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hugues vanhooldant

Gordini Gallery

April 18, 2013 By pete

By Pete Vack
Photos by Hugues Vanhoolandt

Recently we published two articles about Gordini before WWII., Gauld on Gordini and Gordini Before the Big One. This week, Hugues Vanhoolandt gives us a post war Gordini Gallery, consisting of photos taken all over Europe since 2008.

Before VeloceToday contributor Roy Smith wrote his latest book, Gordini, the only source of in depth information about the cars was ChristianHuet’s amazing book, on the subject. Published in 1984 in French, Huet traced the history of Gordini, plus all known cars.

Huet’s task was made a bit easier because there were very few Gordinis ever built; every chassis was a race car so race events and photos provided a field for research. In 1957, when Amedee Gordini retired his cars from racing and went to work with Renault, he wisely sold many of the remaining Gordinis to museums throughout France. The largest recipients of were the Schlumpf brothers, who in 1960 came into the possession of 13 of the 32 post war Gordinis. Other cars were kept by their owners, hidden away until it became affordable to have them restored.

While at the very same time Ferrari blithely went about destroying his old racecars, the Gordini’s enshrined in the museums ensured that his remarkable and beautiful jewels would never die, enhancing his own legacy and history. Since the 1990s, many of the ex-museum cars have come into the hands of those who wish to see them in action once more. Some 56 years after Gordini retired his cars, a few now appear at selected events such as the Monaco Historics and Goodwood. Few, if any, can be seen in the US, although in 2001 one did appear at the Monterey Historics.

Gordini’s cars were a unique combination; French, Italian, exquisite and fast. The rarity and successful race records plus the drivers such as Behra and Fangio, make them as desirable as a mid-fifties classic could possibly be. Information, photos, specs, and tests were sparse and even less well known in the U.S. Fred Wacker was one of the few Americans who actively raced a Gordini, and he did so in Europe. Gordini brought cars to race in the Carrera Panamericana but the cars returned to France. For years, Gordinis remained mysterious and unknown, and since most were in museums, few ventured out to vintage race car events.

As related in our earlier articles, Gordini was supported heavily by the new Simca company prior to the war. This support continued after WWII and the cars were known as Simca Gordinis. Then came the disastrous 1951 Le Mans, when all four 1500cc Gordinis retired. It was too much for Simca’s M. Pigozzi; he pulled his financial support for Gordini and from that point on the cars were known only as Gordinis.

A note about chassis numbers and Types. Postwar, Gordini created an 1100cc formula car much like the Cisitalia D46. These were called T11s. Over the years most T11s were modified and upgraded to T15 which were, for the most part, 1490cc. T15s were often upgraded or changed to sports racers, such as 18s. Each had a unique chassis number, generally in order of initial construction; 02 GCs, 06 GS, 18GC, etc. The letter ‘s’ after the numbers or suffix would mean a sports model. Engines had Types as well, T15 at just under 1500cc being the most common. Almost all chassis had a “immatriculation” number, or license tag. It can get confusing and thankfully in this case there are only 32 chassis to track, and all the work has been done by Huet and recently updated by Roy Smith in his new book on Gordini. (Smith’s book is completely different and takes the Gordini saga right through to the Renault years and beyond.) We’ve asked Roy to check our assumptions below and we thank him for his corrections. However, that does not guarantee that all of the below information is 100 % correct.

Note that Ed McDonough will be featured driving s/n 19GCS coming up in VT, and we’ll take a much closer look at s/n 33 in the near future.

Finally, thanks to our man Hugues Vanhoolandt, we are able to present these Gordinis for this article. I imagine he has been wondering if we’d ever use them!

Gordini Gallery

Chassis number 02GC
Number 15 is a monoposto, original chassis number 02GC, constructed in 1947. It was driven by Gordini himself at the Torino GP in 1946, before he decided to retire from racing. Maurice Trintignant also took part to some races in this particular car. Driven at Monaco in 2008 by Jean-Jacques Bailly (F).

02GC began life as an 1100 cc, but today has a DOHC Gordini head, bigger wheels and tires for the extra power. Almost all Gordinis were upgraded through the years.

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Tagged With: gordini, gordini 02gc, gordini 06gc, gordini 19gcs, gordini 20s, gordini 22, gordini 36s, gordini book, gordini gp, gordini history, gordini racers, hugues vanhooldant, roy smith

Italians at Retro

February 15, 2012 By pete

barnyard ferrari find

Retro at its best shows off the latest discoveries like this 1954 Ferrari 250 Monza spyder Pinin Farina.

Hugues Vanhoolandt on some of the Italian cars that appeared at Retromobile this year.

By Hugues Vanhoolandt

Cisitalia 33DF

Despite the success of the 202 coupe, Cisitalia was still struggling. In 1953 the company decided to create a line of cars based on both the 1900 and 1100 Fiat chassis. The line was called the ‘DF’ for ‘Deriving from Fiat‘. Notably, the Cisitalia tubular frame was now gone and the chassis was Fiat. The 1100 cars were designated 33DF and the first was a spyder with cut down doors shown at the 1953 Turin Auto Show. But the production models were almost all coupes, as shown here and given the name ‘Voloradente’ or ’low flying’. The engine was modified to produce around 70 hp. Less than 20 were produced.

Siata 208

The Siata 208S, equipped with the Fiat 8V engine, was the perfect car for the West Coast. Ernie McAfee imported nearly all of them to California.

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Tagged With: Alfa 1900 Ghia, barnyard ferraris, ferrari found, gilles villenueve, hugues vanhooldant, italian cars retro, pininfarina, retromobile 2012

A Singular GTO: Vanhoolandt and 3223

September 21, 2011 By vanhoolandt

Michael T. Lynch provided the background story to this GTO. Here Hugues Vanhoolandt gives us a full round of the ex-Perkins GTO.


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Tagged With: ferrari gto, ferrari gto 3223, gto, gto at pebble beach, gto s/n 3223, hugues vanhooldant, larry perkins, michael t lynch, monterey car show, pebble beach gto

Belgian Grand Prix 2011

September 1, 2011 By vack

Back on track: Sebastian Vettel does it again for Red Bull. Photo by Hugues Vanhoolandt.

By Eric Davison
Photos by Hugues Vanhoolandt for VeloceToday

The event at Spa held no major surprises in that the Red Bull duo of Vettel and Webber made short shrift of the competition. Although Webber made what has become a normal start for him and faltered, losing about five positions while Nico Rosberg surprised everyone by rocketing past Vettel into a lead that didn’t last.
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Tagged With: belgian f1, belgian f1 2011, Belgian grand prix, f1 reports, hugues vanhooldant, schumacher, spa, vettel, webber

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