Here we are over 50 years later still watching this as it's incredibly interesting without drama and straight to the point. Graham was iconic, sadly he died just 3 years after this was filmed.
I was only 6 years old when he died and I live here in the U.S.A. However, I heard his name a thousand times growing up in the 1980s. I heard people talk about him so much I didn't know he passed so long ago. I think that says alot about the man to be spoken of so often by the racing community for years after.
Esse pra mim.foi um.dos grandes subestimado pela mídia atual do automobilismo um.cara que ganhou cinco GP de Mônaco e a tríplice corridas do automobilismo não é só um.piloto
At Stirling Moss’s memorial, Sir Jackie Stewart said we’d never celebrated the life of any sportsman in that way. Had Graham Hill lived, we probably would have. Look at the other clips of him on TH-cam- charming, funny and of course fast. I remember him doing road safety when I was a kid and I also remember his plane crash and how sad it made us.
The F1 british team in the 70s: bunch of friends building a car in some workshop, adding a Cossie DFV and managing the F1 races with ca 10 people total. "Thats a BIG business indeed!"
A guy called Peter Connew built a F1 car, in 1972, in his domestic garage. In the hands of Francois Migault it qualified 22nd for the 1972 Austrian GP, got up to 17th, but retired with suspension failure.
I’m surprised more people didn’t build there own cars. You could get a job as a mechanic for a year and spend the time seeing how the cars were constructed and if alone I’m guessing you could take some measurements. The biggest problem was getting sometime to buy you a cosworth dfv and hewland box. That’s allowing for the fact you wouldn’t get a ‘works’ engine unless you were very well connected/ established . Podcasts on you tube by a well known ex McLaren employee from the 70’s alluded to the fact ‘allegedly’ that the best teams got the best dfvs and better tyres
1973: GRAHAM HILL creating his own F1 CAR | Tuesday Documentary | Classic Motorsport | BBC Archive indeed. it's also the unoffical labour exchange - the bar or the pub.... and the best ideas have been garnered in a pub..... proper, though, having to pitch your insane ideas to the money men who probably think it's a crazy investment.... though it's boy's own and they probably have similar dreams for themselves. probably the world of the monday club, eh?
1973: GRAHAM HILL creating his own F1 CAR | Tuesday Documentary | Classic Motorsport | BBC Archive 1436pm 8.7.24 woking? is that where thre pub is...? i was gonna ask is that pub situated in islington....
What a Legend! I remember being 14 years old and very much into Grand Prix and loved the look of his car. It was tragic the way he died, I’m sure with his experience and skill he could have made an impact with this team, it’s fascinating to see how small a set up it was, meetings at the pub, putting his overalls over trousers shirt and tie it was simply a project of love! Great days of F1!
The 1970s was the best era of F1. Look how basic the set up is too. Just a steering wheel, gear shifter, and no onboard computers. The steering wheels now look like a video game controller lol.
Sadly the Shadow DN1 was not very successful, even for the works team. Hill got Lola to build his next effort, and after that, the Embassy Hill GH2 with Tony Brise driving was a much better proposition, sadly fete intervened.
I was 14 too and vividly recall seeing the ITN News Flash on 29th Nov, same with Jim Clark at Hockenheim , another Saturday, 7th April 1968...News Flashes in those days left a lasting impact.
This video is so awesome. I wish I could've experienced F1 back then as a fan. The 1970s was an awesome era and like the wild west of F1 when it came to car designs. No computers, all mechanical, with a gear shift lever. Teams could do whatever. The drivers were also legendary. I remember seeing the Tyrrell P34 6 wheeled F1 race car from 1975-76. Then I saw Brabham had the "fan" car design and was super fast because of the insane down force it created in 1978. Having the chance to see both those cars in person really put into perspective how crazy F1 teams were back then and would do anything to win.
Watching in the 60s and 70s was exciting... and frightening. If a race was televised in the 60s and the screen went black, but there was still audio, (I remember Monaco in particular, I forget what year in the mid 60s, I was a toddler) you knew something REALLY bad had happened.
The first time I encountered Graham Hill was at the Questor Grand Prix at Ontario Motor Speedway in 1971. I was taken aback when he walked into the loo. In 1975 I went to Lotus before the race at Silverstone and Peter Warr told me to watch for an announcement. When Embassy announced a press event on the Friday I showed up and attended Graham Hill’s retirement . . .
@@terrystevens5261, I had a reservation for a hotel the night before the race, but when I saw the potential traffic issues on race day, I made other arrangements. I stayed in a tent at the circuit with some follows from Stowe School who were regulars at the track; I had two RAC passes and I gave the second one to the young man I’d befriended. After the race I drove him back to school using the track, but, silly me, I missed his turn off two or three times. Twelve or thirteen years later I was in the paddock at Imola chatting with some of the photographers when a fellow I didn’t know called me by name. Since that day at Silverstone our circuitous routes had had brought me to Italy as a member of the media, and him there as member of Lotus.
Was 12 years young in 1973 and my interest in Formula One Racing just ignited. Hill, Stewart, Cevert, a young Lauda....all my heroes of my childhood. Thank you for this report which really is from another totally different time 👍👍🍀
I remember watching a doco from my childhood about a driver building his own car. And this is it. It could pre-empt the moment when he had his seat fitting. Thanks for this
I was born in 1970 and was always attracted to things with wheels, I knew of Graham Hill at a young age...but probably after he had passed, he was an icon, the first race car driver I ever heard of, the next would be Mario Andretti. So suave in that pecil thin moustache.
@@sportionary its not not that easy to calculate this. if it was like u say, then people back then would also not have been able to buy houses etc. like nowadays. the whole cost of living was so much lower and taxes aswell. Back then my family could easily afford a nice part of land and a nice house, while nowadays with similar jobs and money u would get a friendly handshake. the prices for land also went to the roof. also i did the calculation with the "offical" calculator. 90.000 pounds from 1973 is is roughly 949.000 pounds in nowadays money. 80.000 is what my grandmothers house cost my family in the 70ths. (840.000 in nowadays money) she sold it for 280.000 a couple years ago and its now probabaly worth 350.000.
@@Satori-Automotive yeah I literally did a quick google search for this hahahaha your breakdown makes much more sense but the generally gist I was going for definitely still stands that Graham was paying a fair amount for the engine. Apologies for the misinformation. Also interesting to see the amount your grandmothers house price has risen within a couple of years, can’t even imagine what that 90k he paid for the engine would equate to in another 50 years!
1973: GRAHAM HILL creating his own F1 CAR | Tuesday Documentary | Classic Motorsport | BBC Archive 1431pm 8.7.24 a mobile rocket launch. same with landspeed and water speed vehicles... this was the era when motorsports were intersting, though... now it's plodding crap. saloon cars probably being the more entertaining of these sports....
@Jack_Warner Comments on ‘1973: GRAHAM HILL creating his own F1 CAR | Tuesday Documentary | Classic Motorsport | BBC Archive’ 2241pm 8.7.24 she never asked one....
A very different world back then.........I had the privilege of knowing Walter Hayes 20 years after this film was shot when he came to Aston Martin as President of the company, so much motoring history wrapped up in one man.
Great documentary. He was my favorite F1 driver as a kid. I was fortunate to attend the 1968 & 1970 Mexican Grands Prix as a ten/twelve year old. Thanks to my dad’s job at Ford Motor Company, he obtained weekend pit passes. Different times back then; you could walk around in the back area of the garage stalls and see mechanics working on the cars and drivers walking around. I was able to get the race program signed by the drivers. It was a thrill to have Graham stop and talk to me briefly and sign my program. I still have the 1970 signed program with all drivers except John Surtees because he was in a foul mood over his new underperforming new car he built.
Balls of steel. Iam a simracer who loves this era in a sim. A don't think the newer generation realise how dangerous these cars were. Gt3 cars today pretty much drive themselves, they have to much electronics to realie on and it takes away the drivers skills
Watching Graham is always riveting - the wonderful articulacy and wit in the way he talked, the way he moved, his appearance, everything. There's still nobody in sport - anywhere - who's come close to Graham's amazing combination of tremendous achievement, hilarious humour and immense physical courage. All these years later - not even close. Thank you so much for this, though I'd have so loved to see the whole show! The state of his legs is quite something to see - he never really recovered from his 1969 accident at Watkins Glen when both his knees snapped 'backwards', along with other injuries, yet he seems to ignore this and moves very well. He was asked around this time, which is of course only two and a half years or so before his tragic, ridiculous and (to me anyway) still hard to believe death, whether his legs still hurt. He replied 'Only when I stand up'.
I'd say Alex Zanardi surpassed him. May not have won a GP or a championship, but to win what he has done after losing his legs, I think you have your man for the current times.
@@burkezillar Hi, I take your point about his physical courage, yes of course, but the combination I referred to? Graham was funnier than most comedians and is still the only person ever to win Indy, Le Mans and the F1 world championship - the amazing 'Triple Crown' which is so unlikely EVER to be repeated.
From Wikipedia: "On board with him were five other members of the Embassy Hill team who all died: manager Ray Brimble, mechanics Tony Alcock and Terry Richards, driver Tony Brise, and designer Andy Smallman."
I had the privilege as a kid with my brother to see and touch Graham & Jochen's Gold Leaf Lotus cars at a workshop and then see them at the Teretonga circuit (NZ)
Great video! Absolute legend. It is interesting seeing them experimenting (then) new technology. I'm not sure if the compressed air thing in the helmet is really safe though.
What a man Graham Hill was, smooth, charming, talented, brave; he also managed to replicate all of those qualities in Damon Hill (chip off the old block)
I was chuffed to bits when Damon won the British Grand Prix, something his dad failed to do. He did win the International Trophy at Silverstone though in 1971, Grahams last win in a GP car and my first visit to Silverstone. i was 17, now 70. where the hell did all that time go ?
Please share the rest of this documentary!! I was enthralled, and 100% plot committed. I’m going to need some resolution, if you beauties at the bbc could accommodate a yank.
I saw the rest of this when it first came out .... Graham describes the car and what was needed to build it.... Really wide tyres at that time, wider than today's....... But he found it really difficult to be a small outfit (privateer virtually) ..... When large sponsorship was taking over.
In a parallel universe, Lewis Hamilton this weekend just won his 9th British Grand Prix driving a GH49 for the ultra-successful Sir Graham Hill & Son Racing International racing team powered by the affiliate company within Graham's own empire of The Hill Group plc, Cosworth Engines, Powertrains & Rocket Systems Ltd.🙏
At the moment of his plane crash, Hill was bankrupt ? broke ? Alan jones said that in 1975 Hill was a very demanding and agressive team manager because he needed results to keep running his team. And there is the accident of Stommelen in Montjuic 75 due to a faulty rear wing...
Having won Le Mans with Matra in 1972, as the co driver of French darling Henri Pescarolo, Hill would have been better trying for a sports car drive I think. Many questions over that fatal air crash in the fog , he had the option to divert to a fog free airport but declined, rumours of the plane being overloaded with a DFV. Great man, very rich motorsport history, tragic end. No one will ever equal his triple crown achievement of wins, F1, Indianapolis and Le Mans .RIP.
Here we are over 50 years later still watching this as it's incredibly interesting without drama and straight to the point. Graham was iconic, sadly he died just 3 years after this was filmed.
I was only 6 years old when he died and I live here in the U.S.A. However, I heard his name a thousand times growing up in the 1980s. I heard people talk about him so much I didn't know he passed so long ago. I think that says alot about the man to be spoken of so often by the racing community for years after.
Esse pra mim.foi um.dos grandes subestimado pela mídia atual do automobilismo um.cara que ganhou cinco GP de Mônaco e a tríplice corridas do automobilismo não é só um.piloto
No overbearing music, no unnecessary voice-overs and no flipping drone shots! What joy.
my dopamine levels regained consciousness while watching this
its such a pleasure. Also how calm all people are and well manured.
Argus. Great profile picture!
Mr Hill was a true gentleman.
1:54 The 70s were wild. Imagine Max Verstappen climbing into a race suit over his dress pants, shirt and tie 😂
The big tie under the overalls !!! 😍
Weight! Weight Graham! Discard the tie! Or make the tie a bit smaller at least…
This is Gold, thanks BBC for sharing this. Amazing to see "new" footage of Graham and his Embassy Hill team
At Stirling Moss’s memorial, Sir Jackie Stewart said we’d never celebrated the life of any sportsman in that way. Had Graham Hill lived, we probably would have. Look at the other clips of him on TH-cam- charming, funny and of course fast. I remember him doing road safety when I was a kid and I also remember his plane crash and how sad it made us.
Wish I could have Graham Hill’s voice on my sat nav.
Graham Hill looks just like Dick Dastardly from the Wacky Races! 🏎
Who would be Muttley then?
@@jeshkamDamon.
Alan jones said that once on his beyond the grid interview
Haha yes always thought that too 😂
Separated at birth?
The F1 british team in the 70s: bunch of friends building a car in some workshop, adding a Cossie DFV and managing the F1 races with ca 10 people total. "Thats a BIG business indeed!"
A guy called Peter Connew built a F1 car, in 1972, in his domestic garage. In the hands of Francois Migault it qualified 22nd for the 1972 Austrian GP, got up to 17th, but retired with suspension failure.
I’m surprised more people didn’t build there own cars. You could get a job as a mechanic for a year and spend the time seeing how the cars were constructed and if alone I’m guessing you could take some measurements. The biggest problem was getting sometime to buy you a cosworth dfv and hewland box. That’s allowing for the fact you wouldn’t get a ‘works’ engine unless you were very well connected/ established . Podcasts on you tube by a well known ex McLaren employee from the 70’s alluded to the fact ‘allegedly’ that the best teams got the best dfvs and better tyres
Sitting in the bar:
“Here I am in the boardroom” 😂
1973: GRAHAM HILL creating his own F1 CAR | Tuesday Documentary | Classic Motorsport | BBC Archive indeed. it's also the unoffical labour exchange - the bar or the pub.... and the best ideas have been garnered in a pub..... proper, though, having to pitch your insane ideas to the money men who probably think it's a crazy investment.... though it's boy's own and they probably have similar dreams for themselves. probably the world of the monday club, eh?
Loads of important decisions often are made in the pub with a pint!
@@martinandersson1049 th-cam.com/video/kZlpxSP-RuA/w-d-xo.htmlfeature=shared
He always did have a way with words, very entertaining.
@@terrystevens5261 INDEED......
What an absolute legend. And a shout out to Old Woking !!
1973: GRAHAM HILL creating his own F1 CAR | Tuesday Documentary | Classic Motorsport | BBC Archive 1436pm 8.7.24 woking? is that where thre pub is...? i was gonna ask is that pub situated in islington....
Where in Woking was his workshop and the pub?
What a Legend! I remember being 14 years old and very much into Grand Prix and loved the look of his car. It was tragic the way he died, I’m sure with his experience and skill he could have made an impact with this team, it’s fascinating to see how small a set up it was, meetings at the pub, putting his overalls over trousers shirt and tie it was simply a project of love! Great days of F1!
The 1970s was the best era of F1. Look how basic the set up is too. Just a steering wheel, gear shifter, and no onboard computers. The steering wheels now look like a video game controller lol.
Sadly the Shadow DN1 was not very successful, even for the works team. Hill got Lola to build his next effort, and after that, the Embassy Hill GH2 with Tony Brise driving was a much better proposition, sadly fete intervened.
I was 14 too and vividly recall seeing the ITN News Flash on 29th Nov, same with Jim Clark at Hockenheim , another Saturday, 7th April 1968...News Flashes in those days left a lasting impact.
A real motorsport hero. I would loved to have meet him
This video is so awesome. I wish I could've experienced F1 back then as a fan. The 1970s was an awesome era and like the wild west of F1 when it came to car designs. No computers, all mechanical, with a gear shift lever. Teams could do whatever. The drivers were also legendary. I remember seeing the Tyrrell P34 6 wheeled F1 race car from 1975-76. Then I saw Brabham had the "fan" car design and was super fast because of the insane down force it created in 1978. Having the chance to see both those cars in person really put into perspective how crazy F1 teams were back then and would do anything to win.
Watching in the 60s and 70s was exciting... and frightening. If a race was televised in the 60s and the screen went black, but there was still audio, (I remember Monaco in particular, I forget what year in the mid 60s, I was a toddler) you knew something REALLY bad had happened.
@@trob1731 Lorenzo Bandini died after his Ferrari crashed and caught fire, Monaco 10 of May 1967.
So many died. THAT, I remember.
The first time I encountered Graham Hill was at the Questor Grand Prix at Ontario Motor Speedway in 1971. I was taken aback when he walked into the loo.
In 1975 I went to Lotus before the race at Silverstone and Peter Warr told me to watch for an announcement. When Embassy announced a press event on the Friday I showed up and attended Graham Hill’s retirement . . .
I was at Silverstone for the GP in 75, got bloody soaked.
@@terrystevens5261, I had a reservation for a hotel the night before the race, but when I saw the potential traffic issues on race day, I made other arrangements.
I stayed in a tent at the circuit with some follows from Stowe School who were regulars at the track; I had two RAC passes and I gave the second one to the young man I’d befriended.
After the race I drove him back to school using the track, but, silly me, I missed his turn off two or three times.
Twelve or thirteen years later I was in the paddock at Imola chatting with some of the photographers when a fellow I didn’t know called me by name.
Since that day at Silverstone our circuitous routes had had brought me to Italy as a member of the media, and him there as member of Lotus.
3:25 you can see a classic JVC Videosphere in the back of the office.
In the past we could watch programs like this, now we have 'Love Island' and other quality shows like that. 😞
And BBC3 😮
The pillar-drill is a man's mixer! 💪🇬🇧
What a good looking car that was!
Not very successful though, even for the works team.
Was 12 years young in 1973 and my interest in Formula One Racing just ignited. Hill, Stewart, Cevert, a young Lauda....all my heroes of my childhood. Thank you for this report which really is from another totally different time 👍👍🍀
I remember watching a doco from my childhood about a driver building his own car. And this is it. It could pre-empt the moment when he had his seat fitting. Thanks for this
Putting the race suit on over the shirt, tie and trousers made me smile.
Graham Hill was so great. That car is a customised Shadow DN1. See it in black UOP livery elsewhere.
I always loved the way Graham Hill talked. He had that laid back Oxford English accent.
My favourite clip is an interview he did from his hospital bed, while flirting with a nurse. Imagine verboten doing that.
I was born in 1970 and was always attracted to things with wheels, I knew of Graham Hill at a young age...but probably after he had passed, he was an icon, the first race car driver I ever heard of, the next would be Mario Andretti. So suave in that pecil thin moustache.
Father and son F1 champions, what a legend!
That was brilliant. Really enjoyed that. Building race cars in sheds, how it should be done.
Ken Tyrrell built Sir Jakie Stewarts championship winning cars in a wood yard in Surrey.
@@terrystevens5261 Ecurie Ecosse something similar too, they used to build their cars in a mews garage not too far from where I stay.
When can we hope to see part two ?
"I figure £80-90,000." That'll get you a steering wheel today. Man I miss "the good old days".
Still plenty of fun racing an individual can get into for that money.
Just not F1.
Around £3million adjusted for inflation so still a fair amount
@@sportionary
its not not that easy to calculate this.
if it was like u say, then people back then would also not have been able to buy houses etc. like nowadays.
the whole cost of living was so much lower and taxes aswell. Back then my family could easily afford a nice part of land and a nice house, while nowadays with similar jobs and money u would get a friendly handshake.
the prices for land also went to the roof.
also i did the calculation with the "offical" calculator.
90.000 pounds from 1973 is is roughly 949.000 pounds in nowadays money.
80.000 is what my grandmothers house cost my family in the 70ths. (840.000 in nowadays money)
she sold it for 280.000 a couple years ago and its now probabaly worth 350.000.
@@Satori-Automotive yeah I literally did a quick google search for this hahahaha your breakdown makes much more sense but the generally gist I was going for definitely still stands that Graham was paying a fair amount for the engine. Apologies for the misinformation. Also interesting to see the amount your grandmothers house price has risen within a couple of years, can’t even imagine what that 90k he paid for the engine would equate to in another 50 years!
National treasure..All class.
Followed his career through the automotive magazine's of the day ; one of my childhood Heroes 😎 !
Great to see Dick Dastardly again. Big shout to him & Muttlley if he's still around.
CHEERS MATE BEEN LOOKING FOR THIS FOR AGES 😉
His book, Life At The Limit has a great passage on his first visit to Spa, going back to the pits and "having a think".
Great book.. read it many times and every read I find myself smiling at some of Graham's epic tales.
Incredible, is it possible to watch the full episode?
1973: GRAHAM HILL creating his own F1 CAR | Tuesday Documentary | Classic Motorsport | BBC Archive 1431pm 8.7.24 a mobile rocket launch. same with landspeed and water speed vehicles... this was the era when motorsports were intersting, though... now it's plodding crap. saloon cars probably being the more entertaining of these sports....
@@JJONNYREPP cheers for the clarification
Sure - just invent a time machine and travel back to 1973.
@Jack_Warner Comments on ‘1973: GRAHAM HILL creating his own F1 CAR | Tuesday Documentary | Classic Motorsport | BBC Archive’ 2241pm 8.7.24 she never asked one....
@@aogracing660 as clear as mud...
You'd have thought he'd put his helmet on for seat fitting. Love the string vest - fireproof, was it?
Those gaps in it are clearly for weight reduction
That Shadow DN1 was always such a beautiful car.
Yes, but not quick enough.
A very different world back then.........I had the privilege of knowing Walter Hayes 20 years after this film was shot when he came to Aston Martin as President of the company, so much motoring history wrapped up in one man.
I enjoyed seeing these footsteps of Graham. Can WE have more, please ?
Great documentary. He was my favorite F1 driver as a kid. I was fortunate to attend the 1968 & 1970 Mexican Grands Prix as a ten/twelve year old. Thanks to my dad’s job at Ford Motor Company, he obtained weekend pit passes. Different times back then; you could walk around in the back area of the garage stalls and see mechanics working on the cars and drivers walking around. I was able to get the race program signed by the drivers. It was a thrill to have Graham stop and talk to me briefly and sign my program. I still have the 1970 signed program with all drivers except John Surtees because he was in a foul mood over his new underperforming new car he built.
Yep, the Surtees TS7.
More of this please, we want the full version!
Damon Hill has some of his Dad's mannerisms
Balls of steel. Iam a simracer who loves this era in a sim. A don't think the newer generation realise how dangerous these cars were. Gt3 cars today pretty much drive themselves, they have to much electronics to realie on and it takes away the drivers skills
I wish F1, or some other international formula, was like this today. Private ventures, charismatic people, and guts.
How simple things were back then
Imagine trying to start a f1 team today with a couple of mechanics and a workshop
Ken Tyrrell did it, and won the constructors title in his first year ;)
“Those rather rude bits sticking out” 😂😂😂
What a treat! So interesting to see the differences between F1 then and now.
First time I’ve seen this… I’ve always heard that Graham was a gentleman… But man, what a class act he was
Great video !! Thank You !
Awesome video!! I wonder if there's anywhere you can find the full doco?
The very definition of a champion and a gentleman.
Loved seeing the technicians wearing dress shirts and ties. Plus those sideburns.
Watching Graham is always riveting - the wonderful articulacy and wit in the way he talked, the way he moved, his appearance, everything.
There's still nobody in sport - anywhere - who's come close to Graham's amazing combination of tremendous achievement, hilarious humour and immense physical courage. All these years later - not even close.
Thank you so much for this, though I'd have so loved to see the whole show!
The state of his legs is quite something to see - he never really recovered from his 1969 accident at Watkins Glen when both his knees snapped 'backwards', along with other injuries, yet he seems to ignore this and moves very well.
He was asked around this time, which is of course only two and a half years or so before his tragic, ridiculous and (to me anyway) still hard to believe death, whether his legs still hurt. He replied 'Only when I stand up'.
I'd say Alex Zanardi surpassed him. May not have won a GP or a championship, but to win what he has done after losing his legs, I think you have your man for the current times.
@@burkezillar Hi, I take your point about his physical courage, yes of course, but the combination I referred to? Graham was funnier than most comedians and is still the only person ever to win Indy, Le Mans and the F1 world championship - the amazing 'Triple Crown' which is so unlikely EVER to be repeated.
This is so insightful and inspiring.
Any chance of releasing the whole programme?
Love the boardroom meeting
These are the bravest men ever to drive them f1 cars of there era
Fantastic stuff, completely new to me!
They misjudged a bit the quantity of foam used for molding the seat😅. I love the videos of these pioneers
The fire proof overalls man is sporting a great 70 s hair do .. bring it back 👌
Its amazing how similar Graham sounds to Damon
I wonder if any of the team members helping fit the seat were with in the plane with him on that fateful day two years later
I was thinking the same 🤔
From Wikipedia: "On board with him were five other members of the Embassy Hill team who all died: manager Ray Brimble, mechanics Tony Alcock and Terry Richards, driver Tony Brise, and designer Andy Smallman."
Wow. So much changed in those 50 years. Drivers had to be really crazy to drive those "fuel tanks on the wheels"
Two mechanics! It takes three to change a single tyre today.
Yep, but they only changed tyres when they had a puncture back then.
he was such a nice man
A pilot on speedways and a true lord out of them.
I had the privilege as a kid with my brother to see and touch Graham & Jochen's Gold Leaf Lotus cars at a workshop and then see them at the Teretonga circuit (NZ)
Tasman series i guess.
@@terrystevens5261 Correct👍
Great video! Absolute legend. It is interesting seeing them experimenting (then) new technology. I'm not sure if the compressed air thing in the helmet is really safe though.
What a man Graham Hill was, smooth, charming, talented, brave; he also managed to replicate all of those qualities in Damon Hill (chip off the old block)
I was chuffed to bits when Damon won the British Grand Prix, something his dad failed to do.
He did win the International Trophy at Silverstone though in 1971, Grahams last win in a GP car and my first visit to Silverstone. i was 17, now 70. where the hell did all that time go ?
That is the coolest thing i have ever seen!
They broke the mold after Graham Hill.... There will never be another
FANTASTIC!!! Never saw that!
Holy hell this is so good
Race suit over his suit! What a bunch of mad lads
Graham Hill baby.
Please share the rest of this documentary!! I was enthralled, and 100% plot committed. I’m going to need some resolution, if you beauties at the bbc could accommodate a yank.
I saw the rest of this when it first came out .... Graham describes the car and what was needed to build it.... Really wide tyres at that time, wider than today's.......
But he found it really difficult to be a small outfit (privateer virtually) ..... When large sponsorship was taking over.
Is there a full version?
The early 70's F1 cars looked gaudy and overdone at the time. Now they look positively gorgeous compared to the current space ships.
I do wonder where in Old Woking his racing cars were made! its nearly my home town of Woking!
10 Manor Way. Leased space from Gomm Metal Developments. They weren’t there long however before moving to Hanworth.
@@pensylvania65000 I wonder if they know the history of that building?
@@pensylvania65000Where in Hanworth?
He's so bloody cool.
There has to be more of this..........
Horse riders: please drive slowly when near us.
Graham Hill: 180mph. 0:35
where can we see the rest?? It was getting very interesting!
Fascinating ,but also shows how far technology has moved in 51 years 😳🤓
Crazy racing on top of a fuel tank
the wild 70s , what period
£90,000 in 1975 = £770,000 in 2024.
Graham had a handsome head of hair and a magnificent jawline. 🏁🇬🇧
In a parallel universe, Lewis Hamilton this weekend just won his 9th British Grand Prix driving a GH49 for the ultra-successful Sir Graham Hill & Son Racing International racing team powered by the affiliate company within Graham's own empire of The Hill Group plc, Cosworth Engines, Powertrains & Rocket Systems Ltd.🙏
How many Championships did Damon win with this team in this parallel universe? 4?
dont talk about the disgraceful rich commie in a video about the late and great graham hill
@crusherbmx It was one more championship than the ones Schumacher won in our universe...! 😉🏆💪😆
Graham Hill had the best hair for a racing driver.
James Hunt provided some competition 😊
Maybe they still have an old engine for Red Bull
Absolutely fascinating.
✌
Putting the race suit on straight over a highly flammable shirt and tie 👔 😂
That isn't the race suit, it's just a pair of overalls to protect his normal clothing from workshop oil and grease while he works on the car.
@@vvayoutvvest I disagree. Racing overalls. Goodbye
@@jacobmassey3897 Yep, all the drivers wore those early Nomex suits back then.
Amazing character, I would travel back in time and have a chat with him!
The lady is so pretty from 12:25!
Jim Hall did this in the early 60’s.
At the moment of his plane crash, Hill was bankrupt ? broke ? Alan jones said that in 1975 Hill was a very demanding and agressive team manager because he needed results to keep running his team. And there is the accident of Stommelen in Montjuic 75 due to a faulty rear wing...
Graham Hill did to Formula One what Jimmy Hill did to football: made it much more professional and much more business like.
Only triple crown winner ever, one of our greatestst Brits.
Having won Le Mans with Matra in 1972, as the co driver of French darling Henri Pescarolo, Hill would have been better trying for a sports car drive I think.
Many questions over that fatal air crash in the fog , he had the option to divert to a fog free airport but declined, rumours of the plane being overloaded with a DFV.
Great man, very rich motorsport history, tragic end.
No one will ever equal his triple crown achievement of wins, F1, Indianapolis and Le Mans .RIP.
Super and superb