Yeah I like this one too Roger. It currently wears the more curvaceous scoop it wore in the 1976 season, with enclosed engine.
Yeah I like this one too Roger. It currently wears the more curvaceous scoop it wore in the 1976 season, with enclosed engine.
Here is Neil Doyle, former Corvette powered Anglia Allcomer racer, driving the converted Formula 1 Surtees TS9, into which he fitted a small block Chevy. I'm wary of quoting Graham Vercoe's book, but in it he said this car was the ex-Mike Hailwood car? Is this correct? I assume its now an F1 car again with Cosworth power?
Oldracingcars.com seems to think the Doyle car is the ex-Tim Schenken chassis TS9/006. The Hailwood chassis used in NZ was TS9/002.
Thank you for this. I also posted the image on our Facebook page, and several people said it was the Hailwood car, as to be expected as that is what is written in the Vercoe book, but I also got the following reply from Derek Woods:
"I assisted tony haycock from classic driver magazine nz with some photos and a short history of the car written in book form by the late chris williamson only three months ago it was one of the feature articles about 2 issues ago in that mag, the car now resides in the uk and has more history than most surtees cars. It is chassis number 006 driven in 1972 by tim schenken scoring points only once. Lord hesketh rented the car from surtees for james hunts f1 debut in the 1973 race of champions where mr hunt placed it 3rd , hesketh decided the car was not for them and bought a new march 731 and enjoyed some good results in hunts first year including a second in the usgp. Back to 006 neil doyle bought the car for around 5000 dollars later in 1973 after it had been laying around the factory for a while. Its nz history is well documented so buy the mag on trade me or borrow it and read the article it fills a gap on a nz forgotten f5000 car".
Back to the 1974 NZIGP, and Peter Gethin is just shooting out of the frame in the Chevron B24.
Is this Lola T400 that of Paul Bernasconi? Interesting paint scheme, very similar to the Boraxo colours Brian Redman ran in the US.
The field rolls towards the starter for the 1976 New Zealand Grand Prix. Graeme Lawrence on pole, Ken Smith alongside.
Here is the eventual winner of the 1976 NZ Grand Prix winner. Ken Smith in the Lola T332.
And here is Brian Redman in the Chevron B29. Didn't he cut the chicanes in the early laps?
Lap 1 - straight through on the back straight. I can still hear the gasp that went through the crowd...
Yes, I talked to Brian Redman at the Monterey Historic Meet 2 years ago and he still laughs about doing that. It certainly
did put a gasp through the crowd as we remembered other incidents on the back straight involving Hulme one year
and Bryan Faloon in 1972.
So did he skip the chicane just because he didn't like the chicane, or because he thought it was a stupid place for a chicane, or because he didn't take the race too seriously, or because he knew he didn't stand a chance again the big capacity cars............? He has a good sense of humour does Brian.
I think at the time it was because he knew it was the only chance to "have a go" against the big capacity cars on the first lap.
That's certainly my understanding