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Thread: Article: Ford Falcon Sprint

  1. #1

    Article: Ford Falcon Sprint

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    In the late 1950s, in response to increased opposition from foreign companies, General-Motors, Chrysler, and Ford each recognised a need for a domestically produced compact car, to meet growing market demand. To the rest of the world, their offerings, the Chrysler Valiant, Chevrolet Corvair, and Ford Falcon might be considered more mid-sized than compact, but in a market whose local products were expanding in all directions to huge proportions, these new vehicles were, by comparison, exactly as their market segment suggested.

    Fords new Falcon first hit the market in late 1959, and sales were strong. But while this new entry-level model lacked frills, it also lacked thrills, and until the 260ci V8 was offered for the first time mid-way through the 1963 model range, its performance was more sedate, than sporting. But the addition of the spritely little V8, originally designed for the Falcons bigger brother, the Fairlane, was introduced along with a new sporty Falcon, the Futura Sprint. The new small block V8 transformed the Falcon, and Ford were keen to target the youth market, using the international stage as their platform, when in 1963 they entered a fleet of Holman-Moody prepared Falcon Sprint hardtops in the most unlikely of events for an American vehicle, the Monte Carlo Rally.

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    Even though by US standards the Falcon was considered a compact car, by European standards, it very much wasn’t, and this decision had all the makings for exposing the Fords as being exactly what many considered them to be; large American cars better suited to straight stretches of freeway. But H-M knew how to build strong race cars, and they knew how to get the small block V8 to perform.

    Swedish championship winning rally driver Bo Ljungfeldt was contracted to drive one of the three Falcons, and proved an absolute sensation. On anything remotely resembling a straight stretch of road, Ljungfeldt extracted everything from his galloping V8 Falcon. His experience in ice racing also proved crucial, as Europe was in the midst of its coldest winter for many years. He stunned everyone when he set fastest time on all six special performance Alpine pass stages. But ultimately, the Falcons finished the rally well down the order, when they picked up road penalties through traffic delays which put them on the back-foot, and their bristling performances couldn’t make up the short-fall. But Ford had entered the Monte because it was one of the few events at the time to gain international media exposure, and their conquests had brought the Falcon wide-spread positive reviews.

    The 1964 model year brought about the bold second-generation Falcon, with spear-side body styling, and which included an attractive new Sprint. Part-way through the 1964 model year, the new 289ci V8 was also offered as the top performing engine package.

    Again, Ford entered the Monte Carlo Rally, this time with eight cars. The FIA offered an impossible but tempting homologation minimum racing weight of just 960kg, and in their attempts to get the cars near this weight, Holman-Moody outfitted the Falcons with fibreglass replacement panels for the bonnet, boot lid, front fenders, and doors.

    Again, Ljungfeldt was star of the show, once more winning all six Alpine stages, although works BMC Mini Cooper driver Paddy Hopkirk equalled him on one stage, and was ultimately awarded the overall win based on a handicapping system which favoured his smaller engine size. Ljungfeldt was second.

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    With Ford releasing the sporty new Mustang in April 1964, their focus towards the compact performance market shifted away from the Falcon, which continued on quietly within their line-up until eventually being dropped in 1970, amidst slumping sales. The 1964 Monte Carlo Rally might well have been the final chapter in the Falcons otherwise very brief motor racing history, and the handsome Sprint models competition life might well have faded quietly into the history books, had it not been for a distinctly different discipline to that of rallying; touring car racing.

    Through 1961 to 1965, the British Saloon Car Championship was contested to FIA Group 2 regulations. Internationally, Group 2 was a popular formula, and was also used in the European Touring Car Championship until 1967, Dutch Touring Car Championship from 1964 to 1967, German Touring Car Championship from 1963 to 1966, and in other domestic touring car championships throughout Europe. Group 2 was used in New Zealand during the 1966 and 1967 seasons, and were the regulations the Sports Car Club of America initially structured the Trans-Am championship around in 1966.

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    Group 2 rules were extremely limiting, allowing only very mild upgrades over that of the standard production vehicle. The final season for Group 2, 1965, was dominated by Roy Pierpoint’s Ford Mustang, whose only real challengers were the similar cars of Gawaine Baillie and Mike Salmon, although Jim Clark beat everyone at Goodwood in the Team Lotus Cortina. Pierpoint’s Mustang was one of the Alan Mann Racing Tour de France cars from 1965, converted for Group 2 touring car racing. Jack Brabham took victory in the final two races of the season, in another Mustang, but by then Pierpoint had done enough to take the title.

    Group 5, introduced for 1966, allowed many more modifications to be made than that of Group 2. Wider wheels could be fitted, made of any material available. Induction systems were free, which meant teams could use multiple carburettors, or, if the resources were available to them, fuel-injection. But perhaps the biggest single rule that would determine the outlook of the BSCC over the next four seasons, was that of the minimum racing weight. In factory standard form as produced by Ford, the Falcon comes out a little heftier than the Mustang, and has a larger frontal area, so under Group 2 rules teams generally favoured the Mustang. Indeed, no Falcons competed in the 1964 or 1965 BSCC, or, it would seem, in any other touring car championship in Europe. Even the massive Galaxie looked a better option, with its horsepower advantage from its big block motor.

    1966 BSCC

    However, FIA Group 5 rules suddenly swung the advantage back in the Falcons court, because of the incredible 960kg minimum racing weight offered the Falcons for the 1964 Monte Carlo, which would also carry over to Group 5 touring car racing. For the teams who really did their homework, the Falcon provided an extremely competitive package, being powered by the same V8 motor as the Mustang, but weighing significantly less. But most teams didn’t dig deep enough to spot the Falcons potential. At least, not to begin with. Indeed, come the opening round of the 1966 British Saloon Car Championship at Snetterton, only two Falcons lined up on the grid, those of reigning champion Pierpoint, and Gawaine Baillie.

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    The Falcon Sprints that appeared in the BSCC were those mothballed following their rally adventures two years earlier, and teams further skimmed weight off by removing bumpers and fitting wide lightweight magnesium or alloy wheels.
    Jack Brabham took victory in the opening BSCC race in the same Alan Brown run Mustang he’d won the final two rounds with the previous season, now upgraded to Group 5 spec and fitted with fuel-injection. He overcame pole man Clark in the rapid Lotus Cortina, as did Muir in the mighty Galaxie. Baillie was fourth in the Falcon, Pierpoint retired. However, both Falcons started off the rear, after problems in qualifying, and Baillie managed to equal Brabham’s best lap time, itself a new lap record. So the Falcons gave some indication of their potential.

    Moving to Goodwood for Round 2, and Brabham was on pole with the Mustang, while Baillie was again the best of the Falcons, in fifth. Pierpoint had more troubles, lining up a lowly 22nd, and retired from the race early on following a shunt. Baillie dropped well down the order in the race.

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    Round 3 was at Silverstone, and while Pierpoint was absent with his own troubled Falcon, Alan Mann Racing had entered a Falcon for John Whitmore to drive, this being the car driven by Peter Jopp in the ’64 Monte, now converted by Alan Mann Racing for Group 5 touring car competition. Whitmore put the beautiful red and gold machine on pole, and while Muir briefly powered the big Galaxie ahead on the opening tour, Whitmore soon rounded him up, took over the front, and proceeded to romp away as he pleased. In doing so he set a new lap record, and won by 16 seconds, from the similar Baillie Falcon, which overcame an early battle with Muir, Mike Salmon’s Mustang, and the Team Lotus Cortinas of Jacky Ickx and Peter Arundell. Baillie’s cause was helped by the retirement of both Muir and Salmon.

    Silverstone was to be the only BSCC event entered by Alan Mann Racing in 1966, but for the next round, at Crystal Palace, Pierpoint returned, having ditched his Falcons fuel-injection system in favour of carburettors, and he charged off to lead the race from second on the grid, to head pole man Arundell, and held his position throughout, eventually finishing 6 seconds ahead of Brabham’s Mustang, and Ickx’s Lotus Cortina.

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    Pierpoint backed this up with victory at the following event, Brands Hatch for the Grand Prix event, taking pole position ahead of Baillie in the other Falcon. Baillie eventually finished third behind Jackie Oliver, in a Mustang. An imminent sign was when both Falcons passed Muir’s Galaxie, on the straight, in unison.

    Brands also hosted the next round, where Jim Clark returned to beat everyone in the Lotus Cortina on a drenched track. Here both Falcons retired with mechanical problems. This was the last appearance for the Pierpont machine, although Baillie continued on in the final two rounds at Oulton Park and Brands Hatch, taking a good second spot at Oulton, and fourth and third in the 2 Heat Brands Hatch season finale.

    BSCC rules being what they were, the series champion could come from any of the four classes, as class results counted towards the overall championship. John Fitzpatrick won the championship driving a Class A Broadspeed prepared Anglia.

    1967 BSCC

    For the 1967 season, Alan Mann Racing returned to the BSCC full-time, now with Frank Gardner driving the Falcon. The Pierpoint and Baillie Falcons returned, while Richard Bond was entered in a fourth Falcon. Brian Muir would drive the Baillie car.

    From what was a closely contested championship in 1966 among the big cars and the faster 4 cylinder machines became a one-sided demonstration by Alan Mann Racing in 1967. The Gardner driven Falcon Sprint completely dominated, winning seven of the ten rounds, including both heats in the opener at Brands Hatch. He finished second to Jackie Oliver’s Mustang at Rounds 2 and 3 held at Snetterton and Silverstone, and the only retirement suffered came in Round 8, at Brands Hatch, when a puncture stopped the flying Ford dead in its tracks. Gardner’s dominant performances in Class D were also enough to give him the outright championship, which he comfortably took from Fitzpatrick’s Class A Broadspeed Anglia. Meanwhile, the Galaxies were gone, and Mustang numbers had dwindled, with Oliver’s example being the only one to challenge Gardner.

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    1968 BSCC

    On average, four or five Falcon Sprints contested each BSCC race in 1968, but the Alan Mann team wasn’t one of them. As a Ford supported race team, they needed to be fielding a car race fans could go and buy off the showroom floor. The Falcon was never available in the UK, but even if it was, this particular model had ceased production three years earlier. Alan Mann Racing would instead enter a new Class C Escort Twin-cam, driven by Gardner, joined by a second car pedalled by a fleet of talent including Peter Arundell, Roger Clark, Jackie Oliver, and Graham Hill. The Escorts would miss the opening three rounds, so had to make do running a single MkII Lotus Cortina for Gardner, as a stop-gap.

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    Ultimately, Gardner’s utter dominance in Class C saw him crowned as champion. The little Escort even took outright race wins against the big cars at the Brands Hatch GP events, and the Brands Hatch Motor Show 200 which concluded the championship. Gardner invariably gave the V8s a hard time, and usually finished within the top four outright, but again the Falcon Sprints dominated. Bill Shaw Racing, with Brian Muir driving, were the class of the field, winning the opening five races, before Gardner broke their winning streak at the GP event. Then the Malcolm Gartlan Racing Falcon Sprint, driven by David Hobbs, won the next two, before Muir returned to the top step at Oulton Park. Pierpoint, who’d strung together a series of top three results throughout much of the season, finally won the penultimate round, when he powered his Falcon to victory at Brands Hatch.

    Although the championship fell to Gardner in the Escort, the season was completely dominated by the Falcon Sprints, as it had been the previous year.

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    1969 BSCC

    For 1969, teams required either factory backing, or to be armed with a Ford Falcon Sprint, to have a genuine shot at outright victory. Alan Mann Racing had the factory backing, everyone else had a Falcon Sprint. For a championship that was supposed to be demonstrating the sporting capabilities of cars similar to what race fans could go and purchase, it seemed bizarre the racing was being completely dominated by a vehicle that had been out of production for four years. But this was the problem with the Group 5 rules.

    Four Falcon Sprints were entered for the opening BSCC round for 1969. Muir had switched to the Malcolm Gartlan team, while his spot at Bill Shaw Racing was taken by Pierpoint. Terry Sanger and Martin Birrane were the other two Sprint entries. The opening round at Brands Hatch contained two heats, and both were won by Pierpoint, from Muir and Gardner. Gardner took top spot at Silverstone, followed by Pierpoint and Mike Crabtree in the Willment Racing Escort twin-cam. Muir, from pole position, spun himself out of the race.

    On to Snetterton, and Pierpoint was back on top, followed by Sangers Falcon, and backed this with another victory at the high speed Thruxton circuit, followed by another win at Silverstone. Gardner finally took the win at Crystal Palace, the tight confines suiting the little Escort, although Pierpoint retired with mechanical failure. Mallory Park hosted Round 7, which was won by the Escort twin-cam of Rod Mansfield, after Pierpoint, Gardner, and Crabtree had all failed to finish. Dennis Leech had joined the series from Round 4, in yet another Falcon Sprint, and placed second behind Mansfield, and ahead of the Sanger Falcon.

    The Croft round was split into two heats, and Pierpoint won both of them. However, it wasn’t behind the wheel of the Falcon. Bill Shaw Racing debuted a newly built 1968 Camaro, running a 350ci small block, and Pierpoint headed home Gardner in both legs, while Leech and Sanger shared the final podium spot. The Pierpoint driven Camaro was first across the stripe again at Silverstone, from Leech, and John Hine in the Duncan Hamilton entered Escort twin-cam.

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    The Bill Shaw Camaro was destroyed in a heavy shunt at Oulton Park, and Leech took his first BSCC victory, ahead of Gardner and Crabtree. Leech was first home in both heats at the penultimate round at Brands Hatch, taking the Heat 1 win from Crabtree and Willie Green (Escort twin-cam) and the Heat 2 win from Pierpoint, back in the Bill Shaw Falcon, and Crabtree.

    Brands also hosted the final round of the 1969 BSCC, and, indeed, this would be the final BSCC race held under Group 5 regulations. It’d also be the last race for the dominant Falcon Sprints. Five Falcon Sprints were entered, for Pierpoint and David Howes in a pair of Bill Shaw entered cars, Leech, Sanger, and Birrane. But Gardner beat them all.

    By 1969, Group 5 regulations were in place, not only in Britain, but in various domestic championships right throughout Europe, and the European Touring Car Championship. New Zealand had also adopted Group 5 from the 1968 season. But for 1970, almost everyone would change. For the BSCC, it was a switch to Group 2 once again, although these were a very different set of Group 2 regulations to those used from 1961 to 1965. The 1970 Group 2 rules allowed more freedom, but were not as wild as the outgoing Group 5 rules. And at that, the Falcon Sprints, with their plastic bodywork, were outlawed, after four dominant seasons. Indeed, 1970 had a very different look to it, as Alan Mann had also withdrawn from motor racing.

    Some of the lightweight Falcon Sprints of the British Saloon Car Championship made their way into the wild Special Saloon series. Some ended up being destroyed, some had their parts of value removed, and the rest scrapped. And one or two have survived.

    Thanks to its impossibly light racing weight gifted to it by the FIA in 1964 for the Monte Carlo Rally, and the approval of fibreglass body panels to try and get down somewhere near that weight, in modern day historic touring car racing held under the popular FIA Appendix J regulations that are used throughout Britain and Europe for cars built prior to 1966, Falcon Sprints are eligible to run to this racing weight, and fit the glass panels. This is also the case in Australian Group Na/Appendix J.

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    Its unlikely anyone has ever managed to get a Falcon Sprint down to 960kg, but many have tried, and this model is extremely popular in historic racing today as a result. And, indeed, in historic events held throughout Britain and Europe, which mirror touring car racing during the mid-1960s when these cars were new, the Falcon Sprints outnumber the Mustangs and Galaxies, and are invariably at the head of the field.

    My thanks to Chris Bennett from Speed Scene www.speedscene.co.uk/ for supplying the Falcon Sprint photos used throughout this article.

    Please also visit Frank de Jong’s excellent Touring Car Racing history website, where I got many of the race results from: www.touringcarracing.net/

  5. #5
    Semi-Pro Racer kiwi285's Avatar
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    Another great article and another great car. I reckon that model Falcon was a really smart looking race car and it certainly had its share of the limelight in its time. It is still a smart looking car.

  6. #6
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    CAMS in Australia only issue 4 licenses for Sprints to run in Nb mainly due to none racing in period in Oz but in recognition to their world
    popularity and race heritage maybe.
    Several years ago , one of the 4 licensed cars (from Tas) was sold and went to England.
    A replacement license was obtained from CAMS and new one built to high standards in Tas. It has recently been sold to Victoria. It never raced in Tas....only did display /test laps at Historic meetings.





    That is J Bowe looking in window. He was interested in leasing car at one stage...it never happenned
    Last edited by Ellis; 04-29-2013 at 10:11 PM.

  7. #7
    Fantastic article. Lots of familiar names pop up throughout the Sprint/BSCC era.

  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by Ellis View Post
    CAMS in Australia only issue 4 licenses for Sprints to run in Nb mainly due to none racing in period in Oz but in recognition to their world
    popularity and race heritage maybe.
    Several years ago , one of the 4 licensed cars (from Tas) was sold and went to England.
    A replacement license was obtained from CAMS and new one built to high standards in Tas. It has recently been sold to Victoria. It never raced in Tas....only did display /test laps at Historic meetings.





    That is J Bowe looking in window. He was interested in leasing car at one stage...it never happenned
    That would be JB comparing a Falcon Sprint with another Falcon Sprint in another Series!!!!

  9. #9
    Semi-Pro Racer kiwi285's Avatar
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    That is one grouse looking car - wouldn't one of those look good in HMC guise.

  10. #10
    That is one grouse looking car - wouldn't one of those look good in HMC guise.[/QUOTE]

    Patience is a virtue!!!!!!!!!!

  11. #11
    Weekend Warrior
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    I was talking to the late Howard Marsden when he was head of Ford V8 Supercar program as I had built a couple of sprints in Oz for Bob Tweedie (sold a few years ago) in Sydney & Bill Meeke in Perth (he still has his car).
    Howard was in charge of the Monte Carlo Rallye Sprint build and he said there was a big delay with the front bumpers as they had sent material from the UK to the States. It turns out no one told the guys in quality control of the material change and they kept rejecting them.

  12. #12
    Yep, these are one hell-off a nice looking Falcon and make a grouse looking race car, i have a real soft spot for them and aw-sum GB/euro race history!! Australian Ethan Lind raced one with HMC at the Festival this year and got very favorable feedback, lots of interest as none this shape has ever been race in NZ before. Im sure its only time before one shows up in HMC, 6 cyl versions are still cheap in the USA but not very plentiful, they only made them for 2 years, 64 and 65. All the same mechanics as a 65/6 Mustang so one could be built for a reasonable cost.

    Anyone with a pic of Ethan Linds Falcon?

    Dale M

  13. #13
    Glad you guys enjoyed this one. The competition histories on these cars have always interested me, but for some reason there is very little written about them. Note several of the cars were fitted with GT40 and MkII wheels. I assume Alan Mann's connections helped here, there were probably sets sitting around his workshop.

  14. #14
    Ethan Linds Falcon Sprint
    Attached Images Attached Images  

  15. #15
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    The 4 Sprints that ran in Oz a few years ago...maybe at Bathurst
    Photographer unknown


  16. #16
    Quote Originally Posted by Ellis View Post
    CAMS in Australia only issue 4 licenses for Sprints to run in Nb mainly due to none racing in period in Oz but in recognition to their world
    popularity and race heritage maybe.
    Several years ago , one of the 4 licensed cars (from Tas) was sold and went to England.
    A replacement license was obtained from CAMS and new one built to high standards in Tas. It has recently been sold to Victoria. It never raced in Tas....only did display /test laps at Historic meetings.





    That is J Bowe looking in window. He was interested in leasing car at one stage...it never happenned
    Wow, that is stunning! Interesting that they converted it to rhd. What a beautiful car.

  17. #17
    Quote Originally Posted by Ellis View Post
    The 4 Sprints that ran in Oz a few years ago...maybe at Bathurst
    Photographer unknown

    Great photo! I didn't realise only 4 cars could run, I just assumed it was open. But then again, like you say Ellis, this model never actually raced in Aus in period.

    Which are the ones you built Les? I have an old ad from Auto Action many years ago where the black one was for sale. On the market for 55K, and it said it was the lightest in Aus.

  18. #18
    Quote Originally Posted by Les Laidlaw View Post
    I was talking to the late Howard Marsden when he was head of Ford V8 Supercar program as I had built a couple of sprints in Oz for Bob Tweedie (sold a few years ago) in Sydney & Bill Meeke in Perth (he still has his car).
    Howard was in charge of the Monte Carlo Rallye Sprint build and he said there was a big delay with the front bumpers as they had sent material from the UK to the States. It turns out no one told the guys in quality control of the material change and they kept rejecting them.
    Thats a great story Les! Very funny.

  19. #19
    Something of interest I found while researching this story, an old ad from Alan Mann Racing selling off some of their cars. The two Falcon's would both be ex-Monte cars, and the one on the right is the race winner from Silverstone in 1966, which was the only outing for Alan Mann Racing in the BSCC that year. I'd guess this was from either late 1966 or early 1967. I don't know if the car sold or if its the car driven by Gardner in 1967.

    Check out the big block Fairlane. This was special car built as a circuit racer by Holman-Moody. I believe a small series of replica's have been built recently, and one races in historic events in Europe. Do a Google search, there is a great piece of in-car footage of it at the Nurburgring at a historic event there.

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  20. #20
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    A few pics from the web....photographers not known












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