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Grand Prix de Nogaro

Nogaro, 28 Sep 1975

ResultsLapsTime/Speed
1 Patrick Tambay March 752 [19-2] - BMW M12/6 Rosche
#3 Elf Team March
65
2 Michel Leclère March 752 [12] - BMW M12/6 Rosche
#2 Elf Team March
65
3 Jean-Pierre Jabouille Elf (Jabouille) 2J [7502] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
#6 Equipe Elf Switzerland (see note 1)
65
4 Jean-Pierre Jaussaud March 752 [23] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
#11 Project Three Racing (see note 2)
64
5 Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi March 742 [20] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch
#18 Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi (see note 3)
64
6 Alberto Colombo March 752 [1-2] - BMW M12/6
#16 Trivellato Racing Team
64
7 Claude Bourgoignie March 752 [14] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch
#8 Bang & Olufsen Team Vaillant
63
8 Ray Mallock March 75B [75B-U1] - Ford BDG Swindon
#19 Ardmore Racing (see note 4)
62
9 Bernard de Dryver March 752 [8] - BMW M12/6
#9 Bang & Olufsen Team Vaillant
62
10 Wilhelm "Willi" Deutsch March 752 [13] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
#10 Team Warsteiner Eurorace
62
11 Maurizio Flammini March 752 [22] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
#17 Project Three Racing (see note 5)
61
12 Xavier Lapeyre Chevron B29 [29-75-10] - Chrysler-Simca ROC 4
#5 Ste Racing Organisation Course
(see note 6)
60
13 Giancarlo Martini March 752 [7] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch
#24 Scuderia Everest/Scuderia del Passatore [Giancarlo Minardi]
56
14 Gianfranco Trombetti March 742L [21] - BMW M12/6
#25 Scuderia Everest/Scuderia del Passatore [Giancarlo Minardi]
(see note 7)
55
15 Jean-Pierre Beltoise Chevron B29 [29-75-12] - Chrysler-Simca ROC 4
#4 Ste Racing Organisation Course
(see note 8)
53
R Roberto Filannino Osella FA2/75 [002] - BMW M12/6
#22 Osella Squadra Corse
48 engine
R Hans Binder Chevron B29 [29-75-30] - BMW M12/6
#21 Team Warsteiner Eurorace (see note 9)
48 electrics
R Jacques Laffite Martini MK16 [001] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
#1 Ecurie Elf Ambrozium
36 accident
R Gabriele Serblin March 742 [15] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch
#15 Cucine Elba Racing Team (see note 10)
36 engine
R Giorgio Francia Osella FA2/75 [004] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch
#23 Osella Squadra Corse
35 electrics
R Gérard Larrousse Elf (Jabouille) 2J [7501] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
#7 Equipe Elf Switzerland (see note 11)
31 engine
R Bruno Pescia March 752 [17] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
#12 Project Three Racing (see note 12)
27 engine
DNQ Antônio Castro Prado March 742L [732-10] - BMW M12/6
#28 Roger Heavens (see note 13)
Did not qualify
DNQ Héctor Rebaque Chevron B29 [29-75-03] - Ford BDA Hart alloy
#27 SDC Racing (see note 14)
Did not qualify
DNQ Max Bonnin March 732 ["59"] - Ford BDA Hart
#20 Max Bonnin (see note 15)
Did not qualify
DNQ Hans Meier Surtees TS15A - BMW M12/6
#30 Team Walter Pechek (see note 16)
Did not qualify

All cars are 2-litre F2 unless noted.

Qualifying
1 Patrick Tambay (F2) 2-litre March 752 [19-2] - BMW M12/6 Rosche
2 Jean-Pierre Jabouille (F2) 2-litre Elf (Jabouille) 2J [7502] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
3 Gérard Larrousse (F2) 2-litre Elf (Jabouille) 2J [7501] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
4 Michel Leclère (F2) 2-litre March 752 [12] - BMW M12/6 Rosche
5 Jacques Laffite (F2) 2-litre Martini MK16 [001] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
6 Giorgio Francia (F2) 2-litre Osella FA2/75 [004] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch
7 Hans Binder (F2) 2-litre Chevron B29 [29-75-30] - BMW M12/6
8 Jean-Pierre Beltoise (F2) 2-litre Chevron B29 [29-75-12] - Chrysler-Simca ROC 4
9 Gabriele Serblin (F2) 2-litre March 742 [15] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch
10 Jean-Pierre Jaussaud (F2) 2-litre March 752 [23] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
11 Maurizio Flammini (F2) 2-litre March 752 [22] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
12 Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi (F2) 2-litre March 742 [20] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch
13 Alberto Colombo (F2) 2-litre March 752 [1-2] - BMW M12/6
14 Wilhelm "Willi" Deutsch (F2) 2-litre March 752 [13] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
15 Claude Bourgoignie (F2) 2-litre March 752 [14] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch
16 Giancarlo Martini (F2) 2-litre March 752 [7] - BMW M12/6 Neerpasch
17 Bruno Pescia (F2) 2-litre March 752 [17] - BMW Schnitzer 20-4
18 Gianfranco Trombetti (F2) 2-litre March 742L [21] - BMW M12/6
19 Ray Mallock (F2) 2-litre March 75B [75B-U1] - Ford BDG Swindon
20 Bernard de Dryver (F2) 2-litre March 752 [8] - BMW M12/6
21 Roberto Filannino (F2) 2-litre Osella FA2/75 [002] - BMW M12/6
22 Xavier Lapeyre (F2) 2-litre Chevron B29 [29-75-10] - Chrysler-Simca ROC 4
23 Héctor Rebaque * (F2) 2-litre Chevron B29 [29-75-03] - Ford BDA Hart alloy
24 Antônio Castro Prado * (F2) 2-litre March 742L [732-10] - BMW M12/6
25 Hans Meier * (F2) 2-litre Surtees TS15A - BMW M12/6
26 Max Bonnin * (F2) 2-litre March 732 ["59"] - Ford BDA Hart
 
* Did not start

Notes on the cars:

  1. Elf (Jabouille) 2J [7502] (Jean-Pierre Jabouille): New for the Elf Switzerland team in mid-1975, based on the Alpine A367 chassis 3672 used by the team in 1974. This second car was produced during July, and was driven by Jean-Piere Jabouille at Enna-Pergusa, Silverstone and Zolder, retiring with engine problems at all three races. It was driven by Marie-Claude Beaumont at Vallelunga in October as Jabouille was in Japan with the Alpine sports cars, her first public run in a single seater. She went off the track during practice while avoiding a spinning José Pedro Chateaubriand, and cleaning dirt from the throttle slides left her no time to set a qualifying time. This car was consumed in the creation of new cars with Renault V6 engines for 1976. Whether chassis 7502 became the new chassis 7602 remains unresolved.
  2. March 752 [23] (Jean-Pierre Jaussaud): New to Ron Dennis's Project Three Racing and driven in F2 by Bruno Pescia, Vittorio Brambilla, Masami Kuwashima, Tim Schenken and Jean-Pierre Jaussaud in 1975. Retained in 1976 as part of Project Four Racing and thought to be the "762" used as a testbed for the Lancia engines at the start of that season. Then probably the "762" used by Gilles Villeneuve at Pau and by Mikko Kozarowitzky at three later races. Unknown after July 1976.
  3. March 742 [20] (Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi): New to the CSAI's Equipe Nationale as a spare car but sold on unused to Alessandro Pesenti-Rossi, who raced it twice in F2 late in 1974. Pesenti-Rossi raced the car again in 1975 but was more focused on his F3 campaign with a March 743. After a single F2 race with the 742 at the start of 1976, Pesenti-Rossi acquired a 762 and a 763, and the 742 was not seen again. Reports that it went to the Brambillas are now thought to be incorrect. In early 1978, Nigel Clarkson (Cirencester, Gloucestershire) ran a F2 March in the Aurora series. This was described as a 762 when he failed to qualify for the two Easter races but was identified as a 742 with BDX engine when it reappeared in September. Clarkson recalls that "the car was a disaster having been put together from a bunch of bits by an Australian John Gillmeister" and believes it later became a Special Saloon. According to Kevan McLurg, Scot Ron Cummings bought a dismantled March 742 from Clarkson in 1980, and this was used as a basis of such a Special Saloon, a Lotus Esprit that he raced in 1982 with an 1800cc Cosworth engine. He then fitted a 3400cc Ford GAA to it, and raced it in this form from 1983 to 1988. In 1985, it was crashed at Brands Hatch, and rebuilt using a March acquired from the Channel Islands. Cummings then bought a March 802 in AC bodywork and the March-based Esprit was driven by Ricky Gauld (Huntly, Aberdeenshire, Scotland) in GT racing at Ingliston in 1989 and 1990. Gauld bought the March from Ron Cummings, recalling that it was "an ex Super Saloon", and used it in March form in hillclimbs in 1994. Meanwhile, the original 742 monocoque and associated parts were sold by Cummings to Hall & Fowler (late Hall & Hall). Rick Hall remembers the transaction and recalls selling such a car to Graham Williams. Some years later, in 2009, the 742 monocoque still with original chasis plate and all its associated parts were acquired by dealer Kevan McLurg from someone in the English northwest. Initially he sold it all to Tony Dunderdale as spares for his own car, but when Dunderdale sold his own 742, the remains of 742-20 were sold by McLurg to a man in Belgium. Subsequent history unknown.
  4. March 75B [75B-U1] (Ray Mallock): An unnumbered March 75B built for Ray Mallock (Roade, Northamptonshire) and run for him in British Formula Atlantic and some F2 races by Ardmore Racing in 1975. It replaced the second-hand March 742 that Mallock wrecked in the Thruxton Formula 2 race in March, but it is possible that the 75B was still used the chassis plate of the old 742 during this time, as it was listed by Motoring News as "742/12" twice in 1975 and was also described as a 742 by Motoring News at Hockenheim in September 1976. Mallock raced the car in F2 for the last four races of 1975. For 1976, Ardmore Racing bought a Lola T450 for Mallock, but when that proved a flop, fitted the March with a Swindon BDX engine and Mallock raced that car in Formula 2 specification in the European F2 series and in the Shellsport Group 8 series. During the season it was further modified with wider sidepods and its main radiator moved to the front, and from Pau onwards used the nose from one of Ray Mallock's father's Mallock U2s. Ardmore boss Creighton Brown also raced it in a libre race at Oulton Park in October. It was last raced by Mallock at Brands Hatch on 7 November 1976. This is likely to be the 75B advertised by MRE (Bourne End, Bucks) in Autosport four days later, described as "Updated to full F2 spec" with FG gearbox and "2 litre alloy engine". In the same edition of Autosport, Lucien Lampach (Wiltz, Luxembourg) was seeking a F2 car, and photographs indicate that he acquired the modified Mallock 75B and ran it as a March 742 in European hillclimbs in 1977 and 1978. Numerous reports mentioned it having a Swindon engine, so presumably its Swindon BDX. Subsequent history unknown.
  5. March 752 [22] (Maurizio Flammini): New to Ron Dennis's Project Three Racing but using an early-season monocoque that had already been used by the work team. Raced by Patrick Depailler at Pau, then Vittorio Brambilla at Salzburgring, and by Bruno Pescia, Sandro Cinotti, Tim Schenken and Maurizio Flammini later in the season. Sold to John Nicholson for 1976, fitted with a Chevrolet Vega engine and used in F2 and in the Shellsport G8 series. To Alan Baillie for 1977, who fitted a Swindon BDX engine for libre, Shellsport and Aurora over the next three seasons. Subsequent history unknown.
  6. Chevron B29 [29-75-10] (Xavier Lapeyre): New to Fred Stalder's Societé Racing Organisation Course (Annemasse, Haute-Savoie, France), and fitted with ROC's Chrysler-Simca-based engines, developed by Max Funda (Geneva, Switzerland) for Formula 2 in 1975. Raced by Xavier Lapeyre (Toulouse, southwest France), starting at Hockenheim in April. Lapeyre left ROC for 1976, but retained the Chevron, fitting a BMW engine and racing it in five events at the start of 1976, failing to qualify for four of them. The last time the B29 was seen was at Pau on 7 June, where Lapeyre failed to qualify, and at the next race, at Rouen three weeks later, he had a new Chevron B35. Sold to Werner Ruckelshausen for Austrian national races in 1977, where it was entered as a "Chevron Swindon" of 2000cc capacity, implying a Swindon BDX engine. Subsequent thistory unknown.
  7. March 742L [21] (Gianfranco Trombetti): New to the CSAI's Equipe Nationale, then managed by Eugenio Dragoni, for Diulio Truffo to drive in F2 in 1974. After Dragoni's sudden death in April 1974, the team was managed by Ottorino Maffezzoli, the Monza circuit director. Run by Osella Squadra Corse for Truffo until his new Osella was ready, then to Gianfranco Trombetti for the rest of the 1975 season.
  8. Chevron B29 [29-75-12] (Jean-Pierre Beltoise): New to Fred Stalder's Societé Racing Organisation Course (Annemasse, Haute-Savoie, France), and fitted with ROC's Chrysler-Simca-based engines, developed by Max Funda (Geneva, Switzerland) for Formula 2 in 1975. Raced by Christian Ethuin, starting at Hockenheim in April, and also by former F1 driver Jean-Pierre Beltoise at Magny Cours, Pau and Nogaro. It was part of a two car team with Xavier Lapeyre driving the other car. Laurent Ferrier then drove the car in the final race of the season but did not qualify. It was raced by Roger Rivoire in two French hillclimbs in early 1976, at Charnizay and at Hébecrevon, and later in the year was driven by Jean Lachaud at Le Gua and Limonest-Mt Verdun. Press reports said it had been loaned to Lachaud by ROC boss Fred Stalder for these two events. As Xavier Lapeyre had retained his B29 for 1976, Lachaud must have been in the ex-Beltoise car. By the same logic, 75-12 is likely to be the ROC-engined Chevron bought by Ange-Marie Cheval from Stalder for 1977. It was described as a B27/B29, a B29 and a B29/35, but photographs in Echappement clearly show a B29. Advertised in Echappement in October 1977 as a B29/35. Subsequent history unknown, but there is a good chance this could be the "B35"-ROC raced by Jean Arzeno at Ceyreste in September 1979 and then the "B35" raced by Bernard Hazotte from 1980 onwards.
  9. Chevron B29 [29-75-30] (Hans Binder): Built as a works development car, and tested by Brian Redman. Then entered by Jörg Obermoser's Team Warsteiner Eurorace for Hans Binder to drive in Formula 2 with a Rosche BMW engine, when it was reported to be chassis 32. Brian Redman drove it in the 1976 New Zealand Internationals, still with its 2-litre BMW engine, this time as part of the Fred Opert team. Sold in New Zealand to David Oxton, fitted with a Formula Pacific BDA engine and raced in the New Zealand Formula Pacific series in January 1977. Then to Eric Morgan for Gold Star and International races from 1977 to 1981. Sold to Chris Read for 1982. Later history with the car indicates that it was sold by Read to Kenny Smith in 1991, then to Brian Sampson in 1992, then Peter Whelan in 2000, and Miles Jackson in 2008.
  10. March 742 [15] (Gabriele Serblin): Sold to Trivellato Racing Team and raced by Gabrielle Serblin in F2 in 1974. Retained by Trivellato as a spare car for 1975 and raced by Alberto Colombo, Francesco Cerulli-Irelli, Serblin and "Gimax" (Carlo Franchi). Raced by Gimax at a few Italian F2 races in 1976 and 1977 then to Richard Jones and Robin Smith for the Aurora AFX series in mid-1978, using the Cosworth BDG (or BDA) engine from the pair's Chevron B31 sports car that had been wrecked at Le Mans. Also raced by fellow sports car racer Tony Charnell at the end of 1978. The car is then unknown for two years, until an "Atlantic March" 742 with 772 bodywork was advertised by Ralph Halley, an Opel dealer in Milngavie, a suburb of Glasgow. It was bought from Halley by Jim McGaughey (Lochgilphead, Argyll and Bute, Scotland) and rebuilt as a Renault 5GT special saloon for 1981, using bodywork modelled on the new Renault 5 Turbo by Graham Kelly, a 1930cc Cosworth FVC acquired from Jimmy Jack, and a Hewland FT200 gearbox. It debuted in this form at Ingliston in April 1981, and won McGaughey the 1981 Scottish GT Championship. He then fitted an ex-F2 BMW M12 engine acquired from hillclimber Barrogill Angus, and raced it again in 1982 and 1983. When the special saloon's career ended, it was acquired by the Higgins Brothers of Lincolnshire, and was bought from them by Ian Jones in 1990, by which time it was in a very sorry state. Jones reskinned the monocoque using the original bulkheads, fabricated new suspension parts, and fitted late-1974 (long-nose) F2 bodywork. Jones sold it to Richard Evans in 2010, and by 2012 it was completed with a Gathercole BDG in Stebel livery and was raced in the Derek Bell Trophy races at the HSCC Superprix at Brands Hatch. Shared by Evans and Andrew Smith in Historic F2 from 2013 onwards.
  11. Elf (Jabouille) 2J [7501] (Gérard Larrousse): New for the Elf Switzerland team in 1975, based on the Alpine A367 chassis 3671. The car was completed in time for 50 km of testing at Dijon before the first race of the 1975 F2 season at Estoril on 9 March. Jean-Pierre Jabouille placed it fourth on the grid at that race, but struggled in the wet race conditons and finished eighth. He qualified scond at Hockenheim in April, then won the non-championship race at Magny Cours in May. He was second on the grid again at Pau, Hockenheim again in June and Salzburgring, winning the latter race. He took the 2J's first pole position at Rouen-les-Essarts two weeks later. The second 2J was then completed, so this car was handed over to Gérard Larrousse, who finished a fine second at Silverstone but retired with engine problems at Zolder and Nogaro. This car was consumed in the creation of new cars with Renault V6 engines for 1976. Whether chassis 7502 became the new chassis 7602 remains unresolved.
  12. March 752 [17] (Bruno Pescia): New to Ron Dennis's Project Three team and raced by Vittorio Brambilla and Sandro Cinotti during the first half of the 1975 F2 season. Crashed heavily by Brambilla in practice at Mugello, then raced by Bruno Pescia at the end of the year. Sold to Max Bonnin for 1976 but only seen at a few races. To Sylvain Lachaud for French hillclimbs in 1977 but referred to as a 742 for much of the year. To Bernard-Etienne Grobot for 1978 but he crashed very heavily at Gué-Chervais in September and the car was returned to March for repairs. To Anne Baverey for 1979, when described as a 772, but damaged mid-season and sold to Philippe Porcheur. Retained by Porcheur for 1980, when it was again described as a 772. Bought from Porcheur by Eddy D'Hoe for Belgian hillclimbs in 1981. Then to Pierre Evrard (Rochefort, Belgium) for Belgian hillclimbs in 1982 and 1983. Subsequent history unknown.
  13. March 742L [732-10] (Antônio Castro Prado): STP March Engineering works car for Jean-Pierre Beltoise at Hockenheim and later by Jean-Pierre Jarier at two races. Probably the car used by Jacques Coulon at Hockenheim, by Beltoise at Albi and by Stuck at Estoril. To Brian Lewis Racing for 1974 and updated to 742 spec for Andy Sutcliffe as '742-10b', then run for hire drivers later in the year. To Roger Heavens for Antônio Castro Prado for F2 in the latter part of 1975, then sold via Hervé Le Guellec to Jimmy Mieusset as a backup car for French hillclimbing at the start of the 1976 season. Also used by Roger Rivoire in May 1976, and then sold to Jean-Pierre Simon in June 1976. Retained by Simon for 1977, still with its BMW engine. Unknown in 1978, when it could have been the 742-BMW of, for example, Robert Despratx in southwest France. Then to Maurice Crozier and raced in 1979 and 1980 with a 1600cc Ford engine. Advertised by Crozier with or without its 1600cc Cosworth FVA engine in November 1980. Acquired by Daniel Mangini during 1981, and fitted with an ex-Pourcher Ford engine. Raced by him in courses de côte in 1982. History then unknown until it was advertised by Yves Bonjean (Pont-du-Château, Auvergne, France) in September 1997. The car was still in the 1977 bodywork used by Crozier. Sold via Philippe Demeyer (Liège, Belgium) to Simon Hadfield (Shepshed, Leicestershire). Sold to Howard Katz (New York, NY) who raced it extensively in US vintage racing around 2005. To Nick Osborn (UK) and raced in Historic F2 in 2016, still exactly in Katz' livery. Still owned by Osborn in February 2019, but by the summer it was owned by Graham Adelman, who also owned the Beta-liveried 732/4. Adelman raced the STP-liveried 732 at the 2019 Silverstone Classic.
  14. Chevron B29 [29-75-03] (Héctor Rebaque): New to Fred Opert Racing as a Formula 2 car for Hector Rebaque. Raced by Rebaque in the first five races of the season and then hired to Maxime Bochet for Pau in May. The car was next seen in September when it was raced by Rebaque at Zolder and Nogaro, and it was very probably the car then driven by Tom Bagley at Vallelunga in October. It was then converted to Formula Atlantic specification and sold to Carl Liebich (Plymouth, WI) and used in the IMSA and Players Formula Atlantic series. In August, Liebich acquired a new Lola T460, and the Chevron was advertised by Lola importer Carl Haas in November 1976. The history of the Chevron is then unknown until it was advertised by David Klutsenbaker (Nashville, TN) in February 1984. Klutsenbaker had owned a 1972 Brabham BT38B until January 1983, so it likely that he had only had the Chevron for one season. The B29 was bought by Ted Voruz (Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin) in 1990. It was bought from Voruz by Howard Blight (Sydney, NSW) in late 2005, and raced in a few events in 2008. Then to David Kent, and raced by him from 2013 to 2016.
  15. March 732 ["59"] (Max Bonnin): Max Bonnin raced a March in Formula 2 in 1974, which was described by Motoring News as being "one of last year's March monocoques", to which Bonnin had fitted his own suspension, "which featured narrower track and revised roll centres". Bonnin later told Gérard Gamand that he acquired an unused 732 monocoque to build this car. It was powered by a Hart BDA. Bonnin raced this car in F2 through 1974 and 1975 before buying a March 752 for 1976. The 732, by then called a 742, was sold to Jean-Louis Albinet and used in French hillclimbs in 1976, 1977 and 1978, using a 2-litre Hart engine. In July 1978, Albinet acquired a Martini MK22, and the March-Hart was sold to Gérard Lafaurie (Bordeaux, Aquitaine), first appearing in August 1978 in a "March 732", and then regularly from the start of 1979 in a "March 742". Lafaurie raced the car again in 1980, 1981, and 1982. Later in 1982, the car was sold to Pascal Malateste, who fitted the 1600cc engine from his Pygmée. He raced the car in 1982 and 1983, before it passed to his father Yves Malateste in 1984. It is reported that the elder Malateste had a severe accident in the car, leaving him in a wheelchair. It is also reported that the remains of this car were sold to dealer/collector Christian Hollinger (Lyon, Rhône-Alpes, France), who took them to mechanic Jean-Pierre Navarro (Montluel, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes), who built a new March 712-style monocoque and reassembled the car to be used in the 1600cc Historic F2 series. According to Navarro's records, the resulting car was delivered by Hollinger to Frédéric Lacarelle (Lyon, Rhône-Alpes). The car's HVIF shows Lacarelle acquiring it in January 1994. From Lacarelle, it went to Jean-Jacques Gravier (Servolex, Rhône-Alpes) who entered it for Historic Formula 2 events between 1999 and 2002 as a March "71B". Subsequent history withheld.
  16. Surtees TS15A (Hans Meier): An experimental Surtees TS15 various described as the EXP or TS15X or "Exp 2" and driven by John Watson in F2 in 1974. It was also driven by Derek Bell at Hockenheim in June. It appears to have been one of a pair loaned to Space Racing in 1975 for Hans Meier, but he wrecked the "ex-Watson" car in practice at Zolder and was unable to take over the second car as it had not been through scrutineering. He then failed to qualify for the next two races in the "ex-Watson" car. John Woodington of Space Racing recalls that both cars were returned to John Surtees after the season. Subsequent history unresolved.

Sources

Note that the identification of individual cars in these results is based on the material presented elsewhere in this site and may in some cases contradict the organisers' published results.

All comments, clarifications, corrections and additions are most welcome. Please email Allen (allen@oldracingcars.com) if you can help in any way with our research.

Individual sources for this event

Motoring News (2 Oct 1975 pp11-13) lists chassis numbers for all starters again. Jaussaud is now in the Gomm-Metal-liveried Project 3 car, again given as 752-27 but more likely to 752-23. Flammini had also joined the Project 3 team to replace Sandro Cinotti and was in 752-22. Giancarlo Martini was reported to be in '752-15' but March records show this was the nom de guerre of 752-7.