old, very statuesque Miss Blomquist as a librarian in 1971-72. Of course one couldn’t just sit in the library with ones tongue on the floor, it was while cruising the aisles trying to look like a serious student on my furtive, very frequent perving missions that I came upon Automobile Year 18, the 1970 season review. And so the obsession began, I was soon surgically removing the best photographs of the school’s Auto Years with a razor blade and adding them to my bedroom wall where scantily clad Raquel Welch had pole position.

It’s been great to have the very first of these learned journals for a week to peruse, read and enjoy. The 140 page, then-quarterly, cost 15 shillings in Australia and was distributed by Curzon Publishing Company, 37 Queen Street, Melbourne, not an outfit familiar to me but will perhaps ring a bell with some of the older brotherhood?

Two features are reproduced: one on F3 by Stirling Moss and another by Alfred Neubauer on the ‘Brains’ of the racing driver.

Walt Whitman once wrote ‘stout asa horse, patient, haughty, electrical’ but when first set to control one of the breed, at the age of six, it seemed to me neither stout nor patient. Reference to a horse may seem somewhat out of place when one begins to consider a motor racing career, but the equine enthusiasts talk about a good pair of hands and a good seat, and I am sure that both are just as necessary to the racing driver. If you are going to ride a horse seriously, as I did, then you must think one step ahead of it. A racing car also appears to have a personality of its own, and the driver must be equally facile at anticipating its behaviour.

Certainly I have never thought that the time I spent astride four legs as being anything but invaluable to subsequent control of four wheels, and my fourlegged career went on for ten years. Apart from the lessons it taught, it was even more directly concerned with the first appearance of ” Stirling Moss (Cooper) ” in a hill climb programme. Prize money won in the jumping ring was the financial foundation of the purchase of that Cooper.

It seems astounding now to recall that in 1948 British motor sport was centred on sprints and hill climbs, and that 500c.c. cars were still a somewhat despised novelty, mostly produced by enthusiastic owner drivers. I took delivery of one of the early production Coopers and it really is impossible to consider those days without digressing to praise the foresight and ability of the Coopers, both father and son, for without the reputation built up by their products half litre racing could never have reached the point where it won International recognition as Formula III. The only pity is that France and Italy appear yet to need to discover their equivalent of these two enthusiasts.

If they could, and were thus able to get equally successful cars into production, I am sure that there would not be the present move towards a change in the Formula.

Since those days the design of half litre cars has settled into a fairly consistent pattern of rear mounted motor cycle engine driving the back axle by chains via a motorcycle gearbox and it was the excellence of the available motorcycle components which played another big part in boosting the possibilities of Formula III. Perhaps the biggest advance in the past three years has been the mating of reliability with steadily increasing speeds. Maximum speeds have not changed so much, but circuit speeds have, as the result of patient chassis development, and though in 1951 circumstances will prevent me from driving half litre cars as much as in the past, the lessons learned at the wheel of these flyweights can be applied to the much trickier problems of heavier and faster machines.

Giving around 45 b.h.p. the more prominent 500 c.c. engines of today will propel a racing car at 100 to 105 m.p.h. and because the car is so low and so small this seems to the driver a pretty high velocity. It is only when one changes to a heavier car that one realises just how far liberties can be successfully taken with a car weighing perhaps 6 1/2 cwts all up.

Half-litre racing is always fun, and as far as the British scene is concerned is the most keenly contested class of all, because it has given so many people the opportunities which had previously been the prerogative of Continental drivers. I for one could never have hoped to motor race seriously but for the reduction in cost brought about by the 500 c.c. class and instead of being the proud possessor of the British Racing Drivers’ Club’s 1950 Gold Star would most likely have been, at the best, an unknown also ran with some sports machine in club events.

It may comfort some to know also that the first entry I submitted, fresh with enthusiasm at the prospect of taking delivery of the Cooper, bounced back at me.

The next step forward from the Cooper 500 was the Cooper 1000.

I say step forward without belittling the smaller car, but because I imagine that the goal of every racing driver is Formula I. That is a long road which I have yet to traverse but just how tricky a road it is I am learning almost every weekend this summer of 1951. I was fortunate in having parents every bit as enthusiastic about motor racing as myself, and at the same time a good deal more experienced when they suggested that one did not know what motor racing was all about until one had been on the Continent. With a Cooper 1000 I set out to see for myself in the latter half of 1949, and how right they were. The foray achieved some moderate success, not so much in the results, but in the experience gained and the feeling of confidence induced, and above all that I had something definite to offer to John Heath when he was looking around for drivers for the H.W.M. team. On his side, John could offer a car which was magnificently reliable and always pleasant to drive. The results achieved in 1950 are a matter of history, and there was only one snag. Excellent as the cars were they were never quite fast enough to win against a Ferrari, and we kept on meeting Ferraris.

This is not a criticism, but a simple statement of fact of which John himself was only too well aware, and which he has made every effort to remedy for 1951 by the most ingenious use of available materials. What was always a delight to me was to be a member of a well turned out team of cars bearing the British green which always arrived on the starting line a credit to their sponsor.

A racing driver usually gets some stock questions put to him by the layman, which can be paraphrased into ” How fast can you go?” “Which car do you like driving best? ” and ” What was your most memorable race?” My answer to the first is that speed is purely relative. The real art of motor racing and, for that matter the real excitement, is in negotiating an 8o m.p.h. corner at 90 m.p.h., for it doesn’t matter whether you do 100 or 150 m.p.h. down the straight.

As for the other two questions, the answer to the second is usually the car I am to drive next, and to the third, my last race. If one is to succeed, it has always seemed to me that one must be entirely engrossed in the race in hand, and whilst drawing on the experience of the past, memories of races as races are wiped out by the task of the moment. In any case, the last person to approach for any coherent picture of a race is a driver who was taking part in it.

The same sort of thing applies to cars, and one has to completely identify oneself with the machine of the moment, until you almost approach the state of believing that that is the only car which you really know how to drive.

Certain races stand out because of particular objects achieved, such as last year’s Tourist Trophy as being my first experience of a really fast heavy car, but the race itself was one of the easiest. So much so that I let my mind wander to external problems and made an excursion down an escape road. At Silverstone last August my chief reaction was a pleasure not so much in winning but in beating the late Raymond Sommer on the only occasion we met in reasonably comparable machines.

At Bari it was natural to feel a similar pleasure in bringing an H.W.M. home third behind two type 158 Alfas, because that was a result so much better than any of us had hoped for.

That is really the biggest satisfaction of all; doing just a little bit better than one expects when faced by a new situation and these notes are being written on the eve of what I am expecting to be my memorable race of 1951, the Mille Miglia and Le Mans.

The ‘Brains’ of the Racing Driver

By Alfred Neubauer, Team Manager of Mercedes Benz

The racing driver fixes hisses on the starting flag; his nerves are the keyed up to the highest pitch, for he knows those few moments of suspense, seeming like hours, will soon pass and the flag will drop. Another 10 seconds to go, slowly he pushes his gear lever into first…5…4…3…2…1 off!

With only 5 seconds left, he revs the car up to half its maximum, gently lets in the clutch and revs, further. The flag drops and with care to ensure that the back wheels do not spin, thus causing the car to run sideways, he shoots forward like a bullet from a gun.

Even for this first phase of the race – the start – the tactics involved have been thoroughly worked out by the team manager as a result of his observations during training. The popular opinion exists that in every racing team one or two drivers are chosen to set the pace. This, it is believed, will compel the other competitors to greater speeds. They will strain their engines, weaknesses will become apparent, resulting in their elimination, thus giving the driver, selected as the eventual winner, the opportunity to choose his moment and then drive through to clear victory. The opinion that such tactics are dictated is absolutely wrong. In fact, they evolve from the experience and technique of the driver himself.

The basic rule is as follows: ” Drive your machine within your own capabilities as fast as you can – but do not overstrain either yourself or your machine.” One rider must be added to this. Both car and driver, of course, must be subjected to some strain, but a first-class driver will know at what point this strain becomes excessive and for what length of time any strain can be borne without collapse. After continual experience, maximum powers of endurance become clear. Some drivers use both their cars and themselves unsparingly from the start and, consequently, collapse after a short time. They either drop back or are forced to retire. Others are capable of taking the lead from the start and holding it until the end of the race. There is yet a third kind of driver who knows the individual characteristics of his rivals and plays upon them. They purposely keep on their tail, in the meanwhile economising their own forces, and wait for a suitable moment to overtake them. The nerves of some drivers are unable to bare being trailed, and again there are those who remain completely indifferent to it.

Drivers can only know their position in a race so long as they keep within sight of one another. Once the leading drivers have got so far ahead as to lose contact with the rest of the field or when cars begin to drop out or are forced into the pits, then it is no longer possible for the drivers to know their position. It is at this juncture that the work of the pits commences. They are the brains of the racing driver and are led by the team manager. In aviation radio communication between the flyers of a squadron has long been recognised. So far as motor racing is concerned, however, this method of contact between the team manager and driver has not been introduced.* Thus for them the only means of communication is visual. It is, however easily understandable that the simplest method is the best because the driver’s attention must, under all circumstances, be concentated solely on his own car and the road ahead. A further duty of the pits is to inform the driver of the number of laps he has already covered and also the laps remaining. Each driver signifies that the message communicated to him has been understood by nodding his head.

An inexperienced team leader will be astonished when only a few laps later, by means of a circular movement of his hand, the driver indicates that he once more wants to know the number of laps that remain to be covered. This is, however, not exceptional and the explanation is given more often than not by the driver at the end of the race. He has to admit that very shortly after he received the first message he completely forgot its contents. For the driver the most important signals are those indicating his position in the race and the intervals that separate him from his opponents. The knowledge of his exact position dictates his policy. If the lead over his opponent is increasing, then naturally he will relax and thus economise his own forces and those of his car. If his lead is decreasing, then he will do everything in his power to increase once more the distance between himself and his rival. Similarly it is imperative for the driver lying in second place to know the distance between himself and the leader. From this it follows that he must be careful that his present position is not threatened by those who lie yet farther behind.

Naturally the team manager prefers those drivers who take the lead from the outset and hold it throughout the race without straining either themselves or their cars. It is only during a race itself that the driver can know whether he can have some moments’ relaxation or not. In some racing teams first-class drivers are fully aware of the potential weaknesses of their team mates and their cars and from the very start they remain in second place, thus conserving their own forces. As soon as they realise that their team mates’ powers are exhausted, they can immediately take the lead. The brains of the racing driver -the pits – have also to take such considerations into account, and must ensure that the driver who has made his way through the field and eventually takes the lead maintains the position he has succeeded in gaining. There have been instances when these tactics have been employed with great success. It is then the duty of the team manager to inform both the leading driver and his followers at each lap of the distance between them. It must be made clear to the driver lying in second place that he has lost his lead and would do far better to content himself by remaining in second place rather than force his car out of the race.

The price of driving as fast as driver and car permit is often very high. It should take very little experience for the driver to be fully aware of his own capabilities. So far as his engine is concerned he will have received precise directions and he will have been told by his testing engineers of the precise amount of revolutions permitted. However, it is only natural that he should make a point of ensuring that these instructions have not been too cautious and he will certainly confirm for himself to what extent his motor may be over-revved. The experience of former years has shown that drivers who have been given precise instructions that their revs should not exceed 4500 have, some years later, admitted reaching 6200. When a driver confines himself strictly to the instructions of the technicians and a team mate overtakes him, it becomes quite obvious that this team mate has exceeded the limits given to him. Here temperament plays its part, for the decision has to be made whether he will exceed his limits or whether he will observe the technical instructions to the letter and bear in mind the increased lasting powers of his engine.

Generally speaking, the driver who is bound by technical instructions has an advantage over those drivers who themselves assisted in the building of their engines. The latter, whilst testing, will have discovered the limits which the construction of the engine has imposed. Indeed it is fair to say that it is no advantage whatsoever to a driver to be himself a builder or testing engineer. He is naturally hampered by the knowledge of his own technical experience.

Perhaps this is a suitable moment to say a few words about “luck” in racing. If a driver fails to take into consideration the limits imposed by the technicians and a piston rod breaks or some defect in the engine forces him to retire or his tyres do not stand up to his way of driving, then he will have the satisfaction of knowing that all will say:- “What bad luck ! ” Conversely, one member of a team finishes and the others are forced to retire, invariably the latter will exclaim :- ” How lucky he was! “

Technically speaking, 95% of ” luck ” in racing is dependent upon the preparation of a car. This preparation begins at the first moment of building. The other 5% lies in the hands of the driver, whose “feel ” permits him to get the maximum value out of his car. There are drivers on the Nürburgring who use up their tyres in six laps and are indeed slower than those who do not have to change their tyres for eight or even ten laps. A more subtle method of driving, a more even use of the engine on leaving corners and a softer application of the brakes differentiate a good driver from a better one.

As in every activity which demands talent so in motor racing. There are many enthusiasts, but few become champions.

All these facts prove how many conditions have to be fulfilled before success in a race can be achieved. The popular complaint of housewives :-” You have eaten in a minute what I have taken hours to prepare,” would perhaps be even more suitable to motor racing!

It is not the obiect of this article to consider the many hurdles which must be cleared before the racing car eventually reaches the track:- the planning of the design according to the formula given, the design itself, the manufacture of the parts, the assembly and testing. Our task commences only from the moment when the car leaves the factory and proceeds to a race, there to prove the quality of its design and justify the work of preparation. These preparations are no more than stages on the road to victory.

The work is undertaken not merely to prepare a car for one particular race, but also with a view to its chances of success over its rivals.

Experience gained by entering for the same race year after year greatly assists the designer in his attempts to reach perfection so far as one particular course is concerned. Often drivers entering a race for the first time are taken unawares by the peculiarities of the track which had they had opportunities of practising thoroughly earlier, could have been avoided without difficulty. Practise on non-permanent tracks presents complications as it is practically impossible to close circuits to the public so as to enable practising to take place. Consesequently, the preparation of cars for non-permanent circuits is considerably more difficult than for permanent circuits which are open to racing cars at all times of the year. To list but a few-the choice of the right transmission, the measurements of fuel requirements and the wear on brakes and tyres are factors which must depend entirely on the circuit to be raced.

Many years ago, the principle of fitting streamlined bodies to cars for very fast circuits was accepted. Nevertheless, without comparative tests it is not so easy to decide whether this style of bodywork is most suitable to any track. The streamlined bodies with their attendant lack of wind resistance have the advantage in acceleration and are preferable when high maximum speeds are required. This, however, is offset by the decrease in braking power with the resultant strain on the brakes. On the former Avus circuit, where there are two parallel stretches of ten kilometres and long curves, this disadvantage was not apparent. Many, streamlined designers had soon to learn that the cooling of tyres presented a difficult problem. Within their enclosed space, the maximum temperature permitted was soon reached, but problems of engine and gear cooling often counter balanced the advantages gained by streamlining.’

All these points have to be considered during tactical preparation for a race, and it is on the conclusions reached that the decisions must be taken whether pit stops are to be made or not. These matters are of first-rate importance. In fact, success in a race depends on them just as much as it depends on the tactics of the driver which were mentioned before in this article.

It can now be seen that a race is not just a haphazard competition between one car and other. Each circuit has its individual problems, and not least of these are the prevailing weather conditions. Above all, fuel, tyres, back axle and gear ratios must be adjusted according to the circumstances.

The particular suitability of individual drivers to different tracks has to be considered also and a strategical race plan cannot be worked out without continual observations of the other competitors and the tactics which they employ. There are supreme examples which prove that although complicated preparations were made for a race, it was a the result of such observations that victory was achieved.

There was an instance at the Nürburgring when a driver’s race plan required him to stop for one minute to change his tyre. However this driver had a ten-second victory over his rival whose plan permitted him to run through the ten lap race without a pit stop though at a limited speed.

This ” organisation for victory ” does not date back very far. Even in 1914 visual communication between driver and the pits did not exist. In those days the pits were really no more than depots for refuelling and the change of tyres, and it was not until the period between the two world wars that the pits became more and more ” the brains of the racing driver.”

After many years of practice, this “Organisation” no longer carries many difficulties in so far as circuits are concerned. What is not so easy to master is the “organisation” of long distance races such as the Mille Miglia. It was in 1931 that Caracciola arrived at the finish in Brescia and refused to believe his team manager when told that he had won the race. In fact, it was not until some half an hour later, when his victory was confirmed by the organisers of the event, that he was convinced. The Mille Miglia is so planned that although times between control points are given, they arrive so late that it is impossible to communicate them to a driver, who may be anywhere on the Appenine peninsula.

In this race the only workable maxim is: “Know the capabilities of your machine and your own ability and get the best out of both.” It was not without reason that the experienced Italian master Villoresi exclaimed after the last Mille Miglia:-” What a ghastly race ! ” Above all, in England, where there are many handicap races, ” the brains of the racing driver ” have a particular problem to solve. Here a driver is not in direct competition with his rival who holds a position in the race which is obvious to all. On the contrary, the pits must continually work out his position according to the class of his car.

Many times during the Tourist Trophies in Ireland the team manager has looked for his rivals amonst the fastest competitors whilst the real speed so far as he was concerned was dicated by relatively unimportant competitors who had completely escaped his notice. In each handicap race average comparative speeds are formulated. If a car in the small capacity class exceeds its handicap speed, then the driver of car in a larger capacity class is compelled not only to increase his relative speed but also the speed laid down by his class.

Many prominent drivers from the Continent have been baffled by this and have to do everything within their power not to be defeated by a completely unknown rival. What to an onlooker appears to be no more than the smooth running of a race is to the team manager the careful integration of many factors which achieves the much-sought-after victory.

* Radio communication was used successfully by the American Cadillac team at Le Mans last year – Ed

The Gigi Villoresi and Piero Cassani victorious, battered and bruised Ferrari 340 America Berlinetta passing through Bologna on its April, 29 1951 Mille run.

Jaguar XK Super Sports. Was that the car’s model name before XK120 came along or has the copy-writer goofed?

Credits…

Autocourse 1951 from Tony Johns’ collection – many thanks TJ

Tailpiece…

Finito…

(Dacre Stubbs)

Doug Whiteford won the first Australian Grand Prix held at Albert Park in his Talbot Lago T26C 70 years ago today, November 21, 1953.

He won the Formula Libre race from Curley Brydon’s MG TC Spl and Andy Brown’s MG K3. 40 starters took on the challenge, racing in the opposite direction to today on a course that goes around the lake but is a bit different to the original.

I’d forgotten the anniversary. The Australian Grand Prix Corporation celebrated the occasion back in March during the F1 weekend. My mate, Auto Action publisher Bruce Williams called before to say they were going to post online the article I wrote back then for the pre-AGP Auto Action, see here: https://autoaction.com.au/2023/11/21/australian-grand-prix-at-albert-park-70-years-young-2

That front row above is Lex Davison in his ex-Moss F2 HWM, then fitted with a Jaguar C-Type spec 3.4-litre XK-six at left, Stan Jones’ Maybach 1 4.3-litre and Whiteford’s 4.5-litre Talbot-Lago at right.

(S Wills)

The bolter early was Stan Jones in Maybach 1, he led till the halfway mark but retired after completing 58 of the 64 lap, 250 mile journey. Whiteford lost a tyre off the rim with 10 laps to run, but he was close to his pit, and had a huge lead so the 30 second stop to change the wheel wasn’t a problem.

(The Age)

Whiteford looking modestly chuffed with his win. He took the same car to AGP victory at Mount Panorama, Bathurst the year before, and won at Nuriootpa in the Barossa Valley aboard his famous Ford V8 Ute based special, Black Bess, in 1950.

Dicer Doug was a formidable, aggressive driver who was also a master-mechanic. His preparation and presentation skills were legendary, so too his mechanical sympathy. He was the complete package.

See here: https://primotipo.com/2019/03/16/1953-australian-grand-prix-albert-park/ here: https://primotipo.com/2022/05/04/doug-whiteford-talbot-lago-t26c-take-3/ and here: https://primotipo.com/2022/11/19/maybach-1-take-3-or-4/

Credits…

Auto Action, The Age, Spencer Wills

Finito…

(I Smith)

Small things amuse small minds, mine that is.

Jack Brabham being pestered by Frank Matich before the start of the Tasman Series Sandown Park Cup on February 16, 1969. Frank is after some tips on how to extract the best sponsorship deal from Repco Ltd management.

It’s intrigued me that Jack clearly forgot to bring his nice modern Bell Magnum helmet home with him when he jumped on his Qantas 707 at Heathrow for Sydney in December 1969.

When his Brabham BT31 Repco was finally offloaded at Port Melbourne and had its nice new RBE 830 V8 fitted at Repco Brabham Engines in Maidstone, he cast around for a skid-lid and – seemingly – this circa 1960 helmet and pair of goggles were the only ones available to head off to Calder to test the car two days before the Sandown race. See here for a BT31 epic: https://primotipo.com/2015/02/26/rodways-repco-recollections-brabham-bt31-repco-jacks-69-tasman-car-episode-4/

The lovely shot above seems to be the helmet in question sitting atop Jack’s noggin on the grid of the BRDC International Trophy at Silverstone nine years before, May 14, 1960: second in his works-Cooper T53 Climax behind Innes Ireland’s Lotus 18 Climax.

(unattributed)

Our very own Jack during the ‘69 Sandown Cup. He is on the run out of Peters above, and on the way into Dandy Road below, wearing the same 1960 helmet or one very much like it.

Small things as I say…mind you, I don’t like ‘yer chances of racing with a nine year old helmet in today’s homogenised, pasteurised over regulated times.

Brabham finished third in the race, proving brand-new BT31 was quick right out of the box, which was won – so too the Tasman Series – by Chris Amon’s Ferrari 246T. Jochen Rindt was second in his Lotus 49B Ford DFW.

(R MacKenzie)

Jack returned that Easter to fulfil his final Australian Repco commitments, winning the Gold Star round at Bathurst in BT31. This time (below) Jack remembered to pack the Bell Magnum but not his modern goggles…

(B Frankel)

More on Jack’s helmets here: https://primotipo.com/2020/07/11/jack-piers-and-helmets/

Credits…

Ian Smith , popperfoto.com, Rod MacKenzie, Bob Frankel

Finito