NEWSLETTER - Franschhoek Motor Museum
Transcription
NEWSLETTER - Franschhoek Motor Museum
NEWSLETTER January 2011 More news, more anniversaries It's the start of a new year and with it comes a few changes to FMM's Newsletter. From now on the newsletter will be sent out monthly and with the help of Mike Monk, who everyone will know from CAR magazine, it will contain a lot more news as well as articles pertaining to specific cars in the collection. 2011 also sees some well-known marques reaching new milestones. Mercedes-Benz is 125 years old this year and VW celebrates 60 years of the Beetle on South African roads. But perhaps stealing the spotlight is the 100th birthday of that great 'flying lady' who has graced the bonnets of all RollsRoyce automobiles since 1911. Happy birthday Sprit of Ecstasy and may there be many more (chin-chin). WH Cobras and Lolas Late last year one of Carroll Shelby's former employees and a team driver, Allen Grant, paid a visit to the Franschhoek Motor Museum. Allen's racing career started in 1962 driving an AC Bristol and by winning 12 out of 14 races he won the USA West Coast Championship and received the rookie of the year award.Allen then offered his services as a driver to US motorsport legend Carroll Shelby but there were no rides available at the time. However, he was offered a job as a welder. Within a month he was transferred to the race shop and became a member of Shelby's 1963 Sebring race team as a mechanic and alternate driver. Coventry Motors, a large Cobra dealer in Los Angeles, placed an order for a car and Allen was appointed team driver. Together with Chief mechanic George Lucas, who in later years would become the famed director of movies including American Graffiti and Star Wars, Allen helped prepare the distinctive yellow-with- black-stripes Cobra that was named The Executor. After winning his first two races, Allen told Shelby that he would “blow off” the Team Cobra drivers Dan Gurney, Bob Bondurant and Lew Spencer, in the next race at Riverside Park. He was leading before clashing with Bondurant, spinning out to eventually finish second. Further successes during the year led to him being voted Northern California Driver of the Year. For the 1965 season, Allen became a member of the Shelby Cobra Daytona Coupé team and was responsible for scoring 28,3 of the total of 133,2 points earned by the team that resulted in it winning the World Manufacturer's Championship. In the same year, Allen purchased the original Lola Mk6 GT, forerunner to the Ford GT40, for $3 000, before obtaining a university degree and going on to become a successful property developer. In 2004/5, South Africans André Loubser and Rob Senekal were involved in a Ford GT40 project in Cape Town when Allen visited them to discuss the development and manufacture of a new sportscar. Impressed with Rob's development of a precise copy of the GT40 monocoque, Allen thought that Rob would be the ideal person to restore the silver Lola that, since purchase, had stood untouched in his garage in Portland, Oregon. Consequently, Rob spent most of 2008 completely stripping and rebuilding the Lola. By coincidence, André was at the 1963 Nürburgring 1000 km sportscar race and witnessed South Africans Tony Maggs and Bobby Olthoff driving the same Lola that was destined to be restored by his friend, Rob, 45 years later! AL Allen Grant Tingle’s Tanks Early in the New Year, FMM welcomed Mary Tingle, wife of the late SA racing legend Sam, and her son, John, and grandson, Sam jnr. The family reacquainted themselves with Sam's 1965 LDS single-seater (which first raced in the 1965 Rhodesian GP, finishing third, and is currently on display) and presented the museum's curator, Wayne Harley, with the pair of auxiliary fuel tanks that were fabricated by Eddie Pinto to fit on the side of the car's tub so that it could run the full SA Grand Prix distance without refuelling. The tanks are still in the original Gunston livery and have a wonderful patina. Mary and John also handed over some one-and-a-half hours of Gunston film footage. MM Legends lunch The annual FMM Legends Trust luncheon took place last December at which the John Love Exhibition was jointly opened by Johann Rupert, Carol Love (John's widow) and Royce Love (John's son). John's Chevron B25 (chassis 3) race car was also unveiled at the ceremony. Amongst the motorsport legends attending the luncheon were Giorgio and Paolo Cavallieri, Arnold Chatz, Serge Damseaux, Peter de Klerk, Paddy Driver, Graham Duxbury, Peter Gough, Basil Green, Bruce Johnston, Dennis Joubert, Eddie Keizan, Adrian Pheiffer, Fred Phillips, Ian Scheckter, Dick Sorenson and Andrew Thompson. CAR magazine's outgoing and incoming editors, John Bentley and Hannes Oosthuizen respectively, were among the honoured guests. MM Peugeot International Celebration