Guido,Thanks Dougie - great stuff. The Healey start no 522 shown briefly leaving the starting ramp was the Lockett/Reid entry - one of four entered for the race and one of two that started, the other being Hadley/Mercer. The other two Healey entries did not show up for the race. The race ran on April 26 1953 so all the Healey entries were Special Test Cars as the race predated any production BN1s. The Lockett/Reid entry was SPL225B NOJ 392 - probably the most famous/infamous Austin Healey of all, as in 1955 in 100S guise it was the car driven at Le Mans by Lance Macklin which was rear ended by Pierre Levegh in a Mercedes 300 SLR. The Mercedes became airborne and killed Levegh and 83 spectators when it landed. The hapless Lance Macklin was long blamed for the accident but he swerved to avoid hitting Mike Hawthorn in a works Jaguar D Type. Hawthorn had hard braked as he made a last second dive for the pits. The D Type had four wheel disc brakes (as did the 100S but the Mercedes was still equipped with drum brakes. Neither of the two Healeys finished the Mille in 1953 but by March 1954 at Sebring - and the 1954 Mille it was a very different story.
From viewing the trailer, I would only be interested in the cars, the history and the races.With the much anticipated Ferrari movie coming out next month, I came across this wonderfully filmed doc on the 1953 Mille Miglia. The cars, the clothes, the crowds, I hope this new film can echo the feeling of this black and white documentary.
Guido, Does pleading senility get you any benefits? (Asking for a friend, I'm only 73!) The reason that I mentioned your wording "infamous" was because when '393 was auctioned in 2011 there was a lot of nonsense spoken about how the car should be destroyed due to its involvement in the Disaster. But both these cars (plus 391 if it still exists) have so much history, having completed the '53 Le Mans and many other events. I was able to inspect '392 at the Austin-Healey National Rally in Melbourne in 1995 and would have loved to visit Steve Pike when he was working on '393. But I live a long way from Bacchus Marsh and the opportunity did not arise.Thanks Alwyn, for setting the record straight . My apologies - I stand corrected and did indeed confuse NOJ 392 with NOJ 393 - I plead senility! I should know better as I have several 1/18 metal die cast scale models of NOJ 393.
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Steve did a wonderful restoration...Guido, Does pleading senility get you any benefits? (Asking for a friend, I'm only 73!) The reason that I mentioned your wording "infamous" was because when '393 was auctioned in 2011 there was a lot of nonsense spoken about how the car should be destroyed due to its involvement in the Disaster. But both these cars (plus 391 if it still exists) have so much history, having completed the '53 Le Mans and many other events. I was able to inspect '392 at the Austin-Healey National Rally in Melbourne in 1995 and would have loved to visit Steve Pike when he was working on '393. But I live a long way from Bacchus Marsh and the opportunity did not arise.
Cheers,
Alwyn
If you like the themes on the above films you guys may like these period films my dad made. There are others on my YouTube channel . Search by most popular to cut to the chase and miss out my racing in my TR3a.
dad used to race a cooper jap 1220cc twin supercharged in the late1950’s so he knew a lot of the racers.
I hope you enjoy
I guess you need to watch it before you give the WHOLE game awayFerrari is showing here at the moment but I have not seen it yet. Viewing the interesting interview with Robert Nagle whetted my appetite, so thanks to Randy for posting it. Hopefully this movie will be more historically accurate than Ford V Ferrari. I did spot the Austin-Healey. I don't know how many such cars took part in the '57 Mile Miglia but the works Healey entry (#414) was not Healey Blue/OEW. I believe UOC 741 was Pacific Green over Florida Green. And for the MM it had a cut down windscreen, not full height as shown in the clip. At least they got the race number correct.
And Randy, my wife reckons she will have to gag me because she anticipates an annoying running commentary!
Cheers,
Alwyn
PS I noticed in one of the scenes the camera is at ground level and as the car passes the camera focusses on a "cat's eye" in the centre of the road. I read somewhere once that the tyre failure that led to de Portago's crash was attributed to these cat's eyes damaging the tyre. And that since 1957 such road markers are not used on Italian roads.
Hamish,I guess you need to watch it before you give the WHOLE game away