Английская Википедия:1914 French Grand Prix

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Шаблон:Infobox Grand Prix race report

The 1914 French Grand Prix was a Grand Prix motor race held at Lyon on 4 July 1914. Hailed as one of the greatest races of the twentieth century,[1] it was a contest between the French Peugeots and the German Mercedes. For the first time, the Grand Prix was run to an engine limitation – of 4.5L maximum capacity. It was won by the Mercedes of Christian Lautenschlager who won at an average speed of Шаблон:Convert after a tense seven-hour contest with the Peugeot of Georges Boillot.

Файл:Christian Lautenschlager at the 1914 French Grand Prix (2).jpg
Christian Lautenschlager with his mechanic Ernst Hemminger[2] before the Grand Prix
Файл:Louis Wagner at the 1914 French Grand Prix (3).jpg
Louis Wagner
Файл:Georges Boillot at the 1914 French Grand Prix.jpg
Georges Boillot

Regulations and Circuit

For several years, the Automobile Club de France (ACF) had been trying to reduce engine sizes in racing which it saw as increasingly dangerous with their higher speeds. This year, for the first time, it mandated a maximum engine size of 4.5-litres[3][4] along with an allowable weight range of Шаблон:Convert (excluding fluids and tools). This obviously benefited the leading French racing manufacturers of Peugeot and Delage, that had dominated the recent years of voiturette racing along with Sunbeam, at the expense of the big-engined cars of Italy and Germany.[5] There was also an entry limit of five cars per manufacturer, and no privateer entries were permitted.[6]

Файл:Grand Prix de l'ACF 1914 - le circuit de Lyon.jpg
The Lyon circuit (north is actually to the right)

The city of Lyon promised large subsidies to host[3] and the race was held on a 37.6 km road circuit to the south of the city. It ran from Les Ronzières to the town of Givors. It then took the Route Nationale 88 winding along beside the Gier (a tributary of the Rhône) to Châteauneuf. It returned on a long, undulating Шаблон:Convert straight before coming to a steep downhill right-left switchback (nicknamed le piege de la mort – the Death trap) and a hairpin at Les Sept Chemins to complete the lap.[7][8][9] At the end of June the two hairpin turns were concreted and the course was re-laid with granite chips to prevent its break-up and coated with calcium chloride to reduce the dust raised.[9] The Grand Prix was to be twenty laps of the circuit, totalling 752.6 km.

Entries

On 28 June, the Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austro-Hungarian empire was assassinated in Sarajevo. A week later, the French Grand Prix was held under an increasingly tense political situation across Europe.

The race attracted one of the highest-quality fields hitherto assembled, of 37 starters from 13 manufacturers and 6 countries. Peugeot were the strong favourites to repeat their victories in 1912 and 1913. They arrived with the new EX-5 (or ‘L-45’, after its engine size) for team drivers Georges Boillot, Jules Goux and Victor Rigal. The 4.5-litre four-cylinder engine had a twin-overhead cam and generated 112 bhp. Now fitted with four-wheel brakes it also sported a streamlined extended tail.[10] Boillot had tested it at Brooklands and found it lifted the top speed by 8%.[8] The tail also accommodated two spare tyres.[11]

Файл:Arthur Duray at the 1914 French Grand Prix (2).jpg
Arthur Duray and the Delage team

Louis Delâge bought the new 5-speed Type S for Albert Guyot, Arthur Duray and Paul Bablot.[12] Like the Peugeots and FIATs, it was sporting four-wheel brakes.[10] New French company Alva convinced Ferenc Szisz, winner of the inaugural Grand Prix in 1906, out of retirement to lead their team.

Файл:L'équipe Mercedes au Grand Prix de Lyon en 1914.jpg
The 5-strong Mercedes team

The most serious opposition to the French teams would come from Mercedes, returning to the Grand Prix for the first time since winning in 1908. The company had not made a racing engine before that revved over 1500rpm so Paul Daimler engaged the aero-engine division to assist with engine development.[9] The new 4.5-litre unit had innovative single-cast cylinders with four valves each and a single overhead camshaft, giving 106 bhp at 3100rpm.[5][11][8] Gone was the chain-drive, instead a lighter live rear-axle was used. However, they did persist with rear brakes only.[5][11] Five of the six 18/100 cars built were entered, with a strong team of drivers led by Christian Lautenschlager, victor in 1908. Alongside him were Otto Salzer, young Mercedes director Max Sailer,[13] French veteran Louis Wagner and Belgian Mercedes-agent Théodore Pilette.

The new Opel was a development of the 4.0-litre 1913 model, retaining its single-overhead camshaft, with four valves per cylinder and a live rear axle like the Mercedes.[5] They were the lightest cars in the field, well over 100 kg lighter than most others.[8] Regular works driver Carl Jörns led a team of three cars.

From Italy came FIAT (including veteran Alessandro Cagno), Felice Nazzaro's own team Automobili Nazzaro, and a single entry from Aquila Italiana. Great Britain was represented by Sunbeam (Resta, Lee Guinness and Chassagne) and Vauxhall who included American Ralph DePalma in their squad.

Manufacturer Engine
size
Car
Number
Driver
Шаблон:Flagicon Alda 4.4L S4 1 Шаблон:Flagicon Ferenc Szisz
15 Шаблон:Flagicon Pietro Bordino
29 Шаблон:Flagicon Maurice Tabuteau
Шаблон:Flagicon Opel 4.44L S4 2 Шаблон:Flagicon Carl Jörns
16 Шаблон:Flagicon Emile Erndtmann
30 Шаблон:Flagicon Franz Breckheimer
Шаблон:Flagicon Nagant 4.44L S4 3 Шаблон:Flagicon Leon Elskamp
17 Шаблон:Flagicon Dragutin Esser
Шаблон:Flagicon Vauxhall 4.49L S4 4 Шаблон:Flagicon John Hancock
18 Шаблон:Flagicon Ralph DePalma
31 Шаблон:Flagicon William Watson
Шаблон:Flagicon Peugeot EX-5 4.49L S4 5 Шаблон:Flagicon Georges Boillot
19 Шаблон:Flagicon Jules Goux
32 Шаблон:Flagicon Victor Rigal
Шаблон:Flagicon Th. Schneider 4.44L S4 6 Шаблон:Flagicon René Champoiseau
20 Шаблон:Flagicon Fernand Gabriel
33 Шаблон:Flagicon . Juvanon
Шаблон:Flagicon Caesar Scacchi 7 - (Did not arrive)
21 - (Did not arrive)
Шаблон:Flagicon Automobili Nazzaro 4.44L S4 8 Шаблон:Flagicon Felice Nazzaro
22 Шаблон:Flagicon Jean Porporato
34 Шаблон:Flagicon . De Moraes ("Cenesio")
Шаблон:Flagicon Delage Type S 4.44L S4 9 Шаблон:Flagicon Paul Bablot
23 Шаблон:Flagicon Albert Guyot
35 Шаблон:Flagicon Arthur Duray
Шаблон:Flagicon Sunbeam GP 4.44L S4 10 Шаблон:Flagicon Jean Chassagne
24 Шаблон:Flagicon Dario Resta
36 Шаблон:Flagicon Kenelm Lee Guinness
Шаблон:Flagicon Pic-Pic 4.43L S4 11 Шаблон:Flagicon Paul Tournier
25 Шаблон:Flagicon Thomas Clarke
Шаблон:Flagicon Aquila Italiana 4.49L S4 12 Шаблон:Flagicon Eugenio Beria d'Argentine
(Did not arrive)
26 Шаблон:Flagicon Bartolomeo Costantini
37 - (Did not arrive)
Шаблон:Flagicon FIAT S57/14B 4.49L S4 13 Шаблон:Flagicon Alessandro Cagno
27 Шаблон:Flagicon Antonio Fagnano
38 Шаблон:Flagicon John Scales
Шаблон:Flagicon Mercedes 18/100 GP 4.48L S4 14 Шаблон:Flagicon Max Sailer
28 Шаблон:Flagicon Christian Lautenschlager
39 Шаблон:Flagicon Otto Salzer
40 Шаблон:Flagicon Louis Wagner
41 Шаблон:Flagicon Theodore Pilette
Sources:[14][7][15]

Practice

Файл:Grid of the 1914 French Grand Prix.jpg
Grid before the start
Файл:Georges Boillot at the 1914 French Grand Prix (3).jpg
Boillot's Peugeot – note the streamlined tail housing two spare tyres
Файл:Jules Goux at the 1914 French Grand Prix (3).jpg
Goux's Peugeot coming past the start/finish line to start his 7th lap

Mercedes knew that meticulous preparation would be needed if they were to beat the French cars. In January, the company had sent its team to France to reconnoitre the track to calculate gearing ratios.[16][10][5] Two cars were ready in April for testing where two changes were noted. The extended tail was cut off to save weight and, from the long straights and winding corners, the engineers recommended changing to a five-speed gearbox. However, there was no time to arrange the latter.[9]

The ACF organised a practice period on the new circuit three weeks before the event.[10] However, because they were public roads all that could be arranged were a couple of 90-minute pre-dawn sessions, which left most teams disgruntled.[9] The Vauxhall cars were not even ready by then.[16]

The Peugeot team was confident that their 4-wheel brakes would allow better cornering and the higher top-end speed from the Peugeot's streamlined rear-end would be decisive.[8] In contrast, the Mercedes’ lower centre-of-gravity would provide better road-holding to give it an edge over the French cars.[11] They were also running on more durable Continental tyres. While the French cars were on Dunlops. Thus, the Mercedes team calculated they would only need to make a single tyre-stop for each car during the race.[9]

During practice though the Peugeot drivers found their cars handled badly, with the poor weight distribution having the spare tyres stowed in the tail.[9] The only disruption for Mercedes was when Pilette missed a gear-change and over-revved his engine badly.[9]

The Race

Race-day was hot and fine, and about 300,000 spectators lined the roads. So many were coming out on the trains from the city that many missed the 8am start.[10][9] For the first time, cars were flagged off in pairs at 30-second intervals, in numerical order. First away were Szisz and Jörns,[16][17] but Boillot was the first to arrive back at the finish-line. However, Sailer was ahead on elapsed-time with an 18-second lead and from the beginning he forced the pace, drawing Boillot into a speed-contest.[10][16] Jörns had to stop on the first lap for radiator repairs, dropping his Opel out of the reckoning.[2]

Файл:Max Sailer at the 1914 French Grand Prix (6).jpg
Sailer setting the pace in his Mercedes at the Grand Prix
Файл:Théodore Pilette at the 1914 French Grand Prix (2).jpg
Pilette's Mercedes ahead of a Nazzaro on the winding road by the River Gier

When Boillot had to pit unexpectedly after an hour, on the third lap, it allowed Sailer to take the lead on the road. Pilette's Mercedes retired at the same time, the gearbox damage in practice proving terminal.[2] Sailer pressed on setting the fastest lap of the race on lap four and extending his lead over Boillot to almost three minutes.[9] Whether it was racing inexperience, or internal rivalry with team-leader Lautenschlager to prove a point, Sailer had pushed his car too hard and stopped with a broken conrod along the Gier River on the sixth lap.[18] (Sailer and no one else at Mercedes had said there was a deliberate plan to use a “hare” to break the Peugeots.[9])

After seven laps Boillot had the lead over Lautenschlager, while Goux had just overtaken Duray's Delage to move into third. On the tenth lap at the halfway point, Wagner, Salzer, and Resta's Sunbeam, had also overtaken the Delage. Boillot led by a minute and the German team started coming in for their scheduled stops. Lautenschlager was running out of brakes and his stop became a bit of a shambles as the normally well-drilled Mercedes team cost him 2–3 minutes in the pits.[9] But the Peugeot Dunlops were wearing far quicker – Boillot had to make six pitstops for tyre changes to the single ones for the Mercedes cars.[18]

Файл:Christian Lautenschlager at the 1914 French Grand Prix (10).jpg
Lautenschlager descending le piege de la mort switchback
Файл:Tournier at the 1914 French Grand Prix (2).jpg
Refuelling Tournier's Pic-Pic
Файл:Ferenc Szisz at the 1914 French Grand Prix (4).jpg
1906 Grand Prix winner Ferenc Szisz in an Alda

But despite that, Boillot's skill and all-or-nothing driving kept him with a 2-3 minute lead. By the 11th lap with the pitstops done, Wagner had passed Goux and Lautenschlager to move into second.[11] Then a dangerous accident happened. Szisz had pulled over on the roadside to change a wheel, when he was struck by Breckheimer's Opel when it was obscured by the dust. His arm broken, it fell to his less injured mechanic to slowly get the car back to the pits where Szisz could get attention.[9][19][14]

The Peugeots’ stops lost their advantage and the Mercedes’ pursuit was relentless. Although Wagner had to pit on lap 15 to replace tyres, Salzer overtook Goux to move up to fourth.[18] When Boillot then had to pit for tyres on the 17th lap Lautenschlager reduced the lead from 2 minutes to just 14 seconds. He overtook the Peugeot as they approached Givors. Boillot's car had been thrashed to its limits and was now falling apart, down to three cylinders. By the end of the 18th lap he was 30 seconds behind.[18][9] Boillot kept pushing regardless but on the last lap his engine finally expired when he over-revved it on the climb out of the Gier valley. Boillot was distraught, hunched over the steering wheel weeping at his failure.[18][9]

So after seven hours of racing, Mercedes took a crushing 1-2-3 victory with Lautenschlager repeating his 1908 win ahead of Wagner and Salzer.[11] The French crowd was silent, with Goux's fourth place nearly ten minutes back ahead of Resta's Sunbeam being scant consolation.[18]

Post-race

And so it was that perhaps the greatest race of the early period of motor-racing[13][2] was also the last. Within a month, Europe had descended into total war and racing ceased there for four years.

With his 25000 franc prizemoney, Lautenschlager retired from racing and was able to build himself a house.[11][10] Georges Boillot was initially the personal driver for Marshal Joffre,[20] but then transferred to the French Air Force (Armée de l'Air) as a fighter pilot. He was shot down over Verdun in April 1916 in a dogfight and died in the wreckage.[18][20]

Fagnano had throttled back on his FIAT and finished 11th and last, well over an hour after the winner. It was postulated that, as the sole finisher for FIAT, it had been a prudent move by the team. This was in light of the fact that the scrutineers had found the total engine cylinder-volume was over the 4500cc limit. This would disqualify the team but FIAT's strong support of the race in the past allowed them to race.[21]

After being driven back to celebrations in Berlin, one of the Mercedes (probably Lautenschlager's) was sent on display in London with two of the Opels.[5] War broke out just afterward, and it was commandeered and turned over to Rolls-Royce where it was carefully pulled apart. The engine was developed and a version ended up in the Bristol fighter planes.[18] American driver Ralph DePalma bought Wagner's car at the race conclusion and took it back to the USA (there is still considerable conjecture and confusion as to which Mercedes chassis ended up in London and the USA[22]). Carl Fisher, on the Indianapolis 500 organising committee, purchased two of the Peugeot EX-5s. When they landed in the United States he handed them over to the Premier Motor Corporation for three replicas to be made.[23]

In the 1915 Indianapolis 500, DePalma drove the Mercedes to beat Dario Resta, in a Peugeot EX-5, by three and a half minutes. Resta got his revenge the year after with a victory and a Peugeot won again in the 1919 race.[17]

Classification

Pos No Driver Car Laps Time/Retired
1 28 Шаблон:Flagicon Christian Lautenschlager Mercedes 18/100 GP 20 7:08:18.4
2 40 Шаблон:Flagicon Louis Wagner Mercedes 18/100 GP 20 7:09:54.2
3 39 Шаблон:Flagicon Otto Salzer Mercedes 18/100 GP 20 7:13:15.8
4 19 Шаблон:Flagicon Jules Goux Peugeot L45 20 7:17:47.2
5 24 Шаблон:Flagicon Dario Resta Sunbeam GP 20 7:28:17.4
6 17 Шаблон:Flagicon Dragutin Esser Nagant 20 7:40.28.2
7 32 Шаблон:Flagicon Victor Rigal Peugeot L45 20 7:44.28.2
8 35 Шаблон:Flagicon Arthur Duray Delage Type S 20 7:51.32.0
9 6 Шаблон:Flagicon René Champoiseau Th. Schneider 20 8:06.51.6
10 2 Шаблон:Flagicon Carl Jörns Opel 20 8:17.09.6
11 27 Шаблон:Flagicon Antonio Fagnano FIAT S57/14B 20 8:26.11.2
DNF 5 Шаблон:Flagicon Georges Boillot Peugeot L45 19 Engine
DNF 11 Шаблон:Flagicon Paul Tournier Pic-Pic 18 Accident
DNF 22 Шаблон:Flagicon Jean Porporato Nazzaro 18 Engine
DNF 3 Шаблон:Flagicon Leon Elskamp Nagant 18 Clutch
DNF 23 Шаблон:Flagicon Albert Guyot Delage Type S 18 Engine
DNF 9 Шаблон:Flagicon Paul Bablot Delage Type S 16 Engine
DNF 16 Шаблон:Flagicon Emile Erndtmann Opel 12 Transmission
DNF 30 Шаблон:Flagicon Franz Breckheimer Opel 12 ?
DNF 10 Шаблон:Flagicon Jean Chassagne Sunbeam GP 12 Engine (conrod)
DNF 1 Файл:Flag of Hungary (1896-1915; 3-2 aspect ratio).svg/Шаблон:Flagicon Ferenc Szisz Alda 11 Driver injured
DNF 15 Шаблон:Flagicon Pietro Bordino Alda 10 ?
DNF 13 Шаблон:Flagicon Alessandro Cagno FIAT S57/14B 10 Valve
DNF 36 Шаблон:Flagicon Kenelm Lee Guinness Sunbeam GP 9 Engine
DNF 25 Шаблон:Flagicon Thomas Clarke Pic-Pic 8 Wheel
DNF 33 Шаблон:Flagicon Henri Juvanon Th. Schneider 8 Engine
DNF 34 Шаблон:Flagicon . De Moraes ("Cenesio") Nazzaro 8 Engine
DNF 20 Шаблон:Flagicon Fernand Gabriel Th. Schneider 8 Engine
DNF 18 Шаблон:Flagicon/Шаблон:Flagicon Ralph DePalma Vauxhall 7 Gearbox
DNF 29 Шаблон:Flagicon Maurice Tabuteau Alda 7 Accident
DNF 38 Шаблон:Flagicon John Scales FIAT S57/14B 7 Engine (Valves)
DNF 14 Шаблон:Flagicon Max Sailer Mercedes 18/100 GP 5 Engine
DNF 8 Шаблон:Flagicon Felice Nazzaro Nazzaro 3 Engine
DNF 41 Шаблон:Flagicon Theodore Pilette Mercedes 18/100 GP 3 Drive (Propeller shaft)
DNF 31 Шаблон:Flagicon William Watson Vauxhall 2 Engine (Carburettor)
DNF 26 Шаблон:Flagicon Bartolomeo Costantini Aquila Italiana 1 Engine
DNF 4 Шаблон:Flagicon John Hancock Vauxhall 1 Engine

References

Citations

Шаблон:Reflist

Bibliography
  • Cimarosti, Adriano (1997) The Complete History of Grand Prix Motor Racing London: Aurum Press Ltd Шаблон:ISBN
  • Fox, Charles (1973) The Great Racing Cars & Drivers London: Octopus Books Ltd Шаблон:ISBN
  • Georgano, Nick (1971) The Encyclopaedia of Motor Sport London: Ebury Press Ltd Шаблон:ISBN
  • Higham, Peter (1995) The Guinness Guide to International Motor Racing London: Guinness Publishing Шаблон:ISBN
  • Legate, Trevor (2006) 100 years of Grand Prix Kent: Touchstone Books Ltd Шаблон:ISBN
  • Ludvigsen, Karl (2008) Racing Colours - Italian Racing Red Surrey: Ian Allan Publishing Ltd Шаблон:ISBN
  • Ludvigsen, Karl (2009) Racing Colours - German Racing Silver Surrey: Ian Allan Publishing Ltd Шаблон:ISBN
  • Monkhouse, George (1953) Grand Prix Racing Facts and Figures London: G.T. Foulis & Co Ltd
  • Rendall, Ivan (1991) The Power and The Glory – A Century of Motor Racing London: BBC Books Шаблон:ISBN
  • Rendall, Ivan (1993) The Chequered Flag – 100 years of Motor Racing London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson Ltd Шаблон:ISBN
  • Venables, David (2009) Racing Colours - French Racing Blue Surrey: Ian Allan Publishing Ltd Шаблон:ISBN

External links

Шаблон:Commons category Шаблон:Grand Prix race report

  1. Georgano 1971, p.87
  2. 2,0 2,1 2,2 2,3 Ludvigsen 2009, p.34
  3. 3,0 3,1 Rendall 1993, p.72-3
  4. Higham 1995, p.194-6
  5. 5,0 5,1 5,2 5,3 5,4 5,5 Ludvigsen 2009, p.32-3
  6. Шаблон:Cite web
  7. 7,0 7,1 Cimarosti 1997, p.48
  8. 8,0 8,1 8,2 8,3 8,4 Fox 1973, p.15-6
  9. 9,00 9,01 9,02 9,03 9,04 9,05 9,06 9,07 9,08 9,09 9,10 9,11 9,12 9,13 9,14 Шаблон:Cite web
  10. 10,0 10,1 10,2 10,3 10,4 10,5 10,6 Rendall 1993, p.74-5
  11. 11,0 11,1 11,2 11,3 11,4 11,5 11,6 Cimarosti 1997, p.49-50
  12. Fox 1973, p.19
  13. 13,0 13,1 Legate 2006, p.11
  14. 14,0 14,1 Шаблон:Cite web
  15. Cimarosti 1997, p.53
  16. 16,0 16,1 16,2 16,3 Fox 1973, p.20-1
  17. 17,0 17,1 Venables 2009, p.34
  18. 18,0 18,1 18,2 18,3 18,4 18,5 18,6 18,7 Fox 1973, p.24-5
  19. Шаблон:Cite web
  20. 20,0 20,1 Venables 2009, p.30
  21. Ludvigsen 2008, p.33
  22. Шаблон:Cite web
  23. Rendall 1993, p.76