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1966 BRDC International Trophy


FieldValue
TypeNC
CountryUK
Grand PrixBRDC International Trophy
ImageSilverstone Circuit 1952 to 1974.png
Official nameXVIII BRDC International Trophy
LocationSilverstone Circuit, Northamptonshire
Date14 May
Year1966
CoursePermanent racing facility
Course_mi2.927
Course_km4.711
Distance_laps35
Distance_mi102.528
Distance_km165.003
Pole_DriverJack Brabham
Pole_CountryAustralia
Pole_TeamBrabham-Repco
Pole_Time1:29.8
Fast_DriverJack Brabham
Fast_TeamBrabham-Repco
Fast_Time1:29.8
Fast_CountryAustralia
First_DriverJack Brabham
First_CountryAustralia
First_TeamBrabham-Repco
Second_DriverJohn Surtees
Second_CountryUK
Second_TeamFerrari
Third_DriverJo Bonnier
Third_CountrySweden
Third_TeamCooper-Maserati

The 18th BRDC International Trophy was a motor race, run to Formula One rules, held on 14 May 1966 at the Silverstone Circuit, England. The race was run over 35 laps of the Silverstone Grand Prix circuit, and was won by Australian Jack Brabham in the Brabham-Repco BT19. With no Race of Champions in 1966, the International Trophy formed the first major race of the European season, being run just a week before the start of the FIA World Championship in Monaco. The 1966 season was significant, as changes to the F1 formula had allowed an increase in engine capacity from 1.5L to 3L. This then was the first opportunity for many teams to test their new cars against top-line opposition.

Pre-race

The "return to power" caused some manufacturers significant problems, as the supply of suitable large-capacity engines was restricted. Only four teams managed to provide true 3-litre cars this early in the season. Regular front runners Ferrari and Lotus were both prepared with new vehicles, as was former World Champion Jack Brabham's eponymous team, fielding Australian Repco-Brabham V8 engines. The fourth team to have a 3L car was Cooper, however, their engine was far from new. The team's first monocoque chassis, the Cooper T81 was fitted with what was in essence Maserati's 1950s engine, which had seen success in the Maserati 250F, bored out to the new capacity limit. BRM's new H16 engine was also slated to appear, but reliability problems resulted in Peter Arundell being forced to withdraw his Lotus-BRM prior to qualifying.

Race Report

From the beginning of practice it became apparent that the race would be a straight fight between the Ferrari of John Surtees and Jack Brabham's Brabham. The pair qualified at the head of the field, with Brabham taking pole by only 0.2 of a second. The race went the same way, with Brabham being forced to equal his pole time in order to stay ahead of Surtees's hard-charging Ferrari. Despite qualifying an impressive third, Jochen Rindt's Cooper developed mechanical troubles and dropped him back to fifth by the end of the race. However, the surprise of the field was the sister Cooper of Jo Bonnier - run by Bonnier's Anglo-Suisse Racing Team and painted in Swiss racing red and white - who managed to climb from sixth to take the third place on the podium. It would prove to be Bonnier's last podium finish in a Formula One car, after a prolific career dating back a decade. Close behind Bonnier, Denny Hulme managed to bring an ageing Brabham home in fourth.

Results

Pos.DriverConstructorTime/Ret.Grid123456789RetRetRetDNS
Australia Jack BrabhamBrabham-Repco52:57.61
UK John SurteesFerrari+ 7.4 s2
Sweden Jo BonnierCooper-Maserati35 laps6
New Zealand Denny HulmeBrabham-Climax35 laps5
Austria Jochen RindtCooper-Maserati34 laps3
UK John TaylorBrabham-BRM33 laps10
UK Bob AndersonBrabham-Climax32 laps9
Australia Paul HawkinsLotus-Climax31 laps13
UK Vic WilsonBRM24 laps11
Switzerland Jo SiffertCooper-Maseratiret14*
USA Richie GintherCooper-Maseratioverheating8
UK Mike SpenceLotus-BRMengine4
France Guy LigierCooper-Maserati(12)
  • Qualified 7th, but started from the back of the grid in replacement car.

References

References

  1. Diepraam, Mattijs. "The start of the 3-litre era". 8W.
  2. Hales, Mark. "The Last Cooper". Motor Sport.
  3. "XVIII BRDC International Trophy".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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