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Rear View Mirror Backward glances at racing history | |||
Where Upon Our Scribe, Sherman, and Mr. Peabody Once Again Crank Up The Way-Back Machine for 1961... | |||
by Don Capps, U.S.A. |
Which is better known as...the Season of Low Expectations or Britain Sees Red
In this chapter: A Scorecard for the Season... Let us pause this week to take a look at the teams, drivers, and machines of the 1961 season. We will start with the reigning World Champions and take it from there. I will only look at the teams that participated in the Championship series for reasons soon readily evident: there were a lot of them! Several general comments:
FPF The venerable four-cylinder engine was given a going over for the new season. Wally Hassan and Peter Windsor-Smith developed the Mark II version for 1961 as a stop-gap until the new vee-eight was ready. The FPF Mark II (81.2mm x 71.7mm = 1,475 cc) received a new modified block (stronger bottom end) and a new aluminum cylinder head (made by Birmingham Aluminum). Some other features of the Mark II were circular exhaust ports and the use of the same exhausts as the 2.5-litre engines, all of which gained a 10% improvement in the flow. On the dynamometer, the Mark II could deliver something in the range of 150+ bhp, with just under that being what the engines were capable of delivering when given to the teams. It was not until mid-Summer that Mark II engines were available in any significant numbers, only five teams getting them in the early part of the season. FWMV The new vee-eight, under the care of development engineer Gray Ross, first ran in May of 1961 and was to run its first race in August at the German Grand Prix. There were two FWMV (FeatherWeight Marine V8) Mark I engines made in 1961 and only Cooper got to use in them in anger. The FWMV (63mm x 60mm = 1.495 cc) used four twin-choke 32DCNC-4 Weber carburetors and managed to deliver up to 181 bhp for short periods by the end of the season.
Jack Brabham and Bruce McLaren Cooper 55 - Climax FPF (F1/10/61 and F1/11/61) and Type 58 - Climax FWMV (F1/12/61) The Type 55 was an evolution from the Type 53 of 1960. Used the Cooper six-speed gearbox/ transaxle.
John Surtees and Roy Salvadori Cooper 53 - Climax FPF (F1/1/61, F1/2/61, F1/4/61). The Type 53 Cooper (usually referred to as the '53P') was the production version of the successful Type 53 from 1960 modified for the new formula. The Reg Parnell team did some tinkering with its cars to lighten them and make them a bit more aerodynamic.
Jack Lewis Cooper 53 - Climax FPF (F1/6/61)
Bernard Collomb Cooper 53 - Climax FPF (F1/9/61)
Lorenzo Bandini and Massimo Natili Cooper 53 - Maserati 150S (F1/13/61) and Cooper 51 - Maserati 150S (F2/13/59)
Roger Penske Cooper 53 - Climax FPF (F1/14/61)
Hap Sharp Cooper 53 - Climax FPF (F1/15/61)
Walt Hansgen Cooper 53 - Climax FPF (F1/16/61) This car was bought by Roger Penske and resurfaced the next year as the 'notorious' Zerex Special which was highly successful in the 1962 Fall Pro Season in the United States. It was later acquired by Bruce McLaren and used by McLaren until he started building his own sports racing cars.
Renato Pirocchi Cooper 51 - Maserati 150S (F2/13/59)
Jack Fairman Cooper 45 - Climax FPF (F2/23/58)
Innes Ireland, Jim Clark, and Trevor Taylor Lotus 21 - Climax FPF (930, 931, 932, 933, 934) and Lotus 18 - Climax FPF (371, 912) The Lotus 21 was a much cleaner car than the 18. The bodywork was very sleek rather than being boxy. The chassis tubes were used as water pipes in an effort to streamline the design and save weight. Like Cooper, the driver seat was now reclined, but even more so. The fuel was now carried in pannier tanks rather than behind the seat as in the 18.
Jim Hall Lotus 18 - Climax FPF (371)
Peter Ryan Lotus 18 - Climax FPF (372)
Michael May and Wolfgang Seidel Lotus 18 - Climax FPF (373, 914)
Gaetano Starrabba Lotus 18 - Maserati 150S (902)
Tony Maggs Lotus 18 - Climax FPF (903)
Tim Parnell Lotus 18 - Climax FPF (904)
Lloyd Ruby Lotus 18 - Climax FPF (907) This chassis would capture the pole at the Spring race at Trenton in 1963 powered by a 2.7-litre Climax FPF.
Tony Marsh Lotus 18 - Climax FPF (909)
Stirling Moss and Jack Fairman Lotus 18 - Climax FPF (912), Lotus 21 - FPF (933), and Ferguson P99 - Climax FPF (P99/1) The 18 received new bodywork similar to that of the 21 after the start of the season and was often referred to as a '18/21' although it was essentially a cosmetic change, nothing mechanical being actually done to the cars. The team was loaned a 21 for one race when Ireland swapped cars with Moss (Monza). The Ferguson P99 was the concept of Harry Ferguson of Harry Ferguson Research. Ferguson was the leading maker of four-wheel drive systems for farm tractors in the United Kingdom, Ford using the Ferguson in all of its four-wheel drive farm vehicles. After discussion with race driver Tony Rolt, Ferguson had engineer Claude Hill look at an application for four-wheel drive in a racing vehicle. The result was the P99. Although it was originally hoped that the P99 might make it to the grid in 1960, it finally saw the track in 1961. The P99 was front-engined, which make it unusual for a new racing machine at this time. The P99 used the basic Ferguson system, a central differential that fed to two other differentials located at the front and rear. The gearbox was a five-speed design by Ferguson which utilized a constant mesh system to improve the ability of the driver to control the rather unwieldy vehicle. The P99 was a bear to drive. The lack of punch in the 1.5-litre Climax FPF negated much of the potential in the approach. As one driver remarked, "it gives a whole new meaning to the idea of understeer" Indeed, only Stirling Moss ever really seemed comfortable in the P99. When the P99 participated in the forerunner of what was to become the Tasman Series in 1963, the additional litre was helpful and it was campaigned some moderate success. Andy Granatelli used the Ferguson system in the last series of Novi machines at Indianapolis where the four-wheel drive system helped put some the immense power of the Novi on the track. One final interesting thing about the P99: it was equipped with an Anti-lock Braking System developed by Dunlop for use in aircraft. This feature did little to add to the evil handling characteristics of the overweight, underpowered machine.
Cliff Allison, Henry Taylor, Lucien Bianchi, Masten Gregory, and Olivier Gendebien Lotus 18 - Climax FPF (915, 916, 917, 918) The BRP cars were given the '18/21' bodywork as the season progressed.
Gerry Ashmore Lotus 18 - Climax FPF (919)
Phil Hill, Wolfgang von Trips, Richie Ginther, Willy Mairesse, and Ricardo Rodriguez Ferrari Dino 156 (0001, 0002, 0003, 0004, 0006) These machines will covered in a bit more detail later, but suffice to say that Carlo Chiti conducted a major campaign over the Winter to ensure that the Dino was the odds on favorite in the preseason discussions.
Giancarlo Baghetti Ferrari Dino 156 (0008, 0003)
Tony Brooks and Graham Hill BRM P57 - Climax FPF (571, 572) Sometimes referred to as the 'P48/57' or 'P57 Mark 1.' The P57 was designed around the fuel bags form the 1960 machines, the P48. This made them rather larger than necessary and the added bulk and weight did not help the team's efforts one bit. The team also started the season with Colotti gearboxes. The vee-eight P56 will not be used this season, so the team is forced to use the ubiquitous Climax FPF.
Dan Gurney, Joakim Bonnier, and Hans Herrmann Porsche Typ 718/2 (02, 03, 04, 05) and Porsche Typ 787 (01, 02) These machines will be looked at in closer detail later, but a few notes are in order. Until the minimum weight limit was dropped to 450 kg as a sop to the British teams, Porsche was looking good. When the weight limit dropped, things suddenly didn't look so good since they were now significantly heavier than their British competition. The Typ 547/3 engine from the RSK series finally started to horsepower in the 160 range on the dynamometer, but weight is still weight. Plus, the cars were still the same machines, the 718/2, derived from the Typ 718 RSK Spyder several years previously for F2.
Carel de Beaufort and Hans Herrmann Porsche Typ 718/2 (01, 05)
Maurice Trintignant, Giorgio Scarlatti, and Nino Vacarella Cooper 51 - Maserati 150S (F2/1/59), de Tomaso - OSCA (F1/001), and de Tomaso - Alfa Romeo (F1/003)
Masten Gregory and Ian Burgess Cooper 53 - Climax FPF (F1/3/61) and Lotus 18 - Climax FPF (905)
Lucien Bianchi, Olivier Gendebien, Willy Mairesse, and Andre Pilette Emeryson - Maserati 150S (1001, 1003, 1005), Ferrari Dino 156 (0002), Lotus 18 - Climax FPF (373, 909), and Lotus 21 - Climax FPF (930) I will save any discussion for the Emeryson for later...
Roberto Lippi de Tomaso - OSCA (F1/002) The best things that can be said about the de Tomaso machines is that it helps you if you compete at 8W...
Roberto Bussinello de Tomaso - Alfa Romeo (F1/004)
Keith Greene Gilby - Climax FPF This was an excellent machine plagued by a lack resources to properly develop it into a competitive machine on the track. More on the Gilby later.
Brian Naylor JBW - Climax FPF
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Don Capps | © 2000 Kaizar.Com, Incorporated. |
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