1969 24 Hours of Le Mans
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1969 24 Hours of Le Mans | |
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Index: Races | Winners |
The 1969 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 37th Grand Prix of Endurance, and took place on June 14 and 15, 1969. It was the eighth round of the World Sportscar Championship.
The eventual winner, Jacky Ickx, had demonstrated against the start by walking slowly to his car, starting voluntarily at the back of the field. The use of the traditional Le Mans-style start was no longer used after this accident, as drivers started in 1970 when already properly strapped into their seats.
Contents |
[edit] Pre-race
During 1969, the minimal production figure to compete in the Sport category was reduced from 50 to 25. Starting in July 1968, Porsche made a surprising and very expensive effort to conceive, design and build a whole new car for the Sport category with one underlying goal: to win its first overall victory at Le Mans. In only ten months, the Porsche 917 was developed, which incorporated remarkable technology: Porsche's first 12-cylinder engine and many components from titanium, magnesium and exotic alloys. Porsche built 25 917s and according to many sources this drove Porsche AG close to bankruptcy. In need of cash, Porsche sold the 917s to anyone who wanted to pay for.
Matra ordered the aerodynamic engineer Robert Choulet to conceive a low-drag Long Tail Coupe specially designed for the Le Mans, the Matra 640. On April 16, Matra brought the car to the Sarthe circuit. Henri Pescarolo took it to the track, at the first kilometres in the Hunaudières the car took off and was pulverised, Pescarolo was pulled out alive but severely burned. In parallel, Matra was experimenting with roadster bodywork. This lead to a new car, the 650. Some 630 chassis were converted in roadster; they were christened 630/650.
Despite the fact that no solution was found to fix the instability of the car, three 917s entered Le Mans. Two were Porsche Works teams and the third was entered by the gentleman-driver John Woolfe.
Matra entered four cars: a new 650 roadster, a 630 coupe and two 630/650.
The Ferrari prototypes made a come-back with the 3.0L 312P.
John Wyer's team was there but managed by David Yorkes. Wyer himself wasn't in Le Mans as his wife was ill. The team entered two Ford GT40s. Jacky Ickx shared GT40 1075, the car that won the previous year, with Jackie Oliver.
[edit] Race
The Kurt Ahrens/Rolf Stommelen 917 qualified on pole.
Soon after the start the poor handling of the 917 and the inexperience of the driver resulted in a drama: the death of British driver John Woolfe on lap 1 when his Porsche 917 crashed at Maison Blanche. Woolfe was killed, probably due the fact that he had not bothered to put on his safety belt. This was likely done because of the style of the traditional start used at Le Mans until that year, in which drivers were required to run across the track to their cars, climb in and get it started as quickly as possible to pull away from the grid. Woolfe likely sacrificed strapping his safety belts in order to gain a better start.
The fuel tank from Woolfe's car became dislodged and landed in front of the oncoming Ferrari 312P of Chris Amon. The race was stopped for 2 hours due to these two first lap incidents, but was eventually restarted.
The 2 official 917s were put out of the race by clutch bell housing problems, but the 908 of Hans Herrmann and Gérard Larrousse remained a serious candidate for the victory.
In a dramatic finish, Ickx and Herrmann repeatedly overtook each other as the Porsche 908 had brake problems, and eventually Ickx managed to beat Herrmann by a few seconds, or about 120 meters. Ickx and Oliver won with the GT40 chassis 1075, the same car that had won the previous year. This was second time the same car had won two years in a row; a Bentley Speed Six had done it in 1929 and 1930. Joest Racing would later repeat this feat twice.
Ironically, Jacky Ickx had a road accident near Chartres while driving to Paris on Monday morning. A car pulled in front of his Porsche 911. Ickx's car ended up crushed against a utility pole. Ickx unbuckled his seat belt and stepped unharmed from the wrecked Porsche.
[edit] Official Results
Pos | Class | No | Team | Drivers | Chassis | Engine | Laps |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | S 5.0 |
6 | John Wyer Automotive Engineering | Jacky Ickx Jackie Oliver |
Ford GT40 Mk.I | Ford 4.9L V8 | 372 |
2 | P 3.0 |
64 | Porsche System Engineering | Hans Herrmann Gerard Larrousse |
Porsche 908 Coupe | Porsche 3.0L Flat-8 | 372 |
3 | S 5.0 |
7 | John Wyer Automotive Engineering | David Hobbs Mike Hailwood |
Ford GT40 Mk.I | Ford 4.9L V8 | 368 |
4 | P 3.0 |
33 | Equipe Matra - Elf | Jean-Pierre Beltoise Piers Courage |
Matra-Simca MS650 | Matra 3.0L V12 | 368 |
5 | P 3.0 |
32 | Equipe Matra - Elf | Jean Guichet Nino Vaccarella |
Matra-Simca MS630 | Matra 3.0L V12 | 359 |
6 | S 5.0 |
68 | Deutsche Auto Zeitung | Helmut Kelleners Reinhold Joest |
Ford GT40 Mk.I | Ford 4.7L V8 | 341 |
7 | P 3.0 |
35 | Equipe Matra - Elf | Nanni Galli Robin Widdows |
Matra-Simca MS630/650 | Matra 3.0L V12 | 330 |
8 | S 5.0 |
17 | North American Racing Team (NART) | Teodore Zeccoli Sam Posey |
Ferrari 250LM | Ferrari 3.3L V12 | 329 |
9 | S 2.0 |
39 | Christian Poirot | Christian Poirot Pierre Maublanc |
Porsche 910 | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 312 |
10 | GT 2.0 |
41 | Jean-Pierre Gaban | Jean-Pierre Gaban Yves Deprez |
Porsche 911S | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 306 |
11 | GT 2.0 |
40 | Auguste Veuillet | Claude Ballot-Léna Guy Chasseuil |
Porsche 911T | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 301 |
12 | P 1.15 |
50 | Société des Automobiles Alpine | Alain Serpaggi Christian Ethuin |
Alpine A210 | Renault-Gordini 1.0L I4 | 292 |
13 | GT 2.0 |
44 | Claude Laurent | Claude Laurent Jacques Marché |
Porsche 911T | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 287 |
14 | GT 2.0 |
67 | Philippe Farjon | Philippe Farjon Jacques Dechaumel |
Porsche 911S | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 286 |
[edit] Did Not Finish
Pos | Class | No | Team | Drivers | Chassis | Engine | Laps |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
15 | S 5.0 |
12 | Porsche System Engineering | Vic Elford Richard Attwood |
Porsche 917L | Porsche 4.5L Flat-12 | 327 |
16 | P 3.0 |
22 | Porsche System Engineering | Rudi Lins Willi Kauhsen |
Porsche 908L | Porsche 3.0L Flat-8 | 317 |
17 | P 1.6 |
45 | Société des Automobiles Alpine | Jean-Claude Killy Bob Wollek |
Alpine A210 | Renault-Gordini 1.5L I4 | 242 |
18 | GT 2.0 |
66 | Jean Egreteaud | Jean Edreteaud Raymond Lopez |
Porsche 911T | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 241 |
19 | P 3.0 |
18 | SpA Ferrari SEFAC | Pedro Rodriguez David Piper |
Ferrari 312P Coupe | Ferrari 3.0L V12 | 223 |
20 | P 3.0 |
29 | Société des Automobiles Alpine | Patrick Depailler Jean-Pierre Jabouille |
Alpine A220/69 | Renault-Gordini 3.0L V8 | 209 |
21 | P 3.0 |
23 | Porsche System Engineering | Udo Schütz Gerhard Mitter |
Porsche 908L | Porsche 3.0L Flat-8 | 199 |
22 | GT +2.0 |
1 | Scuderia Filipinetti | Henri Greder Reine Wisell |
Chevrolet Corvette | Chevrolet 7.0L V8 | 196 |
23 | GT 2.0 |
63 | Marcel Martin | René Mazzia Pierre Mauroy |
Porsche 911T | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 174 |
24 | P 3.0 |
31 | Société des Automobiles Alpine | Jean-Pierre Nicholas Jean-Luc Thérier |
Alpine A220/68 | Renault-Gordini 3.0L V8 | 160 |
25 | P 3.0 |
34 | Ecurie Matra - Elf | Johnny Servoz-Gavin Herbert Müller |
Matra-Simca MS630/650 | Matra 3.0L V12 | 158 |
26 | S 5.0 |
14 | Porsche System Engineering | Rolf Stommelen Kurt Ahrens Jr. |
Porsche 917L | Porsche 4.5L Flat-12 | 148 |
27 | S 5.0 |
2 | Scuderia Filipinetti | Jo Bonnier Masten Gregory |
Lola T70 Mk.IIIB | Chevrolet 5.0L V8 | 134 |
28 | P 3.0 |
28 | Société des Automobiles Alpine | Jean Vinatier André de Cortanze |
Alpine A220/69 | Renault-Gordini 3.0L V8 | 133 |
29 | S 5.0 |
8 | Peter Sadler | Peter Sadler Paul Vestey |
Ford GT40 Mk.I | Ford 4.7L V8 | 106 |
30 | S 2.0 |
43 | J.C.B. Excavators Ltd. | Roger Enever Peter Brown |
Chevron B8 | BMW 2.0L I4 | 100 |
31 | P 1.3 |
49 | Trophée Le Mans Alpine | Jacques Foucteau Patrice Compain |
Alpine A210 | Renault-Gordini 1.3L I4 | 97 |
32 | P 2.0 |
38 | Racing Team VDS | Gustave Gosselin Claude Bourgoignie |
Alfa Romeo T33/2 | Alfa Romeo 2.0L V8 | 76 |
33 | P 3.0 |
20 | Hart Ski Racing | Jo Siffert Brian Redman |
Porsche 908/2L | Porsche 3.0L Flat-8 | 60 |
34 | P 3.0 |
30 | Société des Automobiles Alpine | Jean-Claude Andruet Henri Grandsire |
Alpine A220/69 | Renault-Gordini 3.0L V8 | 48 |
35 | S 5.0 |
9 | Alan Mann Racing Ltd. | Frank Gardner Malcolm Guthrie |
Ford GT40 Mk.I | Ford 4.9L V8 | 42 |
36 | GT +2.0 |
59 | Scuderia Filipinetti | Claude Haldi Jacques Rey |
Ferrari 275 GTB/C | Ferrari 3.3L V12 | 39 |
37 | P 3.0 |
36 | Racing Team VDS | Teddy Pilette Rob Slotemaker |
Alfa Romeo T33/2.5 | Alfa Romeo 2.5L V8 | 35 |
38 | GT 2.0 |
42 | Wicky Racing Team | André Wicky Edgar Berney |
Porsche 911T | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 34 |
39 | P 2.0 |
62 | Mark Konig | Mark Konig Tony Lanfranchi |
Nomad Mk.II | BRM 2.0L V8 | 28 |
40 | P 2.0 |
37 | Donald Healey Motor Company | Clive Baker Jeff Harris |
Healey SR | Coventry Climax 2.0L V8 | 14 |
41 | P 2.0 |
60 | Robert Buchet | Jean de Mortemart Jean Mesange |
Porsche 910 | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 10 |
42 | P 1.15 |
51 | Ecurie Fiat-Abarth France | Maurizio Zanetti Ugo Locatelli |
Fiat-Abarth 1000SP | Fiat 1.0L I4 | 9 |
43 | P 1.6 |
46 | Ecurie Savin-Calberson | Alain LeGuellec Bernard Tramont |
Alpine A210 | Renault-Gordini 1.5L I4 | 1 |
44 | S 5.0 |
10 | John Woolfe Racing | John Woolfe Herbert Linge |
Porsche 917 | Porsche 4.5L Flat-12 | 0 |
45 | P 3.0 |
19 | SpA Ferrari SEFAC | Chris Amon Peter Schetty |
Ferrari 312P Coupe | Ferrari 3.0L V12 | 0 |
[edit] Statistics
- Pole Position - #14 Porsche System Engineering - 3:22.90
- Fastest Lap - #12 Porsche System Engineering - 3:27.20
- Distance - 4997.88km
- Average Speed - 208.545km/h
[edit] Trophy Winners
- Index of Performance - #50 Société des Automobiles Alpine
- Index of Thermal Efficiency - #6 John Wyer Automotive Engineering