Race Report: Silverstone, 28 September 1975

silverstone_28_9_75

Race Report: Silverstone, 28 September 1975

silverstone_28_9_75

Practice for round 17 of the BP Championship was a complete lottery, held on Saturday morning it started wet and only began to dry in the last five minutes so grid times were very much a case of if and when you fitted slicks. It was Gunnar Nilsson who timed his tyre change to perfection and set a time over two seconds quicker than the next man who was Graham Hamilton who had to change to slicks when he had a puncture on his wets and it turned out to be just the right time. Third fastest another two seconds slower was Belgian Pierre Dieudonné ahead of Larry Perkins and Alex Ribeiro. Patrick Neve was unusually far back as a result of a broken differential (which might have caused his Brands Hatch practice shunt) and Richard Hawkins who didn’t officially qualify as a brake pipe broke after just two laps. Sitting right at the back was the new Anson of Garry Anderson who had a 10 second and 10 yards penalty for qualifying out of session, he missed the practice proper as the car was having a 2-litre Holbay twin-cam fitted.

Fortunately it was bright and sunny for the race but it wasn’t too bright for Hamilton when a connection on his fuel pump came off on the warm up lap and it couldn’t be sorted in time to make the grid. Also in difficulties was Bob Arnott when a screw came out of his coil, this could be repaired but he started after everybody else.
Larry Perkins took full advantage of the space left by the missing Hamilton and he rocketed his Ralt through from the second row and into the lead. He wasn’t the only one as Alex Ribeiro and Terry Perkins followed him, their cause was helped by Nilsson getting away a little slowly. Nilsson had decided that tyre wear was likely to be an issue so he had set his car up with minimum downforce to be quick down the straight and he decided not to push too hard in the early laps.
At the end of a hairy first lap it was the Perkins brothers in front followed by Ribeiro, Dieudonné, Nilsson, Regout, Neve (following an amazing first lap), Danny Sullivan, Eddie Cheever, Richard Hawkins, Rupert Keegan and the rest of the field. Next lap and it was Ribeiro up to second and Neve had pushed Regout down a place. Lap 3 and Ribeiro was now up to first with Larry Perkins down to second whilst brother Terry spun off at Club slightly damaging the nosecone of his Ralt. Danny Sullivan pulled into the pits at the end of the lap with a bad misfire, his team changed the plugs and leaned off the mixture on his Toyota. For a few laps it looked as if Ribeiro might edge away from Larry Perkins but the Ralt soon reeled the March in again, next there was a slight gap back to a battling Dieudonné and Nilsson. Neve was in fifth ahead of Regout, Cheever, Keegan, Hawkins, Stephen South and Chris Barnett.
Perkins began to apply pressure to Ribeiro and within a couple of laps he was through and he began to pull away. At the same time Nilsson got past Dieudonné and he began to reel in Ribeiro and on lap 8 he was up to third as the Brazilian began to fall back as his tyres started to grain. Nilsson was battling with Ribeiro and the B&O cars of Regout and Dieudonné but he gradually left them behind and Neve moved up to challenge them. Cheever was next up and dropping away as he too suffered from graining tyres, Hawkins was chasing the Modus followed by Keegan and Barnett. Stephen South had had a quick spin at the chicane but was now closing in again on Barnett as was Arnott who had also spun at Copse.

Larry Perkins had opened out quite a big gap to Nilsson but the Swede was going well and Regout had tagged onto his tail, both Marches seeming to be very quick in a straight line. Lap 14 and 15 saw the second and third place Marches dramatically close the gap on Perkins who was the latest victim of tyre problems, Perkins tried to speed up which resulted in some very sideways motoring. Nilsson was now sitting on Perkins tail and he slipstreamed the Ralt down to Stowe, the March dived out at the last moment and took the lead, Nilsson was slow out of the corner with his low downforce and Perkins had to momentarily slow to avoid contact and as he accelerated away the Swede had opened out an immediate gap.
Perkins tried to hang onto Nilsson but the straight line speed advantage of the March gave it the edge over the Ralt. Entering the last lap Regout decided to try and improve on his third place and he tried to slipstream Perkins into Stowe but it all went wrong and the B&O March spun off and hit the barrier. Nilsson continued to hold his lead for the rest of the lap despite Perkins being right on his gearbox and the works March took the win by 0.4 seconds with Dieudonné moving up to finish third after his team mate’s demise. Neve should have been next but a stone split a brake pipe on the Safir and the Belgian had a huge moment at Becketts which destroyed the nose on his car, Neve tried to continue but he had dropped too many places to score any points so he retired. Hawkins took fourth from Ribeiro and the fast closing March of South.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 28 September 1975

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

Race Report: Silverstone, 31 August 1975

silverstone_31_8_75

Race Report: Silverstone, 31 August 1975

silverstone_31_8_75

24 cars arrived at Silverstone for the next round of the BP Championship, the race was a support event for the European F2 Championship.

The Safir of Patrick Neve set the fastest time in Saturday morning’s qualifying, he felt he had gone a few tenths faster than the time he was credited with. Second and third were the works Marches of Alex Ribeiro and Gunnar Nilsson, both men were much happier with their cars following a complete rebuild although Nilsson complained of his dampers being too soft and Ribeiro had his practice curtailed when he ran out of fuel. It was an all Modus second row with Eddie Cheever fourth fastest, his car now featuring a Novamotor Toyota for the first time next to him it was Danny Sullivan who had some minor tyre problems.

Of the other runners Stephen South was hampered by a broken driveshaft, Larry Perkins was suffering from terminal understeer but was confident it was cured for the race. The two B&O Marches of Pierre Dieudonné and Hervé Regout were running old tyres to save money but would fit new ones for the race. Donald MacLeod withdrew his GRD feeling it wasn’t quick enough in a straight line and Bob Arnott had to start at the back with a ten second penalty for qualifying out of session due to engine problems.

The start was a little chaotic, the starting lights went red, off, red then green so people started at different times but since it was a mechanical malfunction there were no penalties issued. Cheever had started when the lights first went out and had got the drop on the others and he lead into Copse but by Stowe Ribeiro had caught and passed the Modus and Cheever now had Sullivan and Neve right behind him. Out of the chicane on lap 1 it was Ribeiro, Cheever, Sullivan, Neve and Nilsson then a small gap back to Terry Perkins, South, Richard Hawkins, Ingo Hoffman, Tim Brise, Bertram Schäfer, Larry Perkins, Chris Barnett, Dieudonné, Regout, Dick Parsons (who was going slowly expecting a restart), Steve Pettitt, Graham Hamilton, Pete Clark, John Lain and Bob Arnott.
The racing at the front was very tight over the next few laps with plenty of position changes, Ribiero led lap 2 , Sullivan lap 3, Neve held third whilst Nilsson passed Cheever. However it was all over for Nilsson on lap 3, he had been having gear problems from the start and on lap 3 he had to pit with the March jammed in fifth gear. Next to have problems was the sister car of Ribeiro who was in the pits on lap 6 with a loose wheel due to the vibrations caused by a missing balance weight. Ribeiro also had his front brakes bled as they hadn’t been working which accounted for the numerous brake locking moments he had been suffering on the track. Sullivan now looked to be in command of the race, the two works Marches were out of it and he had opened out a couple of seconds on Neve but he suddenly spun at Copse for no apparent reason resuming last, Sullivan then pitted and although there was nothing that could immediately be found wrong he retired the Modus.

All this action left Neve in the lead with his Safir although he had Cheever’s Modus right on his tail. Inevitably it all went wrong for Neve and he was suddenly in the pits his engine sounding terrible, the cause, a broken plug. So at 10 laps it was Cheever back in the lead again with Terry Perkins now up to second place, Perkins having pushed his Ralt ahead of the Ray of Stephen South at the chicane. South was now involved in a tight battle with Hawkins for third but the bad luck fairy now waved her wand over South, the Ray suffered a puncture and South spun at Becketts hitting the catch fencing and writing off the car.
Hawkins was now on his own in third but there was as big battle going on for fourth between Dieudonné, Brise, Larry Perkins, and Bertram Schäfer. Larry Perkins was fast making up ground after a huge oversteering moment at Becketts caused a spin on lap 2 which dropped him to sixteenth. Behind the fourth place battle it was Dick Parsons next from Hamilton, Barnett, Arnott, Pettit, Clark and Lain. Other retirements at this stage were Ingo Hoffman who had spun at Becketts on lap 2 and then retired a lap later at Club with an oil leak and Hervé Regout who had spun out on Copse on lap 7, he was hit by a catch fencing pole and had to be taken to hospital.
Man on the move in the second half of the race was Larry Perkins, by lap 12 he was up to fourth after passing Dieudonné and lap 14 saw him in third after passing Hawkins at Club. Cheever’s lead over Terry Perkins suddenly began to diminish, this was partly due to Terry Perkins putting the hammer down but also because Cheever was having gear selection problems. By lap 18 Terry Perkins was right on Cheever’s gearbox as they entered the chicane with every chance that the Ralt would slipstream past the Modus on the home straight. Suddenly, as Cheever changed to fifth, the gearbox baulked again, unaware of the American’s problem Terry Perkins was caught by surprise as Cheever’s car hesitated and the Ralt hit the back of the Modus. The nosecone was torn off the Ralt and Terry Perkins slithered onto the grass and spun through 360 degrees, he managed to regain the track still in second and just ahead of his brother.
Luckily for Cheever he only suffered a bent exhaust in the incident and he was able to complete the final two laps without incident to come home the winner by eight seconds. Larry Perkins came home second from Dieudonné and Hawkins, the three cars separated by less than a second at the finish. A disappointed Terry Perkins finished fifth after loosing three places in the last two laps due to the handling imbalance caused by his contact with Cheever. Alex Ribeiro took the fastest lap after returning to the track after his pit stop, Nilsson also returned but had an off at Copse.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 31 August 1975

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

Race Report: Silverstone, 25 August 1975

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Race Report: Silverstone, 25 August 1975

silverstone_25_8_75

Another BP Championship round and it was new American teenage sensation Eddie Cheever that took the fastest time with his Henry Morrogh Racing Drivers School backed Modus M1. Second fastest was Brazilian Ingo Hoffman with the works Modus of Danny Sullivan third quickest. The works Marches of Gunnar Nilsson and Alex Ribeiro were trying a narrower track configuration in an effort to get back to their early season dominance.

Danny Sullivan got away the best and found himself with a good lead at the end of the first lap when Richard Hawkins helped his cause with a spin at Becketts that held up his pursuers. Lap 2 saw two contenders in trouble when Ingo Hoffman rode over the wheel of Dick Parsons Modus, both cars spun and resumed at the tail of the field. Sullivan’s lead began to diminish as the chasing train of Cheever, Ribeiro, Neve, Nilsson and South began to reel him in. By lap 7 Cheever was on the tail of Sullivan and entering Woodcote Cheever went for the inside and took the lead and within a corner Sullivan was down to third as Ribeiro also found a way through.
Ribeiro began to put Cheever under pressure and on lap 10 it was his turn to lead but Cheever wasn’t giving up the fight and three laps later he was back in front again and this time Ribeiro had no answer. At the chequered flag Cheever took the win by 0.6 seconds from Ribeiro, Nilsson was just over s second behind in third after having passed Neve on lap 8 and Sullivan on lap 12.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 25 August 1975

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

Race Report: Silverstone, 19 July 1975

silverstone_19_7_75

Race Report: Silverstone, 19 July 1975

silverstone_19_7_75

An entry of 49 cars arrived at Silverstone to fight for the 36 grid positions available for round 10 of the BP Championship. The size of the entry was due to the race not only being a support event for the British GP but also because the Formula 1 Constructors Association had added a £2500 bonus to the normal BP prize money.
Practice was initialled scheduled to be held over two sessions on the Thursday afternoon with the fastest 18 runners from each session making the grid, however torrential rain that flooded the track ruined the second session. The session was rescheduled for late Friday and although it began on a damp surface it soon dried out completely. It was then decided on race morning that the grid would actually be decided on the fastest 36 runners overall, the majority of these runners coincidentally coming from the second group of drivers.

It was the two works Marches of Alex Ribeiro and Gunnar Nilsson who took the first two places on the grid, Ribeiro’s car featured the alloy bulkheads that had appeared on Nilsson’s car at Cadwell the previous week Additionally Ribeiro was trying F2 type deformable side pods which were supposed to be beneficial to the straight line speed, since Nilsson set the same time as Ribeiro without the pods any advantage was a moot point. Third fastest and only fractionally slower than the Marches was the works Safir of Patrick Neve who just ahead of Monza winner Larry Perkins in the works Ralt. Yet another works car was fifth, the Ray of Stephen South which featured a full width bluff nose that was reckoned to give another 300 revs at top speed.
Further back Terry Perkins was going well in what would be his first F3 race with the second works Ralt, he had practiced for a couple of other races but various circumstances had stopped him starting. Mike Wilds was making a one-off return to F3 but his practice was curtailed by a broken battery master switch that stranded him on the circuit. Danny Sullivan was not happy with some rear suspension modifications that had been made to the Modus so the car was returned to original specification for the race. Also Modus mounted was American teenager Eddie Cheever in his first F3 race, his car had to be fitted with works bodywork when his own would not fit, Cheever was taking things easy and was happy to qualify. Japanese driver Shaw Hayami was having an outing in the works GRD but was plagued with both engine and tyre troubles during practice, there was some thought of scratching for the race but it was decided in the end to take part.
Amongst the non-qualifiers was F Ford man Donald MacLeod in the GRD formerly driven by Ian Taylor, a blown Scholar engine saw him fail to make the cut as did Monaco GP F3 winner Renzo Zorzi. The Italian was now running a Novamotor Toyota Ford twin-cam in his GRD as the Lancia engine he had used at Monaco was suffering from continued head gasket problems. Had the original plan of taking 18 cars from each heat been followed, Zorzi would have made the race.

The two Marches were beaten away from the front row at the green light by Patrick Neve who timed his start to perfection, as the field arrived at Copse Nilsson slotted into second ahead of Larry Perkins and Ribeiro. As the cars completed the first lap through Abbey and into Woodcote it was still Neve from Nilsson, Ribeiro, Dick Parsons, Terry Perkins, South, Larry Perkins, Conny Ljungfeldt, Richard Hawkins, Anders Olofsson, Giancarlo Brancatelli, Piercarlo Ghinzani and the rest. Neve continued to lead for the next few laps and on lap 4 Ribeiro managed to find a way past Nilsson into the Woodcote chicane. Also on lap 4 at the chicane Parsons managed to get his Modus sideways, Terry Perkins had to lift to avoid him and was punted up the gearbox by his brother. The Ralt of Larry Perkins spun and in the melee Stephen South had the nose on his Ray damaged which saw him forced to retire. Larry Perkins was able to continue albeit down in fifteenth place whilst the three leaders found they had been given a useful lead from the now fourth place Terry Perkins. Richard Hawkins was chasing the Ralt hard in fifth followed by Brancatelli, Ingo Hoffman, a clutchless Ljungfeldt, Danny Sullivan, Ghinzani, Dieudonné and Olofsson. Parsons found the handling on his Modus beginning to deteriorate and he soon fell away from the leaders. Chris Barnett was out on lap 6 when he missed the chicane in his March and ripped off his rear wing. Neve’s lead lasted until lap 8 when Ribeiro demoted the Safir to second and on the following lap it was third as Nilsson also found a way through.
Nilsson decided to try for the lead on lap 10 and the two Marches came to the chicane side by side with the Swede outbraking the Brazilian and moving to the front. For the next few laps the two Marches swopped the lead regularly as they used each other to tow themselves clear of the chasing Neve. Ribeiro then held the lead for several laps as Nilsson was content to sit on his tail and see if the Brazilian’s reputation for making errors under pressure would once again apply. Behind the leading three Terry Perkins was beginning to find his brakes going away and was having to drive defensively to hold Hawkins back which, in turn, was allowing Brancatelli to home in on the pair of them.

Next up it was Hoffman who was under considerable pressure from Sullivan who was really flying now that he was happy with the handling of the Modus. On lap 12 Sullivan managed to outbrake Hoffman into the chicane but in an effort to stop the Brazilian, who had a faster exit speed, from retaking the place he chopped the March and the two cars banged wheels along the main straight. Unfortunately for Sullivan he badly buckled one of his rear rims causing him to retire although Hoffman got away without damage.
As the two leaders entered the last lap it was still Ribeiro ahead of Nilsson and as the two cars sped along Hanger Straight the Swede went for the front, Nilsson dived out of Ribeiro’s slipstream and took the lead under braking for Stowe. Ribeiro fought back and tried to regain the position at Club, Nilsson blocked him but lost a little speed. The Brazilian slipstreamed Nilsson through Abbey and dived for the inside as the two cars approached Woodcote, sadly for Ribeiro he had misjudged the space and with Nilsson already on the optimum line he dropped a wheel onto the grass and in an instant went spinning out of second place. Ribeiro tried to restart his engine but the battery was flat so that was it for the frustrated Alex, his only consolation being a new lap record.
A delighted Gunnar Nilsson therefore took the chequered flag ahead of the Safir of Patrick Neve, Richard Hawkins finished third after he had managed to get ahead of the brake troubled Terry Perkins at the chicane on lap 17. Perkins held onto a well deserved fourth from Giancarlo Brancatelli’s fast closing March whilst Ingo Hoffman was sixth just holding off Pierre Dieudonné. Mike Wilds F3 return was an unhappy one, his engined suffered from electrical problems and he could do no better than fifteenth at the flag.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 19 July 1975

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

Race Report: Silverstone, 6 July 1975

silverstone_6_7_75

Race Report: Silverstone, 6 July 1975

silverstone_6_7_75

A reasonable entry of some of the lesser lights in F3 arrived at Silverstone for this non-championship race, the grid was boosted by the addition of several FF2000 cars.

Pole man Chris Barnett was slow away from the grid when his March 753 stripped second gear which allowed Dyfed Roberts to grab the lead in his March 743. Doug Bassett slotted into second with his GRD 374 with Rupert Keegan third with his ex-Henton 743 whilst the unfortunate Barnett fell to the tail of the field. Roberts then drove sensibly without making any mistakes to win by two seconds from the similar car of Ken Silverstone who had come up to second from fourth on lap 7 after Keegan fell back and then retired with brake problems and Bassett ran wide. Silverstone chased Roberts hard all the way to the finish and both men shared a new lap record 0.4 seconds under the old mark. Barnett recovered well from his opening lap problems to finish fourth behind Bassett.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 6 July 1975

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

Race Report: Silverstone, 27 April 1975

silverstone_27_4_75

Race Report: Silverstone, 27 April 1975

thruxton_31_3_75

Round two of the BP Super Visco Championship and a wet practice meant that grid positions were a bit of a lottery, pole position going to the works GRD of Ian Taylor. Two casualties were Terry Perkins (brother of Larry) who damaged a corner of his Ralt when he aquaplaned off on a puddle and Bob Arnott who did the same with his March 743. Some hard work saw Arnott’s car nearly repaired for the race but sadly there wasn’t quite enough time.

It was still damp for the race but most of the front runners opted for slicks the only important exceptions being Patrick Neve who put wets on the Safir and Tony Rouff who tried wets on the front of the Ehrlich.
The start was a little ragged but Larry Perkins made a great start and had a big lead going into Copse with Danny Sullivan and Ian Taylor giving chase. Entering Becketts Alex Ribeiro decided to pass everybody in one go, he cannoned into Taylor which saw both cars out whilst Richard Hawkins found himself launched over the rear wheel of Stephen South’s Ray which damaged the tub on the March. Also out on the first lap was Neve, the engine on his Safir stopping for no apparent reason although it is unlikely he would have made any progress on his wet tyres. Out in front it was still Perkins from Sullivan, Rouff, Dick Parsons, Hervé Regout, Rupert Keegan, South, Pierre Dieudonné, Graham Hamilton and Mike Tyrrell.
Perkins was further extending his lead as Sullivan edged further away from Rouff in second as the tyres on the Ehrlich began to go off and Rouff slipped down the field. Parsons pitted on lap three to end his promising run and South now found himself in third spot ahead of the March 753s of Dieudonné and Chris Barnett, the latter two having made good progress up the field. Regout had a big spin at Woodcote on lap 9 and in his hurry to rejoin the track he nearly removed Pete Clarke’s Modus and Dyffed Roberts’ March 743, Mike Tyrrell took advantage of the confusion to move up to sixth.
Lap 14 saw the demise of the unfortunate Perkins as a front nearside tyre deflated handing the lead to Sullivan’s Modus. Perkins wasn’t the only one in difficulties as South saw his good run ended with an identical tyre failure one lap later. Dieudonné who had just passed South was now second and he was fighting off Barnett and with four laps to go local man Barnett passed the Belgian. Sullivan completed his 20 laps and took a comfortable win from Barnett and Dieudonné but the last two were both excluded in post race scrutineering, the wings on their March 753s were found to be too high. All of this moved Tyrrell up to second with Regout in third whose rear wing was surprisingly unchecked. Dyffed Roberts tried to oust Pete Clarke from what would turn out to be fourth at Woodcote on the last lap but he spun and stalled his engine when he tried to get going again.
Rupert Keegan failed to finish due to a flat tyre and Tony Rouff was similarly afflicted near the end of the race.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 27 April 1975

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

Race Report: Silverstone, 8 September 1974

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Race Report: Silverstone, 8 September 1974

silverstone_8_9_74

No less than 15 cars arrived at Silverstone for the latest round of the Forward Trust Championship, one of the largest UK fields this year.

There were problems at the start when Nicholas von Preussen and Brian Henton made contact, Henton scraped his March along the pit wall whilst von Preussen’s March was catapulted across the track where it was rammed by the Ehrlich of Chris Smith who had nowhere to go, both cars were badly damaged although the drivers were unhurt.

It was Mike Tyrrell who had made the best start and he proceeded to lead every lap, gradually pulling away from the rest of the field to win by nearly six seconds. Tony Rouff had moved up well and was battling with fellow American Danny Sullivan with both men chasing Alex Ribeiro. They both passed the Brazilian and pulled away a little and continued their battle all the way to the line with Rouff getting the second spot by 0.2 seconds. Ribeiro had fallen behind Henton who was complaining of a down on power engine but the Hollywood GRD managed to get the place back and Ribeiro, Henton and Santo crossed the line less than a second apart. Dick Parsons had been running with the front runners but he made contact with Jose Chateaubriand and picked up a slow puncture that dropped him back, the Brazilian spinning and retiring.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 8 September 1974

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

Race Report: Silverstone, 26 August 1974

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Race Report: Silverstone, 26 August 1974

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This Lombard North Central round took place on the day after the race at Mallory Park, despite this there was a reasonable entry with several new names making an appearance.

It rained just before the race but by the time the cars formed up on the grid it was dry again and everyone fitted slicks for the race. It was Brian Henton who made a great start from row two to lead the other cars into Copse and his cause was helped by the GRD 374s of Alex Ribeiro and Marcos Moraes coming together in the corner and delaying a number of cars. It was Tony Rouff who took second place ahead of Nick von Preussen in third whilst the curse of pole man Mike Tyrrell struck again as the March driver spun down to the back of the field at Maggott’s. Dick Parson’s took advantage of the other cars spinning to slot into fourth at the end of the first lap in his Smiths Crisps Ensign.

The first four remained unchanged until lap 10 when Parsons retired and von Preussen had to pit with his engine making strange noises, some adjustments were made and he continued to finish sixth. Leader Henton continued to be untroubled and he took the flag 2.8 seconds ahead of Rouff with Ribeiro in third. Fourth went to Brazilian newcomer Marivaldo Fernandez who was having an outing in “Teleco’s” March 733, he had raced F3 before in the 1970 1-litre Temporada series where he had handled a works Lotus. Marcos Moraes was black flagged when the bodywork on his GRD was rubbing against a tyre with the ensuing risk of a puncture.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 26 August 1974

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

Race Report: Silverstone, 9 June 1974

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Race Report: Silverstone, 9 June 1974

silverstone_9_6_74

Conditions were very tricky with a very wet track for this round of the Forward Trust Championship and it was Tony Rouff who made the best start in his GRD to lead from Brian Henton’s March. Driving carefully but quickly Rouff led from start to finish with Henton, who after the race said his engine had been misfiring, unable to do anything about the flying American. Nicholas von Preussen looked to be having an exciting time all round the track but he managed to stay on the tarmac to take third place as well as setting the fastest lap. Retirements included Dick Parsons who had engine problems in his Ensign and Derek Lawrence who retired the Ehrlich at the end of lap 1.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 9 June 1974

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

Race Report: Silverstone, 5 May 1974

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Race Report: Silverstone, 5 May 1974

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Once again the F3 cars found themselves in with the Monoposto cars for the latest round of the Forward Trust series despite the disparity in their respective performances.

On a dry track it was the familiar sight of the works March 743 of Brian Henton taking an immediate lead from the GRD 373 of Tony Rouff and the 374 version of Alex Dias Ribeiro, next up it was the second works March 743 of Jose Chateaubriand ahead of the similar car of Buzz Buzaglo with Derek Lawrence sixth in the Ehrlich. The front runners were all running fairly closely together until half distance when it began to rain and Buzaglo had a big spin at Woodcote, he had just passed Chateaubriand and the Brazilian had to take hasty avoidance to miss the gyrating Ippokampos March.
The rain then started to fall even harder with many cars, especially Monopostos, spinning all round the track. Henton slowed his pace to a crawl in the difficult conditions but still took the chequered flag several seconds ahead of Rouff, Ribeiro took third ahead of Chateaubriand. So wet was it that both Rouff and Chateaubriand celebrated completing the race by spinning across the finishing line. Of the other runners Hany Wiano, in the second Ippokampos March, spun into the pits Armco on the last lap, whilst Dick Parsons first race in the Smiths Crisps Ensign was curtailed by a spin at Copse.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 5 May 1974

Race Heat 1

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 20:09.40

2 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 20:09.50

3 Luigi Fontanesi

Tecno-Ford 20:13.10

4 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 20:23.40

Race Heat 2

1 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 15:05.00

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 15:05.00

3 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 15:21.00

4 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 15:34.10

5 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28

Race Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel Alfa Romeo 30:44.30 144.318

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham BT28 30:44.34

3 Fabrizio Noe

Lotus-Ford 69 30:45.10

4 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham BT28 30:55.40

5 Patrice Compain

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00

6 Carlo Franchi (Gimax)

De Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 31:11.50

7 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Ford 31:59.60

8 Giovanni Lo Voi

Martini-Ford MW7 31:08.00