Wednesday 8 July 2015

A Brief Guide to the History of the 24 Hrs of Le Mans Race

In 1969, Jackie Ickx pulled on his leather driving gloves and walked across the track to his race car, while the other drivers did the traditional "run and jump" start. He did this in protest, encouraging the other drivers to race with seatbelts fastened. Jackie Ickx would go on to win the 24 hrs of Le Mans in a Ford GT 40. He won this event six times. The traditional start where drivers ran across the track to their cars, was last used in 1969.
24 hrs of Le Mans is steeped in history and prestige. It is the most widely known race in the world. If you are "anybody", you race at Le Mans...if you win, you are "everybody".
At Le Mans, race cars are 85% at full throttle for most of the long straights and top speeds of 200 mph are reached until knuckles become white beneath leather driving gloves as the grip on the steering wheel resembles the grip of rubber on the road, as the braking system is tested, bringing the car down to 50 mph, from the Mulsanne straight to the fearsome Porsche curves.
The outcome of each curve determined the fate of the next.

"The Flying Scot" Jim Clark, refused to race at Le Mans. He considered it too dangerous.

The Detroit News said in June 17 1966:- "This racetrack is a cornfield airstrip in the jet age. It was built 50 years ago for cars that went 65 mph. Tomorrow 55 race cars - some of them capable of 225 mph on the straight and all of them over the 130 mph class - will get off at 10am (Detroit time) and it will be a miracle if nobody gets killed. Nobody is fearless. Some of these drivers are scared stiff".
Back in the days when driving gloves pulled on leather helmets and goggles, an endurance race had a totally different meaning. When Duncan Hamilton won Le Mans in 1953 in a Jaguar C-Type, he was so drunk that when the team offered him coffee during pit-stops, he refused, saying it made his arms twitch, accepting only brandy!
These days Le Mans is a 24 hr sprint through thousands of gear shifts, millions of crankshaft revolutions and constant forces on every component, you drive every lap as a qualifier. This makes the 24 hr of Le Mans the purist all round challenge in motor racing.

Corvette Racing stood atop the podium at the 24 Hours of Le Mans on Sunday June 13-14 2015 as Oliver Gavin, Tommy Milner and Jordan Taylor wrote the final chapter of a storybook comeback that ended with the team winning the GTE Pro category in their No. 64 Chevrolet Corvette C7.R. The trio in their No. 64 Chevrolet Corvette C7.R completed 337 laps for 2,864.50 miles in a frantic battle that eventually saw the Corvette win in class by five laps. Sunday's victory goes along with Corvette Racing's wins earlier this year in the Rolex 24 At Daytona and Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring in the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship.

Monday 23 February 2015

Sound of Thunder - John Britten Tribute


British, European, American Racing (BEARS) paid tribute this weekend to the passing 20 years ago of one of it's most inspirational members, John Britten.
Seven Britten motorcycles were on display, along with various memorabilia.


When the chips were down and it came time to pull on the racing gloves the event attracted 170 competitors, both nationally and internationally.
 Once again the Galway clan were riding those quick machines from Bob Nesbitt's stable up there at Classic Cycles in Upper Hutt.
That's Terry the Dad on the left with son's Jaden and Jamie next to the maestro himself Big Nes!
They all rode well with Jamie taking out 2 wins and three seconds at my last count anyway. The '62 Atlas 750, #515 above, literally flew and Jamie, riding the Speed Triple below, came a close second to Andrew Stroud.

Terry got his gloves wet when he stepped off his 850 Commando coming out of the sweeper when we think he hit the white line...he was up and running after the bike as it was still skidding along the track!

Wednesday 11 February 2015

Skope Classic at Ruapuna 2015


Did you wear your driving gloves to this event because it had everything.
Muscle Cars, F5000's, Historic Touring Cars, Single Seaters and Vintage Racing Cars.

Visiting the pits and talking to the drivers and crew is always a treat at Ruapuna.
Up close and dirty!
The Mighty Muscle Cars are always impressive with their predominant raucous burble.



Chevy provides the awesome force behind the Formula 5000's of the sixties, seventies.

Race bred Porsches are synonymous with leather driving gloves and speed
 

The Ford GT 40 was originally built to win long distance sports car races against Ferrari.

Pre 65 provided inter-island rivalry

Historic Tourers was supported by many sports and racing saloons.





The world's tallest mechanic made an appearance!

"If it is at all possible, then relaxation was a state of pure excitement."

Excite yourself with leather driving gloves at:-



Monday 26 January 2015

GSX


Helmet, motorbike gloves, keys and a packet of cigarettes!

And a.....
GSX-750

Not an ordinary GSX-750...
Leon's GSX-750

Yes, it's a road bike suitable for racing. About 120 hp (1992 model), 11 second standing quarter at about 130 mph, top speed of about 160 mph. Not bad for the water cooled DOHC in-line 4 cylinder, 4 stroke,  4-valve engine.

Stunning lines for a '92 road racer...nice one Leon!

Jenny thinks so too!


Oh well, back to business...put the gloves on and outta here!



View some gloves at:- www.leatheronhand.com

Wednesday 21 January 2015

Superbikes at Ruapuna 2015

What a hectic weekend.
Soul searching, late nights, broken toes and fingers, stripping one bike to make the other run - the Red Baron Team.

Last minute adjustments




A dedicated effort by dedicated racers and their teams











NZ Superbike Champ Denis Charlett broke a finger and a toe on the Friday, but came out of it with two wins and two seconds on the Sunday. A long weekend in anybody's standards! 

The final superbike race of the weekend was also the NZ Grand Prix. 
James Smith on a Honda CBR-1000RR started well and held the lead for the first 4 laps. Charlett on his Suzuki GSX-R1000 slowly pulled him in and took the race in trying conditions.

Christchurch boys James and Alastair Hoogenboezem dominated the 600 Supersport class.

Bike gloves at
http://www.leatheronhand.com/motorcycle_gloves/