Race Report: Silverstone, 14 May 1972

silv_14_5_72

Race Report: Silverstone, 14 May 1972

silv_14_5_72
Held the day after the Monaco F3 race the entry was based more on quantity than quality although several top names appeared notably Roger Williamson who, despite injuring his foot in his Monaco accident, flew back to drive the prototype GRD 372 usually handled by Andy Sutcliffe. Jeremy Gambs led away at the start in his Ensign F372 but soon found himself demoted so that at the end of lap 1 it was Williamson from Skeaping and von Opel. Skeaping put the Chevron into the lead at Woodcote on lap 2 but Williamson immediately retook first spot and gradually pulled away from the rest of the field to take an easy victory. Rikki von Opel took second place from Skeaping on lap 5 and although the Chevron driver stayed on the tail of the Ensign for the rest of the race he never looked like regaining second place. The main battle was for fourth between ex-MGB racer Tony Binnington (March 713M), Masami Kuwashima (GRD 372), Ross Ambrose (Lotus 69) and Ray Mallock (U2 Mk12).

Binnington appeared to be coming out on top until lap 9 when some barging at Woodcote saw Ambrose push the March into the sleepers, although the car was badly damaged luckily Binnington was unhurt. Ambrose also spun in the melee allowing Kuwashima and Mallock to pull away, the wildly driven GRD and the U2 fought over fourth until lap 13 when Mallock got ahead and eased away over the remaining two laps.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 14 May 1972

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, 23 April 1972

silverstone - 1

Race Report: Silverstone, 23 April 1972

silverstone - 1

60 cars arrived for this round of the Shell Super Oil Championship with two heats on Saturday sorting out the 36 qualifiers for Sunday’s final. The large entry, including several French F3 teams, was probably due to the race being a supporting event for the F1 International Trophy.

Practice was split into two sessions, the first for 45 minutes on Friday and the second for 30 minutes on Saturday. Heat one pole went to Barrie Maskell who, after finding he couldn’t get a tow from anyone on Friday, borrowed a helmet from F Ford racer David Loring. With everybody now thinking Maskell’s car was driven by a slower team-mate Barrie had no problems finding a good tow! Next up was Alan Jones in his new AIRO Brabham BT38 from Sweden’s Conny Andersson in the earlier BT35 and Andy Sutcliffe who had a cracked block to contend with on Friday. All the other heat one drivers had fairly uneventful sessions except for Patrick Depailler who was much further down the grid than was to be expected, he, like all the works Alpines, was in head gasket difficulties seemingly as a result of trying a new blend of ELF fuel.

Fastest in heat two was the Ensign of Mike Walker with the similar car of Colin Vandervell second quickest. Completing the front row were Pierre-François Rousselot’s GRD and Tony Trimmer’s JPS Lotus. Once again the rest of the field were mostly drama free.

It was Sutcliife who got the best start in heat one with Maskell right behind him but as they completed lap one it was Conny Andersson who had been a little slow off the line who was in the lead from Sutcliffe, Williamson, Evans, Maskell, Purley, Jones, Wood, Lamplough, McCully, Pryce, von Opel, Yeates and Magee with the rest in a blur of colour behind. MacDonald was a first lap retirement, suffering severe damage when his March was pushed off the track by Mackintosh’s Ensign. By lap three Williamson was in front from Andersson and these two were edging away from the battle for third. Lap 5 and it was still Williamson and Andersson out in front but slipstreaming each other furiously for third were Sutcliffe, Purley, Maskell, Evans, Jones and Lamplough. Further back a similar dice was going on between Pryce, Sedgley, McCully, Wood and Mackintosh until Sedgley lost it at Woodcote on lap 5 fortunately without involving any of the other runners although the Ensign was out.
Andersson and Williamson continued their battle for the lead for the entire ten laps and although the Swede managed to get in front a couple of times Williamson always seemed in command and the March took took the inside line through Woodcote and won by 0.2 seconds. The next six crossed the line with just two seconds between them, Bob Evans coming out best through Woodcote moving from seventh to third with Maskell and Purley inches behind. Next up were Sutcliffe and Maskell after Alan Jones spun out and hit the bank hard badly damaging the front end of the BT38.

At the start of heat two a group of seven cars quickly detached themselves from the rest with Trimmer in front from Mass, Walker, Harness, Hunt, Hull and Rousselot, behind these a second group formed consisting of Brise, Ashley, Vandervell (a very poor start), Ginn, Ambrose, Coulon and Leclere. Walker moved his Ensign into first on lap two and Brise took his Brabham into the leading group with Vandervell looking to do the same. Gradually Walker, Mass and Harness began to edge away from the rest of the group which had Rousselot heading Hull, Trimmer, Vandervell (moving up well), Hunt and Brise. Mo Harness was next to try the front when he pushed his Brabham into first on laps 4 and 5 whilst Mass tried to get past Walker for second, behind them Vandervell was now up to fourth and pulling the rest of the group towards the three leaders. Lap 9 and one to go, it was Walker back in front with Vandervell flying in second from Harness, Hull, Trimmer, Rousselot, Mass and Brise. Final lap and it is still Walker in front and actually gaining on the rest, the Ensign managing to pull out to a 1.3 second win, the next seven were covered by a second with Harness coming out best on the inside line at Woodcote with Trimmer, Vandervell, Rousselot, Hull, Mass and Brise crossing the line almost as one.

The 36 car final was made up from the first ten in each heat with the next fastest sixteen lap times, the grid lined up as follows:

Maskell
 
Evans
 
Andersson
 
Williamson
 
Sutcliffe
 
Walker
 
Purley
 
Vandervell
 
Trimmer
 
Harness
 
Lamplough
 
Mass
 
Hull
 
Rousselot
 
McCully
 
Mackintosh
 
von Opel
 
Brise
 
O’Brien
 
Ginn
 
Ashley
 
Wood
 
Compain
 
Coulon
 
Pryce
 
Hunt
 
Sedgley
 
Auvray
 
Albera
 
 
Magee
 
Deutsch
 
Bond
 
McGuire
 
Tyrrell
 
    
Ambrose
 
Matthews

Andersson and Mass got away first but as the field reached the Motor Bridge Harness found himself in trouble after receiving a push up the rear, the Brabham veered back and forth across the track and was struck by Walker who then hit Purley. Harness was out immediately with a broken wishbone and a split radiator, Walker was out at Copse with a puncture whilst Purley managed one more lap with his Ensign leaving a oil smoke screen before he had to retire. At the end of lap one it was Williamson in the lead, the GRD taking first place at Stowe and that would be the last the rest of the field would see of him, even without the aid of a tow he left the rest of the field behind at a second a lap. Fighting over second place were Maskell from Andersson, Evans, Mass, Trimmer, Sutcliffe, Vandervell, Ashley, Hull, Mackintosh, Rousselot, Lamplough, Wood, Albera and Pryce. Vandervell moved up to second on lap 3 but a tap sent him off onto the grass where he had both radiators on the Ensign punctured by rocks, he also sent more rocks flying one of which hit the steering arm on the Royale of Tom Pryce bending it which caused the Welshman to retire with dodgy handling.
The next big change came on lap 4, behind Williamson it was Maskell, Mass, Anderson, Sutcliffe, Hull, Ashley, Evans, Mackintosh, Lamplough and Rousselot. As the next group crossed the finishing line Wood spun on someone else’s oil and spun off into the bank, Albera trying to avoid the March also put his Martini into the bank ripping off his wheel, this bounced back onto the track hitting the front of McCully’s Brabham, the Australian in trying to pull off the track was then hit by Auvray’s Martini which sustained a puncture. Also in trouble was Trimmer who lost a lap with a pit stop to replace a punctured tyre following a nudge at Woodcote and Maskell who was out when fourth gear exploded.
By lap 10 the field was down to 20 cars and this was further reduced when Deutsch retired with rear suspension damage after contact with Ambrose at Stowe, next out were Brise with a blown head gasket and Ashley with a broken metering unit. Meanwhile Williamson was still out in front, the second place group were still at it hammer and tongs and further back Magee, Hunt, Bond, Ginn and Mackintosh were having their own private duel.
Things quietened down for the final ten laps, the only additional retirements were Mackintosh and Hunt, the Ensign driver spinning at Becketts taking Hunt off with him much to the annoyance of the March driver. At the end of the 20 laps it was clearly an easy win for Williamson but who would finish second, it was four abreast under the Daily Express Bridge and as they entered Woodcote Mass dived inside Hull grabbing second place by inches. Evans and Sutcliffe crossed the line together with wheels almost interlocked, Sutcliffe got the verdict although many observers though it should have been Evans, Andersson came in sixth after loosing out at Stowe, next up were von Opel narrowly from Rousselot, the rest of the field coming home at a more sedate pace.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 23 April 1972

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, 16 April 1972

silverstone

Race Report: Silverstone, 16 April 1972

silverstone

A full grid contested this Silverstone round of the Forward Trust F3 Championship.

There was almost chaos just before the start of the race when it started to rain, there was a mad scramble for wets and intermediates but the organisers refused to allow the cars to change tyres on the grid. Fortunately it stopped raining before the start and slicks were the required tyre, had the rain increased though there could have been a nasty accident with the entire grid on the wrong tyres. Front row man von Opel was in trouble when a front slick was found to be punctured just as he was about to leave the paddock, an intermediate was fitted but the delay meant he was forced to start from the back of the field.

As the cars left the grid and headed to the Motor Bridge a potentially serious accident occurred when Bernard Vermilio (Lotus 73), Chris Skeaping (Chevron B20), Damien Magee (Palliser WDF3), Neil Ginn (GRD 372) and Robin Smythe (March 723) all made contact. Luckily the only physical damage was to Vermilio who suffered a badly sprained wrist, the organisers obviously felt Magee was to blame and fined him £20. Tony Brise was an inadvertent victim of the shunt when he had to retire his Brabham BT38 with a puncture caused by accident debris.
At the end of lap 1 with yellow flags waving it was Williamson (March 723) from Evans (March 723), Jones (Brabham BT38), Walker (Ensign F372), Wood (March 723), Trimmer (Lotus 73), Yeates (Lotus 69), Sutcliffe (GRD 372), Stan Matthews (March 723), James Hunt (March 723), Peter Hull (Brabham BT38) and Ray Mallock (U2 Mk 12). Williamson began to increase his lead whilst Walker got ahead of Jones to take third as Sutcliffe passed both Maskell and Trimmer for sixth. Trimmer however was out on the next lap when a failed late braking attempt by Yeates at Woodcote went amiss and both of the Loti were out.
Walker was up to second on lap 3 and he immediately began to close the gap to Williamson, next up were Evans, Jones, Wood and Maskell, then a gap to Sutcliffe in brake trouble and another gap to Hunt and Matthews with Hull falling back with a damaged exhaust. Lap 5 and Wood got ahead of Jones and lap 7 saw Walker right on the tail of Williamson. Walker made his move at Maggotts on the next lap and took the lead from Williamson, the March driver fought back furiously over the remaining two laps and on the last lap along Club Straight the two cars were side-by-side. Into the last corner and Williamson left his braking impossibly late and in an instant the March was spinning leaving Walker to take the win with Williamson recovering to finish in fifth. Jones took second after overtaking Evans on the ninth lap, the March driver tried to regain the place at Woodcote on the last lap but he also spun out and was unable to restart his engine. Maskell took third from Wood who drove well for fourth, notable retirements were Rikki von Opel with another puncture and Ray Mallock’s front engined U2 whose clutch packed up.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 16 April 1972

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, 17 July 1971

silverstone_17_7_71

Race Report: Silverstone, 17 July 1971

silverstone_17_7_71

51 cars from a total entry of 73 arrived at Silverstone for this round of the Shell Super Oil Championship that was one of the support races for the British GP. The race would be decided over two heats and a final and qualifying took place on the Thursday with each heat getting an hour’s track time. Some of the runners were taking part in the race at Magny Cours the day before and they were allowed a ten minute session on Friday morning in order that they could qualify.

Heat one pole went, perhaps surprisingly, to Richard Longman who was a lot happier with the handling on his Lotus 69 after a switch to Koni dampers, Andy Sutcliife in his Lotus, David Purley’s Brabham BT28 and Jody Scheckter’s EMC were the other front row occupants.  Row 2 was an all Brabham BT35 affair

with Swedes Conny Anderson and Ingvar Petterssen leading American Chris O’Brien. Geddes Yeates (Lotus 59/69), Peter Lamplough (Palliser), German Lothar Schorg, using a BMW engine in his BT35, and Jose Ferreira (BT28) made up the third row. Dave Morgan was making an appearance in one of James Hunt’s early season March 713S, it was claimed the only original component was the chassis plate 713S-1. Morgan’s practice was curtailed by a broken wheel bearing. Also in trouble amongst the tail-end Charlies was Sandy Shepard was only managed 3 laps with a slipping clutch. Final runners were Magny Cours latecomers Alan Jones (Brabham BT28), Jean-Louis Lafosse (Brabham BT35) and the Martini MW7s of José Dolhem and Phillipe Albera. The Renault powered March of Freddy Link was listed as being an F2 chassis 712M.

Heat two was very much faster and was headed by the inevitable Dave Walker and his GLTL 69 who was nearly 3 seconds faster than the heat one pole, a new Novamotor was fitted for the race as there was some concern about the head gasket in the practice unit. Next to Walker was Roger Williamson in his usual March and Colin Vandervell’s Brabham BT35 who was pleased with the latest Dunlop slicks and his new Vegantune motor replacing the Rowland he had used to date. Bev Bond was the final front row occupant with the works Ensign LN1 but an off at Club badly damaged the chassis and left hand suspension. Row two was composed of James Hunt (March 713) who was another driver requiring an engine change after practice, Steve Thompson (Ensign LN1) and Freddy Kottulinsky (Lotus 69). Bob Evans (Puma) headed row 3 from Barrie Maskell (Chevron B18) whose practice was shortened when he burnt a piston in his Holbay, the engine was removed from the car, flown to Holbay’s, rebuilt and reinstalled in the chassis for Friday, next up was Alan McCully (Lotus 69) from Ulf Svensson (Brabham BT35). Row 4 was Rikki von Opel (Lotus 69), Torsten Palm, who was unhappy with the handling of his new Brabham BT35 (his old chassis being driven by team mate Ingvar Petterssen) and Brian McGuire’s Brabham BT28. Amongst the final runners were Giancarlo Naddeo in his Tecno who was learning the track and Brendan McInerney who only managed 7 laps due to a late engine change, the rest of the grid were Magny Cours competitors Pierre-François Rousselot (Brabham BT35), and the Martini MW7s of François Migault and François Rabbione. Terrance Peterson was in trouble when, after being delayed in Scrutineering, he shunted his Chevron B17B (a converted Formula B chassis) at Copse knocking two corners off after one lap.

Scheckter and Sutcliffe got the best starts in heat one but at the end of lap one it was Sutcliffe leading from Ferreira, Scheckter, Purley, Longman and Morgan, late away was Italian Mimo Bertoni who needed a push start to get his engine running. Lap two saw Ferreira take the lead at Becketts but Morgan came through at Woodcote to lead for two laps with Purley and Ferreira swopping second and third places. Albera retired his Martini on lap 2 with a holed piston whilst Jorge Pinhol spun his Brabham at Copse continuing last. It was Ferreira’s turn to lead on laps 4 and 5 and then Scheckter had a go on lap 7 but anyone of the leading group could be in front depending on which corner you were looking from. Randy Lewis (Brabham BT35) was a spinner at Stowe taking Richard Longman (Lotus 69) with him, both continued down the field although Lewis managed another rotation at Copse on the following lap and needed a push to get going again. On lap 10 it was Purley in front from Morgan, Ferreira, Sutcliffe Andersson, Dolhem, Scheckter, Yeates and Jones, trailing behind were Link, Petterssen, O’Brien and Longman. Sutcliife led on lap 11 from Scheckter, lap 12 it was Purley, 13 and 14 Ferreira.
The last lap and it was anyone’s race as they entered Woodcote 5 or 6 abreast. It looked for a second as if it would be Conny Andersson but Scheckter took the EMC round the outside of the Brabham to win by 0.2 seconds, Morgan was third from Purley whose fuel pump was failing, fifth and sixth were Ferreira and Sutcliffe.

With insufficient spares for his Ensign Bev Bond was forced to scratch from heat two but everyone else lined up on the grid. For a moment it looked like Vandervell was in trouble when his Vegantune wouldn’t start on the grid but luckily it fired at the last minute and it was the Brabham driver who led away from Williamson and Walker. All the rest got away without problems except for Guitteny who needed a push to get his Martini running. By the end of the first lap Walker had moved to the front from Thompson and Vandervell, there was a slight gap back to Williamson, Maskell, Evans, McCully, Svensson, Naddeo, Radmyr, von Opel and Palm. Back at the front it was Walker and Vandervell taking it in turns to lead with Thompson happy to bide his time in third. James Hunt had a disastrous getaway when he cooked his clutch at the start and he pulled over at Copse to retire when as the clutch cooled it bit enough for him to select top. For the rest of the race, except for a few times when he risked dropping a cog, he kept it in top and he was soon picking up places and he managed to work his way up to the second group with some help from Rousselot when the pair each used the other’s slipstream to pull up on the group.
Ten laps down and it was Vandervell from Walker and Thompson, a gap then Maskell, McGuire, Svensson, Evans, McCully, Naddeo, Williamson, Kottulinsky, Rousselot and Hunt. Man on the move was still Hunt and over the next few laps he moved up to fifth, while at the front Thompson led the last two laps but Vandervell and Walker were playing with him. As the last lap was running out the Brabham and the Lotus sat in the Ensign’s slipstream and as they went under the Daily Express bridge they pounced, both drivers passed the Ensign and headed for Woodcote as one but it was Walker who had the edge and he took the flag by 0.2 seconds from Vandervell with Thompson a similar margin down in third. Surprisingly the next bunch all made it through Woodcote without incident and it was Naddeo’s Tecno taking fourth from Maskell, Hunt and the rest. When the cars came out to the grid Lothar Schorg and Rikki von Opel were missing, von Opel deciding his engine was just about to fail and he didn’t have the luxury, like Walker and Hunt, of fitting a new one.
Once again it was Vandervell who made a storming start leading away the rest followed by Naddeo and Thompson. It was clear the top drivers wanted to try and make a break to avoid the mad slipstreaming lottery and at the end of the first lap it was Walker from Vandervell and Thompson with a small gap to Scheckter, Hunt, Williamson, Evans, Purley, Svensson, McCully, Ferreira, Morgan and McGuire. Barrie Maskell should have been up there but someone shoved him off at Becketts and he was well down the field. By lap 6 everyone had caught up with everybody else and it was Thompson ahead of Walker, Vandervell, Naddeo, Williamson, Evans, and Hunt, there was a tiny gap back to Purley and Scheckter, then another space back to Rousselot, Ferreira, Shepard, Morgan, McGuire and Link.
Laps 8 and 9 saw the demise of the works March team, first out was McInerney with a holed radiator and the following lap Hunt was out when his Holbay’s metering unit seized. At 10 laps it was Williamson from Walker, Naddeo with Vandervell a few car lengths back but ahead of Thompson, Purley, Rousselot, Evans and Purley. Alan Jones was out with a broken throttle cable and team-mate Brian McGuire was out in an accident involving Andersson and Morgan at Woodcote, Andersson managed to continue with a broken nosecone.
Lap 14 saw Walker ahead of Thompson, Williamson and Naddeo. Vandervell was out at Stowe with a holed radiator and the leaders were starting to open a gap on the rest of the field except for Rousselot who was really flying and he soon attached himself to the leading quartet. Drivers in trouble were Palm and Radmyr who spun out at Woodcote, Migault had a pit stop with a broken roll bar link and then a second one with a leaking fuel union, Dolhem was out when his Martini shed its air box and Link was out at Chapel with a broken throttle linkage.
As the race entered its closing stages it was clear that, barring a disaster, the winner had to come from Walker, Naddeo, Thompson, Rousselot and Williamson whilst the point for sixth was the aim of the next bunch, Svensson, Evans, Morgan, Purley, Scheckter and McCully. The last lap and it looked like Rousselot had broken away as he had a 30 yard lead but Walker wasn’t beaten, he was closing up as they exited Stowe and they were level at Woodcote and by the flag it was the Lotus by 0.1 seconds from the French Brabham, Naddeo took third from Williamson and Thompson with David Purley managing to outmanoeuvre the other group to take the final point.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 17 July 1971

Qualifying Heat 1

1 Richard Longman

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:38.5

2 Andy Sutcliffe

Lotus-Holbay 69 1:38.7

3 David Purley

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:38.7

4 Jody Scheckter

EMC 606 1:39.0

5 Conny Andersson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:39.1

6 Ingvar Petersson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:39.1

7 Chris O'Brien

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:39.6

8 Geddes Yeates

Lotus-Scholar 59/69 1:39.7

9 Peter Lamplough

Palliser-Holbay WDF3 1:40.0

10 Lothar Schorg

Brabham-BMW BT35 ?

11 Jose Ferreira

Brabham-Holbay BT28 ?

Qualifying Heat 2

1 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:35.7

2 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M 1:36.0

3 Colin Vandervell

Brabham-Vegantune BT35 1:36.3

4 Bev Bond

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:37.0 (DNS)

5 James Hunt

March-Holbay 713M 1:37.2

6 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Vegantune LN1 1:37.2

7 Freddy Kottulinsky

Lotus-BMW 69 1:37.3

8 Bob Evans

Puma-Vegantune 1:37.5

9 Barrie Maskell

Chevron-Holbay B18 1:37.6

10 Alan McCully

Lotus-Vegantune 69 1:38.0

11 Ulf Svensson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:38.3

12 Rikki von Opel

Lotus-Holbay 69 1:38.6

13 Torsten Palm

Brabham-Novamotor BT35 1:39.0

14 Brian McGuire

Brabham-Vegantune BT28 1:39.1

Race Final

1 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69 48:42.2 30 108.18

2 Jean-François

Rousselot Brabham-Holbay BT35 48:42.3 30

3 Giancarlo Naddeo

Tecno-Novamotor 69 48:42.6 30

4 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M 48:42.6 30

5 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Vegantune LN1 48:42.9 30

6 David Purley

Brabham-Holbay BT28 49:13.9 30

7 Jody Scheckter

EMC 606 49:14.0 30

8 Ulf Svensson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 49:14.3 30

9 Bob Evans

Puma-Vegantune 49:14.4 30

10 Dave Morgan

March-Vegantune 713S 49:14.6 30

11 Alan McCully

Lotus-Vegantune 69 49:14.6 30

12 Jose Ferreira

Brabham-Holbay BT28 49:24.1 30

13 Andy Sutcliffe

Lotus-Holbay 69 49:40.0 30

14 Sandy Shepard

Brabham-Holbay BT28 49:47.9 30

15 Ingvar Petersson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 49:48.0 30

16 Barrie Maskell

Chevron-Holbay B18 49:48.5 30

17 Freddy Kottulinsky

Lotus-BMW 69 49:48.7 30

18 Randy Lewis

Brabham-Holbay BT35 49:51.2 30

19 Peter Hull

Brabham-Vegantune BT28 49:54.3 30

20 Chris O'Brien

Brabham-Holbay BT35 50:10.7 30

21 Jan Persson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 50:11.0 30

22 Torsten Palm

Brabham-Holbay BT35 50:11.5 30

23 Richard Longman

Lotus-Novamotor 69 50:22.2 30

24 Jean-Louis Lafosse

Brabham-Holbay BT35 50:22.5 30

25 Bengt Radmyr

Lotus-Holbay 69 29

26 John Bisignano

March-Holbay 713M 29

27 Conny Andersson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 29

28 François Migault

Martini-Novamotor MW7 28

Race Report: Silverstone, 5 June 1971

silverstone_5_6_71

Race Report: Silverstone, 5 June 1971

silverstone_5_6_71

A healthy entry of 31 cars arrived at Silverstone for this Shell Super Oil/Motor Sport encounter, the numbers being bolstered by the addition of several French and Swedish runners.

Practice was split into two sessions on the Friday morning although the first session was somewhat disrupted by several cars being late onto the track due to scrutineering delays. Whether or not a driver got a good time was dependent on being able to find a decent tow so for much of qualification there was the sight of large bunches of cars touring round waiting for someone else to take the lead.

As usual by the end of practice it was Dave Walker on pole in the GLTL 69 although he lost an engine in the process, a bitsa would have to be made up overnight from two engines awaiting rebuilds.

The other front row sitters were Rossi, von Opel and Palm who was delighted with his new Brabham. Next up was Vandervell’s Brabham which was handling more to the drivers liking although the new titanium Rowland engine was not living up to expectations. Next to the Brabham were Maskell’s Chevron, proving very quick in a straight line, and McGuire’s BT28. The Aussie was pleased with his first serious F3 run but his car needed a clutch change as did the other two AIRO cars of Jones and McCully.
Thompson and Purley led a misfiring Williamson who also had handling problems whilst next up was F3 new face Jody Scheckter who was looking very impressive in the EMC which was a development of the previous year’s car as driven by Ray Allen. Randy Lewis led the two clutch troubled cars of Jones and McCully with Svensson ahead of Lamplough whose BRM engine was again causing him problems. Also not happy with their engines were McInerney and Goss, both of whom felt their Holbay’s weren’t performing as they should. Lawrence was another with BRM woes and Qvarnstrom wasn’t pleased with his Sportscars of Sweden engine which apparently had its air restrictor pointing in a direction other than forwards.
Radmyr was next up ahead of Lagier and Longman who was suffering from blocked fuel injectors. The final runners were Deutsch, O’Brien, Sedgley (who went home after practice for reasons unknown) and a disgusted Bev Bond whose engine had blown up after 5 laps.

It was almost inevitable that this would be a Silverstone slipstreaming special and at the end of the first lap the field came round as one multi-wheeled bunch. Palm led from Walker, Purley, Vandervell, Maskell, McGuire, von Opel, Shepard, Williamson, Thompson and Jones. Rossi had lost his front row advantage when his car jumped out of gear and Bond was already starting to cut through the backmarkers with his Ensign now running properly with a freshly installed Holbay. Positions continued to change all round the circuit lap after lap but it was clear that the man on the move was Bond who was already up to twelfth by lap 3 and was catching up with McCully, Jones and Thompson. Vandervell took the lead for a few laps but then his Rowland went off song and he quickly fell back through the field. By lap 5 Bond was an amazing second behind Maskell and on lap 7 he took the lead but no one could make a break and the first 21 cars were all in one group, the order depending on where you were standing on the circuit.
There was a second group of backmarkers behind the top 21 of Deutsch, Radmyr, Lagier, O’Brien and Goss. Lawrence was a lap down after a pit stop to look at a damaged throttle cable whilst Anderson had retired with no fuel pressure and Longman was out with a terminal misfire. The field had begun to split into three groups, in the first group were Thompson, Maskell, Bond, Walker, Jones, McCully and Palm. The next group was headed by Lewis, Scheckter, Williamson (who had terrible oversteer), Shepard, Lewis, von Opel and Rossi. Rossi then spun at Stowe taking Lewis and von Opel with him.
The leading group lost Alan Jones when his engine blew a head gasket and at the head of the squabbling bunch Palm and Bond were trying to get away at the front but then two laps from the end there were yellow flags at Copse where Lewis had taken Skeaping off badly damaging the Chevron although the driver was unhurt. McCully was now in the lead but the rest hadn’t given up and Bond, Walker, Maskell and Palm drafted past on the last lap, Walker and Bond made contact but both kept going and at the line it was the Lotus by a hairsbreadth from the Ensign with Maskell, Palm, McCully and Thompson a blink of an eye behind. First to sixth were covered by exactly 1 second, yet another Silverstone thriller for the record books.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 5 June 1971

Qualifying

1 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:38.0

2 Ronald Rossi

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:38.4

3 Rikki von Opel

Lotus-Holbay 69 1:38.6

4 Torsten Palm

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:38.8

5 Colin Vandervell

Brabham-Rowland BT35 1:38.8

6 Barrie Maskell

Chevron-Holbay B18 1:38.8

7 Brian McGuire

Brabham-Vegantune BT28 1:39.0

8 Sandy Shepard

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:39.0

9 Chris Skeaping

Chevron-Rowland B17 1:39.0

10 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:39.2

11 David Purley

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:39.4

12 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M 1:39.4

13 Pierre-François

Rousselot Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:39.4

14 Jody Scheckter

EMC 1:39.6

14 Jody Scheckter

EMC 1:39.6

15 Randy Lewis

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:39.6

16 Alan Jones

Brabham-Vegantune BT28 1:40.0

17 Allan McCully

Lotus-Vegantune 69 1:40.0

18 Ulf Svensson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:40.4

19 Peter Lamplough

Palliser-BRM WFD3 1:40.6

20 Brendan McInerney

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:40.6

21 Tim Goss

March-Holbay 713M 1:40.8

22 Derek Lawrence

Palliser-BRM WFD3 1:40.8

23 Jonas Qvarnstrom

Brabham-Sportscars BT35 1:41.0

24 Bengt Radmyr

Lotus-Holbay 59/69 1:42.2

25 Bernard Lagier

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:42.2

26 Richard Longman

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:42.2

27 Willi Deutsch

March-Holbay 713S 1:42.2

28 Chris O'Brien

Brabham-Holbay BT35 ?

29 Ken Sedgley

Chevron-Holbay B17 1:43.4

30 Bev Bond

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:50.0

Race

1 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:38.0

2 Bev Bond

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:50.0

3 Barrie Maskell

Chevron-Holbay B18 1:38.8

4 Torsten Palm

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:38.8

5 Allan McCully

Lotus-Vegantune 69 1:40.0

6 Ronald Rossi

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:38.4

7 Rikki von Opel

Lotus-Holbay 69 1:38.6

8 Colin Vandervell

Brabham-Rowland BT35 1:38.8

9 Brian McGuire

Brabham-Vegantune BT28 1:39.0

10 Sandy Shepard

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:39.0

11 Chris Skeaping

Chevron-Rowland B17 1:39.0

12 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:39.2

13 David Purley

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:39.4

14 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M 1:39.4

15 Pierre-François

Rousselot Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:39.4

16 Jody Scheckter

EMC 1:39.6

17 Jody Scheckter

EMC 1:39.6

18 Ulf Svensson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:40.4

19 Peter Lamplough

Palliser-BRM WFD3 1:40.6

20 Brendan McInerney

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:40.6

21 Tim Goss

March-Holbay 713M 1:40.8

22 Derek Lawrence

Palliser-BRM WFD3 1:40.8

23 Bengt Radmyr

Lotus-Holbay 59/69 24

24 Peter Lamplough

Palliser-BRM WFD3 24

25 Derek Lawrence

Palliser-BRM WFD3 24

Race Report: Silverstone, 16 May 1971

silverstone_16_5_71

Race Report: Silverstone, 16 May 1971

silverstone_16_5_71
Due to this race clashing with the Shell Super Oil round at Zandvoort it was unsurprising that the turnout was a little sparse with only seven cars arriving for this Forward Trust round to be held on the Silverstone Club Circuit. Victory went to pole position man Sandy Shepard, the American Brabham driver winning his first F3 race, second after a race long battle with the winner was series newcomer Rikki von Opel with his Lotus 69. Ronald Rossi led the opening lap and was up with the two leaders when his throttle cable broke on lap four.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 16 May 1971

List Formatted as -

Rank- Driver

Car | Time | Lap

Qualifying

1 Sandy Shepard

Brabham-Holbay BT28

Fastest Lap

Sandy Shepard

Brabham-Holbay BT28
1:03.6
91.02

Rikki von Opel

Lotus-Holbay 69
1:03.6
91.02

Race

1 Sandy Shepard

Brabham-Holbay BT28
13:02.4
12 88.79

2 Rikki von Opel

Lotus-Holbay 69
13:02.6
12

3 Chris O'Brien

Brabham-Holbay BT35
13:17.4
12

4 Richard Longman

Lotus-Novamotor 69
13:20.0
12

5 Sonny Eade

Brabham-Scholar BT28
13:38.6
12

6 John Bisignano

March-Holbay 713M
11

Race Report: Silverstone, 8 May 1971

silverstone_8_5_71
silverstone_8_5_71

An excellent 28 starters made it for this round of the Shell Super Oil/ Motor Sport Championship with all the top of the table contenders ready to battle it out on the fast, open Silverstone spaces.
The first session on Friday was held in damp/wet conditions so nearly all the fast times were set in Saturday’s dry session. Fastest in practice was Bev Bond in his usual Ensign LN1 who lead Dave Walker by a third of a second, Walker was trying some trick FSV Firestones on his Lotus but was complaining of handling difficulties. A superb third fastest was Barrie Maskell in his new Chevron B18 that was running in F2 trim except for the removal of its wings which would have been too much for F3 power levels. Fourth was Sandy Shepard who got a handy tow from Bond and announced that Silverstone reminded him of Sebring, next up was Kottulinsky who was doing everything possible to ensure his BMW mill was airtight to avoid a repeat of his Brands Hatch problems. James Hunt was next but had a new Holbay installed in his March overnight after feeling the original was down on power, Brabhams filled the next three positions with McInerney ahead of Vandervell and Rossi. Ertl was next followed by Williamson who had set his time early in the practice session before spinning off at Copse and suffering minor

suspension damage, unfortunately Mike Tobitt also lost his Chevron in the same place, left the track and hit the abandoned March to the detriment of both cars. Williamson’s team immediately packed up the mangled remains and left for the March factory in Bicester, an all nighter by Roger, his father and two mechanics saw them return to Silverstone the next morning with a new chassis built around the few salvageable parts from the wreck.
David Purley followed Williamson, pleased with his time as his engine was now getting a little tired, Ertl in his Alfa powered Lotus was next ahead of Hannelore Werner and Jose Ferreira. Sutcliife took the next grid slot despite severe engine problems due to incorrect timing, Möhr’s Lotus had gearbox problems, at least they were better off than Steve Thompson who broke a piston in his Lotus after five laps rendering himself a nonstarter. Longman and Bülow were ahead of Skeaping who only went out in Friday’s wet session due to a broken gearbox adapter plate on Saturday. Final runners were Goss, Hoffman, Lamplough (engine problems), O’Brien (broken petrol line), Joy (wrong gearing), Tobitt (accident), Hull (jammed throttle) and Evans who missed qualifying altogether due to serious problems with his BRM unit.
At the start everyone got away cleanly and Bond led Shepard into Copse with Maskell, Walker and Vandervell who had made a particularly good start right behind. At the end of the first lap everyone was closely bunched together with Maskell now leading from Bond, Walker, Shepard, Vandervell and Hunt. As is usual at Silverstone positions were changing all round the circuit but the field was soon split into two groups when Rossi spun in the middle of the pack delaying Sutcliffe badly and in the confusion a second group led by McInerney lost the main tow and began to fall away. On the next lap O’Brien also span at Copse and this time Sutcliffe got taken off as well badly damaging his Lotus.
Up at the front of the field the leading ten were were going at it hammer and tongs with cars passing and repassing all the time although Bond, Maskell and Walker were doing most of the leading with Hunt starting to move forward ahead of Vandervell, Shepard, Ferreira, Purley, Kottulinsky and Williamson, next up were McInerney and Ertl with the rest lagging further behind. Skeaping retired with a sticking throttle and clutch problems and Bülow stopped along with his engine. Maskell was still taking turns in the lead despite his engine misfiring slightly and Purley was now starting to show at the front until a spin at Club ended his hopes. Ferreira also managed to lead briefly before Bond pushed him back down
On the last lap Maskell fought back to the front entering Woodcote with Walker, Hunt, Bond, Ferreira, Kottulinsky, Williamson and Shepherd all in with a shout of victory. Vandervell had fallen away fro this group as a loose engine cover was costing him 200rpm on the straights. As the field came under the Daily Express bridge Bond led, taking the inside line, Maskell tried to get further inside the Ensign whilst Walker tried the outside approach. Bond held it to the line with Walker and Maskell dead-heating on time although Walker got the nod for second place. All hell broke loose behind these three with the other cars jostling for position, Hunt touched Ferreira and both cars became airborne and flew off the track into the sleepers, Ferreira’s car was badly damaged, Hunt’s less so, Kottulinsky, Williamson and Shepard crossed the line but Vandervell was stalled in the middle of the track where he had stopped after braking heavily to avoid the Ferreira/Hunt accident, he managed to restart and cross the line in seventh. The rest of the field made it to the finish without dramas.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 8 May 1971

Qualifying

1 Bev Bond

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:37.9

2 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:38.2

3 Barrie Maskell

Chevron-Holbay B18 1:38.2

4 Sandy Shepard

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:38.4

5 Freddy Kottulinsky

Lotus-BMW 69 1:38.5

6 James Hunt

March-Holbay 713S 1:38.8

7 Brendan McInerney

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:39.0

8 Colin Vandervell

Brabham-Rowland BT35 1:39.2

9 Ronald Rossi

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:39.4

10 Harald Ertl

Lotus-Alfa Romeo 69 1:39.5

11 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M 1:39.5

12 David Purley

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:39.5

13 Jose Ferreira

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:40.4

14 Hannelore Werner

March-Holbay 713S 1:40.4

15 Andy Sutcliffe

Lotus-Holbay 69 1:40.8

16 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:41.2

17 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:42.0 (DNS)

18 Richard Longman

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:42.2

19 Wolfgang Bülow

March-Novamotor 713S 1:42.3

20 Chris Skeaping

Chevron-Rowland B17 1:42.3

21 Tim Goss

March-Holbay 713M 1:42.7

22 Sigi Hoffman

Lotus-Holbay 69 1:42.7

23 Peter Lamplough

Palliser-BRM WFD3 1:43.0

24 Chris O'Brien

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:44.0

25 Alan Joy

Brabham-Rowland BT28 1:48.4

26 Mike Tobitt

Chevron-BRM B17 1:49.9 (DNS)

27 Peter Hull

Brabham-Rowland BT28 1:53.5

28 Bob Evans

Puma-BRM DNP

Races

1 Bev Bond

Ensign-Holbay LN1 33:24.4 20 105.44

2 Dave Walke

r Lotus-Novamotor 69 33:24.6 20

3 Barrie Maskell

Chevron-Holbay B18 33:24.6 20

4 Freddy Kottulinsky

Lotus-BMW 69 33:26.4 20

5 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M 33:27.3 20

6 Sandy Shepard

Brabham-Holbay BT28 33:33.4 20

7 Colin Vandervell

Brabham-Rowland BT35 33:39.4 20

8 Manfred Möhr

Lotus-Novamotor 69 33:58.1 20

9 Harald Ertl

Lotus-Alfa Romeo 69 33:58.2 20

10 Brendan McInerney

Brabham-Holbay BT35 33:58.7 20

11 Ronald Rossi

Brabham-Holbay BT28 34:23.3 20

12 Peter Hull

Brabham-Rowland BT28 34:34.7 20

13 Bob Evans

Puma-BRM 34:35.1 20

14 Peter Lamplough

Palliser BRM WFD3 34:35.6 20

15 Richard Longman

Lotus-Novamotor 69 34:35.9 20

16 Tim Goss

March-Holbay 713M 34:36.2 20

17 Sigi Hoffman

Lotus-Holbay 69 34:39.4 20

18 Alan Joy

Brabham-Rowland BT28 19

Race Report: Silverstone 4 April 1971

Silv_4_4_71

Race Report: Silverstone 4 April 1971

Silv_4_4_71

Taking place the day after the Shell/Motor Sport round at Brands Hatch it was hardly surprising that only seven cars made the journey to Silverstone for this Forward Trust event. Dave Walker put the Gold Leaf Team Lotus 69, still suffering with clutch problems, on pole ahead of Roger Williamson’s March 713M, also on the front row were Andy Sutcliffe in a Lotus 69 chassis that had suffered some damage at Brands Hatch and the Brabham BT35 of Brendan McInerney. On the second and final(!) row were Tim Goss in his March 713M, Tom Walkinshaw with a standard engine in his March 713M following a blowup of his race unit and Chris O’Brien in his Brabham BT35.

Walker made a leisurely start to preserve his clutch allowing Sutcliife to take the lead, this only lasted as far as Becketts when Williamson went sailing past into first place. However by Woodcote Walker had surged past both cars into a lead he was not to loose. Williamson and Sutcliffe then proceeded to have a mighty tussle, Sutcliffe apparently not being slowed after knocking his nose cone askew after contact with Williamson. On the last lap Williamson braked as late as possible into Woodcote and aided by Sutcliffe missing a gear held on for second place. McInerney, Goss and Walkinshaw followed the first three home after each having a troublefree, if lonely, race.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone 4 April 1971

Qualifying

1 Colin Vandervell

Brabham-Rowland BT35 1:38.4

2 Bev Bond

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:38.6

3 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:39.0

4 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M 1:40.6

5 Ian Ashley

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:41.2

6 Brendan McInerney

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:41.8

7 Claude Bourgoignie

Lotus-Holbay 69 1:41.8

8 Tim Goss

March-Holbay 713M 1:42.2

9 Alan Joy

Brabham-Rowland BT28 1:42.2

10 Andy Sutcliffe

Lotus-Holbay 69 1:42.2

11 Jean-Louis Lafosse

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:42.6

12 James Hunt

March-Holbay 713S 1:43.8

13 Richard Longman

Lotus-Holbay 69 1:44.2

14 Chris O'Brien

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:48.6

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:50.2

Lotus-Novamotor 69 NT

Race

1 Bev Bond

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1-07:03.0 40 94.85

2 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M 1-07:04.8 40

3 Ian Ashley

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1-07:44.4 40

4 Claude Bourgoignie

Lotus-Holbay 69 1-08:05.6 40

5 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69

6 Brendan McInerney

Brabham-Holbay BT35 39

7 Tim Goss

March-Holbay 713M 39

8 Bernard Lagier

Brabham-Holbay BT35 36

9 Chris O'Brien

Brabham-Holbay BT35 36

10 Richard Longman

Lotus-Holbay 69 31

11 Andy Sutcliffe

Lotus-Holbay 69 31