Автор Тема: 1921 - 200-мильная гонка КМА  (Прочитано 10019 раз)

Оффлайн Владимир Коваленко

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1921 - 200-мильная гонка КМА
« : Июня 11, 2007, 10:12:26 »
Эта была самая первая длинная гонка на "Бруклендсе", и организовал её Клуб малых автомобилей (Junior Car Club, JCC), который ранее отличался только проведением триалов и подъёмов на холм.
В прежние годы на "Бруклендсе" проводились гонки на дистанцию 100 миль, и они, видимо, не воспринимались длинными, а 200 миль - это уже, по тогдашним представлениям, серьёзно. Собственно, это примерно то же, что и нынешняя гонка "Формулы-1".
Статистику гонки можно посмотреть здесь: I Junior Car Club 200.
В нынешней версии этой таблице отсутствуют номера, а раньше они присутствовали. Видимо, авторы сайта обнаружили неразрешимые ошибки и решили вообще исключить номера. Вот какие фотографии и вырезанные из кинокадров изображения с этой гонке имеются в моём распоряжении.
Стартовое поле:

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№33 - Генри Сигрэйв ("Санбим"), победитель
       
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Владимир Коваленко39253,5445717593
Если кто-то чего-то не может, не умеет или не понимает, он доказывает, что это никому не нужно и даже вредно.

Оффлайн Владимир Коваленко

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Re: 1921 - 200-мильная гонка КМА
« Ответ #1 : Июня 11, 2007, 13:53:40 »
Вот как описывает гонку Уильям Бодди в своей книге Brooklands - The Complete Motor Racing History:
             
The JCC's epic 200-Mile race was England's first long-distance race since the war and one of fascinating possibilities. It was well-known that light cars could lap Brooklands in excess of 80 mph and even surpass 100 mph for brief distances, but no-one could visualize clearly how such cars would fare in a race of 200 miles, especially as the regulations demanded 2-seater bodies to enable a passenger to be carried (seats could not be staggered more than 9in) and consequently the faster single-seater small cars couldn't run. Percy Bradley, later to become Clerk on the Course at Brooklands and then Secretary of the Junior Car Club, went ahead with the ambitious plan, the late Hugh McConnell, the Brooklands scrutineer, who ran a 10/15 Fiat saloon, being responsible for the race. The JCC proposed to erect a huge new 100ft x 10ft Scoreboard and at one time a scheme for hanging messages over the track on a wire-and-pulley tackle was discussed. Besides the usual race numbers, each car had to carry on its tail a vertical number disc, this being specified as 18in, later settled as 12in. The new Shell-Mex wheeled refuelling tanks with hoses were to be available in the pits, the latter, at the Fork, providing 14ft, 24ft or 32ft frontage per entry, that nearest the Fork being allocated to GN, that farthest away to Aston Martin, with the necessary people's pits beyond that. Timing was done from 'Chronograph Villa' on the Fork apex.
The Junior Car Club certainly intrigued the motoring world when it announced a 200-Mile contest at Brooklands for cars not exceeding l,500cc. The actual distance was to be 201 miles 189 yards (74 laps), and there were to be two classes, up to l,100cc and 1,101 to l,500cc, with cups for the winners and a great gold cup presented by T B Andre for the entrant of the car making fastest time. The starters were to be drawn up at the Fork in four lines, the first row leaving at midday, the remaining rows being flagged off at 30sec intervals. The cars allocated to the first row were to sport on their bonnets at least 2ft of yellow paint, those in the second row red, those in the third green and those unfortunates in the last row white. Mechanics had to be carried and they, alone, could assist the driver at the pits.
It only needed a good entry list and the first 200-Mile race of the JCC, scheduled for October 22, seemed an assured success. That list was not long in forming. It closed with Talbot-Darracq, AC, Aston Martin, Bugatti, GN, Deemster, AV, Marlborough, Eric-Campbell, BAG, Hillman, ABC, Enfield-Allday, Douglas, Charron-Laycock, Lagonda, Bleriot-Whippet, Alvis, Soriano-Pedroso, Silent Snow, Gregoire, Singer, Coventry-Premier, Crouch, Horstman, Temperino, Baby Peugeot and Morgan -positive proof that this contest was to have the support both of the leading makes of light car and those dark horses striving to establish themselves in a new industry. Speculation as to the results continued unabated. The Bugattis had won at Brescia. The Talbot-Darracqs were known to be very fast and had beautiful little bodies built at the last minute by the Hawker aeroplane works at Kingston. They had proved invincible at Le Mans and could exceed 90mph if pressed, while Segrave, Guinness and Campbell were to be the drivers. But Aston Martin had taken the hour record in the 1 1/2-litre class at over 86mph in spite of a side-valve engine and the AC team had lapped at over 90.
Gradually information trickled through concerning technicalities and form. The Talbots had 16-valve engines with the timing gear for the twin overhead camshafts at the front, twin Solex carburettors, Delco coil ignition and pump cooling. Dynamos were used to charge the batteries on which they relied for ignition, and their 65 x 112mm engines gave 51bhp at 4,000rpm. The bodies had seatbacks of unpadded aluminium moulded to the occupants' form, and the mechanics had those handgrips behind the driver's seat beloved of writers of schoolboy racing yarns. There were neat half-foot ramps, also of aluminium, with recesses for the driver's heels. Everyone wanted to know, and no-one ever discovered, what axle ratio these cars were using - a popular guess being 3.25:1.
Many of the cars were hastily stripped and rebuilt following the GP des Voiturettes, and Bedford's Hillman was found to be in good fettle after finishing fourth, behind the Talbots, averaging 62.5mph for the 279 gruelling miles of that race. Five ACs were entered, two being virtually standard 3-speed sporting cars, specially streamlined and faired, and three genuine racing cars designed by the ingenious J Weller. The latter originally had 8-valve engines with single chain-driven overhead camshaft, but 16-valve heads were used later, and ignition was by coil, pump cooling being used. The 4-speed gearboxes were in unit with a remarkable solid rear axle, devoid of any casing, the 1/4-elliptic springs being linked to the central casing, close against which ran the brake drums. The front suspension consisted of 1/4-elliptic springs to a tubular axle located by a ball-jointed radius arm, while the new-shape radiators had stoneguards, the bodies were well streamlined and the cars were geared to do 25mph per l,000rpm. An rpm/mph table was pasted beside the tachometer. The drivers were announced as Munday, Davis and Davy, the last-named having a beautiful streamlined headrest on his car, while the side-valve cars were to be handled by Brownsort and Stead. Lionel Martin put in three Aston Martins, Kensington Moir's, with streamlined body, winning a Short race at 81mph at the preceding BARC meeting, while Zborowski had the 16-valve, single-ohc Robb engine which had been completed about three weeks beforehand, Victor Bruce and B S Marshall handling side-valve cars. An ingenious lap-scorer was used and big wire-gauze screens for driver and mechanic were fitted. As time went on the Aston Martins gained speed, but AC had various bothers on the eve of the race, their sixth car was withdrawn and Stead took over Noble's entry.
France sent over two bolster-tanked Bugattis, but they did not appear until near the race day so there was no time to fit streamline bodies, and Mones-Maury and Pierre de Viscaya came over later still, with no opportunity of learning Brooklands. Ignition was by two magnetos and the contact-breakers were coupled by a link in the cockpit, held by a wing nut, to obtain advance and retard. Of the Horstmans, three had Coventry-Simplex 62 x 100mm engines, altered to take an external inlet manifold fed by a Solex carburettor and outside exhaust pipes, and long streamlined bodies with conventional radiator cowls and outside gear and brake levers, the dashboard carrying a radiator thermometer. They were not fast, but seemed likely to be reliable, so Temple and Edwards, backed by Douglas Hawkes' Anzani-engined car, were considered to have a good chance. S A Horstman built Hawkes' car in 11 days: the chassis was lowered, body, tail and undershield were one and a scuttle tank supplemented that in the tail. The two Lagondas were based on the standard 11.9hp model, being driven by Major Gates and Hammond, the former's a sister car to the single-seater which had recently broken the l,500cc hour record. The engine had overhead inlet valves operated by rockers in line with the crankshaft, and the bodies, while quite well-faired, were noticeably comfortable and roomy, with well-upholstered seats. Gear and brake levers were central, a spare wheel was accommodated transversely in the tail with a very large fuel tank behind it, and the radiator was cowled.
Alvis put in two cars, presumably sv 12/40 models, although there was at one time some worry as to whether the second car would be ready as the car which ran in the GP had suffered a smashed sump in that race and had to be repaired. Harvey's car had a cowled radiator, extensively drilled frame and full undershield and was fast; Joceland drove the other Alvis. Milward and Pradier teamed up for Charron-Laycock. These cars had 65 x 110mm engines, Pradier's having a 3.5:1 top gear, and 1/4-elliptic rear springs were hastily substituted for 1/2-elliptics on both cars. The ABC entered by Gordon England only just came within the 1,500cc class with its ohv 'square', air-cooled flat-twin engine of l,198cc. It had been fitted with a much lighter square-aspect body for the '200', built in a weekend after a sports body had proved unsatisfactory, the whole chassis being visible from the skeleton seats. The fan was removed, the foot-brake and its connections taken off, the cast-iron pistons replaced by aluminium ones giving a compression ratio of 5.5:1, two huge Solex carburettors fitted, and the breather led to the exhaust valves, while return springs were fitted to the valve rockers. During the first week in October the rear axle ratio was changed to one of 3.25:1 and the speed went up to nearly 80mph; unfortunately, a gudgeon pin broke near the eve of the race.
  
The fast scarlet Enfield-Allday, a newcomer to Brooklands, went out, experiencing steering trouble, and was rushed back to the works, to Bertelli's concern; but the Marlboroughs, one of which had a rotary-valve engine, were ready in good time, although in the end only two started. They, like so many of the other cars, had a piece of coiled tubing from the radiator cap to act as a steam vent should boiling occur. Spare wheels were carried in a locker beneath the fuel tank in the circular tail, while the rear springs ran directly beneath the side-members of the frame, passing through slots in the upper flanges at the rear to meet the shackles. One car had a screen of ordinary fine wire-mesh.
As practice progressed it was seen that many cars would go through the race without refuelling, consumption appearing to vary from 18 to about 25mpg, but the need to stop for fresh oil presented a grave problem; plug troubles were infrequent. The Bugattis used a huge funnel with lid, set before the mechanic, into which could be fed the contents of a quart tin of oil to humour the roller-bearing engine, while the ACs had two hand-pumps, one to feed in fresh oil and the other to scavenge. The Enfield-Allday and some other cars had a small oil radiator. Good shock-absorption proved essential, and one Aston Martin had both Houdaille hydraulic and Hartford friction shock-absorbers, the latter left loose, to be tightened up if needed.
Before dealing with the actual race, let us consider the l,100cc-class competitors. Frazer-Nash relied on a standard GN with special engine and ratios. The engine was the one used at Boulogne a few weeks before the '200', with two 84 x 98mm air-cooled cylinders set at 90deg. Each cylinder had four overhead valves operated by an overhead camshaft. Finding chain drive for the camshafts unsatisfactory in several respects, Nash hastily designed a new system in which a vertical shaft from the centre of the crankcase drove, by bevel, a cross-shaft connecting both camshafts - in later days, of course, ohc GN engines had either a shaft running up the barrel to each camshaft or a single chain drive. Aluminium pistons were used, the internals were undrilled, and there was a dummy radiator frame before the engine. The 4-speed dog-and-sprocket transmission gave two high top speeds, top being 3.03:1, but a 3.3:1 ratio being provided in case a head wind blew up the Fork on the day of the race. The tyres were 700 x 75mm Palmers, and the instruments included a Smith speedometer and tachometer. The engine asked for a pumpful of Castrol R three times per lap to keep the passenger busy.
Salmson, who had won the Cyclecar Grand Prix that year, sent over Lombard, regarded as Nash's only serious rival. His car had a 4-cylinder engine and GN-type 1/4-elliptic front springs. The Deemster, new to Weybridge, was developed from a standard chassis, but had steel pistons, lightened conrods, stronger single valve springs, a special camshaft and a racing Claudel-Hobson carburettor for its bench tests. To improve stability the wheelbase was increased to 8ft 4in and Hartfords were used all round; the top-gear ratio was 2.5:1. The transmission bearings ran dry, being specially fitted, and a continual drip-feed to engine and front universal joint was used, with in addition a spare oil supply in a tank fed by hand-pump. The normal Deemster radiator sat on rubber buffers and had a pigtail vent pipe and mesh shield, the 10-gallon fuel tank was well protected, both occupants had screens, and the body was well faired, with the brake-lever outside and the gear-lever inside, just below the driver's knees. Before the race the artillery wheels were replaced by Rudge wire wheels and the number disc on the tail was braced by wire stays. The engine had additional water connections from around the valve pockets to the radiator.
The AV had a V-fronted dummy bonnet, and Ackermann steering replaced the centre-pivot front axle which sufficed for the production cars. The big V-twin air-cooled engine sat in the tail behind the rear axle, notwithstanding which the wire wheels carried tyres of a size that would seriously upset present-day scrutineers, even of class I cars. The Eric-Campbell, quite an unknown quantity, was one of the few unstreamlined cars running, although it made up for this to some extent by having a very slim radiator; it had a specially tuned Coventry-Simplex engine with outside exhaust system and a raised back axle ratio, but was otherwise practically standard. The BAG had a rather similar radiator, set well back over its 1/2-elliptic front springs, and much bother arose when the engines of these cars were lost in transit to the maker's works! The Soriano-Pedroso carried a great Continental speed reputation, but was totally unknown over here; the 2-stroke Silent Snow was equally unknown and it never appeared to fulfil the kind comment of a current contemporary to the effect that the 2-stroke cycle should give a theoretical advantage as regards power.
Yet another 'dark horse' was the Gregoire entry, and the Coventry-Premier was another newcomer, rather standard-looking, even to disc wheels, but it and Bicknell's artillery-wheeled Singer Ten ran consistently in practice. The Coventry-Premier was eventually given a bigger Claudel-Hobson carburettor to help it along, while Ware's Morgan 3-wheeler was really quick, lapping at 80mph. The Crouch had many Brooklands successes to its credit, but Topping's tiny yellow Baby Peugeot was virtually standard and naturally not very brisk, although at one time a special engine was visualized.
The practice period was hectic in the extreme. The Horstmans and one Marlborough were ready in good time, the Deemster lapped at 82mph, the Charron-Laycock had run quite a distance at 82, and one Alvis was very fast, reaching 87mph. But, not unexpectedly, trouble was rife. Two days before the race Davis' AC was rushed back to the works with the water pump leaking into the base chamber, a suspicion that the contact-breaker cam was slipping and clutch slip, worries that persisted even as the cars lined up for the start. Indeed, the night before the race saw lights burning in most of the sheds at the track as frantic last-minute work proceeded - but over at the Byfleet side, where the Talbot-Darracqs were stationed, peace and contentment reigned.
It is interesting to observe how estimates of the winner's probable speed changed as practice times came in. The original estimate of 75mph was up to 80mph by the end of September, and on the eve of the race the victor was expected by the knowledgeable to average nearly 86mph. In actual fact, the winning car averaged nearly 89mph, seven finishers averaged over 80mph and the fastest lap was at nearly 98mph. Thus this first long-distance light car race run in England appealed not only on account of its originality, and the importance which a varied field of manufacturers attributed to success (competition in the 'New Motoring' sphere was keen), but also because ordinary motorists were going to be given the opportunity of seeing racing light cars lapping Brooklands at nearly twice the speed that their own small cars could attain flat-out - and attempting to do so for a distance greater than most people covered in a full day's drive. Little wonder that in spite of clouds which gathered about 10 o'clock, 6,630 spectators in 1,462 cars (many of them small cars of makes soon to be contesting this long-distance classic) and 198 motorcycles made their way to Weybridge on the Saturday morning of October 22.
When the four rows of cars lined up before the Vickers sheds and people ticked them off in their programmes (which contained a lap-scoring chart of over 4,000 minute squares!), it was seen that the Eric-Campbell, BAG, Douglas, Soriano-Pedroso, Silent Snow, Gregoire and Crouch had failed to arrive. But that did not materially detract from the interest and anticipation. All was set for an epic race to commence at noon, and The Autocar had arranged for telegrams of the competitors' progress to be posted at 36 different towns throughout the British Isles.
As the flag fell the following left the line: in the 1 1/2-litre class -HOD Segrave, K Lee Guinness and Malcolm Campbell (Talbot-Darracq); P de Viscaya and Mones-Maury (Bugatti); Hawkes, Temple and Edwards (Horstman); Bedford (Hillman); Stead, Brownsort, Munday, Davis and Davy (AC); Marshall, Victor Bruce, Zborowski and Kensington Moir (Aston Martin); Hammond and Oates (Lagonda); Gordon England (ABC); Harris and Martin (Marlborough); Bertelli (Enfield-Allday); Harvey and Joceland (Alvis); Milward and Pradier (Charron-Laycock); l,100cc class - Frazer-Nash (GN); Lombard (Salmson); Phillips (Deemster); Dixon (Coventry-Premier); Empson (AV); Bicknell (Singer); Topping (Baby Peugeot); Wood (Temperino); Ware (Morgan) and Marchant (Bleriot-Whippet) - a curious single-makes entry. As the thickly bunched ranks of racing light cars spaced out, it was seen that Segrave led from Campbell and Lee Guinness, with Ware's Morgan way out ahead of the Salmson, GN and Deemster. AC and Aston Martin early dispelled their supporters' hopes, but the Horstmans and Lagondas were going very rapidly and a pronounced misfire did not seem to seriously slow a Charron-Laycock.
Bedford's Hillman, Viscaya's Brescia Bugatti and Guinness' Talbot-Darracq fought a battle in which the placings frequently changed. At 18 laps, as rain began to fall, Segrave led the 1 1/2-litre cars and Ware the 1,100s, the GN now second and Deemster third in that class. Segrave, indeed, was ahead of Campbell by a bare 15sec and Guinness was third, Imin 59sec behind Campbell and 3min ahead of Ware's astounding Morgan, the 3-wheeler lapping at nearly 80mph. Already Edwards' Horstman, with engine trouble, was out of the race for good, to be followed by the Bleriot-Whippet cyclecar and Temple's Horstman, which paid for fast lappery with a broken conrod. Before Marchant retired he wrestled desperately with plugs and carburation, while Davis changed plugs on his AC, only to find that a piston had collapsed, Sammy thereupon insisting on attempting to drive 61 laps on three cylinders to finish the race. Then Ware's 3-wheeler Morgan broke its clutch support while leading its class, and the Salmson led the Deemster and GN. Pradier's Charron-Laycock had retired with the fuel tank unable to hold fuel, and then Davy's AC, which had started with a crack between the exhaust valves, seized its camshaft and was pushed to the dead-car bay.
After 37 laps Segrave still led, but Guinness was now ahead of Campbell, and the GN was second in its class behind the Salmson. Segrave and Lombard gained gold cups by leading at half-distance. Campbell's place loss was due to his offside rear tyre bursting as he went over the Fork on his 36th lap, the stop costing him nearly 4min, suggesting lax pit work. Segrave continued to lap steadily at 4,000rpm on three-quarter throttle, although he admitted afterwards that he was worried on the opening lap at being unable to exceed 3,600rpm, probably because the oil was cold.
The AC's trouble got worse, Brownsort needing a new radiator, which took 14min to fit, while Munday changed plugs, with no improvement in his speed. Considerable excitement occurred when Lombard, braking before his pit in order to refuel, skidded into the concrete kerb, both nearside wire wheels promptly collapsing - which gives some idea of the flimsy wheels used in those days. He fitted two new wheels in 15min and the Sunbeam folk subsequently used this incident for an advertisement proclaiming the general strength of axles and chassis! But the stop allowed Frazer-Nash to lead and probably cost Lombard the race. Empson's rear-engined AV refuelled after 35 laps and the Temperino came in for a like purpose. Harvey's Alvis developed a leaking petrol tank after 46 laps, probably due to Brooklands' rough postwar surface, but the car fortunately carried two tanks, although a stop was necessary to change over. After 30 laps the little Temperino broke a valve, after 43 gallant laps the baby Peugeot broke a conrod, and then, with 60 laps to its credit, the Singer suffered that most annoying cause of retirement, a duff magneto.
So the afternoon - and an historic afternoon at that - wore on. The two Bugattis screamed round, Viscaya a little above Maury on the bankings. Milward's Charron-Laycock swayed a little at the end of the Railway Straight, the Salmson swerved about quite a bit, its rear wheels bouncing badly over the bumps, while the GN weaved skilfully up and down the bankings in passing slower cars. The Talbots, lapping at 90mph or so, were remarkably steady, likewise the Lagondas. Suddenly fuel was seen to stream from Moir's long-chassis Aston Martin, the back axle having fouled the tank, so the car had to be retired after 47 laps. Davis finally gave best to his broken piston at 60 laps and the Hon Victor Bruce, in a most primitive-looking side-valve Aston Martin, experienced tyre trouble, as did Zborowski, the latter lifting the car himself when no suitable jack was forthcoming; Bruce finally stopped after 61 laps with a run big-end. The only accident of the day overtook Munday when his AC burst a tyre on the Byfleet Banking on its 68th lap. It ended up inverted in the ditch, Munday breaking a thigh but his mechanic escaping with a few cuts.
  
The closing stages of the race were enlivened by a contest between the Bugattis, Hawkes' Horstman and the Hillman, and also, after the winners were in, by a careless official opening the gates at the Fork, thus precipitating a cross-stream of spectators' cars in the path of Joceland's Alvis, which was fortunately flagged down, to be credited with a time allowance as compensation.
So Segrave crossed the line in Talbot-Darracq No 33, winner of England's first long-distance light car race. He speeded up four laps from the end and, indeed, continued for some laps after being flagged until a suitably enticing bottle, waved from the pits, caused him to conclude his great drive! He covered the distance in 2hr 16min 26sec, an average of 88.82mph. A few laps from the end an oil pipe broke and his mechanic, Moriceau, got a castor-oil bath, and after he had been flagged a tyre punctured and Segrave actually drove two laps on a 'flat'. He suffered acute deafness and his face bore the brunt of concrete grit, for during a shower of rain he had driven with his goggles up - and there was no screen of any sort. His fastest lap was 93.09mph, tying with 'KLG'. Clearly, fine as Segrave's victory was, the race was rather a close thing. Guinness and Campbell also speeded up at the end, the former coming in 5.8sec behind the winner and 3min 56.2sec ahead of Campbell - the Talbot-Darracqs 1,2,3; Guinness and Campbell averaged 88.73 and 86.50mph, respectively. Viscaya's Bugatti came home fourth, 5min 57sec later, and the following places down to 20th went, respectively, to Hawkes, Maury, Bedford, Stead, Marshall, Zborowski, Hammond, Brownsort, Dates, England, Harris, Bertelli, Harvey, Milward, Martin and, at 56.17mph, Joceland. Four of these averaged under 65 and seven over 80mph.
In the 1.100cc class, Capt Archie Frazer-Nash's GN, consuming 6 gallons of fuel and 2 1/2 gallons of oil, won at 71.54mph after 2hr 49min 24.8sec. The car did not misfire once, a richer setting of the Zenith triple-diffuser carburettor being used while the rain fell. The closing lap was clocked at 77.45mph to demonstrate retention of tune, and 8min 58.6sec afterwards the Salmson came home in second place, followed 2min 16.6sec later by the Deemster, which had been running for just 40sec over three hours. The Coventry-Premier was fourth and the AV fifth, the place averages being 67.93, 67.07, 55.57 and 55.56mph, respectively. Rumour says that Brooklands was littered with curious bits and pieces for weeks afterwards, but certainly the world had been made to realize that 100mph with long-duration reliability was within the province of 1 1/2-litre cars.
Если кто-то чего-то не может, не умеет или не понимает, он доказывает, что это никому не нужно и даже вредно.

Оффлайн Владимир Коваленко

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Re: 1921 - 200-мильная гонка КМА
« Ответ #2 : Июня 11, 2007, 22:39:44 »
Ещё интереснее выглядит рассказ участника гонки - Сэмми Дэвиса. Он позаимствован из его книги Motor Racing 1932 года издания.
                   
1921 - THE FIRST BIG RACE IN ENGLAND
PROSPECTS of real racing, as distinct from trials and -records, in 1914 were distinctly brighter. For one thing, the R.A.C. commenced preparations for a i|-litre race in the Isle of Man, news of which considerably elated everyone who had been driving in road trials, as well as those who had made their names at the track, the road trial drivers particularly, because the manufacturers of cars which they had driven in competitions showed signs of being interested.
Thus, directly through trials, since this was previous even to my record attempts described in the last chapter, I at last attained to my first road racing car, an A.C., one of three which S. C. Westall, A. Noble, and myself were to handle, though coming events, had we known it, were to cut short our hopes. Certainly that car looked odd, though never for a moment would we admit it. The front wheels were well out on a wide front axle, the rear wheels close in on a much narrower axle ; the machine, in other words, was crab-tracked. In front was a high radiator, quite unlike that of the conventional A.C., which the other details of the chassis closely followed ; but there was a streamline tail in which sat the fuel tank, and the handle of a big air pump stuck out from the instrument board invitingly.
We watched the beginnings of those cars every minute that could be spared, we fretted when the Calthorpes 01 more normal design were on the road long before our machines were recognizable, and then one day the first car stood in the works, run in, so they said, and ready for test. Anyhow, it made a most satisfactory noise, so Westall and I, narrowly missing the doorposts to show the necessary dash, went off to the track. Alas, our much desired car seemed deader than the proverbial mutton, slower than the ordinary sports models. One or two tentative experiments revealed a considerable weakness in the brakes and—black moment—a burst at full throttle completely eliminated a big-end bearing. Terribly chastened, we took the car back, to be assured that all would yet be well, though the atmosphere was critical.
Thefl a man we had never heard of shot another man, equally remote, in a country that we dimly considered to be mostly inhabited by brigands. The thing, one thought, was a nuisance, perhaps, but nothing more. Unfortunately the victim was an Austrian Archduke, big headlines announced unbelievable happenings, and before one could understand quite what it was all about, the whole of Europe was on the brink of war.
Well I remember the last Brooklands meeting, when suddenly it seemed that England w as involved. Of that meeting I saw not a single race, but, walking alone towards the aeroplane sheds, I tried to think things out. All hopes of a T.T. race in the Isle of Man had vanished, people almost talked in whispers, it was as though the coming tragedy had thrown its shadow over all. Thus, though we only realized it dimly, our world came to an end, another quite different life began.
This is no place in which to discuss the war. It suffices to say that when, very much the worse for wear, I found myself miraculously to have survived, I had learned many things, not least of them a new basis for judging life and death, and had realized the astounding bravery of ordinary men once in uniform, knowing full well that the lives of others depended on their personal efforts.
Towards the end, I once more met W. O. Bentley, with the result that we spent what seemed a lifetime on the development of the BR i and BR 2 rotary aero engines, first at Gwynne's, Chiswick, and then at Humber's, Coventry, and I came to know " W. O.", as we always call him, very well indeed until I cracked up entirely and went to live in hospital. Much was to spring, however, from the friendship that developed in those few months, and, had I known it, one stage more towards the desired goal had been passed.
After the war things were, somehow, very different. Like everyone else, I had lost too many friends to feel the same, among them were practically the whole of my family, Bowes-Scott, the " Fatty " with whom so much was to have been done, and my father, without whose enthusiasm it was difficult not to be despondent.
But once racing restarted, it was better than ever before, everybody having a mass of superfluous energy to work off and being only too anxious to do it, in season or out.
Anyhow, the Junior Car Club, a body that had made its name with the South Harting Hill-Climb and a general efficiency trial calculated to wreck practically any car, however good, suddenly announced a 200 Miles Race on Brooklands track for any car with an engine capacity of not more than i| litres. The proposition rather took one's breath away, for though nothing could exceed the enthusiasm of that club, the race seemed a gigantic proposition, and big races hitherto had been solely affairs for the R.A.C. In practice, the committee went about shivering with apprehension, yet delighted with the idea, while every driver in the land commenced forthwith to search for a car.
In this I was lucky, for A.C. decided to run, and the team of five was based on the 1914 "?quipe", slightly altered, as B. A. Davy of Claudel-Hobson's joined W. G. Brownsort and myself, with G. C. Stead, and a works driver, H. C. Munday, added. John Weller had decided to build three machines of a new type, running two normal racing cars of the pattern that had already proved themselves in competition at the track.
The new cars, when we saw the drawings during a solemn conference at the works, really were extremely promising, being based on a very fast little single-seater with which W. G. Hawker had already done well, their chief point being that the chassis was designed as part of a very pretty streamline body, whereas usually the body has to be thought out afterwards to suit an existing chassis. Moreover, the engines were mostly aluminium alloy, the gear boxes provided four speeds, and the crab-track was retained, that is the rear wheel track was narrower than the front. They were cars typical of John Weller, and I still think that they would have done exceptionally well had they been ready. Unfortunately, that was the one thing they were not, although everybody worked like galley slaves, showing the utmost enthusiasm.
Mine I drove from the works two days before the race, and had to take it back at once as the water-pump gland was leaking and the water ran into the base chamber, where it did the oil no good at all. A night's work at high pressure, several hours' steady running-in, and the leak began again. More feverish work, then more running-in, and this time to the leak was added clutch slip and a strong suspicion that the contact-maker cam—the engine had battery ignition—was slipping.
It was the day before the race, all three of the new cars were in trouble, there was nothing for it but to work all night ; fortunately, the shed in the little paddock had electric light. We worked nearly all night, stopped the leak with bran, strengthened the clutch springs all we could, and, since the car could not be tried on the track, tested the clutch by jumping hard on the starting handle with the engine in gear.
There was only one redeeming feature in the situation. Most other people were in trouble too, as tinkering noises and profanity amply proved in shed after shed ; but away on the Byfleet side silence and contentment reigned where the three Talbot-Darracqs were housed.
That night, quite rightly driven away by Weller, the drivers had a few hours' troubled sleep, the mechanics none at all, and next morning, as the crowds invaded the paddock and enclosures, we were still unready, or at least my car was, for we got the last bolt into the bracket holding the exhaust pipe under the supervision of no less a person than S. F. Edge, just as the cars were marshalled to go up to the start.
That start was extremely exciting. The competing machines were arranged in three lines, with the 1,100 c.c. cars in front. At the fall of the flag the first line went away, the second took its place and was immediately dispatched, the third line conformed to the movement until it, too, went away. Consequently, a mass of cars shot away in clouds of smoke, two other lines moved a length, then stopped ; a fractional interval and another mass roared off, the third line moved a length and stopped ; then, with barely a pause, they too dashed away.    It was entirely successful and extremely dangerous.
Waiting in the second line, half asphyxiated by fumes and blinded by clouds of smoke, I was considering what would happen if the man in front had reverse instead of first in mesh, wondering also whether our new set of racing plugs could possibly stand all this without oiling. Immense volumes of smoke and a terrible noise showed me that the first line was off, we moved up one, I could just see Ebblewhite's red flag, it dropped, an avalanche of cars went off, we did not ; with the engine screaming, we remained stationary—the clutch was playing the fool ! I switched off, and pulled at the rear tyre my side to turn the wheel, the car crept away, I switched on, opened up gently, and lo, we had started ; but the cold fury of that moment remains, and the fear that we should be rammed by the third wave.
Then, for three laps, we went well, in and out among cars of all sizes, some already in trouble, some doing their best, and for the space of one lap we clung to the tail of a Talbot-Darracq, I think it was " Bill " Guinness' car !
On the fourth lap a cylinder cut out ; I thought " plug " and my mechanic agreed, so to the pit we went, there to discover that it was not a plug, but that a huge piece had broken away from one valve and gone through the piston.
By this time I was desperate. I told the team chief that the car was going on, cylinder or no cylinder, until it flew to pieces. This it very nearly did, for though we went surprisingly fast considering that the engine could only use three cylinders, the clutch slipped every time we came to the rise for the home banking, and on four separate occasions the clutch shaft, which had a sliding joint, slid out of engagement and had to be rammed home by my unfortunate mechanic, while time did nothing to improve what remained of the engine.
Meantime, in beautiful order at equal intervals, line ahead, Segrave, Guinness, and Malcolm Campbell went by with the Talbot-Darracqs holding a lap speed of at least ninety m.p.h., Vizcaya and Mones Maury in pursuit with the little Brescia Bugattis, but at considerably less speed, while in the 1,100 c.c. class E. B. Ware's Morgan led Lombard's Salmson and that exceedingly cheery sportsman, A. Frazer Nash, in a G.N.
For us, struggling along as best we could, the race was full of incidents, as first Kensington-Moir's Aston-Martin, just after passing, gushed fuel all over the track, the axle having hit the tank, then M. C. Topping who, with J. Leno, in stupendous yellow overalls, as mechanic, was driving a very tiny Peugeot, got into quite serious trouble, awful noises and, apparently, a perfect shower of bits and pieces, giving dire evidence that the engine had had enough of phenomenal revolutions for the day. They had started, it seems, with a temporary lubrication system, in which Leno poured oil down a tube, carried from what had been a crank-case breather to the dash !
Now and then Stead and Brownsort passed, going well with the older type side-valve cars of our team, and exchanged meaning grimaces ; an awful clatter came from a Bleriot-Whippet on occasions ; and, once, I saw Lombard charge the pits, to the considerable detriment of his Salmson's wheels. Friends went by grimly hanging on to the Talbot-Darracqs ; other friends we passed doing exciting things with red-hot metal ; and for quite a time I had a great fight with Pradier's crippled Charron-Laycock, which was faster than we were before the wind but slower against it, so that we passed and re-passed for lap after lap, and, I regret to say, one mechanic put his tongue out at the other.
The pace was telling none the less. Brownsort was observed to be changing a radiator, and commenting caustically on affairs in general to his aggrieved pit manager ; Davy's car appeared stationary, having seized its camshaft ; the team, barring Stead, seemed completely out of luck. Then my mechanic spotted the underscreen of a car upside down in the ditch below die Byfleet banking, and simultaneously I saw the ambulance driving away. Deeply intrigued, we came down close to the inner edge to have a look-see, and were appalled to discover that it was one of our own cars, Munday's, which had burst a tyre and crashed. At the time neither of us knew why the car had turned over, which awoke forthwith unpleasant speculations as to the possible cause. Was it the steering, for instance, or had something important broken which might happen to our own mount any moment, a thoroughly unsatisfactory train of thought causing involuntary uprising of the hair ! Moreover, kind friends made ominous signs with their thumbs whenever we and they passed the wreck.
And so the afternoon wore on. Segrave, followed by Guinness and then by Campbell, whose car had lost a tyre earlier on, came over the finishing line, still in perfect order, though it was five laps before the winner, who had averaged 88-82 m.p.h., could be stopped, and then only by frantically waving a bottle at him from the pits. Frazer Nash, having disposed of the Morgan and the Salmson, won the 1,100 c.c. class at 71'54 m.p.h. Cheering and excitement was audible from the pits, the crowd forsook the railings, the sun showed signs of disappearing, too, and still we went on going round, the car making extraordinary noises.
Our pit packed up, everybody packed up, we went on until, just when we could see a chance of finishing, they opened the enclosure gates and let touring cars pour across the track to the exit gates. We stopped ; no more notice was taken of us than when we had been going, I became quite certain that I had been sitting on the nut of a shock absorber arm, a thing which had seemed likely for the last hour. I was very black and very thirsty, so was my mechanic. For all the chances there were of getting a drink it might have been the Sahara, nothing wTould induce the engine to start again ; there we were, entirely alone. Pushing the car to the vacant pit, we left it there, made our way to the paddock, had a good wash and a huge tea. I saw Jarrott, who had been a spectator, and explained ; he said that we could have done no more, I felt more satisfied.
Apart from anything else, I was exceedingly glad that Segrave had won, for he and I had discussed plans for future advancement when we met by accident at Jarrott and Letts, where Segrave, then unknown, was busy with a Brescia Bugatti, and our ideas and enthusiasms tallied. Segrave himself was not only a born racing driver, but, which was far less common, possessed a real personality, an intense enthusiasm, and knew exactly what to do and what to say in any situation at home or abroad. In France he fitted in exactly with the French tradition, in America he said and did just the right thing automatically. Never man earned a knighthood more fittingly, and though men in future may drive faster or win more races, they can never hope to detract one iota from De Hane's wonderful name, because the basis of that name was not so much what he did as the way he did it.
But leaving Segrave for the present, this, the first long distance race in England, was an immense success, and started the long series of events which have done more to train our drivers than anything else.
Fired by the success of the first "200", the Junior Car Club made this race an annual event until 1928, Talbot-Darracq winning in 1922, 1924, 1925 and 1926—every race in which they ran—with cars that were genuine racing machines from their inception on the drawing-board, and therefore considerably more suitable for this race than any of their rivals, all of which were practically sports cars converted into racing form. There was a certain ironic humour about the 1923 race, since the Anglo-French " marque " decided not to run when Fiat came over with two new and beautiful racing cars. That these would win seemed almost certain, but some little devil of mischief prompted the team to arrange that whichever driver led at the end of so many laps was to lead if he could for the rest of the race.
That naturally resulted in the world's finest dog-fight between the two cars, in the course of which I think somehow that rev. limits were probably forgotten, and, as a very natural result, the two cars " burst " each other, as two equally fast and identical machines usually do in the circumstances. The moral of that convinced even the uninitiated that a proper team order, such as Talbot-Darracq always arranged, was the only wise plan, however much it might not appeal to those who could only understand a race as a sporting affair between rival drivers.
As a matter of fact, a team order is absolutely necessary, but the chief of a team is wise if he arranges for each driver in turn to have his chance to win, rather than to have one star driver who always has preference against two rather less experienced men.
In that race, incidentally, artificial corners were formed on the track for the first time, and drivers' skill was immediately made obvious. Two things were against the " 200 "—the fact that the same make of car nearly always won, and the fact that the largest engine allowed was of 11 litres capacity, for people became tired of making " noises off " for the Talbot-Darracqs, and the supply of i|-litre racing cars dwindled.
In 1922, by the way, the R.A.C. revived the Tourist Trophy in the Isle of Man, but elected to accept only three-litre racing cars, with the unhappy result that only eight cars started, in the usual downpour ; but the race was particularly interesting to me because the first Bentley team of three-litre cars was running, driven by W. O. Bentley, Clement, and Hawkes, and I had, as it were, been behind the scenes while the Bentley grew, from an idea W. O. and I used to discuss almost daily, into a real car at last.
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Оффлайн Владимир Коваленко

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Re: 1921 - 200-мильная гонка КМА
« Ответ #3 : Июня 20, 2007, 04:23:22 »
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Если кто-то чего-то не может, не умеет или не понимает, он доказывает, что это никому не нужно и даже вредно.