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Classic Cycle Video

Vintage BMW Sidecar Action

After last week’s post about vintage sidecar racers, the Ledermanns, @MplsMoto passed along this tasty nugget of BMW R75/5 sidecar runs from Mid-Ohio. How could I not share it?

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Video

1965 Sebring Recap

We saw a bit of film from the 1965 Sebring back in March, but I ran across a much larger piece on Nigel’s YouTube channel. This was the year that the late race deluge of rain saw open-top drivers working hard despite racing in a quickly-filling bathtub. The commentator says something about “water up to their elbows”, but that has to be exaggeration—doesn’t it? The footage of the rooster tails coming off of some of these GT cars must have been thrilling and terrifying in person.
Part 2. Part 3. Part 4. Part 5.

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Porsche Video

Barth at la Sarthe, 1977

I’m always up for another spin around the Circuit de la Sarthe. Let’s ride shotgun with Martini’s Jurgen Barth in a Porsche 936 for the ’77 24 Hours of Le Mans.

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Porsche Video

Stirling and his RS 61 Go Up Goodwood Hill

I swear I don’t post every video Porsche puts out.

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Porsche Video

Up Goodwood Hill in a Porsche 956 with 15 Year-Old Tires

Oh, and with Derek Bell driving.

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Ferrari Video

The Rodriguez Brothers at the 1961 LeMans

The film is wonderful, but it was the uploader’s comments that prompted me to share it.

“Pedro & Ricardo Rodriguez, driving a Ferrari 250TR entered by the North American Racing Team, fought the works Ferraris of Hill-Gendebien and Parkes-Mairesse for 22 hours. While leading at 7am (after 15 hours), it took the works mechanics over 20 minutes to replace a defective condenser and the brothers, now 5 laps down but with 9 hours to go, started the chase for the lead with lap times of 10 secs faster than the leading works Ferrari of Hill-Gendebien. With only 2 hours to go and back in second place, Pedro came in with a smoking engine and retired the car. The brothers received a standing ovation from the crowd.”

YouTube uploader Pedro917
Categories
Porsche Video

Early Racing Porsches at the 2008 Eifelrennen

Eifelrennen 2008 had a pretty impressive lineup of early Porsche racers. I see a 550, an RSK, an RS60, an Abarth-Carrera. I could just listen to that 4-cam for hours.

Ok, that’s all well and good, but let’s get on the track. Alright, let’s ride shotgun with Gerrit Kobus in a 550.

Categories
Racing Ephemera Video

Documenting Disaster

LeMans ’55 Diagram

Part of what made the 1955 LeMans disaster so confusing and difficult to understand (beyond the enormity of the tragedy itself) is that it happened so quickly that it was nearly impossible to determine exactly what happened. If it were today, there would be several camera angles in high resolution to capture the event: a shot from at least one ground-based camera, a aerial view, on-board cameras in many of the cars. That doesn’t even account for the fact that virtually every spectator would be carrying a camera with them at all times—a camera phone at least. Investigations would commence and close in comparative short order.

In 1955, however, there were only a few grainy photographs and a single film camera (that I know of) running that caught the tangle between Mike Hawthorne, Pierre Leveigh, and Lance Macklin (with Fangio in the middle of it all as well). Leveigh would ultimately be thrown from his Mercedes which tumbled over the hay bales and into the crowd killing 83 spectators and injuring a further 120. It remains the single worst crash in the history of motorsport—and likely the worst accident in all of sport.

This is why it was so important to determine what happened. To assign blame, perhaps, but more importantly to find a way to keep it from happening again. Some were quick to blame Hawthorne, some rightly faulted the facility’s lack of safety measures, some governments decided that motor racing itself was to blame. France, Spain, Switzerland, and Germany banned motor racing entirely until tracks could be brought up to a higher level of safety. The Swiss ban remained in effect until 2007.

LeMans 55 Illustration

The lack of a visual archive—of a detailed record—made communicating exactly what happened challenging. So we had to leave it up to artists to show the public the details of the LeMans disaster. I find these artifacts fascinating. This type of record has become almost completely obsolete today, and the simple line drawings somehow both communicate what (they thought) happened and at the same time filters it. Looking at these diagrams, the LeMans crash becomes a cold, matter of fact, sequence of events; not a horrific and bloody nightmare.

These renderings omit the human tragedy; the emotion; the panic. They simply communicate the clinical facts of the crash—which car went which way, and when. In that way, you can argue that it’s more effective than the horror of looping the video feed back and forth.

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Video

1911 Indy 500 Footage

When a race is 40 years older than the Formula 1 World Championship, the newsreels have to both show the race highlights and explain how an auto race works. “Cars remain in platoon formation for the first lap”—platoon formation. That’s the first time I’ve heard that term: definitely ready for a comeback.

via

Categories
Event Ferrari Video

It’s Mille Miglia Time!

Well, they’re off from Brescia to Rome and back. And photos and videos are starting to arrive online. Sorry, this is going to be a long one.

Hope that’s not too much of an overload. I’m sure more will continue to surface throughout the next week.. I’ll keep an eye peeled for the good stuff.