1966 Grand Prix de Rouen-les-Essarts

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Circuit de Rouen-les-Essarts (1955-1971)

The 14th Grand Prix de Rouen-les-Essarts, was the third round of the 1966 Trophées de France. It was held on the Circuit de Rouen-les-Essarts, in Grand-Couronne, near Rouen, on the 10 July.[1][2] This Formula Two race was only a week after the previous round at Reims, and the cars were brought over from there and assembled in time for opening qualifying on the Thursday. Qualifying was scheduled for Thursday and Friday. This allowed those drivers competing in the Martini Trophy race at Slverstone to practise and then fly to England for the sportscar race and return to Northern France in time for the race on Sunday.[2]

Report[edit]

Entry[edit]

A total of 26 F2 cars were entered for the event, of which 22 took part in qualifying. Of those 22, plenty of big names turned out. The championship leaders, Jack Brabham and Denny Hulme arrived with their Honda S100–powered Brabhams, hoping to continue their good form, as Brabham had won the two previous races at Pau and Reims. Roy Winkelmann brought two Cosworth-powered Brabhams for Jochen Rindt and Alan Rees, while John Surtees, Jacky Ickx, Graham Hill and Jean-Pierre Beltoise were scheduled to drive Matra-BRMs, although Surtees’ car was fitted with a Cosworth engine.[1][2]

Qualifying[edit]

Thursday’s qualifying session was uneventful, with most teams trying to sort their cars for the weekend ahead. Jack Brabham turned in the fastest lap, timed at 2min 14.9, Jochen Rindt managed a 2:15.8 lap. Denny Hulme was unable to record a time below 2:16, while of the rest of field could not better 2:17.[2]

Friday’s session was very different, with everyone trying to set a competitive time. Nevertheless, Brabham’s pole time of 2min 10.7 (averaging a speed of 112.018 mph) was a full two seconds quicker than his team-mate Hulme, and nearly 4½ seconds ahead of everyone else. Third was claimed by Jochen Rindt, in a time of 2:15.1, with half a second covering the next four drivers; John Surtees, Graham Hill, Jean-Pierre Beltoise and Richard Attwood.[1][2] Saturday’s Martini Trophy race at Silverstone, saw Denny Hulme victorious.[3]

Race[edit]

On the Sunday, the Grand Prix de Rouen-les-Essarts was held over 46 laps of the Circuit de Rouen-les-Essarts.[1]

Jochen Rindt got the jump, when the flag dropped, over the dominant Brabham-Hondas, leading into the first corner. However, by the Virage du Nouveau Monda (turn four), Jack Brabham was past and opened a three-second lead by the end of lap one. Rindt was second, following by Jean-Pierre Beltoise, Graham Hill, Alan Rees and Richard Attwood.[2]

Meanwhile, back in ninth place was Denny Hulme. Although Brabham was pulling away at a rate of three seconds a lap, Hulme had passed everyone bar his team leader by lap 4, ahead of John Surtees, Beltoise, Rees and Rindt.[2]

While the Brabham-Hondas headed off into the distance, Rindt made his way back to third, then pulled away from his pursuers. On lap 14, Brabham set the fastest lap of the race, with a 2m 14.6 lap. By this stage, Hulme was 3s behind and a gap of 15s to Rindt.[2]

By half distance (lap 23), only ten cars remained on the lead lap. Rindt’s excellent drive came to an end, when his gearbox failed, while the Brabham pairing steamed on relentlessly. Then Rees held third, and immediately set about closing the gap to Hulme, halving the gap from 45s to 23s. Hulme’s car began sounding rough, and just six laps from the end of the race, Brabham stopped on the circuit with a broken gearlever, robbing him of a comfortable third straight Trophées de France win.[2]

Hulme reeled off the remaining laps to secure his first Trophées de France win for two years, with Rees finishing second, 15s behind. Following mechanical problems to many of the cars, Pedro Rodríguez inherited third. Kurt Ahrens Jr. managed to claim fourth place from Hill, just a few corners from home, Hill finished fifth with Trevor Blokdyk sixth.[2]

Denny Hulme took the winner's spoils for the works Brabham team, driving their Brabham-Honda BT18. Hulme won in a time of 1hr 46:33.5mins., averaging a speed of 105.313 mph.[1]

Classification[edit]

Race result[edit]

Pos. No. Driver Entrant Car - Engine Time, Laps Reason Out
1st 10 New Zealand Denny Hulme Brabham Racing Developments Brabham-Honda BT18 1hr 46:33.5
2nd 24 United Kingdom Alan Rees Roy Winkelmann Racing Brabham-Cosworth BT18 1hr 46:58.7
3rd 2 Mexico Pedro Rodríguez Ron Harris – Team Lotus Lotus-Cosworth 44 1hr 47:54.0
4th 42 Germany Kurt Ahrens Jr. Caltex Racing Team Brabham-Cosworth BT18 1hr 48:41.4
5th 6 United Kingdom Graham Hill John Coombs Matra-BRM MS5 1hr 48:46.3
6th 16 South Africa Trevor Blokdyk Ron Harris – Team Lotus Lotus-Cosworth 44 45
7th 12 United Kingdom John Surtees Tyrrell Racing Organisation Matra-Cosworth MS5 44 Differential
8th 26 United Kingdom Richard Attwood Midland Racing Partnership Lola-Cosworth T61 43 Bearing
9th 36 France Eric Offenstadt Eric Offenstadt Lola-BRM T60 43
DNF 8 Australia Jack Brabham Brabham Racing Developments Brabham-Honda BT18 40 Gear Lever
DNF 20 France Jo Schlesser Matra Sports Matra-Cosworth MS5 32 Oil radiator
DNF 22 Austria Jochen Rindt Roy Winklemann Racing Brabham-Cosworth BT18 27 Gearbox
DNF 18 France Jean-Pierre Beltoise Matra Sports Matra-Cosworth MS5 26 Radiator
DNF 38 Switzerland Silvio Moser Martinelli-Sonvico Brabham-Cosworth BT16 26
DNF 4 United Kingdom Peter Arundell Ron Harris - Team Lotus Lotus-Cosworth 44 22 Engine
DNF 44 United Kingdom David Prophet David Prophet Racing Brabham-Cosworth BT10 21
DNF 30 United Kingdom Trevor Taylor Aurora Gear Racing Brabham-Cosworth BT16 21
DNF 40 United Kingdom Bob Anderson Bob Gerard – Cooper Racing Cooper-Cosworth T82 14
DNF 28 Australia Paul Hawkins Mildland Racing Partnership Lola-Cosworth T60 12 Puncture
DNF 14 Belgium Jacky Ickx Tyrrell Racing Organisation Matra-BRM MS5 9
DNF 34 Sweden Jo Bonnier Ecurie Suisse Cooper-Cosworth T82 5 Gearbox
DNS 8 France Henri Grandsire Société des Automobiles Alpine Alpine-Gordini A270 Car too slow
Source:[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g http://formula[permanent dead link] 2.net/F266_9.htm
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "8W - Where? - Rouen-les-Essarts". 8w.forix.com. 2006-09-15. Retrieved 2014-02-19.
  3. ^ "Martini Trophy Silverstone 1966". Racing Sports Cars. Retrieved 2014-02-19.
  4. ^ Tristan Wood, “Drive It! The Complete Book of Formula 2 Motor Racing” (Foulis/Haynes, ASIN B009UWU1BW, 1984)