Race Report: Imola, 10 June 1971

imola_10_6_71

Race Report: Imola, 10 June 1971

imola_10_6_71
It was another win in the Shell Italian F3 championship for Vittorio Brambilla in a race that featured several runners more usually seen in the British F3 rounds. Brambilla’s Birel with its Wainer tuned Alfa Romeo engine won by 3 seconds from the Tecno of Monaco runner up Giancarlo Naddeo. A tight run for third place was taken by Freddy Kottulinsky from Pierre-François Rousselot, Wolfgang Bülow and John Bisignano, all four drivers separated by two seconds. Rousselot’s effort was especially noteworthy as he spun early in the race and lost nearly a lap but fought his way back up to the leaders, setting fastest lap on the way.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Imola, 10 June 1971

Qualifying

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel-Alfa Romeo 1:52.24

Race

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel-Alfa Romeo 45:50.3 24

2 Giancarlo Naddeo

Tecno-Novamotor TF69 45:53.1 24

3 Freddy Kottulinsky

Lotus-Novamotor 69 45:53.2 24

4 Pierre-François Rousselot

Brabham-Holbay BT35 45:53.7 24

5 Wolfgang Bülow

March-Holbay 713S 45:55.0 24

6 John Bisignano

March-Holbay 713M 45:55.3 24

7 Giuseppe Bianchi

Lotus-Ford 69 45:58.3 24

8 Sandro Cinotti

de Sanctis-Alfa Romeo 45:58.5 24

9 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham-Novamotor BT28 46:08.3 24

10 Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi

Brabham-Novamotor BT28 46:18.5 24

11 Girolamo Bertoni

Brabham-Ford BT28 46:46.8 24

12 Giorgio Pianta

Chevron-Alfa Romeo B17 46:51.1 24

13 Carlo Scarambone

Chevron-Ford B17 46:51.2 24

14 Giuseppe 'Pino' Babbini

Tecno-Ford 47:16.9 24

15 Giuseppe Piazzi

Chevron-Alfa Romeo B17 47:18.2 24

16 Andrea Zucchi

Brabham-Ford 47:48.4 24

17 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 23

18 Max Bonnin

Brabham-Novamotor BT28 22

Race Report: La Châtre, 6 June 1971

la chatre_6_6_71

Race Report: La Châtre, 6 June 1971

la chatre_6_6_71
This the X Grand Prix de La Châtre, was the seventh round of the French F3 championship and was held as a two heats and a final format at the small circuit of La Châtre, all three races were over 40 laps. The two heats were won by Renault powered cars, one by Jacques Coulon in his Martini MW7, the other by Patrick Depailler’s works Alpine A360. In the final Depailler beat Coulon by 2 seconds with the second works Alpine of Jabouille taking the third spot.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: La Châtre, 6 June 1971

Race Heat 1

1 Jacques Coulon

Martini-Renault MW7 40

2 Jean-Pierre Jabouille

Alpine-Renault A360

3 François Rabbione

Martini-Novamotor MW7

4 François Lacarrau

Martini-Renault MW7

5 Joël Auvray

Martini-Novamotor MW7

6 Max Bonnin

Brabham-Novamotor BT28

Race heat 2

1 Patrick Depailler

Alpine-Renault A360 40

2 Jean-Louis Lafosse

Brabham-Holbay BT35

3 Christian Ethuin

Tecno-Renault 71

4 Patrice Compain

Martini-Novamotor MW7

5 François Migault

Martini-Novamotor MW7

6 Marcel Morel

Tecno-Renault 71

Race Final

1 Patrick Depailler

Alpine-Renault A360 25:42.1 40

2 Jacques Coulon

Martini-Renault MW7 25:44.5 40

3 Jean-Pierre Jabouille

Alpine-Renault A360 25:45.2 40

4 François Lacarrau

Martini-Renault MW7 25:45.4 40

5 Jean-Louis Lafosse

Brabham-Holbay BT35 26:01.3 40

6 François Migault

Martini-Novamotor MW7 26:01.5 40

7 François Rabbione

Martini-Novamotor MW7 26:02.2 40

8 Christian Ethuin

Tecno-Renault 71 26:02.4 40

9 Joël Auvray

Martini-Novamotor MW7 39

10 Patrice Compain

Martini-Novamotor MW7 38

Race Report: Silverstone, 5 June 1971

silverstone_5_6_71

Race Report: Silverstone, 5 June 1971

silverstone_5_6_71

A healthy entry of 31 cars arrived at Silverstone for this Shell Super Oil/Motor Sport encounter, the numbers being bolstered by the addition of several French and Swedish runners.

Practice was split into two sessions on the Friday morning although the first session was somewhat disrupted by several cars being late onto the track due to scrutineering delays. Whether or not a driver got a good time was dependent on being able to find a decent tow so for much of qualification there was the sight of large bunches of cars touring round waiting for someone else to take the lead.

As usual by the end of practice it was Dave Walker on pole in the GLTL 69 although he lost an engine in the process, a bitsa would have to be made up overnight from two engines awaiting rebuilds.

The other front row sitters were Rossi, von Opel and Palm who was delighted with his new Brabham. Next up was Vandervell’s Brabham which was handling more to the drivers liking although the new titanium Rowland engine was not living up to expectations. Next to the Brabham were Maskell’s Chevron, proving very quick in a straight line, and McGuire’s BT28. The Aussie was pleased with his first serious F3 run but his car needed a clutch change as did the other two AIRO cars of Jones and McCully.
Thompson and Purley led a misfiring Williamson who also had handling problems whilst next up was F3 new face Jody Scheckter who was looking very impressive in the EMC which was a development of the previous year’s car as driven by Ray Allen. Randy Lewis led the two clutch troubled cars of Jones and McCully with Svensson ahead of Lamplough whose BRM engine was again causing him problems. Also not happy with their engines were McInerney and Goss, both of whom felt their Holbay’s weren’t performing as they should. Lawrence was another with BRM woes and Qvarnstrom wasn’t pleased with his Sportscars of Sweden engine which apparently had its air restrictor pointing in a direction other than forwards.
Radmyr was next up ahead of Lagier and Longman who was suffering from blocked fuel injectors. The final runners were Deutsch, O’Brien, Sedgley (who went home after practice for reasons unknown) and a disgusted Bev Bond whose engine had blown up after 5 laps.

It was almost inevitable that this would be a Silverstone slipstreaming special and at the end of the first lap the field came round as one multi-wheeled bunch. Palm led from Walker, Purley, Vandervell, Maskell, McGuire, von Opel, Shepard, Williamson, Thompson and Jones. Rossi had lost his front row advantage when his car jumped out of gear and Bond was already starting to cut through the backmarkers with his Ensign now running properly with a freshly installed Holbay. Positions continued to change all round the circuit lap after lap but it was clear that the man on the move was Bond who was already up to twelfth by lap 3 and was catching up with McCully, Jones and Thompson. Vandervell took the lead for a few laps but then his Rowland went off song and he quickly fell back through the field. By lap 5 Bond was an amazing second behind Maskell and on lap 7 he took the lead but no one could make a break and the first 21 cars were all in one group, the order depending on where you were standing on the circuit.
There was a second group of backmarkers behind the top 21 of Deutsch, Radmyr, Lagier, O’Brien and Goss. Lawrence was a lap down after a pit stop to look at a damaged throttle cable whilst Anderson had retired with no fuel pressure and Longman was out with a terminal misfire. The field had begun to split into three groups, in the first group were Thompson, Maskell, Bond, Walker, Jones, McCully and Palm. The next group was headed by Lewis, Scheckter, Williamson (who had terrible oversteer), Shepard, Lewis, von Opel and Rossi. Rossi then spun at Stowe taking Lewis and von Opel with him.
The leading group lost Alan Jones when his engine blew a head gasket and at the head of the squabbling bunch Palm and Bond were trying to get away at the front but then two laps from the end there were yellow flags at Copse where Lewis had taken Skeaping off badly damaging the Chevron although the driver was unhurt. McCully was now in the lead but the rest hadn’t given up and Bond, Walker, Maskell and Palm drafted past on the last lap, Walker and Bond made contact but both kept going and at the line it was the Lotus by a hairsbreadth from the Ensign with Maskell, Palm, McCully and Thompson a blink of an eye behind. First to sixth were covered by exactly 1 second, yet another Silverstone thriller for the record books.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Silverstone, 5 June 1971

Qualifying

1 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:38.0

2 Ronald Rossi

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:38.4

3 Rikki von Opel

Lotus-Holbay 69 1:38.6

4 Torsten Palm

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:38.8

5 Colin Vandervell

Brabham-Rowland BT35 1:38.8

6 Barrie Maskell

Chevron-Holbay B18 1:38.8

7 Brian McGuire

Brabham-Vegantune BT28 1:39.0

8 Sandy Shepard

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:39.0

9 Chris Skeaping

Chevron-Rowland B17 1:39.0

10 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:39.2

11 David Purley

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:39.4

12 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M 1:39.4

13 Pierre-François

Rousselot Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:39.4

14 Jody Scheckter

EMC 1:39.6

14 Jody Scheckter

EMC 1:39.6

15 Randy Lewis

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:39.6

16 Alan Jones

Brabham-Vegantune BT28 1:40.0

17 Allan McCully

Lotus-Vegantune 69 1:40.0

18 Ulf Svensson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:40.4

19 Peter Lamplough

Palliser-BRM WFD3 1:40.6

20 Brendan McInerney

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:40.6

21 Tim Goss

March-Holbay 713M 1:40.8

22 Derek Lawrence

Palliser-BRM WFD3 1:40.8

23 Jonas Qvarnstrom

Brabham-Sportscars BT35 1:41.0

24 Bengt Radmyr

Lotus-Holbay 59/69 1:42.2

25 Bernard Lagier

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:42.2

26 Richard Longman

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:42.2

27 Willi Deutsch

March-Holbay 713S 1:42.2

28 Chris O'Brien

Brabham-Holbay BT35 ?

29 Ken Sedgley

Chevron-Holbay B17 1:43.4

30 Bev Bond

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:50.0

Race

1 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:38.0

2 Bev Bond

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:50.0

3 Barrie Maskell

Chevron-Holbay B18 1:38.8

4 Torsten Palm

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:38.8

5 Allan McCully

Lotus-Vegantune 69 1:40.0

6 Ronald Rossi

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:38.4

7 Rikki von Opel

Lotus-Holbay 69 1:38.6

8 Colin Vandervell

Brabham-Rowland BT35 1:38.8

9 Brian McGuire

Brabham-Vegantune BT28 1:39.0

10 Sandy Shepard

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:39.0

11 Chris Skeaping

Chevron-Rowland B17 1:39.0

12 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:39.2

13 David Purley

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:39.4

14 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M 1:39.4

15 Pierre-François

Rousselot Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:39.4

16 Jody Scheckter

EMC 1:39.6

17 Jody Scheckter

EMC 1:39.6

18 Ulf Svensson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:40.4

19 Peter Lamplough

Palliser-BRM WFD3 1:40.6

20 Brendan McInerney

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:40.6

21 Tim Goss

March-Holbay 713M 1:40.8

22 Derek Lawrence

Palliser-BRM WFD3 1:40.8

23 Bengt Radmyr

Lotus-Holbay 59/69 24

24 Peter Lamplough

Palliser-BRM WFD3 24

25 Derek Lawrence

Palliser-BRM WFD3 24

Race Report: Oulton Park, 31 May 1971

oulton_31_5_71

Race Report: Oulton Park, 31 May 1971

oulton_31_5_71

23 drivers arrived to contest the British Empire Trophy at Oulton Park from an original entry of 45, it was a two heat and a final format with the cars divided unevenly between the two heats due to the non-starters.

Dave Walker duly took pole position for the first heat by two tenths from Steve Thompson’s Ensign which had been repaired after its Montlhery accident. Final front row starter was Colin Vandervell in his Brabham BT35 on its new Firestones, ahead of the similar car of Brendan McInerney. Fifth fastest was series newcomer Alan McCully in an ex-works Lotus 69, this was part of the three car Australian 

International Racing Organisation which was an odd title since McCully is a New Zealander! The other two members of the team were Alan Jones and Brian McGuire with their Brabham BT28s, all three cars were using Vegantune engines running on Weber carbs. Leading the next row of the grid was Ronald Rossi in his usual Brabham BT28 ahead of Tim Goss (March), Ulf Svensson, Rikki von Opel, Pierre-Francis Rousselot and Torsten Palm. Next up was Alan Jones who had only managed two laps before an oil pipe broke causing the Aussie to spin off at Island. Final runners were Richard Longman, Bernard Lagier and another new face, Keith St John in the ex Peter Hanson Chevron B17.

There were only eight cars in the second heat and fastest for this race was Bev Bond in the works Ensign, this week trying Dunlops. Setting the same time as Bond was the March of Roger Williamson and completing the front row was a very tender (after his Monaco practice accident) Barrie Maskell. The second row was headed by Chris Skeaping’s Chevron and Brian McGuire’s ex Tony Trimmer BT28. Bringing up the rear were Alan Joy, Chris O’Brien and final débutante Bengt Radmyr in a Lotus 59/69.

With a few minutes to go before the start of the first heat panic set in when a sudden heavy rain shower soaked the track, Thompson, Vandervell, McInerney, Svensson, Goss, Palm, Longman and St John switching to wets. With five minutes to go and the track beginning to dry Thompson put the Ensign back onto dry tyres. As the flag fell Walker took an immediate lead from Vandervell and Thompson, McCully, Svensson, McInerney and Goss. On a fast drying track Walker quickly pulled away whilst Vandervell was forced to hunt for wet patches to try an cool his tyres as Thompson passed him for second place. Vandervell was able to hold onto third place ahead of a hard charging von Opel who had dropped to ninth at the start but clawed his way back to fourth. Alan Jones spun on lap one at Lodge removing his nosecone and dropping to last but got up to twelfth by the finish.

The track had dried completely by the start of heat two, not that it helped Maskell who had to be pushed off the grid when his starter motor came unattached. Bond took an immediate lead from Williamson and and Skeaping. The Ensign led to the finish but it wasn’t easy as Williamson was attacking him all round the track bur especially at Knickerbrook were he often got ahead only to drop back again at Lodge. Skeaping actually made it up to second for a few laps until fuel starvation caused his engine to cut out intermittently and he fell back again. So it was that Bond took the chequered flag only to find he had been penalised 1 minute for jumping the start which dropped him to fifth. Williamson inherited the win from Skeaping, Joy, O’Brien and Radmyr. Maskell managed to get out and do five laps to qualify for the final.

 

Williamson took pole position for the final due to the dry second heat being quicker than the damp first one but Walker who was beside him made no mistakes as the flag fell and jumped into an immediate lead. Walker was determined to try and build up as much of a lead as possible to avoid the potential threat of Bev Bond back on the fourth row and at the end of the first lap he was ahead of Williamson, Thompson, Skeaping and a fast starting Bond. Vandervell was already dropping back but was still ahead of McCully, McInerney, Rousselot, Rossi and Radmyr. Trailing well back were Maskell and Jones who had required push starts and Goss who had started a lap behind due to a fuel pump problem. On lap 2 Thompson got past Williamson who was now being threatened by Skeaping but it was Bond who was really flying and in the next three laps he dealt with all three cars and he was just 4 seconds behind Walker.
However having got up to second Bond seemed unable to close in on Walker and dropped further behind as he met backmarkers, he was also having to watch the sister Ensign of Thompson who was trying to get second place back. Thompson did get ahead briefly on lap 22 at Knickerbrook but it was all academic anyway as two laps later Bond retired with steam coming from the engine due to a blown head gasket.
Behind the leaders there was a battle royal going on between Vandervell, Rossi, McInerney, McCully, Radmyr, Rousselot, Svensson and von Opel who had made an awful start. Quickly joining this group was Barrie Maskell who carved his way through in great style, his only problem being Rossi who solved the problem by having a huge accident at Knickerbrook (without personal injury). Maskell concentrated on trying to close the gap to Skeaping whilst von Opel and Rousselot were having a great battle, behind them Vandervell was trying to get away from McInerney and Svensson.
Walker was finding it easy at the front extending his lead from a tiring Thompson, Williamson and a closing Skeaping. Sadly Maskell’s great drive came to an end 10 laps from the finish when he had to stop for a new battery which dropped him to the tail of the field. At the finish Walker won by nearly 40 seconds from Thompson, Williamson, and Skeaping. von Opel just beat Rousselot to fifth ahead of a lapped Vandervell, Svensson, McCully and McInerney.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Oulton Park, 31 May 1971

Qualifying Heat 1

1 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:42.6

2 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:42.8

3 Colin Vandervell

Brabham-Rowland BT35 1:43.2

4 Brendan McInerney

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:44.0

5 Allan McCully

Lotus-Vegantune 69 1:44.4

6 Ronald Rossi

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:45.0

7 Tim Goss

March-Holbay 713M 1:45.4

8 Ulf Svensson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:45.6

9 Rikki von Opel

Lotus-Holbay 69 1:45.6

10 Pierre-François

Rousselot Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:46.2

11 Torsten Palm

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:47.0

12 Alan Jones

Brabham-Vegantune BT28 1:47.6

13 Richard Longman

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:47.8

14 Bernard Lagier

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:50.2

15 Keith St John

Chevron-Piper B17 1:54.2

Qualifying Heat 2

1 Bev Bond

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:42.0

2 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M 1:42.0

3 Barrie Maskell

Chevron-Holbay B18 1:42.8

4 Chris Skeaping

Chevron-Rowland B17 1:44.6

5 Brian McGuire

Brabham-Vegantune BT28 1:45.8

6 Alan Joy

Brabham-Rowland BT28 1:47.6

7 Chris O'Brien

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:48.0

8 Bengt Radmyr

Lotus-Holbay 59/69 1:48.2

Race Heat 1

1 Dave Walker

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:42.6

2 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:42.8

3 Colin Vandervell

Brabham-Rowland BT35 1:43.2

4 Brendan McInerney

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:44.0

5 Allan McCully

Lotus-Vegantune 69 1:44.4

6 Ronald Rossi

Brabham-Holbay BT28 1:45.0

7 Tim Goss

March-Holbay 713M 1:45.4

8 Ulf Svensson

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:45.6

9 Rikki von Opel

Lotus-Holbay 69 1:45.6

10 Pierre-François

Rousselot Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:46.2

11 Torsten Palm

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:47.0

12 Alan Jones

Brabham-Vegantune BT28 1:47.6

13 Richard Longman

Lotus-Novamotor 69 1:47.8

14 Bernard Lagier

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:50.2

15 Keith St John

Chevron-Piper B17 1:54.2

Race Heat 2

1 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M 1:42.0

2 Chris Skeaping

Chevron-Rowland B17 1:44.6

3 Alan Joy

Brabham-Rowland BT28 1:47.6

4 Brian McGuire

Brabham-Vegantune BT28 1:45.8

5 Bev Bond

Ensign-Holbay LN1 1:42.0

6 Chris O'Brien

Brabham-Holbay BT35 1:48.0

7 Bengt Radmyr

Lotus-Holbay 59/69 1:48.2

8 Barrie Maskell

Chevron-Holbay B18 1:42.8

Race Report: Brands Hatch, 30 May 1971

brands_30_5_71

Race Report: Brands Hatch, 30 May 1971

brands_30_5_71
Only 11 starters made it to this Lombank round due to the clashing Shell Super Oil meeting the next day at Oulton Park. As the flag dropped pole-sitter Roger Williamson’s March 713M took the lead on what was a very wet track from the Brabham BT35s of Colin Vandervell and Brendan McInerney, after 5 laps McInerney started to close in on Vandervell but then started to drop away again. After 10 laps Vandervell, who had been carrying out a lot of testing on the BT35, closed in on Williamson and for the rest of the race he harried the March unmercifully but although the Brabham was all over the March in the corners the Rowland was loosing out to the Holbay on the straights. At the finish Williamson held on to win by 0.6 seconds. McInerney finished an untroubled third ahead of Ronald Rossi’s Brabham BT28 and Jose Ferreira in a similar car, Ferreira was still wearing a plaster cast as a result of his Silverstone shunt and had the additional handicap of a 10 second penalty.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Brands Hatch, 30 May 1971

Fastest Lap

Colin Vandervell

Brabham-Rowland BT35 |58.0 | 76.97

Race

1 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M | 19:44.2 | 20 | 75.40

2 Colin Vandervell

Brabham-Rowland BT35 19:44.8 20

3 Brendan McInerney

Brabham-Holbay BT35 |19:56.6 | 20

4 Ronald Rossi

Brabham-Holbay BT28 |20:07.6| 20

5 Jose Ferreira

March-Holbay 713M 20:23.2 | 20

6 Rikki von Opel

Lotus-Holbay 69| 20:25.6 | 20

7 Geoff Bremner

Chevron-Ford| B17 | ?

8 Chris O'Brien

Brabham-Ford| BT35 | 19

9 Torsten Palm

Brabham-Novamotor |BT35 | 16

Race Report: Chimay, 30 May 1971

chimay_30_5_71

Race Report: Chimay, 30 May 1971

chimay_30_5_71
Most of the British based drivers stayed at home for the clashing F3 races at Brands Hatch and Oulton Park, however the three that made it dominated the meeting. David Purley (Brabham-Holbay BT28) and Claude Bourgoignie (Lotus-Holbay 69) lead from the start and soon pulled out an 8 second lead over Randy Lewis (Brabham-Holbay BT35) but Lewis in only his second F3 race caught them back up. The three then proceeded to have a great battle to the line with 0.3 seconds covering all three at the finish, but it was the experience of Purley and Bourgoignie that told and they took first and second places. Lewis had the consolation of setting a new lap record, beating James Hunt’s old figure.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Chimay, 30 May 1971

Qualifying

Claude Bourgoignie

Lotus-Holbay 69 | 3:30.6

Fastest Lap

Randy Lewis

Brabham-Holbay BT35| 3:30.7

Race

1 David Purley

Brabham-Holbay BT28 |50:10.8 | 14

2 Claude Bourgoignie

Lotus-Holbay 69 |50:11.0 | 14

3 Randy Lewis

Brabham-Holbay BT35 |50:11.1 | 14

4 Wolfgang Bülow

March-Novamotor 713S | 14

5 Jonas Qvarnstrom

Brabham-Sportscars BT35 | 14

6 Guy Dhotel

Martini-Ford/BRM MW7 | 14

7 Roger Hurst

March-Novamotor 713M | 13

8 Utz Schad

Tecno Ford | 13

9 Josef Kremer

March-Ford 703 | 13

Race Report: Monza, 30 May 1971

monza_30_5_71
monza_30_5_71
This race (round 6 of the Italian Championship) was entitled the Coppa Agip F3 race and took place on the 2.4km junior circuit at Monza and was split into two heats and a final. Star of the Monaco F3 race Giancarlo Naddeo won the first heat from Marcello Gallo while Vittorio Brambilla in his Birel-Alfa Romeo took the second heat from the Brabham BT28 of Girolamo Bertoni. Brambilla also won the final again from Bertoni, the race being affected by a heavy rainstorm.

By this stage of the season it is possible that all the cars might have 1600cc engines.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Monza, 30 May 1971

List Formatted as -

Rank- Driver

Car | Time | Lap

Qualifying

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel-Alfa Romeo | 57.7

2 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham-Novamotor BT28 | 57.7

Race heat 1

1 Giancarlo Naddeo

Tecno-Novamotor |19:50.0 20| 90.42

2 Marcello Gallo

Brabham-Novamotor BT28 |19:50.2 | 20

3 Phillip Albera

Martini-Novamotor MW7| 19:50.5 | 20

4 Jean Blanc

Tecno-Ford| 19:50.7 | 20

5 Adelmo Fossati

Brabham-Novamotor BT28 |19:50.8 20

6 Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi

Brabham-Ford BT28| 19:59.8 | 20

7 Giorgio Pianta

Chevron-Alfa Romeo B17 |20:00.0 |20

8 Giuseppe 'Pino' Babbini

Tecno-Ford |20:03.4 |20

9 Giovanni Lo Voi

Brabham-Ford BT28 |20:14.3| 20

10 Giuseppe Piazzi

Chevron-Alfa Romeo B17 20:41.1 | 20

11 Dietmar Flöer

March-Ford 713M | 19

12 "Canale"

Tecno-Ford | 19

Fastest Lap

Giancarlo Naddeo

Tecno-Novamotor| 57.4 |72.53

Race heat 2

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel-Alfa Romeo |19:46.6| 20 |90.66

2 Girolamo Bertoni

Brabham-Novamotor BT28 |19:46.8| 20

3 Giuseppi Bianchi

Lotus-Novamotor 69| 19:46.8 | 20

4 François Migault

Martini-Novamotor MW7| 19:47.0 | 20

5 Carlo Giorgio

Tecno-Novamotor |19:48.6| 20

6 Joël Auvray

Martini-Novamotor MW7| 20:01.6 |20

7 John Bisignano

March-Holbay 713M |20:01.6 | 20

8 Carlo Scarambone

Chevron-Novamotor B17 20:08.1 | 20

9 "Gimax"

de Sanctis-Ford| 20:08.3 |20

10 François Rabbione

Martini-Novamotor MW7 |20:27.1 | 20

11 Patrick Perrier

Martini-Ford MW7 |20:40.4

12 Guidetti

18

Final

1 Vittorio Brambilla

Birel-Alfa Romeo |37:42.9 | 31 73.69

2 Girolamo Bertoni

Brabham-Novamotor BT28| 37:49.1| 31

3 Carlo Giorgio

Tecno-Novamotor |37:49.8 |31

4 Giancarlo Naddeo

Tecno-Novamotor |37:55.2 | 31

5 Giuseppe

Bianchi Lotus-Novamotor 69 |38:01.4 | 31

6 Pino Babbini

Tecno 38:18.8 | 31

7 Jean Blanc

Tecno-Ford 38:32.3 | 31

8 Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi

Brabham-Ford BT28 | 30

9 François Migault

Martini-Novamotor MW7 | 30

10 Carlo Scarambone

Chevron-Novamotor B17 | 28

11 Marcello Gallo

Brabham-Novamotor BT28 | 27

12 John Bisignano

March-Holbay 713M | 26

13 Joël Auvray

Martini-Novamotor MW7 |20

14 Giorgio Pianta

Chevron-Alfa Romeo B17 | 20

Race Report: Kinnekulle, 23 May 1971

kinnekulle_23_5_71

Race Report: Kinnekulle, 23 May 1971

kinnekulle_23_5_71
Round 3 of the Swedish Championship, the Svenska Mästeskapen, saw Torsten Palm take a narrow three second win over Sten Gunnarsson, both were driving Brabham Bt28s.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Kinnekulle, 23 May 1971

Qualifying

1 Rolf Gröndahl

Brabham-Ford BT28
0:56.2

Fastest Lap

Torsten Palm

Brabham-Ford BT28
0:56.1

Race

1 Torsten Palm

Brabham-Ford BT28
5:55.1
24

2 Sten Gunnarsson

Brabham-Ford BT28
25:58.4

3 Ingvar Pettersson

Brabham-Ford BT28
23:03.2

4 Rolf Gröndahl

Brabham-Ford BT28
23:10.8

5 Jean Johansson

Tecno-Ford 69
23:11.2

6 Egert Haglund

Tecno-Ford 69
23:22.2

Race Report: Montlhéry, 23 May 1971

montlery

Race Report: Montlhéry, 23 May 1971

montlery

Surprisingly this race at Montlhéry, the XVI Prix de Paris, was scheduled to take place on the day after the Monaco GP support race but even so a representative entry arrived with several drivers stopping off at the French track on their way back to their bases. The race was held over 20 laps and was the sixth round of the French F3 Championship.

Fastest in practice was Jean-Louis Lafosse in his Brabham BT35 from the Martinis of Patrice Compain and Lucien Guitteny.

At the start the leading group consisted of Lafosse, Ethuin (Tecno), Coulon (Martini), Williamson (March), Thompson (Ensign), Depailler (Alpine) and Jabouille (Alpine). Coulon was soon out with a blown engine and then Depailler crashed out at Virage de la Ferme when he hit a patch of oil. Next out was Williamson and Jabouille found himself falling back from the leading group. This left Ethuin, Lafosse and Thompson fighting for victory, Thompson got ahead of Lafosse’s Brabham but found the Tecno of Ethuin a more difficult prospect. On the last corner of the last lap Thompson pushed the Ensign ahead of the Tecno and held on to take the chequered flag by two tenths of a second. In the overtaking attempt Thompson lost control of the Lotus as it crossed the line and hit a straw bale wiping a corner off the car, he commented after it was a case of hit the bale or finish second!

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Montlhéry, 23 May 1971

Qualifying

1 Jean-Louis Lafosse

Brabham-Holbay BT35

2 Patrice Compain

Martini-Novamotor MW7

3 Lucien Guitteny

Martini-BRM MW7

4 Christian Ethuin

Tecno-Renault TF3/71

5 Jacques Coulon

Martini-Renault MW7

6 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Holbay LN1

7 François Migault

Martini-Novamotor MW7

8 Patrick Depailler

Alpine-Renault A360

9 Joel Auvray

Martini-Novamotor MW7

10 Roger Williamson

March-Holbay 713M

Race

1 Steve Thompson

Ensign-Holbay LN1 31:59.2

2 Christian Ethuin

Tecno-Renault TF3/71 31:59.4

3 Jean-Louis Lafosse

Brabham-Holbay BT35 32:03.4

4 François Migault

Martini-Novamotor MW7 32:11.9

5 Jean-Pierre Jabouille

Alpine-Renault A360 32:25.4

6 François Lacarrau

Martini-Renault MW7 19 Laps

Race Report: Markgräfler, 23 May 1971

mark_25_5_71

Race Report: Markgräfler, 23 May 1971

mark_25_5_71
This race was held at what was probably an airfield track over 15 laps of the 3.7km track, all the runners were German and it is likely that some of the cars were 1-litre powered.

f3 HISTORY

RACES

Race Report: Markgräfler, 23 May 1971

Race

1 Dieter Kern

March-Ford 703 | 15

2 Hannelore Werner

March-Ford 713 | 15

3 Willi Somner

March-Ford 713 | 15

4 Jo Vonlanthen

Tecno-Ford | 15

5 Wilhelm Geiss

Tecno-Ford | 15

6 Felix Martin

Brabham-Ford BT21 | 15

7 Jean-Bernard Mermod

Brabham-Ford BT28 | 15

8 Klaus Enders

March 713 | 15

9 Wilfried Holder

McNamara-Ford 3B | 15

10 Josef Kremer

March-Ford 703 | 15

11 Peter Krause

March-Ford 703

12 Hans-Peter

Hoffmann Tecno

13 Hans Werner

Tecno-Ford

14 Rolf Zumstein

Brabham

15 Wolfgang Bülow

March-Ford 713

16 Horst Seidel

Tecno-Ford

17 Gerald Storrer

Tecno-Ford

18 Hans Werner

Tecno-Ford

19 Roger Ray

Brabham BT21B