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1908 Grand Prix season

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The 1908 Grand Prix season was the third Grand Prix racing season. An international economic recession affected motor-racing with fewer races and smaller fields. However, in consequence, it also saw an increase in the number of smaller cars and voiturette racing. This gave close racing between the teams from Lion-Peugeot, Sizaire-Naudin and Delage. Both the major races in Europe, the Targa Florio and French Grand Prix, had precursor voiturette races, and along with the Coupe des Voiturettes, the honours were shared between those three manufacturers. This year’s Targa Florio had a small, but quality, field. Vincenzo Trucco won for Isotta-Fraschini with better mechanical reliability, after a close duel with the FIATs of Felice Nazzaro and Vincenzo Lancia.

The French Grand Prix had a big field and this time Christian Lautenschlager in a Mercedes again denied the French a victory in their own race. Felice Nazzaro won the Coppa Florio for FIAT

Jean Porporato at the 1908 Targa Florio
George Robertson winning the 1908 Vanderbilt Cup

Major Races

Sources:[1][2][3][4][5]

Date Name Circuit Race
Regulations
Race
Distance
Winner’s
Time
Winning driver Winning
constructor
Report
26 January Italy I Corsa Vetturette Torino Turin Voiturette 180 km (110 mi) 4h 01m Italy Giosue Giuppone Lion-Peugeot Report
10 May Italy II Corsa Vetturette Madonie Madonie Voiturette 300 km (190 mi) 6h 32m Italy Giosue Giuppone Lion-Peugeot Report
18 May Italy III Targa Florio Targa Florio 445 km (277 mi) 7h 49m Italy Vincenzo Trucco Isotta Fraschini Report
28 May Spain I Copa Catalunya Sitges Voiturette 250 km (160 mi) 4h 23m Italy Giosue Giuppone Lion-Peugeot Report
6 July France I Grand Prix des Voiturettes Dieppe Voiturette 460 km (290 mi) 5h 46m France Albert Guyot Delage Report
7 July France XI French Grand Prix AIACR 770 km (480 mi) 6h 56m Germany Christian Lautenschlager Mercedes Report
15 August France I Coupe de Normandie Caen Voiturette 350 km (220 mi) 2h 49m France Marius Barriaux Alcyon Report
6 September Italy IV Coppa Florio Bologna AIACR 530 km (330 mi) 4h 25m Italy Felice Nazzaro FIAT Report
7 September Italy I Targa Bologna Targa Florio 420 km (260 mi) 4h 01m France Jean Porporato Berliet Report
24 September United Kingdom International Four-Inch Race Four Inch Course Grand Prix 340 mi (550 km) 6h 43m United Kingdom William Watson Hutton-Napier Report
27 September France III Coupe des Voiturettes Compiègne Voiturette 400 km (250 mi) 5h 14m France Louis Naudin Sizaire-Naudin Report
24 October United States IV Vanderbilt Cup Long Island Motor Parkway AAA 260 mi (420 km) 4h 01m United States George Robertson Locomobile Report
26 November United States I American Grand Prize Savannah AIACR 400 mi (640 km) 6h 11m France Louis Wagner FIAT Report

Racing regulations

At the end of 1907, at a meeting in Ostend, the AIACR (forerunner of the FIA) had set down new regulations for motor-racing. In barely 10 years, top speeds had dramatically increased fourfold. More power had usually come from bigger and bigger engines – now approaching 20 litres, on chassis getting dangerously light and flimsy. So, the AIACR derived an international racing formula based on a maximum cylinder bore: 155mm for 4-cylinder engines and 127mm for 6-cylinders. A minimum weight of 1100kg (not including tyres, tools and liquids) was also applied to enforce structural integrity. They also opened the voiturette class up to 4-cylinder engines to further encourage development of smaller cars.[6][7] For the voiturettes, the corresponding cylinder bore limitations were 65mm (4-cyl), 80mm (2-cyl) and 100mm (1-cyl) respectively.[8]

Season review

The Targa Florio opened the season with a small field of 9 entrants. In a close race across the rough Sicilian roads, the FIATs of Nazzaro and Lancia led initially, but when they had to stop at the pits it was Vincenzo Trucco close behind who took the lead. He held it to the finish to give Isotta-Fraschini its first major victory.[6][9]

The French Grand Prix was once again held on the 77km circuit on the northern French coast at Dieppe. Although this was only the third annual Grand Prix, the organising body, the ACF, numbered it the 11th French Grand Prix – by retroactively including the earlier inter-city races to add more faux-prestige.[10] The track was well-provided for. Teams had service places built in a divided trench, from whence, subsequently, came the term “pits”.[11] A big field of 48 cars arrived, of which half were French manufacturers. Challenging the established Renault, Richard-Brasier, Clément-Bayard and Mors were FIAT and Itala from Italy, and Benz, Mercedes and Opel from Germany. Otto Salzer, in his Mercedes, led the first lap. Then as he fell back with engine issues it was Nazzaro and Wagner (FIATs), Lautenschlager (Mercedes) and Hémery (Benz) who diced for the lead. The French cars dropped out with mechanical problems, as did the FIATs. Hémery was caught by a stone thrown up that smashed his goggles and put glass splinters in his eye. Despite the injury, he pressed on, closing in on the Mercedes. Even though Lautenschlager had to ease off to save his tyres he took the victory from Hémery, with René Hanriot third in another Benz. The partisan French crowd was left very disgruntled.[12][7][9]

The day before, a huge field of 64 mostly French cars had entered for the inaugural Grand Prix des Voiturettes. Albert Guyot had enough fuel in his Delage to run the near 6-hour race without stopping. So when the leading pair of Sizaire-Naudins had to pit he could carry on to a comfortable 16-minute victory. Naudin was second followed by the Lion-Peugeots of Jules Goux and Georges Boillot.[6][13] Later in the year, at the Coupe des Voiturettes run at Compiègne, the Sizaire-Naudins had bigger fuel-tanks so now they could also run non-stop. Naudin won ahead of his co-owner Sizaire, with Goux coming third.[13][8]

A major meeting was held in on a high speed circuit in Bologna consisting of two races over two days, around two months after the French Grand Prix. The first was the Coppa Florio over 10 laps, and was this year held for Grand Prix cars, with every car having appeared at the Grand Prix. Notable was the absence of the German entries. Ferdinando Minoia lead the first lap in a Lorraine-Dietrich but then ran into trouble on the second, giving the lead to Vincenzo Lancia in a FIAT, but he would lose time around the halfway mark, eventually finishing fifth, with fellow FIAT driver Nazzaro taking the lead and holding it to the end. On the following day was the Targa Bologna over 8 laps, for Targa Florio cars. It attracted mostly Italian drivers. Nino Franchini (in a Bianchi) lead the first few two laps but retired on his third, with second placed Enrico Maggioni (in a Zust) heavily delayed on his third lap, giving the lead to Jean Porporato in his Berliet who drove steadily to win. Both races had high attrition and many drivers experienced delays, mostly due to tyre trouble on the high speed circuit.[4]

In the United States, there had been a schism between the Automobile Association of America (AAA) and the Automobile Club of America (ACA). The former ran the Vanderbilt Cup races, but these had been plagued by poor crowd control, and the 1907 race had been cancelled accordingly. It was reinstated in 1908 to the AAA’s own rules. This upset the European teams, who boycotted the race, and so the ACA took the opportunity to launch their own race: the American Grand Prize run to the AIACR regulations and held on Thanksgiving Day, a month after the Vanderbilt Cup.[6]

American Grand Prize trophy

The race was held on a 25-mile course outside of Savannah, Georgia. The roads were in good condition and on race-day were lined with armed police and soldiers to maintain crowd control. The twenty entrants included the best European drivers. FIAT had Nazzaro and Wagner, with a third car for Italian-American Ralph DePalma. Hémery and Hanriot were sent by Benz, as was Ferenc Szisz (Renault), Arthur Duray (Lorraine-Dietrich) and Alessandro Cagno (Itala). DePalma thrilled the local crowd by taking the initial lead. The French and American cars lost ground leaving it to be a contest between FIAT and Benz. Hémery crossed the line first but it was Wagner who won by a minute on corrected time.[12][14]

After the American Grand Prize, Henry Ford (on the ACA committee) declared that American manufacturers could not compete with European cars unless they also started building specialist racing cars. However, he could not do so himself, as he had just started tooling up for mass-production of the Model T.[12]

Although French cars dominated voiturette racing, they did not win a single race in the larger grade this year. With the economic downturn and seeing the writing on the wall, Renault had decided to quit motor-racing. At the end of the year, a dozen other French and German manufacturers followed, in a letter pledging to abstain from motor-racing for the next three years because of the rising costs. It was enforced with a FF100,000 (equivalent to approximately €433,000 in 2022[15]) bond on each, forfeited for those that broke the agreement.[16] So, at the start of 1909, with only nine entrants the ACF was forced to cancel the Grand Prix.[12][14][17]

Other events

Following its sponsorship of the great race from Peking to Paris in 1907, this year French newspaper Le Matin organised an even longer one from New York to Paris – travelling across the United States to Alaska before getting a boat to Japan, and Vladivostok. Six cars started in Times Square on February 12th. After much controversy, the American team in a Thomas Flyer was declared the winner.[18]

Citations

  1. ^ "Golden Era of Grand Prix Racing". Retrieved 2019-06-21.
  2. ^ "GEL Motorsport Information Page". Archived from the original on 2008-08-21. Retrieved 2019-06-21.
  3. ^ Monkhouse 1953, pp.232-79
  4. ^ a b Sheldon 1987, pp.58-62, 68-73
  5. ^ Hough 1957, pp. 50-64
  6. ^ a b c d Rendall 1993, p.54-5
  7. ^ a b Rendall 1991, p.65
  8. ^ a b Venables 2009, p.28
  9. ^ a b Cimarosti 1997, p.31
  10. ^ Monkhouse 1953, p.2
  11. ^ Georgano 1971, p.87
  12. ^ a b c d Rendall 1993, pp.56-7
  13. ^ a b Rendall 1991, p.69
  14. ^ a b Rendall 1991, p.67
  15. ^ 1262 to 1789 Leonardo Ridolfi, The French economy in the longue durée: a study on real wages, working days and economic performance from Louis IX to the Revolution (1250–1789), Ridolfi, L. (2019). Six Centuries of Real Wages in France from Louis IX to Napoleon III: 1250–1860. The Journal of Economic History, 79(3), 589-627. 1798 to 1809: Mitchell, B. R. (Brian R.). (1975). European historical statistics, 1750-1970. New York: Columbia University Press, 1810 to 1903: Sauvy, Alfred. Variations des prix de 1810 à nos jours. Journal de la société française de statistique, Volume 93 (1952) , pp. 88-104 1904 to 2022: Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques, Coefficient de transformation de l'euro ou du franc d'une année, en euro ou en franc d'une autre année – Base 2015 – Série utilisée par le convertisseur franc-euro – Identifiant 010605954
  16. ^ Ludwigsen 2009, p.32
  17. ^ Venables 2009, p.26
  18. ^ Cimarosti 1997, p.32

References

  • Cimarosti, Adriano (1997) The Complete History of Grand Prix Motor Racing London: Aurum Press Ltd ISBN 1-85410-500-0
  • Georgano, Nick (1971) The Encyclopaedia of Motor Sport London: Ebury Press Ltd ISBN 0-7181-0955-4
  • Higham, Peter (1995) The Guinness Guide to International Motor Racing London: Guinness Publishing ISBN 0-85112-642-1
  • Hough, Richard (1957) Tourist Trophy - The History of Britain's Greatest Motor Race London: Hutchinson & Co Ltd
  • Legate, Trevor (2006) 100 years of Grand Prix Kent: Touchstone Books Ltd ISBN 0-9551-0201-4
  • Ludwigsen, Karl (2008) Racing Colours - Italian Racing Red Surrey: Ian Allan Publishing Ltd ISBN 0-7110-3331-5
  • Ludwigsen, Karl (2009) Racing Colours - German Racing Silver Surrey: Ian Allan Publishing Ltd ISBN 0-7110-3368-4
  • 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 ISBN 0-563-36093-3
  • Rendall, Ivan (1993) The Chequered Flag – 100 years of Motor Racing London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson Ltd ISBN 0-297-83220-4
  • Sheldon, Paul (1987) A Record of Grand Prix and Voiturette Racing Volume 1 Shipley, West Yorkshire: St Leonard's Press ISBN 0951243306
  • Venables, David (2009) Racing Colours - French Racing Blue Surrey: Ian Allan Publishing Ltd ISBN 978-0-7110-3369-6