{"id":38547,"date":"2014-07-07T19:41:26","date_gmt":"2014-07-07T18:41:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/issue_content\/readers-letters-30\/"},"modified":"2019-07-20T14:31:24","modified_gmt":"2019-07-20T13:31:24","slug":"readers-letters-august-2009","status":"publish","type":"issue_content","link":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/archive\/article\/august-2009\/39\/readers-letters-august-2009\/","title":{"rendered":"Readers letters, August 2009"},"content":{"rendered":"

A flight to remember<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

Norma Henderson\u2019s letter about Webbair brought back memories of a journey to the 1960 Portuguese Grand Prix. The Dan-Air Elizabethan was not large enough to take all those booked, and an unpressurised converted WWII bomber was chartered to take the rest of us. Webbair\u2019s hostess was Cliff Allison\u2019s sister, Pat, who presented us all with the ubiquitous Airfix kits to build. The plane did not have the range to reach Oporto and we were landed at Biarritz and treated to a good luncheon while the plane was refuelled, before it took off to fly along the north coast of Spain.<\/p>\n

About an hour into the flight the pilot warned us of likely turbulence ahead and we were all instructed to fasten our seat belts. The plane was flying at its maximum ceiling of 8000ft and all of a sudden it dropped half that height like a stone, Airfix kits, bottles and cans flying in all directions. Everyone<\/em> including the cabin crew used their sick bags, while the pilot struggled to regain control at 4000ft. The plane was heaving around in all directions and there were hailstones the size of golf balls coming through the ventilation system. Then there was an almighty bang and all of us on board thought the end had come. When things quietened down the pilot came on air to tell us laconically that the hailstones had smashed his windscreen but we were now through the thunderstorm, which was so wide he had been unable to fly around it and so high he could not fly over it. He deservedly got a standing ovation when we landed!<\/p>\n

Among the passengers were Dan Gurney, journalist Chris Nixon and photographer David Phipps. We heard on Sunday night that the pilot of the Elizabethan (which had flown back to the UK and picked up a spare windscreen for our plane) had said that he must be able to take off by 10am as there would be inadequate lift after that. Judging by the state of the passengers after the race-night party, Dan, Chris, David and I thought that if we got to the airport well before 10am we would stand a chance of a flight home in the Elizabethan. It was not to be, and the four of us watched the Dan-Air plane \u2013 half an hour late \u2013 taxi to the end of the runway, across the grass, the pilot swinging the tail of the plane over the perimeter fence before releasing the brakes and trundling across the grass, the length of the runway and almost all the grass at the opposite end before it had lift-off. With our hearts in our mouths we watched it rise painfully slowly into the air and only just clear a wood several miles from the airfield! We had all been convinced that the entire Grand Prix circus was about to meet its maker. As a complete contrast, our trusty old ex-RAF bomber with new windscreen took us home serenely, via a splendid dinner at Biarritz airport.<\/p>\n

Two years ago Dan Gurney paid a visit to the Jim Clark Room in Duns, and I reminded him about the occasion. He became very serious and told me that never in his racing career had he felt so sure his life was about to end.<\/p>\n

Webbscare? Not after the way that pilot got us to Oporto!<\/p>\n

Ian Scott-Watson, Greenlaw, Duns<\/p>\n

I had to chuckle\u2026<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

Re Simon Taylor\u2019s Lunch With\u2026 interview with Jack Oliver (June issue) in which he describes me as \u201cdour\u201d \u2013 intense maybe, but dour never. Here I am (left) actually laughing at one of his jokes for a change! <\/p>\n

Happy days.<\/p>\n

John Miles, Hingham, Norfolk<\/p>\n

Dump the dictatorship<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

Quite recently the Edmonton Journal<\/em>, our local excuse for a newspaper, ran an editorial on the machinations of one Mr Ecclestone with a further reference to the dubious Mr Mosley, he of the hookers, parties and lawsuits.<\/p>\n

What is amazing is that this is ice hockey territory, and not even when Jacques Villeneuve won his World Championship did the Journal bother to write an editorial. Things must be bad for it to weigh into Formula 1 affairs.<\/p>\n

The crux of the piece was that the Ecclestone and Mosley dictatorship had not been good for F1 and particularly not for Montr\u00e9al with respect to the loss of the GP.<\/p>\n

As one old enough to remember Black Jack when I was a kid growing up in Australia, and being so proud of Alan Jones\u2019 F1 title, along with cheering for JYS, Damon Hill and assorted others, I am appalled at the way F1 has been raped and pillaged for no good. Was it Martin Brundle who said \u201cthere are some people in F1 who are ill with money\u201d? Great quote.<\/p>\n

Can\u2019t someone bring some common sense to this? If Jackie Stewart wants me to, I will become his director in the \u2018Dump Mosley\u2019 campaign.<\/p>\n

Everyone else should get together and get rid of Ecclestone \u2013 his interview in your May issue was an embarrassment, both to him and F1. Be gone!<\/p>\n

Al Gill, Edmonton, Canada<\/p>\n

You couldn\u2019t make it up<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

During extraordinary times, both in the world at large and in F1 in particular, your letters page provides a useful insight into how motor sport aficionados in general view the current state of our sport\u2019s flagship series.<\/p>\n

One has to stop and pinch oneself: a new and young World Champion embroiled in controversy both inside and outside his team; claims of cheating, spying, lying and worse; an FIA supremo embroiled in controversies around rules and his personal extra-curricular predilections; upstarts from the back of the grid dominating current proceedings; circuits under threat; a veritable bevy of new beauties gracing the pits on race weekends; teams and organisers divided over next season before we\u2019re a quarter way through the current one. If it wasn\u2019t real you couldn\u2019t invent it all.<\/p>\n

Ever was it thus and ever should it be: it\u2019s called entertainment and it\u2019s marvellous.<\/p>\n

John Dennehy, Auckland, New Zealand<\/p>\n

The Ferrari effect?<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

Simon Taylor\u2019s Lunch With\u2026 Jackie Oliver was up to the usual high standard and interest. <\/p>\n

Oliver says his two most \u201cdifficult\u201d team-mates were John Surtees and Jacky Ickx. It\u2019s worth remembering that both had long spells driving for Ferrari prior to being team-mates with Oliver. This may explain why they became difficult!<\/p>\n

Roy Campbell, Bridge of Don, Aberdeen<\/p>\n

Memories and a model<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

I was interested to read Mike Dodman\u2019s letter (July) concerning the impression that the Murkett Brothers D-type had made on him at the age of 12, while being raced by Henry Taylor.<\/p>\n

I was extremely fortunate to be the custodian of TKF 9 for over 25 years, during which time I vigorously raced the car all over Europe as well as driving it on long tours.<\/p>\n

For his interest I refer him to the excellent article by your Deputy Editor Gordon Cruickshank, published in Motor Sport in December 1994, in which a full description and history of the car is recorded following a reunion of Tony Murkett and Henry Taylor with the D-type at Silverstone. <\/p>\n

I have to admit that I bought the car more because it had been raced by Jim Clark than because it was a D-type. However, it didn\u2019t take me long to discover what a magnificent car it was. Once you are seated the car envelops you, and it is really very small and easy to place on the road. It\u2019s also unusually comfortable, so much so that I once drove from Devon to the south of France without getting out, except for fuel.<\/p>\n

My times with TKF 9 were undoubtedly the most enjoyable and happiest of a long and varied motoring life. Just to make Mr Dodman happy, all I have now is also a model of a white D-type with the registration number TKF 9, apart of course from all the incredible memories she gave me. Should I win the lottery next week, I will call Adrian Hamilton \u2013 and Mr Dodman, if I do you will be the first person to get a ride! <\/p>\n

Willie Tuckett, Buckland Monachorum, Devon<\/p>\n

Time to reassess Schumacher<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

Given your position as the most neutral and most able historians of motor sport, I trust that \u2013 given the success of Brawn GP so far this year \u2013 you will now re-open previous comparisons of Michael Schumacher with other racing champions, for the majority of his 91 Grand Prix wins had Ross Brawn in command. Being fair, Schumacher was one of the first to acknowledge that he was only the tip of the arrow in a considerable team effort: it\u2019s the ratio of the mix of Schumacher and Brawn that now needs to be re-calibrated.<\/p>\n

While clearly Schumacher was\/is \u2018quite good\u2019, perhaps now some might realise that he is not in the top five with the likes of Fangio, Stewart, Clark et al who had the demonstrable skill and versatility of altering their driving style to overcome a less-than-perfect set-up. And continuing the theme of fairness, which ones needed to win their World Championships by crashing into their title contender \u2013 or would even think of doing so?<\/p>\n

Martin Hasker, Newbury, Berks<\/p>\n

Do you have Bette\u2019s books?<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

When my husband Graham Hill died in 1975, quite a lot of the contents of our home were auctioned. Sadly, my timing book and lap charts somehow disappeared too. I would like to know if anyone bought them, or if anyone knows where they are. I would adore to have them back.<\/p>\n

Bette Hill, Cobham, Surrey
\n[Letters can be forwarded \u2013 ed]<\/p>\n

Puzzled by Prodrive snub<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

David Richards must have crossed swords with Mad Max and Burnt Ecclescake in the past for Prodrive not to gain entry at the first time of asking to next year\u2019s F1 championship. Surely with his vast experience and backing from the Middle East for Aston Martin he deserved to get one of the slots?<\/p>\n

Mike Allaston, Tadley, Hants<\/p>\n

A salute to Silverstone<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

Heartfelt thanks for rekindling old Silverstone memories (July issue). In 1965 I was at Woodcote to watch the \u2018silent Lotus\u2019 win. In 1969 I was at Maggotts for one of the classic duels. I was a BRM supporter but had drawn \u2018Wee Jackie\u2019 in the fun betting event our group of 12 avid fans ran each year, so I had an incentive to support the Matra driver and pocket a welcome \u00a311.<\/p>\n

In 1973 I was at Stowe and waited in vain for the bulk of the field to come round for the second lap (the PA system really was not very good in those faraway days).<\/p>\n

In 1979 I was at Club and cheered Regga to the rafters \u2013 what a great day for Frank and his team. Great days, fantastic races. Silverstone is not my favourite circuit but I would hate to see it perish at Bernie\u2019s hands.<\/p>\n

My favourite circuit? Bathurst \u2013 thankfully too distant and not an F1 track, so it should escape the \u2018Bernie cull\u2019. <\/p>\n

Arnold Eglington, Winchester, Hants<\/p>\n

Another Behra, not Gordini<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

Congratulations for the high quality of your June issue. However, I would like to correct a caption on p20. The man standing beside Jean Behra is not Aldo Gordini but Jean\u2019s brother Jos\u00e9. During the Gordini racing period Jos\u00e9 used to drive the team truck. Then he became an endurance and rally driver.<\/p>\n

Andre Pibarot, Culey, France<\/p>\n

Transparent history<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

With reference to your article \u2018Debut for last GT40\u2019 (June issue), I have had a great deal of involvement with 1085 recently and want to make some corrections. The spare chassis 1085 was purchased new by Sir Malcolm Guthrie as a spare for his then Le Mans entry, chassis number 1009 which in reality was XGT 2. Gill Jackson bought the whole ensemble from Guthrie in 1971. Far from being \u2018crated\u2019 the car was always on display with 1009\/XGT 2, and was always \u201cjust about to be completed\u201d. The original 1009 resided in California from 1971 until 2007.<\/p>\n

Tom Edwardes, Fiskens, London<\/p>\n

Photos to tell a story<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

I am writing a complete guide to all the Grand Prix circuits since 1950 and wonder if any of your readers have taken pictures over the years which could be considered for inclusion. The pictures (black and white or colour) can be of any subject but must show an aspect of the circuit \u2013 in other words, they could not have been taken anywhere else. Professional standards of photography are not a necessity! <\/p>\n

Interested readers should e-mail me on hil4ton@yahoo.co.uk or write c\/o Editorial, Haynes Publishing, Sparkford, near Yeovil, Somerset BA22 7JJ. <\/p>\n

Christopher Hilton, by e-mail<\/p>\n

The Brough connection<\/strong><\/p>\n

Sir,<\/p>\n

I am looking for original material relating to George Brough, the Brough Superior marque and the connection between Brough and T\u2009E\u2009Lawrence. If you can help please contact me at: davidmason81@mac.com or write to me at 474 Coniscliffe Road, Darlington DL3 8AL.<\/p>\n

David Mason, Darlington<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":739,"featured_media":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","template":"","categories":[],"tags":[167,35508,36503,35042,56257,42991,190,92146,36412],"issue_decade":[121591],"issue_year":[121612],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/issue_content\/38547"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/issue_content"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/issue_content"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/739"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=38547"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/issue_content\/38547\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":239267,"href":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/issue_content\/38547\/revisions\/239267"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=38547"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=38547"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=38547"},{"taxonomy":"issue_decade","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/issue_decade?post=38547"},{"taxonomy":"issue_year","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.motorsportmagazine.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/issue_year?post=38547"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}