This was the very reason the Le Mans disaster happened. 84 people dead, and 180 or so injured. Now, cars a lighter and faster. Without precautions, many more would die in a similar crash
After the crash, it seemed that god cursed him, especially with bad kidneys. He lost one in 1955, and his other was failing. He had only 3 years to live.
yes, quality of analogue 35mm film is amazing. but because "advancement" does not mean better quality, but more easy sellable consumer products, we ended up with horrible videoformat in the 80s.
Yeah it went from high-quality film to analog storage methods with crap quality like cassettes in the 80s, 90s, and 00s. Then finally to digital methods today where quality is far better than the film.
No... In the end, porno won. Sony would not allow the porno industry to buy their cassettes in large quantities. At the time, this was a major portion of the cassette market. Sony made a ethical stand and it cost them the business.
In 1965 while I was in the Army in Germany, three other GIs and I drove a rented VW Beetle from Munich to Paris and then south to Le Mans. We got there the day before the day of the race and I drove the Beetle around the entire ~8.5 mile race course. I pushed it as hard as I dared and it took something over 15 minutes for one lap. There were race cars on the road doing practice runs in addition to normal local traffic. It was cool to be passed by Porsche 904s, Ford GT40s, Shelby Cobra Daytonas, various Ferrari models, etc. Many people don't realize that the race consisted of various classes being run at the same time on the same course so, in addition to the above types there were also Alpines, Triumphs, MGs, and others on the course. Before the race many teams rented or contracted with local garages in the town of le Mans where they set up their cars so several of these cars were running around town after being tuned and set up. Ever see as fully setup race Ferrari 250 sitting at a stop light behind a Porsche 904, both behind a 1965 Volkswagen Beetle? Unfortunately, in the last 50+ years I've lost the pictures I took of the two days we were there. EDIT, additional info: While we were there, we spent most of the time at the first turn out of the pit area but we did do a bit of walking around. Up the hill past the S-bends and the Dunlop bridge and as far as the beginning of the Mulsanne Straight at the Virge du Tetra Rouge. I think that stretch was where a lot of the exciting action took place, aside from the 3.7 mile musanne itself which would have been a bit far to walk as there was no real path to follow.. There was a carnival set up in the area near the S-bends which was nothing special with most of the stuff you would see at any US carnival, but was a momentary diversion. We crossed the Dunlop bridge and went over to the area above the pits where Ford had a party tent set up with a large buffet table set up. We weren't invited in but could nose around a bit. I saw, but didn't talk to Carroll Shelby and probably a lot of other famous people who I didn't recognize. They had a new 1964 1/2 Mustang on display. We stayed through the entire race, even through the night hours although we did get a little sleep until the morning sun got us going again. It was exciting being there and it's an experience to remember but seeing the same cars roaring past, one after another, and on and, on and, on actually got a bit boring. All you could see is zipping by cars with no way to tell who was winning. As an aside, not related directly to the race - the VW Beetle we rented had the speedometer/odometer driven from a cable which ran through the left front wheel axle and was pinned in a square hole in the grease cap. I removed the pin to disconnect the cable so the speedometer didn't work, and more importantly so the odometer wouldn't rack up any miles. It could have been unscrewed from the speedometer head behind the dash but the company had marked the connection there with paint which would have shown if the connection was disturbed. I did have to get an international driver's license but that only took a couple of days before we left. This all was a few decades before free movement between countries came about but having a valid driver's license and our military IDs were all we needed, so there was no hassle going from German into France, or coming back. None of us could speak French and our few attempts to interact with French nationals in English were met with indignation and disdain. I can understand their expecting visitors to at least try the language but even out attempts at sign language were ignored. They were just plain rude. We had to rely on what little food we brought along plus some terrible carnival food. Our few hours spent in Paris left me highly unimpressed with the city. It seemed dingy and unkampt with dirt and trash on the streets and sidewalks. We did visit the Eifel Tower which is a lot bigger than you might think, taking up an area of an entire city block. The traffic circle around the Arc de Triomphe was an adventure in itself. With six lanes circling and twelve roads entering you really have to plan ahead to get in and out at the right place.
@@sarahcampbell8819 It's an open country road when they're not racing. I've been around the course (and in the #1 Starting Position, in a VW WestFahlia Camper! 🤣) and watched bicycles and motor scooters pass in the other direction. Knowing that teams do, or at least use to, drive the course before the race just to get a few more laps in, we kept a close watch on the mirrors. We traveled throughout Europe in a 1963 VW Camper and for some reason, it just wouldn't pass that racecourse without stopping. Of course, a 13 year old kid in the back, bugging his dad incessantly may have had something to do with that! 😂
It's incredible to see how different the track was back then, when it was quite literally just a country road that was shut down for some race cars. Fantastic history!
The first thing that strikes you when you drive on it in a sim or see it on film is how obscenely narrow it is, compared to the modern version of the track. A wall of trees on both sides and barely any room to pass other cars, in a car with zero downforce and safety measures in the form of "just don't crash, mkay?" going almost 300kmh. Old racing is terrifying af.
175 miles per hour ............. That demonstrates how damn good that XK engine was, why it became a legend . 6 pistons , 2 camshafts and 3 SU carbs made this unforgetable powerhouse of an engine . Those where the days my friend ......
Among other things, just look at how much of the track has trees less than 10m from the edge, not even a tire barrier to slow a 150+mph impact. Such a dangerous era of motorsport, but that was simply how things were back then. My grandfather raced on dirt tracks in a time of leather helmets, homemade goggles, and no seatbelts - sometimes no windscreens, wearing slacks and short sleeves. Unthinkable these days, but that was the era. Amazing he lived through it - many did not. It's often referred to as a romantic time of "real men" but that does a disservice to many great drivers of the modern era, and certainly there are countless "real men" who would rather be alive today than having died their "heroic" (and terrible) deaths. It makes them legends, I suppose, but I'd still prefer to be able to see and hear them today, telling their stories of the early days of modern motorsports. Their bravery was unquestionable, and I have a lot of respect for them, but I have to say I'm glad things have changed. Regardless, great video footage, thanks for posting!
And some people think it was those cars, and not the stupid rules, that made racing dangerous in the past. Still think it is the car? Put a modern racing car there, that is at least 2x as fast, and keep the same stupid rules. Now tell me if it was really dangerous because of the cars...
Some of the problem was the cars. Mercedes using FLAMMABLE magnesium alloy bodies, for instance. The manufacturers certainly didn't help make the sport any safer back then either. ;)
To think that this apparatus recording the image and sound was so complicated, large and heavy, the tape recorder with vacuum tubes and the batteries were all huge, consumed a lot of electricity and lasted for a short time. This movie was expensive but what a wonderful legacy of human science. As the saying goes, "a lot of work is a lot of satisfaction".
That's probably a wind up 16mm camera, not that heavy or technical (you can see it on a pole in the opening part of the sequence, it's about the size of a couple of shoeboxes) & the film stock was black & white, so not very expensive at all by 1954. Even if it's an electric camera the batteries they took weren't big or heavy, we still put them in bike lights in the 80's when I was a kid. The sound is likely recorded to a small, separate reel to reel located on the cockpit floor & synched up afterwards. Obtaining this footage wasn't nearly as difficult as you seem to think it was. Film tech was always simple, unlike TV cameras of the time.
Still, it's amazing. Older video and audio recording systems were very complex and susceptible to vehicle vibration. It always impresses me when I see old movies in motion, and even more so handcrafted racing cars. Thank you and good health :)
Christ chris true but braking and cornering speeds are the 2 biggest differences between racing then and now. A Lmp1 can stop from 210mph in 300m in 4seconds. 200mph racing cars were possible from the 1930s, they couldn't stop or turn worth a dam in comparison to todays cars though
Gregisonutube production public? None. But race and specialty? The land speed wheel driven record was 203mph in 1927, by 1939 it was 394mph, 200mph racing cars were most definitely possible by this time period. My point was, its braking and corner speed that has made the most strides, not really top speeds.
are you kidding me? if you demand an explication for the obvious, how do you want to do that? please just use common sense and listen to ACCEELERATION SOUND (engine full load, rpm going up) in braking zone. is this argument understandable? or do you think otherwise? if yes, what is different?
Paty of the engine noise you're hearing, the static, is from the ignition system interfering with the recording gear. Also there's no way the driver would endanger a racing car for a short tour of the track the day before when the public has access. By the sound of it I believe the engine sound is genuine, just remember that the microphone was designed to block as much outside noise as possible, allowing the driver to be heard. That this film is in as good of condition is amazing, but then again, it was probably shown very little and archived fairly well.
Amazing. I don't think I've ever heard Mike Hawthorne's voice before. Taken far to early. Also its completely nuts they we're doing 175 mph plus in these cars, no seatbelts, harness, any kind of protection.
Seat belts were a driver and crew decision. Most drivers thought it better to be thrown clear. In some cases it was as being trapped in a burning car was not that uncommon.
Jimmy S. I’m blown away he’s on a hot lap with the roads open and traffic and cyclists and pedestrians on both sides and directions. I need to go find out when Le Mans changed from public roads to a closed circuit. Fascinating.
@@wallymcguire2033 he's not on an hotlap. He's just doing a tour of the circuit. That's why the roads are still open as it isn't race day. On race day the roads are obviously closed.
"I've got to be a little bit careful today because there's quite a lot of traffic on the road" right before curtailing some throttle-induced oversteer when the oncoming bicyclist appears in the corner @ 1:26, lol.
matthew clark it’s thanks to using good old fashioned normal perspective lenses, not the dumb fisheye lenses used today to exaggerate sensation of speed but which lose all perspective.
This has to be about the coolest historical race type footage I've ever seen. Nowadays this is normal but to have a driver miced up talking you through the course back then?? That's awesome!
Just look how smooth his hand movements are. I've been in modern rally cars, driven by top drivers - the common factor is that, even though they're driving ridiculously fast, the steering wheel is being "nursed", never jerked or wrenched. They could put a half full glass of water on the dashboard and not spill a drop. If we all drove like that, we'd use less fuel, be quicker and have less accidents.
Yes. He had caused less accidents... Only two of them are worth mentioning: Le Mans 1955, 83 dead and 180 injured and the one he lost his life, three years later. This dude was a true "smooth criminal"...
Well, we can’t exactly all drive like that because racing cars are set up to be that way. No car with stock steering and suspension will be able to handle that way.
What an imcredible piece of history in superb quality. "Hawthorne says: lot's of traffic, cyclists typically French" Then a giggle. How very fanatstically British . Keep it up chaps. Thanks. RUUD
Gorgeous!! The sound is simply stunning!! The great in line six Jaguar XK engine sounds as it has a very high compression ratio,lets say 10:1!!! For 1956 racing engine indicates very high octane fuel or methanol mixture!! Thanks for sharing the D type is one of my favorite racing cars!!😊😊😊❤❤❤
@@bencezavarko7312 I was harshly critical of Hawthorne for years for Le Mans 1955 but learning more about the disaster it's hard to single out anyone for the blame. You could blame the organizers for not widening the pit straight when the cars started to get really fast in the 1950s. You could question Austin Healey for the design of putting a sloped rear on the back of a racing car, it seems like it's practically designed to launch a rear ending car into the air. A crazy design in hindsight. I can't blame Macklin or LeVegh, and I can at most say that Hawthorne was guilty of reckless driving. But all he did was to decide to pit on that lap, and the new disc brakes of Hawthorne's Jaguar provided braking power racers just weren't accustomed to. His situational awareness was down to a blurry image of a few cars in a shaky mirror. The infamous post race pics of him celebrating with champagne are misleading too. There are some pics of him looking somber and miserable after the race. But if someone comes up to you with a post race garland of flowers and some champagne it seems just natural to many people to just accept it with a smile, even if you don't feel like celebrating. Not trying to exonerate him fully, but I think he's been unfairly targeted for decades for causing the disaster.
He did not cause it. He saw the instruction from his team to enter the pit. He did. In auto racing, as in bicycle racing, you are responsible for your front wheel. This world today is too quick to blame and to slow to sympathize.
i know right!? in my mind i kept saying "why isn't he slowing down" then i relized that was his true racing coming out vs just a casual stroll for the camera
Wow! This just popped up in my suggested list. What great footage from before I was born (only just). Obviously a relatively slow lap due to all the cars and bicycles 😊 Nice quality video thanks to film rather than later magnetic media. Thank you for giving us the opportunity to see it.
This certainly brought back memories. I had a friend called Johnny Williams, an American GI based at Upper Heyford. Met him in an Oxford pub early sixties. He owned a metallic blue Austin Healey 3000, new. I think he paid around £3000 for it. If memory serves me correctly the number plate was 300 LAC. We went to Silverstone in the Healey one day. He knew somebody who was involved in the running of a D type and fiddled me a ride in it. I remember stalling it 2 or 3 times before I got rolling and most likely recorded the slowest ever time for a D type around Silverstone. Can't remember any other names involved, I think I was about 22 years old ( now 81 ) at the time, maybe younger. I shared an Austin Somerset saloon car with my dad- the reg was HJB 835- a somewhat different experience! There were about 3 million cars on the roads then, very low traffic movement everywhere you went. That Healey could really motor, a fantastic car. Older people will remember the salute you received from the RAC motorcyclist when you met him on the open road. Motoring was fun then....
Very cool video. The first time my brother Pat Hennen raced motorcycles at Le Mans was at the 1976 French GP, his first ever GP. He rode a privateer production RG500 Suzuki, his first ride on the bike. It's amazing how vastly different Le Mans was by then. It had transformed since the year this video was made into a proper race track that was much shorter, no trees or buildings close by the track, with proper race-grade tarmac all the way around. He raced on the version of the track with the long back straight and really enjoyed racing on the circuit. One part of the center of the circuit had a large carnival with a huge farris wheel. At night, the evening before the race, the center of the track was all lit up with the lights and noise from the carnival. We had never seen anything like it in the U.S., so we were really blown away by the track and the whole atmosphere.
The 24hr circuit hasn't changed length much since 1932 and is only used for the 24hr car race. All other races use the Bugatti circuit which is only 2.6 miles long and is all private road.
Still to me it's the best car video that has been made. I'm in my 30s and love it more now than I did as a teen when it first ended up on one of Dads old VHS vids.
That microphone is HUGE! It's fun to see how advanced the Jaguar is in comparison to the other cars on the road, even the Citroën 2CV. Driving Le Mans with pedestrians, bicycles, cars, motorcycles....
I saw similar mics being used for a World Poker Tour event a few years ago, since the commentator booth was basically on the casino floor, and the casino was open for regular business aside from the tournament. You probably wouldn't have been able to hear yourself think for all the cacophony, but the commentators came through crystal clear. It was just funny seeing them all kissing those mics. :P
@@PlaySA Nope, take a look at his lips when the camera changes to show his face. You can see a piece going around his mouth, that's what they're talking about.
Sometimes referred to as a lip mic because of the metal bar you held against your top lip to get the spacing correct. I haven’t seen one with such an elaborate screen around the mouth before. There is vision out there of Murray Walker using one in the 1990s. They are still in use today but I’m not sure if they are still being made.
Oh, if only my Dad had lived long enough to experience the internet, and see stuff like this. He would have been thrilled. Part of me would like to think that he's seeing it through my eyes... thank you for this...
Jaguar D type. Short sleeve polo shirt and no fireproof suit. No computers no high tech monitoring system besides Smith gauges and a driver with nerves of steel and balls of titanium. More driving skills and talent back then. I prefer the old days. Thanks for sharing this beautiful piece of auto racing history.
Kamikaze Yamamoto I mean auto gearboxes, traction control, anti lock brakes and all driver aids are banned in a lot of series these days so not sure what you’re talking about
Drivers are just as brave, modern cars at the top tier at Le Mans and F1 are much faster, complicated and require the best to get the best out of the cars, same apply with the GTE and LMP2 Cars, the forces of modern cars are twice as powerful as old cars, they are precision machines, one wrong move and then your gone
Great vid.i clearly remember being in primary school in belfast when a teacher came in and said mike hawthorn has just been killed.some memories never fade.
I just happened to come across this while searching for something else. The technology used, for the time, is pretty amazing. I especially like how the driver’s microphone is held in place!
Hawthorn was going into the pits which he guestered to the jag and merc behind him on the turn before the start/finish straight. the jag moved from behind hawthorn in front of the merc. Then the jag braked for the turn (essentially brake checking the merc). the merc could not slow down in time because the The jaguar's had disc brakes which slow the car down faster than the Mercedes. Because of this merc ramped off the back of the jag into the crowd That's what happened hawthorn was not a fault. It was as some would say a racing accident.
He brake checked Macklin TWICE. He wanted to wreck Fangio and Levegh. Fangio was coming up hard, Levegh in front, a lap down. Both Fangio and Levegh in 300 SLR's. Macklin was in a Healey, and Hawthorne was of course in the D-Type. Hawthorne tried brake checking Macklin further up on the road to the pits, but he was too far away. The second time he was successful, and Macklin, caught unawares, scandi flicked his Healey away from the back of the Jag and into the right front wheel of Levegh's Merc which reports said was doing a buck fifty at the time. The Merc was launched into the stands after that. As far as I can fathom, up until today the Gesdarmes have not released an official death toll from the '55 crash. It was a lot more horrific than was let on. From the pics I've seen, the published death toll was a joke. On youtube somewhere an American driver, John Fitch, who was Levegh's co-driver, said Hawthorne came into the pits a broken man. Fitch said, I believe, that Hawthorne was rambling on about having caused the accident.
There’s so much that I love about this video but the fact that the track is essentially the exact same layout (give or take a few chicanes lol) after 60+ years is insane
Sometimes it's a bit tricky to use the cigarette lighter that the Jaguar D Type thankfully has on board properly but ultimately it's a matter of concentration and hand eye coordination.
My local hero, "The Golden Boy" Owned Tourist Trophy in Farnham, now Hawthorns, used to drink in the Barley Mow in Tilford up the road, sadly buried in our local Cemetrey , West Street in Farnham, killed in 1959 on the Hogs Back towards Guildford, what a Legend. R.I.P Mike Hawthorn, i visit your grave on a regular basis
That's incredible! I know the circuit in its current iteration quite well from playing Gran Turismo and it's really striking some of the differences. So many trees around the track, especially around the Esses and there's a chicane before the pit straight now.
I find it difficult to believe the stupidity of some of the comments from various people.Le Mans is a race run on public roads,this was a demonstration done when the road was still open to every day traffic.When the race is run for real the roads are CLOSED,when Hawthorne talked about speeds of 175-180 mph he was refering to speeds in the actual race,it is plain to see he was not doing speeds remotely near those.With regard to the accident in 1955,Hawthorne does share some blame,so does Macklin.
+clive doyle…...on what basis do you claim that the blame for the 1955 Le Mans tragedy was Lance Macklin's? Whilst there are deeply conflicting accounts of who was really at fault - the official inquiry cleared all drivers of responsibility stating it was simply a 'terrible accident'. However, many - including Macklin, John Fitch [Pierre Levegh's co-driver]. Mercedes-Benz team Manager Alfred Neubauer and to lesser degree Healey team manager, Geoffrey Healey all felt Mike Hawthorn was the main culprit. [indeed, Hawthorn himself was initially extremely upset and openly blamed himself for the resulting carnage - although he significantly changed his stance later on]. Macklin stated that after passing him at great speed on his inside, Hawthorn had suddenly braked in front of him on noticing an order to enter the pits to refuel - and veered across the track. Due the far superior stopping power of the disc-brake equipped D-Type Jaguars, Macklin was forced to swerve to his left and into Levegh's path - who was travelling at approx. 200kph in comparison to Macklin's 120kph. What happened next is a matter of record - but in the aftermath of the tragic events of that fateful day, a war of words developed between Macklin and Fitch [on one side] and Hawthorn on the other. What fanned the fires of this dispute even more was Hawthorn's highly insensitive accusation that both Levegh and Macklin were extremely poor drivers and not fit to be racing at Le Mans. [Indeed this led to Macklin suing Hawthorn for libel]. The case was never settled as ironically a terminally-ill Hawthorn was killed a few years later whilst over-taking a Mercedes-Benz in his Mk 1 Jaguar on the A3 Guildford bypass.
+Graeme Smith....oh hum - it's a pity you never mastered the basic skill of READING. I never claimed anyone was to blame - I merely cited the official enquiry and anecdotal accounts by people who were there at the time. To be truthful I have absolutely no real interest in this highly unnecessary 'sport' - so events like the 1955 Le Mans race and the carnage that ensued merely serve to demonstrate how pointless motor racing is.
Mike Hawthorn is a good person, he evocates the terrible accident in 1955 that killed a part of the spectators in front the départ line (you Can note some changes with 1956), one year before the video, i Can feel the sadness in his voice, Great pilot
You guys are both mistaken. The footage is edited together from multiple laps so it is not a single lap but it is made to look as if it is just one. The audio is very genuine and is substantially from the first lap with the camera mounted on the rear of the car. The end of the ‘lap’ shows him going through the pit area and starting another lap so we know there were at least two laps (but probably more) with this rear camera set up. We also see some footage of the camera mounted on the front of the car. That required driving the circuit with the hood removed. As this was B roll there may have been only one lap with this set up. In addition there was some dolly footage near the car, and tripod footage from an elevated location. In those days this required a good size crew, good director, several hours engineering attachment points for the car, and several filming hours to get this short clip of what looks like a single lap with Hawthorne. It would be expensive as well as time consuming. Today, our smaller equipment vastly simplifies a job like this and shortens the time needed to get the shots. And dramatically reduces production costs, although money is then spent on getting ever greater amounts of footage. Many people fail to realise the complexity of producing this kind of footage in the earlier days of film, but as a professional I have huge respect for those unsung heroes of news filmmaking at that time.
@@artistjoh Wow, well done, your breakdown shows how much craft and effort went on here. Absolutely different than taking a lap now! Tiny HD cameras at multiple points , car and driver probably only need one lap.
Keith Putnam Yes, people these days don’t realise why it is that early footage doesn’t exist of many significant events in the early to mid 20th century, but movie footage was expensive and to do something like this purported single lap just for a news reel was very expensive to do so generally not done. It also required a director with the skills to put together a complex operation coordinated with circuit administration and a racing team who are possibly wary of removing car parts and adding attachment points for camera frames. It is the sort of job that would be in planning for weeks. That is also true today, but today there would be substantially more footage obtained than a so-called lap of the track. Our modern tiny cameras, gimbals and steadicams, sophisticated cranes and skycams on cables also make for complex operations, but they will get an entire event, often over several days. Footage of a lap or two is far simpler, and with GoPro cameras and their simple attachments, possible for a single operator to do. This old footage is not only interesting, it is remarkable, and a testament to the dedication of those early film crews. It is disappointing to see a commentator dismiss it as “the sound is fake”. He doesn’t realise how difficult it was back then to get that sound in the first place, and how it was edited into clips from multiple laps to give the illusion of a single hot lap. I think they did an incredible job. In many ways thisfootage is the prototype for the 1966 movie Grand Prix in which they got so much wonderful footage of F1 cars racing at places like the old Monza from cameras mounted on the cars.
Ernest Hemingway once said “There are only three sports, bullfighting, motor racing, and mountaineering and all the rest are merely games” It's not that simple any more, but i guess you can get that feeling by watching this classic footage.
Beautiful... What strikes me most is the focus on the track. There's a racing track and a few ads alongside it. Nowadays it's all one humongous piece of advertising space, and we're only a few years away from those ads being (literally) all singing and dancing, blaring visually and sonically whenever a camera is pointing at them... The trick for the next generation of drivers will be to have some serious level of autism to keep your eyes where they need to be: on the road & all other traffic.
Was in my recommended 6 years after the upload. Yet, this footage in itself is still very very fascinating! Didn't know they had cameras on the cars at that time
i bet he never imagined someone would be watching this on the internet at 4am some 84 years later
Couldnt be me.
Im watching it at 5 am
Are you watching this in the year 2040?
@@naomorra who isnt
@@naomorra yes, arent you?
@@marty154 strange, that's when I watched it :)
1956-"somebody in the way never mind"
2019- "he rejoined the track so dangerously"
Hahaha!
+5 seconds penalty
This was the very reason the Le Mans disaster happened. 84 people dead, and 180 or so injured. Now, cars a lighter and faster. Without precautions, many more would die in a similar crash
Funnyshish also, people seem to have lost all common sense, so more safety for them too :/
@@thesauciestboss4039 It's funny because Hawthorne caused the disaster 1 year before that recording.
"...where there was a terrible accident that occurred last year."
Understatement of the century.
right???? 83 killed lmao, i think in those times they were like "yeah its gonna happen again in a couple of years".
This was less than 2 decades after the war, so imagine the psychology of these people. We live in relatively peaceful times.
Drew Insur “lmao”?? 83 killed and who knows how many badly hurt and it’s “lmao”?? What have we become?
After the crash, it seemed that god cursed him, especially with bad kidneys. He lost one in 1955, and his other was failing. He had only 3 years to live.
@@richardthefox3412 I think maybe bad driving may also have shortened his life expectancy.
The quality of the video is unbelievably good.
yes, quality of analogue 35mm film is amazing. but because "advancement" does not mean better quality, but more easy sellable consumer products, we ended up with horrible videoformat in the 80s.
Yeah it went from high-quality film to analog storage methods with crap quality like cassettes in the 80s, 90s, and 00s. Then finally to digital methods today where quality is far better than the film.
That was the VHS Vs Betamax era. In the end, cheap won
No... In the end, porno won. Sony would not allow the porno industry to buy their cassettes in large quantities. At the time, this was a major portion of the cassette market. Sony made a ethical stand and it cost them the
business.
+Bertie Wooster Yeah not really. The format war was mainly between Betamax and VHS and VHS won. Video 2000 was never really in the picture.
In 1965 while I was in the Army in Germany, three other GIs and I drove a rented VW Beetle from Munich to Paris and then south to Le Mans. We got there the day before the day of the race and I drove the Beetle around the entire ~8.5 mile race course. I pushed it as hard as I dared and it took something over 15 minutes for one lap. There were race cars on the road doing practice runs in addition to normal local traffic. It was cool to be passed by Porsche 904s, Ford GT40s, Shelby Cobra Daytonas, various Ferrari models, etc.
Many people don't realize that the race consisted of various classes being run at the same time on the same course so, in addition to the above types there were also Alpines, Triumphs, MGs, and others on the course.
Before the race many teams rented or contracted with local garages in the town of le Mans where they set up their cars so several of these cars were running around town after being tuned and set up. Ever see as fully setup race Ferrari 250 sitting at a stop light behind a Porsche 904, both behind a 1965 Volkswagen Beetle? Unfortunately, in the last 50+ years I've lost the pictures I took of the two days we were there.
EDIT, additional info:
While we were there, we spent most of the time at the first turn out of the pit area but we did do a bit of walking around. Up the hill past the S-bends and the Dunlop bridge and as far as the beginning of the Mulsanne Straight at the Virge du Tetra Rouge. I think that stretch was where a lot of the exciting action took place, aside from the 3.7 mile musanne itself which would have been a bit far to walk as there was no real path to follow..
There was a carnival set up in the area near the S-bends which was nothing special with most of the stuff you would see at any US carnival, but was a momentary diversion.
We crossed the Dunlop bridge and went over to the area above the pits where Ford had a party tent set up with a large buffet table set up. We weren't invited in but could nose around a bit. I saw, but didn't talk to Carroll Shelby and probably a lot of other famous people who I didn't recognize. They had a new 1964 1/2 Mustang on display.
We stayed through the entire race, even through the night hours although we did get a little sleep until the morning sun got us going again. It was exciting being there and it's an experience to remember but seeing the same cars roaring past, one after another, and on and, on and, on actually got a bit boring. All you could see is zipping by cars with no way to tell who was winning.
As an aside, not related directly to the race - the VW Beetle we rented had the speedometer/odometer driven from a cable which ran through the left front wheel axle and was pinned in a square hole in the grease cap. I removed the pin to disconnect the cable so the speedometer didn't work, and more importantly so the odometer wouldn't rack up any miles. It could have been unscrewed from the speedometer head behind the dash but the company had marked the connection there with paint which would have shown if the connection was disturbed. I did have to get an international driver's license but that only took a couple of days before we left.
This all was a few decades before free movement between countries came about but having a valid driver's license and our military IDs were all we needed, so there was no hassle going from German into France, or coming back.
None of us could speak French and our few attempts to interact with French nationals in English were met with indignation and disdain. I can understand their expecting visitors to at least try the language but even out attempts at sign language were ignored. They were just plain rude. We had to rely on what little food we brought along plus some terrible carnival food.
Our few hours spent in Paris left me highly unimpressed with the city. It seemed dingy and unkampt with dirt and trash on the streets and sidewalks. We did visit the Eifel Tower which is a lot bigger than you might think, taking up an area of an entire city block. The traffic circle around the Arc de Triomphe was an adventure in itself. With six lanes circling and twelve roads entering you really have to plan ahead to get in and out at the right place.
Did you win ? Hahaha ....
Lovely story.
Thank you kind sir for sharing your story.
I love these memories, thank you sir it is much appreciated! 👌🏻😎
I wish I was born back then, early Motorsports must've been a blast!
The quality of this 60+ year old video footage is absolutely incredible! What a fantastic piece of history.
Yes, great quality. I just don't understand the people riding bicycles on the side of the track.
@@sarahcampbell8819 It's an open country road when they're not racing. I've been around the course (and in the #1 Starting Position, in a VW WestFahlia Camper! 🤣) and watched bicycles and motor scooters pass in the other direction. Knowing that teams do, or at least use to, drive the course before the race just to get a few more laps in, we kept a close watch on the mirrors. We traveled throughout Europe in a 1963 VW Camper and for some reason, it just wouldn't pass that racecourse without stopping. Of course, a 13 year old kid in the back, bugging his dad incessantly may have had something to do with that! 😂
This! Ladies and gentlemen, might literally be the first car vlog ever recorded.
You, good sir, are a genius.
he ought to have started a youtube channel
I’d be careful, there might end up being “beef” between him and Jim Clark. Or something.
Or lap onboard
This was like Nico Rosberg’s how to master each track series
175mph in a car as safe as that... in the dark. Balls of steel
MrINSANITY321 that’s why it’s interesting
Absolutely!
And then 30 years later doing 240MPH in the dark
@@TomTheCat. At least you weren't falling out of that one straight into the trees when you crashed.
Fun fact: 185 mph in 1956 is like going 250 mph today
It's incredible to see how different the track was back then, when it was quite literally just a country road that was shut down for some race cars. Fantastic history!
The first thing that strikes you when you drive on it in a sim or see it on film is how obscenely narrow it is, compared to the modern version of the track. A wall of trees on both sides and barely any room to pass other cars, in a car with zero downforce and safety measures in the form of "just don't crash, mkay?" going almost 300kmh. Old racing is terrifying af.
Like the Isle of Mann TT.
still the case today
It's not even shut down!
You can still see that 1956 track in the one we have today though. There’s a few more chicanes, but it still follows basically the same route
The 1950's GoPro!!
The buzzing in the audio is from the Jag's unshielded ignition wires. The mike is picking up RFI interference from them.
What an amazing video! Thank you for posting it.
And GoMic. Good thing he didn't crash with the gadgetry strapped on. Fun to see how the scenery has changed.
So that is whats wrong with my 1975 sony recorder :D i can hear the tape motor whirr when recording
...
Technology one step ahead of having an artist and a scribe on board! Great piece of history, thanks for uploading.
That old jag sounds amazing, even with the radio static interference. 👍👍👍👍
175 miles per hour .............
That demonstrates how damn good that XK engine was, why it became a legend .
6 pistons , 2 camshafts and 3 SU carbs made this unforgetable powerhouse of an engine .
Those where the days my friend ......
When professional racing was street racing. Still moving faster than most would dare today.
@@chaytonhurlow840😊😊+1!!!!😊😊😊😊
Unbelievable! POV from 60 years ago
Another era altogether in deed....unbelievable footage.
I feel like growing a mustache after watching.
boothegoo pc My moustache shrivelled away, I am not a true man compared to these chaps.
Now this video is a very important historic treasure
"Cyclists everywhere... Haha Typical French."
Synystr7 «this part of the track is a lot safer»
Love that
Scaring dangerous, those cyclists.
Typical French "P.I.T.A"'s that is !!! ;D
Typical 50's french. :D
Among other things, just look at how much of the track has trees less than 10m from the edge, not even a tire barrier to slow a 150+mph impact. Such a dangerous era of motorsport, but that was simply how things were back then. My grandfather raced on dirt tracks in a time of leather helmets, homemade goggles, and no seatbelts - sometimes no windscreens, wearing slacks and short sleeves. Unthinkable these days, but that was the era. Amazing he lived through it - many did not. It's often referred to as a romantic time of "real men" but that does a disservice to many great drivers of the modern era, and certainly there are countless "real men" who would rather be alive today than having died their "heroic" (and terrible) deaths. It makes them legends, I suppose, but I'd still prefer to be able to see and hear them today, telling their stories of the early days of modern motorsports. Their bravery was unquestionable, and I have a lot of respect for them, but I have to say I'm glad things have changed. Regardless, great video footage, thanks for posting!
it's just to increase the chances of being able to have an open casket funeral
+Rob Cohen LMAO
And some people think it was those cars, and not the stupid rules, that made racing dangerous in the past. Still think it is the car? Put a modern racing car there, that is at least 2x as fast, and keep the same stupid rules. Now tell me if it was really dangerous because of the cars...
Some of the problem was the cars. Mercedes using FLAMMABLE magnesium alloy bodies, for instance. The manufacturers certainly didn't help make the sport any safer back then either. ;)
You know, the WRC exists. Even today they race in much more dangerous locations than Le Mans in the 50s.
To think that this apparatus recording the image and sound was so complicated, large and heavy, the tape recorder with vacuum tubes and the batteries were all huge, consumed a lot of electricity and lasted for a short time. This movie was expensive but what a wonderful legacy of human science. As the saying goes, "a lot of work is a lot of satisfaction".
That's probably a wind up 16mm camera, not that heavy or technical (you can see it on a pole in the opening part of the sequence, it's about the size of a couple of shoeboxes) & the film stock was black & white, so not very expensive at all by 1954. Even if it's an electric camera the batteries they took weren't big or heavy, we still put them in bike lights in the 80's when I was a kid.
The sound is likely recorded to a small, separate reel to reel located on the cockpit floor & synched up afterwards.
Obtaining this footage wasn't nearly as difficult as you seem to think it was. Film tech was always simple, unlike TV cameras of the time.
Still, it's amazing. Older video and audio recording systems were very complex and susceptible to vehicle vibration. It always impresses me when I see old movies in motion, and even more so handcrafted racing cars.
Thank you and good health :)
Now imagine it in the dark!
At full race pace. So much respect for guys that would do that.
FARRRRRRKKKKKK !!!!!!
Get a toyota 70 in gt6 and just try. Total madness.
Idk that looks pretty dark to me. can't even see colors properly
... then imagine dark and wet 😱
185 mph is fast even for today.
ye it prolly took these pos about 30 sec down the whole 2 km straight to get that LOLOL shit cars
Mena Yazzie yes because the engines were monsters, but see how he has to brake for 10 seconds to take the corner at the end...
Agîlity he obviously wasn't going at 185mph and he obviously wasn't fully braking
Christ chris true but braking and cornering speeds are the 2 biggest differences between racing then and now.
A Lmp1 can stop from 210mph in 300m in 4seconds.
200mph racing cars were possible from the 1930s, they couldn't stop or turn worth a dam in comparison to todays cars though
Gregisonutube production public? None. But race and specialty? The land speed wheel driven record was 203mph in 1927, by 1939 it was 394mph, 200mph racing cars were most definitely possible by this time period.
My point was, its braking and corner speed that has made the most strides, not really top speeds.
Corrects oversteer as motorcycle passes. “Much safer this year.”
I love the sound of the D-Type Jaguar
the sound is faked
MrTiti Your justification for that comment?
are you kidding me?
if you demand an explication for the obvious, how do you want to do that?
please just use common sense and listen to ACCEELERATION SOUND (engine full load, rpm going up) in braking zone.
is this argument understandable?
or do you think otherwise? if yes, what is different?
No the sound is not fake th-cam.com/video/kVMFwUhxx9o/w-d-xo.html
Paty of the engine noise you're hearing, the static, is from the ignition system interfering with the recording gear. Also there's no way the driver would endanger a racing car for a short tour of the track the day before when the public has access. By the sound of it I believe the engine sound is genuine, just remember that the microphone was designed to block as much outside noise as possible, allowing the driver to be heard. That this film is in as good of condition is amazing, but then again, it was probably shown very little and archived fairly well.
piece of history of motorsport!
Amazing. I don't think I've ever heard Mike Hawthorne's voice before. Taken far to early. Also its completely nuts they we're doing 175 mph plus in these cars, no seatbelts, harness, any kind of protection.
NO. What they do now is nuts...
Seat belts were a driver and crew decision. Most drivers thought it better to be thrown clear. In some cases it was as being trapped in a burning car was not that uncommon.
Different times and a different mentality mate. As simple as that.
In the dark
@@Noremax Also drunk.
"I have to be carefully , theres a lot of traffic today" ( *accelerates* )
Jimmy S. I’m blown away he’s on a hot lap with the roads open and traffic and cyclists and pedestrians on both sides and directions. I need to go find out when Le Mans changed from public roads to a closed circuit. Fascinating.
@@wallymcguire2033 he's not on an hotlap. He's just doing a tour of the circuit. That's why the roads are still open as it isn't race day. On race day the roads are obviously closed.
Yeah, this is not a hot lap... Looks like he's driving fast, but compared to what he'd be doing in the actual race, this was a relaxing cruise...
@Jimmy to be fair, yes he does accelerate very gently. The joke was a bit ruined by the might of facts 😁 oh, and, nice name, btw.
and you can't be careful if you accelerate, right
"I've got to be a little bit careful today because there's quite a lot of traffic on the road" right before curtailing some throttle-induced oversteer when the oncoming bicyclist appears in the corner @ 1:26, lol.
"Have to be careful because of trafic" 😂😂he wasnt careful in 1959 when he hit a truck on the road
Commando Ultra 84 you would be the type of person to bring up something completely unrelated just to belittle somebody you don’t even know
Commando Ultra 84 it was a tree on the A3 Guildford bypass. He was racing against an 300SL gullwing Merc in a Coombes MK2 Jaguar.
This is the coolest video on the internet.
Damn straight
better quality footage than half of todays
matthew clark it’s thanks to using good old fashioned normal perspective lenses, not the dumb fisheye lenses used today to exaggerate sensation of speed but which lose all perspective.
Well this was a big-ass suitcase size movie camera. Today's cameras are tiny palm sized cameras. It's hard to work around the difference.
because the car is going slow, with no big forces on the camera, and they are using a huge camera.
100th like!
Not surprised,they use gopro:)
This has to be about the coolest historical race type footage I've ever seen. Nowadays this is normal but to have a driver miced up talking you through the course back then?? That's awesome!
He was 27 at the time.... Amazing how much class he had in his voice.
@Mr. Handsome what a moron you are, fancy coming out with all that crap you just did
Wow you really have a personal issue with this guy lol. Dont cry.
Eagle comic called him 'The Farnham Flyer'. I remember the news of his end.
He was the 'Farnham Flyer' but originally from Mexborough in South Yorkshire.
He's British, all British people's accent has classiness
Before GoPros, SJCams and helmets with build-in microphone was born...
Wow, how different it was back then..that D-Type sounds nice!
God
Forget all the consumer technology you are talking about, it was before the Pc or internet was born. Wonderful! History of motorsports.
Le mans in the 50's looked beautiful but.. also was deadly
Extreme agreed!
yea living in a world that is only black n white must of been amazing.
@@hauskins9516 what? im talking about the track not the color lol
@@mickeymouze5 what color?
Speaking of deadly tracks have you heard of a circuit called Pescara?
Just look how smooth his hand movements are. I've been in modern rally cars, driven by top drivers - the common factor is that, even though they're driving ridiculously fast, the steering wheel is being "nursed", never jerked or wrenched. They could put a half full glass of water on the dashboard and not spill a drop. If we all drove like that, we'd use less fuel, be quicker and have less accidents.
Exactly. The trick to driving well is smoothness
Jim Clark approves that message
Yes. He had caused less accidents... Only two of them are worth mentioning: Le Mans 1955, 83 dead and 180 injured and the one he lost his life, three years later. This dude was a true "smooth criminal"...
I noticed that..I thought ‘soft’ hands.
Well, we can’t exactly all drive like that because racing cars are set up to be that way. No car with stock steering and suspension will be able to handle that way.
What an imcredible piece of history in superb quality. "Hawthorne says: lot's of traffic, cyclists typically French" Then a giggle. How very fanatstically British . Keep it up chaps. Thanks. RUUD
I never thought I would ever witness Mike Hawthorn overtaking a Velo Solex at Le Mans!!! Only in France. Thank you so much for this.
What an amazing driver, it's a pity that he's all but been forgotten.
A true gentleman racer .
Vale Mike Hawthorn.
I started watching F1 in 2010 and he's not forgotten for me
If you look closely in the rear mirror there is a Williams FW42 trying to follow up but couldn't keep up in the second half.
It's a lap down too
@@drewhender3999 GOT'EM! XD
Good eye, Cat. Nice pic too 😉
Balkan banana your gay
@Balkan banana Can't right now maybe later.
Gorgeous!! The sound is simply stunning!! The great in line six Jaguar XK engine sounds as it has a very high compression ratio,lets say 10:1!!! For 1956 racing engine indicates very high octane fuel or methanol mixture!! Thanks for sharing the D type is one of my favorite racing cars!!😊😊😊❤❤❤
It's impressive to see how much the track has changed since then
I think that might be the coolest thing I've ever seen.
I think you may possibly be right! I have never seen anything like this, loved it. About to watch again.
The ride of the Jaguar is incredibly smooth.
Becease he drive slowly on normal road..
Nah you can tell it kinda wallows around like a lot of old cars
I like the way he casually mentions the 1955 crash that he was involved in himself.
pretty much he caused it 🙄
@@bencezavarko7312 I was harshly critical of Hawthorne for years for Le Mans 1955 but learning more about the disaster it's hard to single out anyone for the blame. You could blame the organizers for not widening the pit straight when the cars started to get really fast in the 1950s. You could question Austin Healey for the design of putting a sloped rear on the back of a racing car, it seems like it's practically designed to launch a rear ending car into the air. A crazy design in hindsight. I can't blame Macklin or LeVegh, and I can at most say that Hawthorne was guilty of reckless driving. But all he did was to decide to pit on that lap, and the new disc brakes of Hawthorne's Jaguar provided braking power racers just weren't accustomed to. His situational awareness was down to a blurry image of a few cars in a shaky mirror.
The infamous post race pics of him celebrating with champagne are misleading too. There are some pics of him looking somber and miserable after the race. But if someone comes up to you with a post race garland of flowers and some champagne it seems just natural to many people to just accept it with a smile, even if you don't feel like celebrating.
Not trying to exonerate him fully, but I think he's been unfairly targeted for decades for causing the disaster.
"Involved in"? Some people thought he caused it.
@@SWog617 He didn'.
He did not cause it. He saw the instruction from his team to enter the pit. He did. In auto racing, as in bicycle racing, you are responsible for your front wheel. This world today is too quick to blame and to slow to sympathize.
this is the video you live for to see if you're true racing enthusiast.
That's a Coles Lip microphone. Murray Walker and James Hunt shared one. And you can still buy them!
Great film, thanks! 👍
That microphone to his chest is huge. Imagine infiltrating the mafia back then and the police asking you if you’d mind wearing a microphone
L😂😂😂😂😂😂L
those neumanns fetch 2-3 grand now!
This is absolutely fascinating, a look back into history, it is such a wonderful view into the past especially with an excellent driver.
One of the best ride alongs ever made. Thanks for posting.
Unbelievable to see all the other traffic on the road, ordinary cars and even cyclists! Amazing film
3:03 so no one's gonna talk about how he perfectly controlled his throttle on that exit without having to countersteer while spinning
He is the traction control in that car
Nope. Because knowing Mike Hawthorne, it was probably completely accidental. This same guy won a world championship by accident.
i know right!? in my mind i kept saying "why isn't he slowing down" then i relized that was his true racing coming out vs just a casual stroll for the camera
@@TonyF1MMA just like James Hunt ,, Oh and it was no accident
Yeah I know!!! Perfect amount of throttle to rotate the car around!
I like how you can hear the ignition system in the audio. Quality is actually really good for the time!
Makes a nice change from elevator muzac.
Maybe due to electrical systems of the time? Analog circuits all?
Unshielded wires @@SpandanChatterjee2904
Wow! This just popped up in my suggested list. What great footage from before I was born (only just).
Obviously a relatively slow lap due to all the cars and bicycles 😊
Nice quality video thanks to film rather than later magnetic media. Thank you for giving us the opportunity to see it.
That has got to be the best ride along footage I've ever seen. Breath taking.
I love seeing all the houses and farms along the way. What a piece of history. This camera quality is amazing!
This certainly brought back memories. I had a friend called Johnny Williams, an American GI based at Upper Heyford. Met him in an Oxford pub early sixties. He owned a metallic blue Austin Healey 3000, new. I think he paid around £3000 for it. If memory serves me correctly the number plate was 300 LAC. We went to Silverstone in the Healey one day. He knew somebody who was involved in the running of a D type and fiddled me a ride in it. I remember stalling it 2 or 3 times before I got rolling and most likely recorded the slowest ever time for a D type around Silverstone. Can't remember any other names involved, I think I was about 22 years old ( now 81 ) at the time, maybe younger. I shared an Austin Somerset saloon car with my dad- the reg was HJB 835- a somewhat different experience! There were about 3 million cars on the roads then, very low traffic movement everywhere you went. That Healey could really motor, a fantastic car. Older people will remember the salute you received from the RAC motorcyclist when you met him on the open road. Motoring was fun then....
Very cool video. The first time my brother Pat Hennen raced motorcycles at Le Mans was at the 1976 French GP, his first ever GP. He rode a privateer production RG500 Suzuki, his first ride on the bike. It's amazing how vastly different Le Mans was by then. It had transformed since the year this video was made into a proper race track that was much shorter, no trees or buildings close by the track, with proper race-grade tarmac all the way around. He raced on the version of the track with the long back straight and really enjoyed racing on the circuit. One part of the center of the circuit had a large carnival with a huge farris wheel. At night, the evening before the race, the center of the track was all lit up with the lights and noise from the carnival. We had never seen anything like it in the U.S., so we were really blown away by the track and the whole atmosphere.
The 24hr circuit hasn't changed length much since 1932 and is only used for the 24hr car race. All other races use the Bugatti circuit which is only 2.6 miles long and is all private road.
The sound of that car is amazing
Imagine putting along on your tiny motorbike and then Mike Hawthorne goes screaming by you in a Jaguar D type...
Still to me it's the best car video that has been made. I'm in my 30s and love it more now than I did as a teen when it first ended up on one of Dads old VHS vids.
Une époque merveilleuse. Un grand champion, un homme au grand coeur.
Quand je pense que ce temps s'est définitivement enfui, j'ai envie de pleurer.
🤙🏻
That microphone is HUGE! It's fun to see how advanced the Jaguar is in comparison to the other cars on the road, even the Citroën 2CV. Driving Le Mans with pedestrians, bicycles, cars, motorcycles....
The STC 4104. Still produced, sold and used today, and a favourite for commentators on noisy sports events as the Coles 4104.
That Coles lip mic is incredible at killing wind noise! They are capable of quite high fidelity, too.
I saw similar mics being used for a World Poker Tour event a few years ago, since the commentator booth was basically on the casino floor, and the casino was open for regular business aside from the tournament. You probably wouldn't have been able to hear yourself think for all the cacophony, but the commentators came through crystal clear. It was just funny seeing them all kissing those mics. :P
... and high speeds!
It's underneath the mask isn't it?
@@PlaySA Nope, take a look at his lips when the camera changes to show his face. You can see a piece going around his mouth, that's what they're talking about.
Sometimes referred to as a lip mic because of the metal bar you held against your top lip to get the spacing correct. I haven’t seen one with such an elaborate screen around the mouth before. There is vision out there of Murray Walker using one in the 1990s. They are still in use today but I’m not sure if they are still being made.
what a beautiful jag,timeless
Oh, if only my Dad had lived long enough to experience the internet, and see stuff like this. He would have been thrilled. Part of me would like to think that he's seeing it through my eyes... thank you for this...
Jaguar D type.
Short sleeve polo shirt and no fireproof suit.
No computers no high tech monitoring system besides Smith gauges and a driver with nerves of steel and balls of titanium.
More driving skills and talent back then.
I prefer the old days.
Thanks for sharing this beautiful piece of auto racing history.
Kamikaze Yamamoto I mean auto gearboxes, traction control, anti lock brakes and all driver aids are banned in a lot of series these days so not sure what you’re talking about
And 84 people killed the year before this video. Yeah, the good old days.
Renard Goupil tbf you can have good racing and good safety .,, look at Formula Ford
I prefer nowadays,I do not want to remember 1955...
I prefer safety than competitiveness.
Drivers are just as brave, modern cars at the top tier at Le Mans and F1 are much faster, complicated and require the best to get the best out of the cars, same apply with the GTE and LMP2 Cars, the forces of modern cars are twice as powerful as old cars, they are precision machines, one wrong move and then your gone
Great vid.i clearly remember being in primary school in belfast when a teacher came in and said mike hawthorn has just been killed.some memories never fade.
I just happened to come across this while searching for something else. The technology used, for the time, is pretty amazing. I especially like how the driver’s microphone is held in place!
This layout was so cool how the pit lane was part of the main straight
Oblio1942 that is one of the main reasons 80+ people died in 1955
this video is a treasure
I love that interference... It reminds me of my first car radio😍
It's hard to believe the deadliest racing accident happened there just a single year before.
Also hard to believe that this man was involved in it and saw it unfold firsthand.
@fenderfan85 no it wasn't him
Hawthorn was going into the pits which he guestered to the jag and merc behind him on the turn before the start/finish straight. the jag moved from behind hawthorn in front of the merc. Then the jag braked for the turn (essentially brake checking the merc).
the merc could not slow down in time because the The jaguar's had disc brakes which slow the car down faster than the Mercedes. Because of this merc ramped off the back of the jag into the crowd
That's what happened hawthorn was not a fault. It was as some would say a racing accident.
fenderfan85 We will never know if or who causes the crash in 55
He brake checked Macklin TWICE. He wanted to wreck Fangio and Levegh. Fangio was coming up hard, Levegh in front, a lap down. Both Fangio and Levegh in 300 SLR's. Macklin was in a Healey, and Hawthorne was of course in the D-Type. Hawthorne tried brake checking Macklin further up on the road to the pits, but he was too far away. The second time he was successful, and Macklin, caught unawares, scandi flicked his Healey away from the back of the Jag and into the right front wheel of Levegh's Merc which reports said was doing a buck fifty at the time. The Merc was launched into the stands after that. As far as I can fathom, up until today the Gesdarmes have not released an official death toll from the '55 crash. It was a lot more horrific than was let on. From the pics I've seen, the published death toll was a joke.
On youtube somewhere an American driver, John Fitch, who was Levegh's co-driver, said Hawthorne came into the pits a broken man. Fitch said, I believe, that Hawthorne was rambling on about having caused the accident.
This is the greatest onboard ever.
This Is Really Great! Reminded Me Of A Book I Read 50 Years Ago Titled, 'The Black Tiger'. Thank You.
There’s so much that I love about this video but the fact that the track is essentially the exact same layout (give or take a few chicanes lol) after 60+ years is insane
"The wind on the straights puts out my cigarette but I'll lite it again after the next corner"
I'll just have a quick nip from my whiskey flask when I hit 175 mph
Sometimes it's a bit tricky to use the cigarette lighter that the Jaguar D Type thankfully has on board properly but ultimately it's a matter of concentration and hand eye coordination.
How much it has changed...and how much it is still the same! Just beautiful!
Speechless, what a piece of footage you have here Thank you so much for sharing it with us!
OMG! This is a Priceless Classic indeed! Thank You So Much for Sharing! Many Happy Good Blessings in Return! 🌷🌿🌍💖🕊🇫🇷
It’s incredible this footage
Magic footage, love how Mike says at 1:28 need to be a bit careful here as a lot of traffic on the road just as he has a bit of oversteer
Mike Hawthorn is and always will be a LEGEND.
And an assassin of 85 people
a spectacular view from a classic racing car, today's audio and video technology is light years ahead, but the beauty of such cars is unsurpassed
My local hero, "The Golden Boy" Owned Tourist Trophy in Farnham, now Hawthorns, used to drink in the Barley Mow in Tilford up the road, sadly buried in our local Cemetrey , West Street in Farnham, killed in 1959 on the Hogs Back towards Guildford, what a Legend. R.I.P Mike Hawthorn, i visit your grave on a regular basis
Seems a fortune of place and circumstance. Appreciate that you do that.
This was absolutely amazing!! The sound of that Jag, wow!
Incredible piece of history 😍
I cannot believe how much the track has changed
Three years later, Mike was gone. The shock of the golden boy's death still vivid.
this is priceless. thank you Duke.
This is way better quality that some of the rally footage you find here on TH-cam
Front and rear facing cameras with proper microphone, that's impressive.
Love the way he's racing around the track with cars and bicycles coming in the opposite direction.
love how aggressive the engine sounds, fantastic
That's incredible! I know the circuit in its current iteration quite well from playing Gran Turismo and it's really striking some of the differences.
So many trees around the track, especially around the Esses and there's a chicane before the pit straight now.
Been to the LeMans races at least 6 times in my life and can hardly wait to return to THE greatest car race ever. Amazing experience.
For a 50's video, this looks beautiful
I find it difficult to believe the stupidity of some of the comments from various people.Le Mans
is a race run on public roads,this was a demonstration done when the road was still open to every day traffic.When the race is run for real the roads are CLOSED,when Hawthorne talked about speeds of 175-180 mph he was refering to speeds in the actual race,it is plain to see he was not doing speeds remotely near those.With regard to the accident in 1955,Hawthorne does share some blame,so does Macklin.
clive doyle crazy if you think about it that that huge crash is only one year ago in this footage
+clive doyle…...on what basis do you claim that the blame for the 1955 Le Mans tragedy was Lance Macklin's? Whilst there are deeply conflicting accounts of who was really at fault - the official inquiry cleared all drivers of responsibility stating it was simply a 'terrible accident'.
However, many - including Macklin, John Fitch [Pierre Levegh's co-driver]. Mercedes-Benz team Manager Alfred Neubauer and to lesser degree Healey team manager, Geoffrey Healey all felt Mike Hawthorn was the main culprit. [indeed, Hawthorn himself was initially extremely upset and openly blamed himself for the resulting carnage - although he significantly changed his stance later on].
Macklin stated that after passing him at great speed on his inside, Hawthorn had suddenly braked in front of him on noticing an order to enter the pits to refuel - and veered across the track. Due the far superior stopping power of the disc-brake equipped D-Type Jaguars, Macklin was forced to swerve to his left and into Levegh's path - who was travelling at approx. 200kph in comparison to Macklin's 120kph.
What happened next is a matter of record - but in the aftermath of the tragic events of that fateful day, a war of words developed between Macklin and Fitch [on one side] and Hawthorn on the other. What fanned the fires of this dispute even more was Hawthorn's highly insensitive accusation that both Levegh and Macklin were extremely poor drivers and not fit to be racing at Le Mans. [Indeed this led to Macklin suing Hawthorn for libel].
The case was never settled as ironically a terminally-ill Hawthorn was killed a few years later whilst over-taking a Mercedes-Benz in his Mk 1 Jaguar on the A3 Guildford bypass.
TheSoulTwins. If you’re gonna race cars. You’re gonna crash cars. It was an accident.
+Graeme Smith....oh hum - it's a pity you never mastered the basic skill of READING. I never claimed anyone was to blame - I merely cited the official enquiry and anecdotal accounts by people who were there at the time.
To be truthful I have absolutely no real interest in this highly unnecessary 'sport' - so events like the 1955 Le Mans race and the carnage that ensued merely serve to demonstrate how pointless motor racing is.
@@thesoultwins72 "To be truthful I have absolutely no real interest in this highly unnecessary 'sport'"
sooo.... why are you here then, fam?
Mike Hawthorn is a good person, he evocates the terrible accident in 1955 that killed a part of the spectators in front the départ line (you Can note some changes with 1956), one year before the video, i Can feel the sadness in his voice, Great pilot
what a lovely sound!!! awesome lap with a lengendary Car and pilot recorded by gopros grandfather!
the sound is fake
You guys are both mistaken. The footage is edited together from multiple laps so it is not a single lap but it is made to look as if it is just one. The audio is very genuine and is substantially from the first lap with the camera mounted on the rear of the car. The end of the ‘lap’ shows him going through the pit area and starting another lap so we know there were at least two laps (but probably more) with this rear camera set up. We also see some footage of the camera mounted on the front of the car. That required driving the circuit with the hood removed. As this was B roll there may have been only one lap with this set up. In addition there was some dolly footage near the car, and tripod footage from an elevated location. In those days this required a good size crew, good director, several hours engineering attachment points for the car, and several filming hours to get this short clip of what looks like a single lap with Hawthorne. It would be expensive as well as time consuming. Today, our smaller equipment vastly simplifies a job like this and shortens the time needed to get the shots. And dramatically reduces production costs, although money is then spent on getting ever greater amounts of footage. Many people fail to realise the complexity of producing this kind of footage in the earlier days of film, but as a professional I have huge respect for those unsung heroes of news filmmaking at that time.
@@artistjoh Wow, well done, your breakdown shows how much craft and effort went on here. Absolutely different than taking a lap now! Tiny HD cameras at multiple points , car and driver probably only need one lap.
Keith Putnam Yes, people these days don’t realise why it is that early footage doesn’t exist of many significant events in the early to mid 20th century, but movie footage was expensive and to do something like this purported single lap just for a news reel was very expensive to do so generally not done. It also required a director with the skills to put together a complex operation coordinated with circuit administration and a racing team who are possibly wary of removing car parts and adding attachment points for camera frames. It is the sort of job that would be in planning for weeks. That is also true today, but today there would be substantially more footage obtained than a so-called lap of the track. Our modern tiny cameras, gimbals and steadicams, sophisticated cranes and skycams on cables also make for complex operations, but they will get an entire event, often over several days. Footage of a lap or two is far simpler, and with GoPro cameras and their simple attachments, possible for a single operator to do. This old footage is not only interesting, it is remarkable, and a testament to the dedication of those early film crews. It is disappointing to see a commentator dismiss it as “the sound is fake”. He doesn’t realise how difficult it was back then to get that sound in the first place, and how it was edited into clips from multiple laps to give the illusion of a single hot lap. I think they did an incredible job. In many ways thisfootage is the prototype for the 1966 movie Grand Prix in which they got so much wonderful footage of F1 cars racing at places like the old Monza from cameras mounted on the cars.
Ernest Hemingway once said “There are only three sports, bullfighting, motor racing, and mountaineering and all the rest are merely games”
It's not that simple any more, but i guess you can get that feeling by watching this classic footage.
Actually maybe simpler. I consider two of those are blood sports and one is largely gone.
Beautiful...
What strikes me most is the focus on the track.
There's a racing track and a few ads alongside it.
Nowadays it's all one humongous piece of advertising space, and we're only a few years away from those ads being (literally) all singing and dancing, blaring visually and sonically whenever a camera is pointing at them...
The trick for the next generation of drivers will be to have some serious level of autism to keep your eyes where they need to be: on the road & all other traffic.
Was in my recommended 6 years after the upload. Yet, this footage in itself is still very very fascinating! Didn't know they had cameras on the cars at that time
The cameras weren't common in those days, the camera they use and can be seen at the start of the video is quite large that needs an special support