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This decade at Le Mans began with the first victories by Porsche,
whose awesome 917 racing car, capable of more than 240mph (385kph),
established a distance record that would stand for almost four
decades. One of a hat-trick of wins by Matra, effectively the
French national team, was achieved in a famously frantic,
head-to-head duel with Ferrari. In 1975, the oil crisis led the ACO
to run its race to a 'fuel formula', and it was won by the
Ford-supported Gulf-Mirage team. Porsche, using motorsport to
develop its turbocharging technology, won again in 1976 and in
1977, when Jacky Ickx produced one of the greatest drives ever seen
in motor racing anywhere. A massive effort by Renault, again with a
turbocharged engine, delivered success in 1978. The decade closed,
as it had started, with a soaking wet race that was won by Porsche.
This 10-year chronicle describes events as they unfolded during
each of the races. The reader will learn about the ever-changing
regulations - many introduced to encourage fuel efficiency - that
governed the races, and follow the technical advances made by
innovative competitors as they strove to win the biggest prize in
motor racing.
This was a very important period in the Le Mans story. Ferrari and
Jaguar raced to stake claims as the foremost manufacturers of
high-performance cars. Mercedes-Benz came back from war-ravaged
Germany and again set the standards in race-car engineering. Aston
Martin finally won at its 20th attempt. Enormous crowds -
approaching half a million people - saw the first rear-engined
saloons to compete at Le Mans, and the first mid-engined
sports-racing cars, and the first diesels. As the victorious
manufacturers actively promoted their successes, their commercial
rivals also set out to win. As many as 15 brought 'works' teams
every June, with purpose-built cars. On-track performance soared.
In 1949 the fastest car hit 135mph (217kph) on the unique Mulsanne
straight. Before the end of the 1950s, top speeds exceeded 180mph
(290kph). This fascinating book tells the stories of these
increasingly potent racing cars and conveys the punishing nature of
an incomparable event - the ultimate test of the mental and
physical abilities of the fragile individuals who make up racing
teams, be they drivers, engineers, strategists or mechanics.The
thorough statistics in the book result from fresh research, and
there are more than 400 evocative photographs, many of them -
including very rare colour images - never published before.
Officially licensed with the ACO, the organisers of the annual Le
Mans 24 Hours race, this sumptuous book is the sixth title in a
decade-by-decade series that is building up into a multi-volume set
covering every race. This title covers the seven 24 Hours races of
the 1920s, plus, as a prologue, all the events held at the Le Mans
circuit during the period 1906-23. Each running of the 24 Hours is
exhaustively covered in vivid photographs, an insightful commentary
providing more detailed information than has ever been published
about the period, and full statistics. Compiled by an acknowledged
authority of this legendary race, this series of books is treasured
by all enthusiasts of sports car racing.
This was the defining decade for the Le Mans 24 Hours. It started
with six consecutive victories by Ferrari, overwhelming Aston
Martin and Maserati. But then Ford threw its all-American dollars
at the race and won it four times in a technically exciting period
that also brought the competitive emergence of brands such as Alfa
Romeo, Matra, Porsche and Renault. The participation of great
automobile manufacturers spurred the development of many iconic
racing cars: Ferrari Testa Rossa and GTO, Ford GT40 and Daytona
Cobra, Porsche 904 and 917. The machines that were specially built
for Le Mans evolved through the decade from front-engined brutes to
mid-engined monsters. By the end of the period, many of them could
achieve more than 200mph (300kph) on the awesome straights that
defined the race, thrilling as many as 300,000 spectators at
trackside. Almost 50 companies built cars that were raced at Le
Mans in the 1960s. The 24 Hours became an annual cauldron of
corporate rivalry and a high-speed proving ground for innovative
automobile technologies.Above all, it became an incomparably
arduous and complex challenge to man and machine that captured the
imagination of the public the world over.
Officially licensed with the ACO, the organisers of the annual Le
Mans 24 Hours race, this sumptuous book is the seventh title in
this decade-by-decade series and completes coverage of the
endurance classic from its very beginning to the end of the 20th
century. This title covers the nine races of the 1930s (no race was
held in 1936) in which honours were divided between Italian, French
and British manufacturers. Each race is exhaustively covered in
vivid photographs, an insightful commentary providing more detailed
information than has ever been published about the period, and full
statistics. Compiled by an acknowledged authority of this legendary
race, this series of books is treasured by all enthusiasts of
sports car racing. In the 1930 race Bentley achieved its fourth
consecutive success, Woolf Barnato and Glen Kidston the winning
drivers in the very same 'Speed Six' with which they had won in
1929. Two of Britain's greats of the era, Earl Howe and Henry
Birkin, won for Alfa Romeo in 1931, beginning a four-race victory
streak for the Italian manufacturer. Tazio Nuvolari, the
outstanding Grand Prix ace of the pre-war decade, secured an
intensely dramatic last-lap victory in 1933 in the closest Le Mans
finish to date. Lagonda (1935) and Delahaye (1938) secured a win
each, while Bugatti took two with the great Jean-Pierre Wimille
driving its innovative Type 57 'Tank' cars, with all-enclosing
bodywork. Highly detailed year-by-year treatment of the decade's
nine races, giving unprecedented depth of information and
photographic coverage for each year. Official status provides a
number of unique features, including the reproduction of
photographs and full-colour race poster artwork from the ACO's
archives.Complete data for each year includes technical
regulations, entry list, circuit changes (with diagram), full
results and category awards. The whole work is beautifully designed
and presented.
The 1980s was a momentous decade in Formula 1 and this book
captures its extraordinary drama. A superb range of 250 colour
photographs by Rainer Schlegelmilch, one of the greatest motor
racing photographers of all time, is supported by insightful
commentary from Quentin Spurring, who had the senior editorial role
on Autosport magazine for much of that decade. Alain Prost, Ayrton
Senna and Nigel Mansell all made their debuts in this decade and
became, with Nelson Piquet, the stars of the era - they were arch
rivals equipped, at one stage, with the most powerful racing
engines of all time. McLaren and Williams first established
themselves as regular winners in this period, and these teams, with
Ferrari, remain big players today. This was a decade when Formula 1
was transformed by political upheaval, technical innovation and
extended TV coverage, all of which laid the foundations for today's
globally popular sport.
Officially endorsed by the ACO, the organisers of the annual Le
Mans 24 Hours race, this sumptuous book is the fifth title in a
decade-by-decade series that is building up into a multi-volume set
covering every race since 1923. Each year is exhaustively covered
in vivid photographs, a detailed and insightful commentary, full
results data and a glorious rendering of the official race poster,
the whole work providing coverage that far exceeds any previous
books in quality, depth and authority. Compiled by an
acknowledgedexpert on this legendary race, this series of books is
treasured by all enthusiasts of sports car racing. - Highly
detailed year-by-year coverage of the decade's ten races, giving
over 32 pages of information and photographs for each year. -
Official status provides a number of unique features, including the
reproduction of the full-color race poster artwork for each year
and photographs from the ACO's archives. - The images are entirely
in colour, and the emphasis is on photographs that enthusiasts will
not have seen before. - The story of each race is told through
photographs and an accompanying commentary. - Complete data for
each year includes technical regulations, entry list, circuit
changes (with diagram), lap chart, full results and category
awards. - The whole work is beautifully designed and presented. -
The 1990s was a richly varied decade, with winning cars from a wide
range of manufacturers: Jaguar, Mazda, Peugeot, Dauer, McLaren,
Porsche and BMW.
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