Jump to content

1948 Australian Grand Prix

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1948 Australian Grand Prix
Formula Libre handicap race
Race details
Date 26 January 1948
Location Point Cook, Victoria
Course Airfield circuit
Course length 3.85 km (2.4 miles)
Distance 42 laps, 100.8 km (162.19 miles)
Weather Sunny
Fastest lap
Driver Australia Alf Barrett Alfa Romeo
Time 1'48
Podium
First BMW
Second MG
Third Reed-Ford

The 1948 Australian Grand Prix was a motor race held at the Point Cook Aerodrome,[1] a Royal Australian Air Force base at Point Cook, just outside Melbourne in Victoria, Australia on Australia Day, 26 January 1948. It was staged over 42 laps of a 3.85 kilometre circuit utilizing the runways and service roads of the base.[2] The total race distance was 162 kilometres. The race was organised by the Light Car Club of Australia and was sanctioned by the Australian Automobile Association.[3]

The race was the thirteenth Australian Grand Prix and the first not to be held on a public road circuit. It was staged as a handicap event with the first car starting 18 minutes before the last.[4] Conditions were oppressive, with the temperature topping 100 °F (38 °C) by mid-morning, along with hot winds buffeting the exposed pits on the start/finish straight.[5] The overpowering heat, plus the bumpy concrete-slab surface of the runways, took a heavy toll on the competing cars. As well as mechanical retirements, several drivers had to retire due to heat exhaustion.[5]

Prominent motorcycle racer Frank Pratt won the race driving a BMW 328. Alf Najar finished second driving an MG TB Special with Dick Bland placed third in a George Reed constructed Ford V8 special. Bland was also awarded the prize for setting the fastest time.[6]

Classification

[edit]
Race winner Frank Pratt (BMW 328) contesting the 1948 Australian Grand Prix

Results as follows.[4]

Pos No. Driver Car / Engine Entrant[1] Laps Time
1 28 New Zealand Frank Pratt BMW 328 / BMW 2.0L LF Pratt 42 1h 33m 52s
2 31 Australia Alf Najar MG TB Special / MG 1.3L A Najar 42 1h 34m 35s
3 11 Australia Dick Bland G Reed Ford V8 Special / Ford 4.0L R Bland 42 1h 35m 19s
4 12 Australia Granton Harrison Ford V8 Special / Ford 3.6L G Harrison 42 1h 35m 58s
5 26 Australia Dennis Curran Willys Ford V8 Special / Ford 3.9L D Curran 42 1h 36m 05s
6 30 Australia John Barraclough MG NE / MG 1.3L J Barraclough 42 1h 37m 02s
7 27 Australia Bill Ford Hudson Special / Hudson 3.5L WD Ford 42 1h 38m 00s
8 3 Australia John Crouch Delahaye 135 / Delahaye 3.6L J Crouch 42 1h 39m 00s
9 10 Australia Alec Mildren Ford V8 Special / Ford 3.6L AG Mildren 42 1h 40m 22s
10 22 Australia Ron Head Riley Imp / Riley 1.1L R Head 42 1h 42m 13s
NC 35 Australia Bill Patterson MG TC / MG 1.3L GW Patterson ?
NC 23 Australia Jim Skinner Ballot 8 / Ford 3.6L J Skinner ?
NC 41 Australia Cec Warren Morgan / Matchless 0.4L CR Warren ?
NC[7] 19 Australia Arthur Chick Bugatti Type 37 / Bugatti 2.3L A Chick ?
Ret 4 Australia Doug Whiteford Ford V8 Special / Ford 4.2L D Whiteford 34
Ret 5 Australia Hope Bartlett Dixon Riley / Riley 1.8L H Bartlett 32
Ret 2 Australia Alf Barrett Alfa Romeo Monza / Alfa Romeo 2.4L H Bartlett 22
Ret 6 Australia Lex Davison Mercedes-Benz 38/250 / Mercedes-Benz 7.4L AN Davison 17
Ret 38 Australia Tom Sulman Singer Special / Singer 1.0L T Sulman 16
Ret 20 Australia Jim Gullan Ballot / Oldsmobile 3.9L J Gullan 15
Ret 16 Australia Rug Nutt Cadillac Special / Cadillac AC Cooper 14
Ret 14 Australia Charlie Dean Maybach I / Maybach 4.3L HC Dean 12
Ret 21 Australia John Nind MG TB Special / MG 1.3L J Nind 10
Ret 18 Australia Tom Luxton Nuttbug Bugatti Type 40 / Ford 3.6L J McEwan 7
Ret 1 Australia Tony Gaze Alta / Alta 2.0L FAO Gaze 5
Ret 7 Australia Norm Andrews Stewand / Lea-Francis 3.5L N Andrews 0

Notes

[edit]
  • Fastest lap: Alf Barrett (Alfa Romeo Monza), 1m 48s, 80.00 mph (128.7 km/h)
  • Fastest time: Dick Bland (G Reed Ford V8 Special), 1h 26m 52s, 69.62 mph (112.02 km/h)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Programme, Australian Grand Prix, Australia Day 26 January 1948, Point Cook Aerodrome
  2. ^ Galpin, Darren. "Point Cook". GEL Motorsport Information Page. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  3. ^ Australian Motor Sports, 15 December 1947, page 24
  4. ^ a b Howard, Graham (1986). "1948". In Howard, Graham (ed.). The Official 50-race history of the Australian Grand Prix. Gordon, NSW: R & T Publishing. pp. 126–137. ISBN 0-9588464-0-5.
  5. ^ a b Walker, Terry (1995). Fast Tracks - Australia's Motor Racing Circuits: 1904-1995. Wahroonga, NSW: Turton & Armstrong. p. 134. ISBN 0908031556.
  6. ^ Motor-cyclist wins Grand Prix in BMW, The Argus, Tuesday, 27 January 1948, page 12, trove.nla.gov.au Retrieved 14 April 2015
  7. ^ Arthur Chick is mentioned as "still running at the finish" in The Official 50-race history of the Australian Grand Prix, page 132
[edit]
Preceded by Australian Grand Prix
1948
Succeeded by