Talbot Owners' Club

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Le Mans Classic 2018 6th Jul 2018

A victorious event for Talbots!  The outstanding performance of the Talbots at the 9th running of Le Mans Classic, held on the famous Sarthe circuit from 6th – 8th July. There were seven Talbots among the 70 cars in Plateau One, the pre-war grid:

GO52 – Gareth Burnett

JJ93 – Michael Birch

BGH21 – William Medcalf and Patrick Blakeney-Edwards

GO53 – Chris Lunn

GO54 – Nick Pellett

AYL2 – Graham Goodwin

PL2 – Luc Slijpen

Qualifying took place in the hot sunshine of Friday afternoon, resulting in Gareth taking pole position, with nearly a 20 second gap to the 2nd car, Michael Birch in JJ93. BGH21 qualified in 7th, AYL2 was in 22nd place, GO54 in 31st, GO53 in 40th and Luc in PL2 in 58th.  But back in the pits there was some disconcerting news. Nick Pellett had pulled off when GO54 lost oil pressure on the Mulsanne Straight – not the place to destroy a good engine! And Chris Lunn had a serious oil leak from the front of his gearbox. The tech crews worked hard all night to resolve Chris’ problem, but GO53 played no further part. And sadly, the same was the case for GO54.

Gareth’s reflections on the qualifying session:‘LMC only comes around every other year, so for us it is the main event to showcase the capabilities of the Talbots to the historic racing world. And this year would be more important than ever as that Blue Lago-Talbot was again out to prove itself unbeatable.

So, into qualifying we would find out the reality… Well, even I was surprised at the power of GO 52 as we headed down to Indianapolis the fastest part of the course, watching the rev counter climb - 4,800, 4,900, 5,000, 5,100 – 5,200rpm and a lap of 5-50 which seemed easy! We worked out the speed and it was 138mph without help of slipstream.  Imagine what it would have been if car was more streamlined!

John Ruston was getting excited in the pits, as our only serious competitor, the Talbot Lago, had come in with the stench of oil so it seemed a dramatic failure.  Turned out to be holed piston and it was put back on the truck.”

Race day was a scorcher! Following the mock ‘Le Mans start’ and formation lap, it was a memorable and dramatic moment to watch the two leading Talbots come belting round the bend at the end of the start straight as they headed to the chicane and the Dunlop Bridge. There were a couple of BMW 328’s and a noisy Bugatti trying to give them a hard time, but both Talbots showed a clean pair of heels to the rest of the field as they headed to Tertre Rouge and the Mulsanne Straight.

But then, disaster! On the huge TV screens, we could see Gareth in GO52 slowing down as he approached the pits well ahead of the compulsory pitstop window. Mechanics ran over, bonnet was raised and there was feverish activity. Memories of a previous Le Mans where the throttle linkage came loose – and that’s what happened again, once more with a fix that allowed Gareth to get racing again after five minutes of lost time. So at the end of Race 1, Michael Birch was holding 1st place, with his nearest rival, a BMW 328, some 32 seconds behind. BGH21 had held station and was in 6th, Graham Goodwin had done a brilliant job bringing AYL2 home in 10th, and Gareth was by now over 3 minutes behind in 15th position. PL2 was running its own race, and Luc had moved up through the field to finish the first race in 46th position.

John Ruston, the man whose energy and investment has taken these historic cars to such heights, continues the story:

“So, based on what we knew, Gareth had to take an average of fifteen seconds a lap for the remaining two races to catch Michael if he had any chance of winning, and that assumes no safety cars or red flags.
One hazard we had overlooked was the very fast Bugatti, driven by Robert Spencer, with his fancy Red Bull lights. Gareth started the night race really well and found for the first three laps the Bugatti was with him with these superb lights. This presented us with another problem, as Michael was doing his best with normal Talbot lights! The lines are hard to find but he was losing time to Gareth and Robert Spencer. So quite simply, we changed the pit stop routine to get rid of Robert, and it worked as he slowed down when he didn’t have a tow. At end of the night race, Michael finished 4th, but was still in 1st place overall in JJ93, with Robert Spencer in the Bugatti 2nd with Gareth 3rd and BGH21 6th. It was close, and Gareth needed to find a minute to get 2nd place and virtually two minutes to Michael – possible, but only if nothing went wrong.
Off we went in Race 3 with Michael gapping Robert Spencer, so that guaranteed his position, and Gareth at the front of proceedings gaining enough time to win overall. Seemed easy until someone dropped oil on the racing line, and clerk of course decided to wave red flag. They then had to count back, as the race had finished at completion of previous lap. It was very close! Gareth had taken 1st place from Michael by just eight seconds! BGH21 finished in 7th place, and Graham Goodwin was 12th – a brilliant result on his first international race in a Talbot.”

For Michael Birch, heading the field for so long and coming home to a brilliant 2nd place was an emotional experience.  In his own words:

“I quickly came to appreciate the superior handling characteristics of the Alpine bodied 105 when experiencing brake fade at almost 130 mph along the four long fast sections of the Mulsanne and into Indianapolis. Just as I’d found at Donington it was a case of throw it in to the corner and hope, as I certainly wasn’t going to slow down enough, but I quickly realised that’s just how you race them. They handle so well you can go into a corner much quicker than you first think! One of the highlights is spinning the rear tyres on the exit coming out of Arnage. But the best of all is how quick they are through the Porsche Curves, you can just press on hard and leave most other cars long forgotten in your rear-view mirror.”

This was Talbot’s best performance at Le Mans Classic, and included Gareth setting a new pre-war lap record of 5:50.203, beating his own previous record by one second.

And a note from Des Burnett that sums up this great achievement:

“The "icing on the cake" at Le Mans was, of course, Gareth and Michael Birch coming 1st and 2nd - a great testament to the new heads and blocks for which we also have to thank Richard Newby for his foundry skills and associated help and advice. And, of course, none of this would have got off the ground without the foresight and enthusiasm of John Ruston. This is a seminal moment in establishing the long-term future of our fabulous Talbots! In what other single car can you tour the world, win the Flying Scotsman and trounce the opposition at Le Mans?!”

It was this time last year that I commented on what, at the time, was the most exciting pre-war race I’d ever seen, at the Silverstone Classic when Gareth in GO52 just held off the Nash of Patrick Blakeney-Edwards to win the pre-war race. That race has now been demoted to second place!

 

 

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