Vintage Revival Montlhery 2015: Part 1 & 2

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Ruby helmets founder Jérome Coste is alive and well and racing his father's ES2 Norton
Why on earth, my friends ask, would I travel 20 hours on a round-trip plane to Paris, and spend a couple of grand of my own money to attend a weekend event at a suburban Parisian racetrack in lousy condition, with shabby amenities, mediocre food, which is a pain to reach unless you have a car? The reason is simple; it’s worth it. If you’re a fan of pre-1940 racing cars and motorcycles, there really isn’t a comparable event, anywhere. Vintage RevivalMontlhéry has become to my eyes the most authentic vintage motorsports event in the world. Not as in ‘period correct’ as per the Goodwood Revival, that glorious costume party of 50,000 people, who are not allowed access to the truly interesting stuff, like the pits. It may be the right crowd, but it’s Disneyland crowded, and shares a bit too much of that park’s gloss for my taste. I prefer a little grit, because pre-war racing wasn’t a theme park, it was dangerous and poorly-paid stuff, and the participants did it for the love of the sport.

The four horsemen strategize
I suppose if that tens of thousands turned up at Montlhéry there would be tiered access as well, but as the crowd is still 4-figures small, with a very large playground, it feels very much in tune with the old Brooklands ad – the right crowd, and no crowding. VRM is the work of Vincent Chamon, who took on the mantle of the late lamented Jacques Protherat, the grandfather of vintage racing in France, who organized a ‘Vintage Montlhéry’ gathering for decades, before his untimely death 15 years ago. The track was without such a mixed-vehicle event for ten years, until Chamon decided to do something about it. This is the third of these bi-annual events, and it just seems to get better.


Amilcars need love too
Unlike most motorsports events, the organization is almost invisible, with a very light touch. Gents and ladies in white boiler suits direct the action, and their attention is generally focused on getting vehicles onto the track in an orderly fashion. The glorious chaos of the scene, which actually has a fluid and orderly movement, includes a mix of pedestrians, bicyclists, children, and racing vehicles using the main throughfare/track access, which means there’s a constant mix of revving racers and ordinary folks milling along, with a kind of friendly acceptance of of each group’s needs. The frustration level looked very low, and I didn’t hear a voiced raised in anger amongst the scrum between pits and track, which considering the high temper of a rider or driver about to do hot laps, is really something.


A 1921 Leyat Helica aerocar, surely the most remarkable vehicle at the meet, and a pleasure for all to witness! Powered by an Anzani v-twin sidevalve engine. A very special version reached 171km/h (102mph) in 1927 at Montlhéry
Perhaps it’s because there’s nothing to win; the track time is a ‘parade’, which means a few take full advantage of the fantastically historic track’s banking and chicanes, while most are content with a fast but not furious pace. Some even potter, and know well enough to stay out of the way, clinging to the very bottom of the banking, while the really fast ones sail up the top line, which feels awfully near vertical when you’re on it. It’s an eerie sensation to gaze at the top of another rider’s helmet as you pass by/over and they’re perpendicular to you. But it is bumpy on the crumbly old concrete. Riding the track is truly living the history of the place, as an awful lot of world speed/distance records were set there from its inception in 1924 through the 1960s. Unlike Brooklands, competing interests (like tanks) never sullied the architectural concrete track banking, and we can still enjoy the magnificence of the place today. I found it especially poignant to be back at Montlhery after visiting Daytona for the first time last September, during the Cannonball, and being sorely disappointed at the lack of romance about the place. The center of the Montlhéry track is a forest, with big swaths of green grass, flowers, and shade if you need it. The grandstands will hold a thousand people at most, all else is trees and sky in the environs; it’s simply gorgeous. Visit the place before something stupid happens.


A lovely 1933 AJS OHC 'Trophy' model
What appeared in 2015? Racers from collections all across Europe, from as far as the Czech Republic, with plenty from Germany, Holland, Italy, and England. To date, no motorcycles from US stables have appeared, a situation I’d love to rectify in 2017. There were American bikes certainly, Indian and Harley and Excelsior board trackers which seemed right at home on the banking – just about the only venue suitable for them actually. Mostly it’s what you would have seen on European Grand Prix circuits from the early 1900s through 1940, with plenty of ultra-rare machines you’ll see nowhere else, dragged from the depths of family collections far from the public (and the tax man’s) eye. The photographs here are a reasonable selection, but don’t encompass nearly everything – just the ones I managed in an attractive shot.


Lots of familiar faces, including Alistair Gibson, who built the 1100cc Brough Superior raced at Bonneville recently
Here’s huge thanks to Vincent Chamon and his team for putting on an exceptional and beautifully run weekend event, and for arranging perfect weather too!



Pudding basin helmets are fairly useless in a crash, but look great in photos...

Listed as an Amilcar, this recent creation is mostly new, barring the frame and a c.1918 Hispano-Suiza OHC V8 engine, rated at 200hp in the day, and an impressive piece of kit. Note the cam covers making themselves known...

Plenty of cool stuff at the autojumble - enough to build a 'special' actually, with a few frames and engines laying around

The Brooklands Museum boys consider a one-family-from-new Bugatti circulating discreetly around the track

Teen heart-throb! Aboard a 1930 Terrot NSS0

Bugs everywhere! A Type 35 Bugatti lining up for a track session

Another Type 35; so distinctive, and truly effective on the track

The loneliness of the long-distance racer

Between track sessions, a racing Morgan makes a nice backrest

Run don't walk! A 1902 Clement Gladiator, identical to my own machine, and the great-grandfather of all mopeds

Trés chic in an oily-rag Bugatti Type 35 in French racing blue

A rare OHV Blackburne v-twin engine powering a cyclecar

Engine not required! A few bicycles and pedal-powered cars circulated too; quiet time.

Second oldest machine of the meet; the 1900 DeDion-Bouton trike

What has 4 connecting rods, 3 pistons, 2 carbs and exhausts, and 1 spark plug? A supercharged DKW SS250, that's what. Sadly not raced.

The furious complexity of a c.1928 Douglas SW5 racer, with the Freddie Dixon-developed 'still air box', which also provided 100% more air filtration than other motorcycles of the day.

Gorgeous early Excelsior board track racer in original paint condition

Start them early! Plenty of today's adult competitors at Montlhéry have attended since childhood

Untouchable! Frank Chatokhine and his ultra-fast '39 Triumph T100 racer.

More than one person asked me 'what's inside that thing?', to which I answered, 'time and skill'.

Serious raw fun with a pair of GN racers; the 'Piglet Special' and 'Parker Sport'; with chain drive an no differential, the rear wheels are slid around corners - fantastic to watch. GN mostly build cyclecars, and was the creation of Archie Frazer-Nash and HR Godfrey (HRG). Here's a period poem about them: 'Nash and Godfrey hated cogs, built a car with chains and dogs, and it worked, but would it if, they had built it with a diff?'

Period correct attire.

And the ladies too!

The engine room of the 1922 GN 'Parker Sport' - about as motorcycle as a car can be, with four separate air-cooled cylinders, 4 TT carbs, and all-chain drive.

An Amilcar after the final 'touring' lap of the track, the last event of the day, and hence no helmets

Marc Tudeau, the Montlhéry ambassador for Indian motorcycles, in clashing green!
Inter.ready.jpg

A few Norton Internationals were mixed with the European racers; always a welcome sight

Kalle alternated between two and four wheels

A late 1950s Harley K model in bumblebee paint

Martin Heckscher and his lovely 1932 Velocette KTT Mk2

Oldest machine on the track; the 1897 Léon-Bollee trike, which sounded very healthy, and was bonked around the grounds all Saturday

Ueli Schmid and his 1926 Motosacoche 804 Sport with 1000cc f-head motor

A trio of early Mercedes GP cars were impressive in factory racing white livery

Hot stuff! A special Cameron racing JAP engine for this Morgan, with post-war Speedway heads and enormous GP carbs fed by automotive SU float bowls. Running on methanol, the owner reckoned 110hp

Morgans everywhere! They even had their own racing grid.

If it doesn't exist anymore, someone like Pavel Malanik might just build it himself. This is the big brother of the NLG-JAP which won the first ever race at Brooklands in 1907...very big 1909 brother at 2714cc! The age of Monsters.

An ex-works AJS K10 racer with a lovely patina, which won my 'I'd like that please' award.

Oliver Way, the premier exponent/instigator of the current aero-engine car craze, aboard his first creation, labeled an Austin but considerably larger than the 7, with an airplane motor to boot.

Pushing in after hot track laps

Not just a man's game, racing.

I caught neither the lady's name, nor her machine info, although it appears to be a Magnat-Debon

A lovely Salmson, and the forest at the heart of the speed bowl

A monoposto racer with a motorcycle engine on the side; the Schashes cyclecar of 1927


Not the Tatra you were thinking of...a 1925 flat twin Model T11 Rennwagen

A very patinated c.1931 Terrot-JAP

Tim Gunn explains a 1919 Grafton cyclecar only needs one tool.

The lovely Paval Malanik re-creation of the 1909 Torpedo fan-4 with 1640cc and F-head configuration


From the Brooklands Museum; a c.1934 Triumph-JAP special

Goosebumps; the final Bugatti GP racer, the 1934 Type 59 with DOHC straight-8 engine and 'piano wire' wheels.

A little maintenance of the Brooklands Museum Velo KSS racer

The right crowd...and no crowding
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Marcel Léyat's' Hélica' aerocar of 1921 in full glory - what an object! There's another example in the excellent Musée des Arts et Metiers in central Paris.

The smoky end of Frank Chatokhine's '38 Triumph Speed Twin

1921 Hélica, 1925 Excelsior Super X racer, and 1926 Motosacoche 804 Sport, amazingly sharing a single track, but there's plenty of room...

Cars as full of character as an antique bike, and surely as much trouble to keep in good running order!

A bored ambulance crew is an excellent sign that riders kept matters under control...

The Amilcar/Hispano-Suiza aero-engine mashup...

...and the pilot's view of the beast.

A Dixieland jazz band kept things light

A series of tented workshops from Yesterday's, the Hockenheim Museum, the Brooklands Museum, and several private owners corralled a wide variety of machines in a small space; visible here are Indian, Douglas, Peugeto, and Werner - the products of four countries, all pre-WW1.

No, not a racer, but a rare and wonderful beast, the 1924 BSA 770cc v-twin

Red, white, and blue...the French flag represented in the engine bay of a Bugatti type 35 straight-8 racer

One could get lost in the sensuous landscape of a Bugatti Type 59's front suspension - leaf springs, dampers, and axle...

...with cable-operated brakes of enormous size.

The crowd mostly kept to the balcony over the starting grid, and avoided the grandstands; the better to smell the Castrol R!

The 1902 Clément-Gladiator, which was also produced under license in the USA

No excuses here: I have one too, and this example looks great. Compared to a 1902 Indian, it's a moped, but this is what motorcycling looked like at the turn of the Century. And the Indian would have set me back several zeros more than a Clément!

A 1928 Norton CS1 racer, with Walter Moore-designed 'cricket bat' engine.

Cyclecars! A 1921 Tamplin Cyclecar to be exact - with seating a cozy one-two inline, and the body made from plywood soaked in resin to make it waterproof. It's a unibody, with direct chain drive to the left rear wheel only (no need for a differential!). Over a thousand Tamplins were produced.

Lots of vintage bicycles in use, which expedited transversing the grounds. Especially nice in period dress

The hot rods confer - Dimitri Coste and Frank Chatokhine

The Hockenheim Museum's immaculate 1928 Douglas SW5 road racer.

This early Bugatti bears the maker's signature on the cambox! A nice touch; as Ettore was raised in a family of artists, it's understandable he'd sign his creations

The VRM staff, always helpful, generally smiling. Lots of work to do, but what an office!

The owner reckoned this might be the first Peugeot v-twin ever sold, the ex-Paris Show 1905 machine

Frank

Well bashed aluminum bodywork on this GN, the twin-carb 'Piglet Special', with plenty of louvres to keep the air-cooled engine cool. A fantastic sight to watch sliding around the corners

Jean-Luc Gaignard in his 1920 Silver Hawk 1480cc OHC racer; he brought motorcycles too!

Period correct gents...

...and ladies!

A rare Gnome-Rhone with pressed-steel frame and forks.

I captured this gent in 2013; the car has been in one family since new, and no doubt these youngsters will inherit it

Big smiles in a big 'teens Mercedes GP racer

1913 Henderson on the track - the magnificent American 4-cylinder, this is the short-chassis second version.

Jonathan Rishton, editor of The Automobile (to which I occasionally contribute), peers out the back of the 'works' Ford Vedette van

'Cally' Callamon looking distinguished in his everyday attire. A well-known exponent of high-wheeler bicycles, who's done the full length of Britain on one

Even the kids get a race course - with vintage pedal-cars.

Ultra-rare beast; the OHC Koehler-Escoffier GP 350cc of 1934, a big improvement over their late '20s OHC racers, as it has a proper oil pump and positive oiling for the camshaft, rather than the total-loss feed prior. Cams need lots of oil!

Laurence Chatokhine with a lovely vintage Peugeot in full Deco decor.

Rackety old open-wheelers crowding the grid. Just fabulous.

The technically advanced work of Nougier, here with a gear-driven DOHC head added to a Magnat-Debon

The 1928 La Mondial with full pressed-steel chassis and JAP engine. A very rare machine, with a cool half-round gas tank - very Deco indeed. Note the doubled-up front brakes.

Lining up for the Morgan/Salmson 3-wheel races

Nice ad placement! The command center of the track

A shot of the 500cc DOHC Magnat-Debon with the full Nougier treatment, originally modified in 1936. Francois-Marie Dumas has recently written a full account of the Nougier enterprise from 1932-72; worth investigating, as their DOHC 4-cylinder racer of the 1950s is serious stuff.

Oliver Way and his Austin aero-engine racer

Paterfamilias of the Coste clan

Sebastien Chirpaz, proprietor of A Piece of Chic silk scarves, some of which adorn my neck!

I love two wheels, but four wheels like this look like fun too

A very early Rochet motorcycle, looking very original


A better view of Jean-Luc Gaignard's Silver Hawk racer, with the banking behind, looking like a wall

A rare 1932 Styl'son R12 250cc with Blackburne engine

How the racing across his back must haunt his dreams...

A gorgeous seafoam green Terrot

And another Terrot, with an engine of their own make

Pavel Malanik's 1909 Torpedo recreation, with 1640cc fan-4, which sounded amazing on the track

Ready for the staging area

DOHC Amilcar with supercharger replaced by a pair of carbs! Less trouble in actual use?

Not a men's club; Gillian Carr on an early 60s Velocette Venom

Thanks for the party Vincent! You're the man!

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