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talbot lago

Trackside at the Revival

October 2, 2023 By pete

Story and photos by Jonathan Sharp

Dear readers, if you will allow me just one more outing before we say goodbye to racing at Goodwood for the 2023. The follow are just some random shots taken by me from the chicane and assembly area track exit. No driver’s names, no race positions, just some photographs of old racing cars doing what they do best…..racing. Goodbye Goodwood, see you again in 2024.

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Tagged With: 4CLT Maserati, 6 CM Maserati, alfa monza, BRM V16, Chenard-Walcker, Goodwood Revival 2023, Jonathan Sharp photo, talbot lago

Name that Car! Seavey Photo Art

June 26, 2023 By pete

Talbot. 1955 Talbot Lago T26 GSL. 2014 Concorso car on the Plaza early one morning. I mentioned earlier about the recalcitrant pre-selector gearbox. This was the car in question. Only 19 of these were ever built, and this is the only one with a factory built 4.3 liter six, making 210 hp.

Photoart by Charley Seavey

In a few weeks we’ll feature early 1960s Grand Prix photos from the Seavey photo archives, but this week Charley shows more of his Santa Fe Concours photos from various years. You’ll see a Tubster, a rare in this country Maserati A6GCS/53, a car with no name and most impressive, an Isotta Fraschini Flying Star. Then there is the yellow TZ1 with a number reminiscent of the Bob Tullius race team. And see what happens when a lowrider lifts its skirts.
All here and more. Just enjoy.

Oh yes, the first reader to properly identify the car in the very last photo gets a free year’s subscription to VeloceToday. If you are already a subscriber, give it to a friend! Send your guess to vack@cox.net.

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Tagged With: Auburn Cord Duesenberg Museum, Charley Seavey, Daimler, Ferrari 512, lowriders, Santa Fe Vintage Car Club, talbot lago, tubster

Pebble Beach Concours Photo Gallery

September 3, 2019 By pete

Story and photos by Hugues Vanhoolandt

The Pebble Beach Concours d’Elégance began in tandem with the Pebble Beach Road Races in 1950 and was at its 69th edition this year. Brandes Elitch has reported in more depth about this year’s event. Here I present a modest gallery from my perspective.

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Tagged With: Bentley at Pebble Beach, cars at pebble beach, figoni et falaschi, Hugues Vanhooiandt, pebble beach 2019, talbot lago, Zagato at Pebble Beach

Talbot’s Post War Gran Turismo

November 27, 2018 By pete

From the Archives, December 26, 2012
We recently asked Gijsbert-Paul Berk if he had a favorite Talbot-Lago. Reaching into his huge bank of automotive experiences, he told us about driving the ultra-rare 2.5 liter 1955-56 Gran Turismo coupe on the banking at Montlhéry. Above is the author’s test car on the cover of the June 1956 issue of the Dutch magazine “Autovisie”. The photo was taken in front of the gate of the stately house called Oostermeer on the bank of the river Amstel near Amsterdam.

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Tagged With: driving the talbot lago, racing a talbot lago, Talbot, talbot gran turiismo, talbot lago, Talbot Lago GT

Talbot Lago Grand Prix Cars

September 25, 2018 By pete

Story by Pete Vack

From the Archives, March 28, 2012


Lead image: Peter Giddings drives his first Talbot Lago, #110007, ex-Chiron. Courtesy Peter Giddings.

Hindsight is a good remedy for perceived mediocrity. Looking back on the 20-odd year run of the French Talbot Lago, it is easy to see that the cars of Anthony “Tony” Lago (born in Venice in 1893) were not only were winners on the concours circuit, but significant winners on the Grand Prix tracks in the post war era. After five major Grand Prix wins, nine lesser ones and victory at Le Mans in 1950, Cyril Posthumus would write, “Lago, in his retirement years could look back on a remarkable chapter of accomplishment.”

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Tagged With: 4.5 liter talbot lago, Chiron Talbot, peter giddings, racing a talbot lago, talbot lago, talbot lago GP, tony lago

As Found Classic: Talbot-Lago Pourtout

April 5, 2016 By pete

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Car as found at Elkhart Lake. Pure beauty here. But was it Figoni?

As Found Classic Number Twenty-Two

This photo was taken by my father Don Vack on June 18, 1960 at Road America near Elkhart Lake Wisconsin. At a time when American cars could be called many things but rarely beautiful, my father made an effort to show me, and later my brother Greg, that there were in fact cars that were beautiful, stunning, and well-proportioned; most did not hail from Detroit. This Talbot Lago was one of them. For over a half century, we wondered who the coachbuilder was, for lack of other ideas, assumed that it was a Figoni et Falaschi creation. Now, thanks to Peter Larsen, Bruno Martin and current owner Steve Hamilton, we can answer that question.

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Tagged With: As Found, as found classics, figoni et falaschi, Pourtout, talbot lago

The Lee T150C SS Talbot, aka “Stinky”

December 9, 2015 By pete

An unrestored classic among the finest restored classics on one of the world's most prestigious golf courses.

An unrestored classic among the finest restored classics on one of the world’s most prestigious golf courses. Elitch photo

Story by Brandes Elitch

Back in 2008 at the Quail Lodge, what I was looking for was a truly unique car, that neither I, nor anyone else, had seen before, at least not in my lifetime, a car that would blow you away when you saw it. I found what I wanted, and here is the story:

Don Lee started selling Cadillacs in 1906, and was awarded the West Coast distribution in 1919. In 1926, Lee bought KFRC radio in San Francisco, and the next year bought KHJ in Los Angeles. In 1929 he paid for LA’s first television broadcast, and in 1932 broadcast the first motion picture. Eventually, Lee owned twelve stations and became a CBS, and later, Mutual Broadcasting affiliate. To this day the ridge above the famous Hollywood sign, where he put his transmitter, is called Mount Lee. But in 1934, Lee succumbed to a heart attack, at only 54 years of age. His son, Thomas (Tommy) Lee inherited the empire, but left business management to CEO Willet Brown, to pursue, as author Lou Brooks has succinctly put it, “…his other interests, namely race cars and women.” [Read more…] about The Lee T150C SS Talbot, aka “Stinky”

Tagged With: figoni et falaschi, stinky, talbot lago, tommy lee collection

Royal Show at the Edinburgh Concours

September 15, 2015 By pete

Jim Clark remembered.

Jim Clark remembered.

Story and Photos by Jonathan Sharp
Click to ENLARGE

This year’s Concours of Elegance continued its tradition of taking place at a British Royal Residence. Following the three previous events held at Windsor Castle, Marlborough House on the Mall in London and Hampton Court it was time for the event to travel north of the border. The location for this year’s event was the Palace of Holyrood House, the Queen’s official residence in Edinburgh. [Read more…] about Royal Show at the Edinburgh Concours

Tagged With: Edinburgh Concours 2015, European car shows, jim clark, lancia b20, MG K3, Richard Seaman, Royal Palace car shows, talbot lago, Vignale Ferrari

Talbot-Lago Grand Sport Book Review

March 5, 2013 By pete

Click here for details and to order from Dalton Watson

Reveiw by Pete Vack

The “Talbot-Lago Grand Sport” arrived in a very heavy box, and like a Russian matryoshka doll, this was opened to find a luxurious 14.5 x 9.5 x 3.5 inch carrying case with handle, profusely illustrated with the cover material printed in full color. That in turn opened to reveal an even more luxurious 13 x 9 x 3 inch slipcover, which in turn harbored a slick, high quality two-volume set of the “Talbot-Lago Grand Sport”. Standard volumes are $350, with a limited number (600) of copies. Leather bound editions are $650 and only 100 copies.

We are sure most of our readers are aware of this line of Talbot-Lago cars, called Grand Sports. They can be seen occasionally at auctions, major concours, in select museums, and at important retro events. But such sightings are rare, fleeting, scattered throughout time and space, never allowing one to grasp the meaning, numbers or depth of the species. Most knowledgeable enthusiasts could probably not put forth a useful definition of the Talbot-Lago Grand Sport, much less recite how many were built, coachbuilders, where they are today and what they look like. Even co-author Peter Larsen, in the introduction, had to explain that the book was specifically about the Talbot-Lago Grand Sport, a rare model which did not include the more famous pre-war Figoni et Falaschi teardrop coupes based on the T150SS chassis.

MYSTERY CARS
The amount of information available about the Talbot-Lago Grand Sport (TLGS) is truly meager and as scattered as the appearance of the cars themselves. The Grand Sport model was not acknowledged in the original Georgano Encyclopedia, completely overlooked in William Stobb’s “Les Grandes Routieres”, mentioned only briefly in an excellent article on the automobiles of Tony Lago in “Automobile Quarterly’s” V23 No 4. An Internet search will reveal images and videos of several of the cars, some good information from our friends at Coachbuild.com and some auction company information, but all scattered and incomplete. Wiki is notably short on the Grand Sport. The bibliography in the “Grand Sport” book lists six books – most in French – that pertain directly to Talbot-Lago, and that’s probably pushing it. In short, there is not much out there.
That’s precisely what makes the Peter Larsen/ Ben Erickson “The Talbot-Lago Grand Sport” so interesting, valuable, entertaining, informative, necessary, compelling, and a thrill to read. For the first time, the Talbot-Lago Grand Sports have been tracked down, gathered, defined, explained, photographed and detailed, chassis by chassis. It is overwhelmingly new and fresh information. Many of the cars have not been seen in years; a few are in private collections unknown even to the authors; some – though very few – have just disappeared, and most are now and have been kept in Europe.

WHAT IS A GRAND SPORT
The Grand Sports were Tony Lagos’ supercars, the top of a very expensive line. Based on the pre-war Grand Prix chassis (with a 2.65 meter wheelbase and later 2.80 meter) they were given coachwork by Figoni, Saoutchik, Dubos, Franay, Graber. The T26 was virtually the same 4.5 liter Marchetti-designed hemi-head used in the Grand Prix Talbots of the era, minus the aluminum block, dry sump oil system and with different carburation, most using 3 Zenith carbs. This resulted in the most powerful French road car built at the time, with at least 190 horsepower on tap. The Wilson preselector gearbox was the same unit as used in the race cars as well. The chassis consisted of massive steel girders, independent front suspension via transverse leaf spring, and a live rear axle under the frame located by leaf springs. It was archaic but light. A huge 120 liter fuel tank meant long periods without stops but little space left for luggage. In a very real sense, a road-going GP car. Larsen figures that from 1947 to about 1950, between 29 and 35 Grand Sports were built on both 2.65 and 2.80 meter wheelbases.
With coachwork more art than automotive, the Grand Sport, as the book’s PR would have it, was “chic, ritzy, aristocratic with a superb pedigree that gave it instant admission to the elite gatherings at races and concours, no questions asked”. The coachwork that graced the Grand Sport chassis ranges from the bizarre and odd, to beautiful and advanced, from lithe racing barchettas to svelte coupes. Each is unique, most are stunning.

LAGO RECORD VS GRAND SPORT
Allow us to digress for the benefit of our very astute readers who may wonder about the difference between the Grand Sport and the more common Lago Record: In the post-war era, the Talbot-Lago line consisted of the 6 cylinder T26 Record and Grand Sport, and the 4 cylinder Talbot-Lago “Baby”. The normal T26 Record used the same engine as the Grand Sport but produced 170 hp, using only two Zeniths. The Record chassis was much longer at 3.12 meters; the weight was 1280 Kg. As a post-war design, the Record feature coil spring independent front suspension. However, Lago’s goal for the Grand Sport model was to use whatever resources at hand to quickly create a lightweight high-performance chassis at low cost, hence the use of the pre-war GP chassis. It was 47 cm shorter and 430 Kg lighter than the new Lago Record. That the GP chassis made use of a transverse-spring front suspension was perhaps a necessary compromise. While it was seemingly a retrograde step, it made sense and Lago figured he could market it as a “perfected road car chassis, which has much of the power, road holding and strength of my Grand Prix racing machines.”

A NECESSARY OPUS
In the realm of French and Italian cars, we can only compare this new work to Christian Huet’s book on Gordini (in French only) and Simon Moore’s Alfa Romeo 2.9 and 2.3 volumes. In many respects, though it covers fewer individual chassis, the TLGS does it better, making use of more outstanding color photography as well as historical black and white images, complemented by outstanding layout and presentation. Like Moore and Huet, Larsen and Erickson are relentless detectives, tracing each car as far as possible from its birth to the present day. In most cases, where and whenever possible, the authors consult with the current owners and provide photos of the cars as they appear at time of publication. This with a considerable amount of historic images in both color and black and white, leaving little left to wonder.

Like Moore, they are not professional writers per say and at times the text can annoy. But any such annoyances are readily tossed aside as the full impact of the material presented simply blows one away. Perhaps unfairly, but in light of the overall magnificence, we care less if a rare word (“bespoke”) is over-used, or if certain peculiarities are repeated (on six different occasions calling Coatalen to task for spending too much on racing). Written off is a mistake attributing Rocco Motta as the coachbuilder for the Renault/Marquis (read story). Tony Lago was perhaps a bit less than the authors admit. More information about the post-war Talbot line and less about the Pons plan would have been nice. This ain’t Shakespeare, but it is a breathtaking revelation of the most hidden, most outlandish, most artistic, and often the most beautiful cars on earth.

VOLUME 1
While Moore dealt with a very well-known subject matter, the team of Larsen/Erickson knew that they would have to set the scene for the actual serial number saga. Volume 1 includes a fairly in depth history of the S-T-D year but focuses on the story of Tony Lago, his triumphs and repeated problems trying to keep his firm alive and solvent while he upheld the honor of France on the race tracks and the Paris salons. The authors have done their research here, bringing in new facts about the life and death of Talbot, the heartbreaking bankruptcies, the mistakes and the competition, but alas, no one yet knows much about the private life of Tony Lago.
Technically, there is a chapter on the history and workings of the Wilson pre-selector gearbox, the chassis, and yet another about engines that would power the fabled Grand Sports. They are not in great depth, but enough to garner a good understanding of the components. The chapter on the Wilson gearbox was most welcome.
Much to our delight, Volume 1 also contains fairly substantial histories of the coachbuilders that clothed the Grand Sports. How much do you know about Dubos, Antem, Besset, Pennock, and Contamin? Altogether the authors found eighteen different coachbuilders and/or designers responsible for the Grand Sport bodies. Each one is given a chapter. Only Farina, Saoutchik, Graber and Motto were familiar to this reviewer in any depth.
Alas, nowhere in Volume 1 is there good photos of any of the 35 plus cars that are described in Volume 2! The authors wanted to save the subject shots for the second volume. At first this was rather annoying, as there were plenty of references to the Grand Sport series. Then I (egad, pardon my first person here!) decided to go with the flow. I carefully digested Volume 1’s 238 pages, while absolutely refusing to even open the cover of the larger, heavier 407 page Volume 2, which I knew consisted of all the chassis numbers. Something told me I’d be into something good.

THE TREASURES IN VOLUME 2
Admittedly, not jumping into Volume 2 takes some self-discipline, but it was worth it. For every night I would discover a new and interesting if not bizarre car which I had never before or rarely seen. Or seen only in grainy Road & Track photographs, or in photos take in the poor light of museums or obstructed by asses and elbows of the concours field. But here they all were in both color and historic images, almost large that life, with details and histories. Each chapter was to be saved and savored, each one a treasure, even to one who is admittedly pretty jaded in terms of automobilia by now.
This leads to a problem; one can be devastated when the last of the 648 pages are turned, the last car unveiled, the last morsel tasted.
This is a huge book, an important book, and a superb effort, well worth the money. The price of entry is mitigated by the high probability that it is an investment which will grow in value.
In the next few weeks, we’ll give you further insights and previews of a few of the Talbot-Lago Grand Sports. Yeah, you too, can wait!

Tagged With: dalton watson, French luxury cars, Talbot, talbot grand sport, talbot lago

Hugues Vanhoolandt at Retromobile

February 8, 2012 By vanhoolandt

Photos by Hugues Vanhoolandt

Graham Gauld brought you the commentary this year, and below, Hugues Vanhoolandt provides a look at the colors of red and blue at this year’s event. Here are the selections from the cars of France.

Talbot-Lago  T26 Grand Sport

Cooperation between France and Italy resulted in this Ferrari-like 1950 Talbot-Lago T26 Grand Sport with a barchetta body by Motto of Torino in 1952.

Renault Electric

Back to the future with this Renault Dauphine with electric motor. Henney Motors and Bell Labs, both American companies, experimented with an electric powered car, fifty years ahead of their time …or perhaps fifty years after!

After Ralph Lauren last year, it was the turn of another US collector, Peter Mullin, to show his best pieces in Paris, among them the Bugatti Type 57 SC Atlantic s/n 57374 …

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Tagged With: Alpine, bugatti, Delage, hugues vanhoolandt, paris car shows, Renault, retro paris, retro show, retromobile 2012, talbot lago

Belgian Race Drivers and Teams: More Than You Think

January 11, 2012 By vanhoolandt

Above: Ferrari 500 TRC s/n 0682 MD TR was entered by Ecurie Nationale Belge at Le Mans in 1957, and placed 7th overall with the team of Bianchi/Harris.

Photos and text by Hugues Vanhoolandt

When one thinks of Belgian race drivers, the name of Olivier Gendebien, Paul Frere and Jacky Ickx (whose daughter, Vanina, is also a race driver) naturally come to mind.

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Tagged With: Abarth, belgian drivers, belgian race drivers, belgian race teams, belgian racing, ecurie nationale belge, Ferrari, ferrari swaters, hugues vanhoolandt, swaters, talbot lago

Paris Retro with Hugues Vanhoolandt

February 23, 2011 By hugues

Amilcars are rare, coupes even rarer. But from 1921 to 1939 Charles Duval bodied a great number of Amilcars and was particularly noted for his charming coupes, this one on a 1926 CGSS.


[Read more…] about Paris Retro with Hugues Vanhoolandt

Tagged With: Amilcar, Citroen, devin panhard, french classic car show, french classic cars, hugues vanhoolandt, Panhard, paris retro, peugoet, Renault, retro 2011, retro in paris, talbot lago

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