• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

VeloceToday.com

The Online Magazine for Italian and French Classic Car Enthusiasts

  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Contact
  • Donate
  • As Found

Inside Autodelta

Inside the Walls of Autodelta Part 7: Le Mans, 1972

February 24, 2015 By pete

Story and photos by Robert Little
All images copyright Robert Little

(Read Part 1)
(Read Part 2)
(Read Part 3)
(Read Part 4)
(Read Part 5)
(Read Part 6)

Following the absolutely heart-breaking loss to a Ferrari 312P driven by Sandro Munari and Arturo Merzario by only a mere 17 seconds over the course of nearly 500 miles of the Sicilian countryside in the Targa Florio only weeks before, Ing. Chiti was even more determined to break the domination of the 312Ps and to take on all challengers to the 1972 World Championship for Makes title.

Unfortunately, a high stakes game of ‘cat and mouse’ ensued where Ferrari withdrew from Le Mans, Porsche did not enter a factory team, and Alfa Romeo Autodelta was facing 12 cylinder Matras, Cosworth-powered Lolas, Ligiers, a variety of French Ferrari dealer racing teams sporting Daytonas, the BF Goodrich Team of Chevrolet Corvettes, a couple DeTomaso Panteras and a vast plethora of privately-entered 908s, 911s.

The Autodelta team, sponsored by Alitalia, Shell, Goodyear and Koni brought three V-8 cars to the circuit along with a full and complete racing caravan of spare parts, a large Alfa Romeo autobus machining operation and a full staff…including the writer who was once again in charge of keeping the cars absolutely spotless, keeping the local Le Mans Alfa Romeo garage clean and guarding the assets of the company during off hours.

The FIA formula for the World Championship for Makes competition and this 1972 Twenty Four Hours of LeMans race specified that prototypes run with three-liter engines. The era of the magnificent 4.5-litre 917 in Le Mans was over, but a 908 long tail privately entered by Reinhold Joest turned heads. Joest, Mario Casoni and Michael Weber shared the car owned by Jo Siffert and scored third overall behind two factory entered Matra-Simca 670’s and a single Matra-Simca 660. The 908 benefited mainly from its sophisticated long-tail aerodynamics and low weight. Despite its substantially lower engine output compared to the works Matra-Simcas, the Porsche reached an identical top speed on the Mulsanne straight.

We enter the town of Le Mans...

The local Alfa Romeo authorized service facility in Le Mans kindly offered the use of its entire facilities to the Autodelta team. Note the Alfa sign on the building at right. Also peer closely on the left for a glimpse of the Alfa Romeo transporter in the process of unloading our three T-33 cars.

Combined with the Alfa Romeo machine-shop-autobus parked outside, this shop had every possible convenience required by the team to prepare the cars. Clean, well-lit, spacious enough to fit everything and relatively private. In the unlikely event that an emergency part or sub-assembly became necessary, the ride from Settimo Milanese to Le Mans was a relative short transit of perhaps six hours or so.

barn-find--f

This content is for Premium Subscriber members only.
LoginSubscribe

Tagged With: 33TT Targa Florio, Alfa 33TT12, Alfa at Le Mans, Alfa GTA autodelta, alfa racing, alfa romeo and autodelta, autodelta, Autodelta at Le Mans, Autodelta factory, carlo chiti, GTA alfa romeo, Helmut Marko, Inside Autodelta, le mans 1972, Robert Little, Targa Florio, what is an autodelta alfa, what is autodelta

Inside the Walls of Autodelta Part 6: At the Targa Florio

February 16, 2015 By pete

Story and Photos by Robert Little

(Read Part 1)
(Read Part 2)
(Read Part 3)
(Read Part 4)
(Read Part 5)

Dear Readers: I am pleased to open the door of history a tiny bit wider through the exposition of these images taken about 43 years ago. Please however remember the following:

The images themselves were captured on Kodak color slide film using a fine quality 35mm camera for the period. However, the pictures cannot be compared with the resolution quality found with today’s photographic equipment.

Secondly I hope you understand that as a worker for Ing. Chiti I had almost no opportunity to take photographs while “on duty” so many of the photographic opportunities during the many races I attended were lost to the fact that I was there to serve and not to photograph. My number of interesting images was restricted by this commitment. I hope you will enjoy the images I was able to capture and seek the true ‘atmospheric’ shots where they are to be found in commercially available books and magazines on the subject.

Meeting the Autodelta Team in Sicily for the Targa Florio

After arriving in Sicily (Read Part 5), I met up with the Autodelta team, who had rented garage space from the Motel Aurim in Cerda. As the lowest member of the Autodelta ‘totem pole’, I was responsible for keeping all of the cars in spotless condition during the season, so that history would record every Autodelta car looking its absolute fastest and shiny best at the track appearances and in all future photographs.

For the actual race I was stationed somewhere along the course in the mountains. equipped with front and rear spare tires, fuel, a few tools, gasoline, coolant and a large Alfa Romeo sign board to represent an assistance point for drivers.

Evocative; a scene which could only be from the Targa Florio. This is the Vic Elford/Van Lennep Alfa being fueled up.

One of Carlo Chiti’s Darkest Moments: The 1972 Targa Florio

Autodelta had made a major concerted effort to win here and threw the entire weight and prestige of the parent company behind this effort, under the assumption that Ferrari would not bother to enter the race, having a good lead in the World Manufacturer’s Championship. However, at the last minute, Ferrari entered a 312P to be driven by Arturo Merzario and Sandro Munari. Still with four cars entered for Vaccarella/Stommelen, Elford/Van Lennep, de Adamich/ Hezemans and Nanni Galli/Helmut Marko, Chiti was confident of a win.

I had been driving the circuit fairly quickly in my Giulia 1600 with my camera on the passenger seat...it was all I could do to avoid clipping this Ferrari 312P coming toward me at full speed while at the same moment capturing this image. The one car entry took Autodelta by surprise.

barn-find--f

This content is for Premium Subscriber members only.
LoginSubscribe

Tagged With: 33TT Targa Florio, Alfa 33TT12, Alfa GTA autodelta, alfa racing, alfa romeo and autodelta, autodelta, Autodelta factory, carlo chiti, GTA alfa romeo, Helmut Marko, Inside Autodelta, Robert Little, Targa Florio, what is an autodelta alfa, what is autodelta

Primary Sidebar

     SIGN UP BELOW TO RECEIVE VELOCETODAY EVERY WEEK FOR FREE

         

       EXCLUSIVE ARTICLES ABOUT 

    EXTRAORDINARY AUTOMOBILES

PositiveSSL

Recent Posts

  • VeloceToday for March 3, 2026
  • Sports Car Racing at Midland, TX 1960-62
  • Smith’s Alfa Vintage Racing Chronicles
  • Squarebacks to Love
  • The Final Word on Squarebacks!
  • Sports Car Racing at Midland, TX, 1959
  • Tripoli 1939: Italian Job That Mis-fired
  • Gauld Checks Out the Ferrari Estate Car
  • Juan Manuel Fangio Tribute
  • Sports Car Racing at Midland, TX, 1958-59
  • Behind the PBS SOCAL Story: My Extra 5 Minutes of Fame
  • Sharp’s Retro Part 4: French Classics
  • Sharp’s Retro Part 5: Interesting Others
  • Sharp’s Retro Part 6: Art and Neat Stuff
  • Sharp’s Retro Part 1: Ferrari
  • Sharp’s Retro Part 2: Alfa and Lancia
  • Sharp’s Retro Part 3: Fiat and Others
  • Amore mio Ardea
  • Bill Warner finds the Don Vitale Nardi
  • Thornley Kelham, the home of the Lancia Bandit
  • The Legends of Bob Gerard
  • Retromobile 2026, First Report
  • Graham Gauld on Nardi
  • Gauld and the Auburn Douze
  • The Races of Life, a Review
  • The Selected Works of Aldo Zana
  • Aldo Zana at the Monaco Grand Prix, 1968
  • Wilson’s 6C 2500: Will it Fit?
  • Panning for Gold Part 2
  • Robert F. Pauley explores the SCCA parking lots

Copyright © 2026 · VeloceToday.com · Privacy · Sitemap

MENU
  • Home
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Contact
  • Donate
  • As Found