Another Maserati - 4CLT (quite the same car as prewar 4CL) - Villoresi winning the first British GP at Silverstone in 1948...
These prewar and immediate postwar race cars were really big.
French GP 1968 - Rouen - This pic of Hill making business with Siffert is famous... But who is passing at the wheel of the Honda number16 ? Yes, John Surtees.
jimmyj wrote:Have to do it since Harpo has not yet today. John Surtees in a Honda, 1968. A great picture.
You should have looked closer... It was a "Where-is-Surtees-in-the-picture-?" kind of pic, with the same car at the same race (France GP 1968).
Back to today's number 15
Renault RS 10 - Dijon 1979 - The man who was faster than Villeneuve and Arnoux and won the race : Jean-Pierre Jabouille - One of the most underrated driver with one of the best, if not the best, ratio wins/finished races of F1 history.
I started posting in this thread with a Chaparral exhibition. Here's the "beautiful one" : Chaparral 2F - 1967 (Here at Daytona - the Ferrari(s) following her on the banking at the start won the race)
Four of the most beautiful and remarkable cars in sports car racing history in that pic... The Chaparral, Ford GT, Ferrari P3, and towards the back a Porsche 907 or 908?.
Great field!
Re: Countdown to 2019 Australian Grand Prix!
Posted: Fri Mar 01, 2019 1:18 pm
by Mort Canard
15 Days till the Australian GP
Eddie Irvine in the Jordan Peugeot. 1995
Four of the most beautiful and remarkable cars in sports car racing history in that pic... The Chaparral, Ford GT, Ferrari P3, and towards the back a Porsche 907 or 908?.
Great field!
And you get a bonus Chaparral (2D) behind the Ferrari 24. The Ferrari number 33 is the Belgian 412P that I posted at Day... 33.
Now the Surtees picture, though it's a bit of cheating : Surtees TS9 car F5000, without any John in it, and coming from a recent exhibition, when I wanted to post only photos from the time the cars raced.
Four of the most beautiful and remarkable cars in sports car racing history in that pic... The Chaparral, Ford GT, Ferrari P3, and towards the back a Porsche 907 or 908?.
Great field!
And you get a bonus Chaparral (2D) behind the Ferrari 24.
I can't believe I missed the 2D!!! It is one of my favorite all-time cars. Got a chance to go to the Chaparral museum in Midland, Texas a few years ago, not even a dozen cars on display, but oh what cars!
Thank you Harpo for remembering the Jean-Pierre "Turbo Father" Jabouille, fantastic driver and engineer, who actually engineered the cars he was racing. One of the most luckless drivers of all times. Here on the picture on his way to his last victory, Austria 1980.
But number 15 will not be complete without posting the picture of Alain Prost. Here also on his way to last victory with Renault and number 15, Silverstone 1983, overtaking Arnoux in Ferrari.
He was Emmo before it was cool: Emmerson Fittipaldi, in his Fittipldi F6A from 1979, which sadly never properly used the ground effect and good results were not coming his way.
Source: formulatotal.worldpress.com
Also number 14: Clay Reggazoni, Ensign N180, on his last laps before terrible crash which ended his career at Long Beach 1980. He could have been third in that race, was it not for the accident. Third was the guy behind, the same Emmerson Fittipaldi from the picture above.
The reason why there were no number 13 on racing cars in races organized in France for tens of years (and for a long time only even numbers...).
Delage number 13 - GP San Sebastian 1925 - The driver was killed, as was the driver of the Delage number 13 at the next Targa Florio.
The name Vaillante (and the logo the current Vaillante team uses) comes from the series of comic book "Michel Vaillant", who was driving Vaillante cars built by his father. Comic books that every boy from France and Belgium have read from the late '50s to the '70s. In one book from early sixties (Le 13 est au départ - "13 is on the starting grid") the villains were driving a car number 13 at Le Mans. (Here in German... I couldn't find anything interesting in the original French version).