Le Mans 24 hour race in 1967
The 35th 24-hour race of Le Mans , the 35 e Grand Prix d'Endurance les 24 Heures du Mans , also 24 Heures du Mans, Circuit de la Sarthe, Le Mans , took place from 10 to 11 June 1967 on the Circuit des 24 Heures .
Before the race
For the 1967 sports car season, both Ford and Ferrari had developed new prototypes that were also launched at Le Mans.
ford
The new Ford was the Mk.IV, a consequent further development of the Ford GT40 . The chassis continued to be provided by the GT40, a new aluminum body ensured more downforce and a higher top speed. Internally, the project was given the chassis designation "J". The car has been extensively tested. During one of these test drives, however, the long-standing Ford factory driver Ken Miles was killed in a serious accident.
Ford brought four of the new racing cars to Le Mans. At Shelby American, the team of Le Mans winner of 1959 , Carroll Shelby , were Dan Gurney and AJ Foyt , who made his Le Mans debut and a few weeks before the third time the 500-mile Indianapolis had won a Driver duo. Last year's winners Bruce McLaren and Mark Donohue formed the second driver team . The two Holman & Moody -Mk.IV were driven by Mario Andretti and Lucien Bianchi as well as Lloyd Ruby and Denis Hulme .
Both teams also relied on the conventional Mk.IIB version (GT40) and used one or two of these vehicles. The Holman & Moody cars were driven by Roger McCluskey and Frank Gardner and the French duo Jo Schlesser and Guy Ligier . This car was registered by Ford France. Ronnie Bucknum and Paul Hawkins sat in the Shelby Mk.IIB .
At the beginning of the year, those responsible at Ford had already signed a contract with the team of John Wyer and John Willment , making their John Wyer Automotive the third works team. Wyer had taken on the task of further developing the GT40, but had also negotiated special rights. He was allowed to launch the two lightweight GT40s, which were built in the factory in England, under the name Mirage M1 . There was also a GT40, driven by Brian Redman and Mike Salmon .
The dozen Ford racing cars were rounded off by two more GT40s. One belonged to the Scuderia Filipinetti and was driven by Umberto Maglioli and Mario Casoni . The twelfth car - reported by Ford France - was in the hands of Henri Greder and Pierre Dumay .
Ford brought 53 tons of material to Le Mans with an airlift, including three reserve engines per team. All Ford teams received logistical support at great expense. 270 employees were deployed to ensure overall victory.
Ferrari
The biggest opponents of Ford were the Ferrari teams. The works team wanted to return the favor for the defeat from the previous year, so the Ferrari 330P4 was developed in Maranello . In contrast to the 7-liter engines from Ford, Ferrari relied on a 4-liter V12 engine . After the triple victory at the Daytona 24 Hours , Le Mans was the highlight of the season. In training, however, it soon became apparent that the Ferrari were clearly inferior to the Ford prototypes at top speed. The fastest Ford was stopped at Les Hunaudières at 340 km / h and was thus 30 km / h faster than the best Ferrari.
The three works cars were driven by Ludovico Scarfiotti , Chris Amon , Nino Vaccarella , Mike Parkes , Günter Klass and Peter Sutcliffe . Pedro Rodríguez sat in one of the two North American Racing Team Ferrari cars , but the American team also used an old P2. Willy Mairesse and Jean Blaton drove the Equipe-Nationale-Belge-P4 with a yellow median .
How little people thought of secrecy in the 1960s can be seen from the fact that Scuderia Filipinetti also used a Ferrari P4 in addition to their factory Ford, which was driven by Jean Guichet and Herbert Müller .
Chaparral, Porsche, Alpine and Matra
The new Chaparral racing cars surprised with top times in practice. Phil Hill and Mike Spence scored the second time in practice. It was rather doubted whether the 2F with its mighty rear wing would be able to hold out the long distance.
Porsche brought three guys to the Sarthe. The Porsche 906 , 907 and 910 all had the 2-liter 6-cylinder flat engine and those responsible for Porsche knew that they had no chance against the large prototypes in the overall standings. So the focus was on the P 2.0 class in order to achieve class victory there.
Alpine brought seven A210s to Le Mans and Matra ran two MS630s powered by a BRM V8 engine.
The race
When the starting flag for the Le Mans start fell on Saturday at 4 p.m. , Ronnie Bucknum took the lead ahead of Frank Gardner . In the second lap, Denis Hulme came into the Ford box with a defective gas pedal and lost two laps. The two new Lola T70s with Aston Martin engines, which soon broke down with technical defects, got worse in the initial phase . After almost 1½ hours of racing, Ford lost the first car. Mike Salmon's GT40 suddenly caught fire in the Mulsanne because gasoline had leaked. The fire could be put out quickly, but the car was so badly burned that it was impossible to continue driving.
After two hours, Ronnie Bucknum was still leading four other Ford cars. Only Hill and Spence's Chaparral could keep up with the speed of the fastest Ford. It stayed that way when Dan Gurney took the lead after 2½ hours. As long as the chaparral was running, it put pressure on the Ford racing cars. Up front, however, Dan Gurney and AJ Foyt set the pace and consistently drove record laps. The Ferrari cars could not intervene in the action at the front: Mike Parkes was already four laps behind the leading Mk.IV in the fastest P4 in the early hours of the night.
Ford disaster at 3:30 a.m.
When Lucien Bianchi pits at 3:25 a.m., Mario Andretti is getting ready to take over the MK IV from the Belgian, which is third in the overall ranking. Andretti had to wait a few minutes before he could drive off because the brake pads were being changed on the car next to the refueling process.
Andretti went back on the track and drove through the first Dunlop arch towards Esses. When braking into the left-hand bend, the car suddenly broke out. Andretti had obviously forgotten to briefly brake the new pads and the wheels locked at 250 km / h. The Ford hit the guardrail on the right, then skidded across the lane before coming to a stop. Henri Greder and a Porsche 911 drove just behind Andretti, just able to avoid the spinning Ford. Roger McCluskey was next at the scene of the accident. Little did McCluskey know that Andretti had already got out of the car and shortly afterwards collapsed behind the guardrail. Assuming his teammate was still in the car and trying to avoid a collision, he steered the Mk.IV into the left guardrail and damaged the car permanently. Next, Jo Schlesser appeared at the scene of the accident in a Ford France Mk.II and had no chance to avoid the wreckage. Three Holman Moody factory cars suddenly failed.
Further course of the race
When Ronnie Bucknum had an engine failure at 9:40 on a Sunday, the Parkes / Scarfiotti-Ferrari was suddenly in second place in the overall standings. The Chaparral with defects in the automatic transmission had long since failed. Around noon, Bruce McLaren lost the engine cover on the Mk.IV on the straight. The New Zealander had the part fetched from marshals and fixed the flap back to the car with the adhesive tape he had carried with him. The flap was exchanged in the pits and the car was put back into the race.
In the end, the Gurney / Foyt car had no more opponents, and the two Americans drove the last two hours of racing rather calmly. Nevertheless, they set a new distance record with 5232.900 km. That is the fourth best mileage in Le Mans to date. If the duo hadn't strolled like that in the last phase of the race, the two Americans would probably hold the distance record to this day.
Mike Parkes and Ludovico Scarfiotti finished second, four laps behind. The Equipe-Nationale-Belge-Ferrari in third place had already lost eleven laps to the winner. With fifth place overall in their Porsche 907, Joseph Siffert and Hans Herrmann achieved the best placement for a 2-liter car in Le Mans.
Champagne shower and the stop on the route
At the award ceremony, Dan Gurney introduced a procedure that has long since become commonplace at motorsport award ceremonies: He was the first racing driver to splash champagne on the podium .
At around 02:30 am, Mike Parkes tried to provoke Dan Gurney, who was driving in front of him, by constantly flashing the headlights. The American didn't get involved and after several laps he stopped in the meadow at the edge of the track after the Arnage curve. Parkes stopped behind Gurney and the two drivers "watched" each other for a few moments before Parkes drove on and Gurney could continue the race unmolested. The Ferrari was already three laps behind the Ford at this point, and Gurney had had no reason to be provoked.
Results
Pilots by nationality
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Final ranking
Item | class | No. | team | driver | chassis | engine | tires | Round |
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1 | P + 5.0 | 1 |
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Ford GT40 Mk.IV | Ford 7.0L V8 | 388 | |
2 | P 5.0 | 21st |
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Ferrari 330P4 | Ferrari 4.0L V12 | 384 | |
3 | P 5.0 | 24 |
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Ferrari 330P4 | Ferrari 4.0L V12 | 377 | |
4th | P 5.0 | 2 |
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Ford GT40 Mk.IV | Ford 7.0L V8 | 359 | |
5 | P 2.0 | 41 |
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Porsche 907 / 6L | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 358 | |
6th | P 2.0 | 38 |
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Porsche 910 / 6K | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 351 | |
7th | S 2.0 | 37 |
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Porsche 906K Carrera 6 | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 327 | |
8th | S 2.0 | 66 |
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Porsche 906 Carrera 6 | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 321 | |
9 | P 1.3 | 46 |
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Alpine A210 | Renault -Gordini 1.3L I4 | 321 | |
10 | P 1.3 | 49 |
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Alpine A210 | Renault-Gordini 1.3L I4 | 318 | |
11 | GT 5.0 | 28 |
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Ferrari 275 GTB / C | Ferrari 3.3L V12 | 317 | |
12 | P 1.3 | 48 |
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Alpine A210 | Renault-Gordini 1.3L I4 | 311 | |
13 | P 1.6 | 45 |
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Alpine A210 | Renault-Gordini 1.5L I4 | 311 | |
14th | GT 2.0 | 42 |
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Porche 911S | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 308 | |
15th | P 1.3 | 51 |
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Austin-Healey Sprite Le Mans | BMC 1.3L I4 | 289 | |
16 | P 1.3 | 64 |
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Abarth 1300 | Fiat 1.3L I4 | 262 | |
Failed | ||||||||
17th | P 5.0 | 19th |
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Ferrari 330P4 | Ferrari 4.0L V12 | 296 | |
18th | P + 5.0 | 57 |
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Ford GT40 Mk.IIB | Ford 7.0L V8 | 271 | |
19th | P + 5.0 | 7th |
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Chaparral 2F | Chevrolet 7.0L V8 | F. | 225 |
20th | P 1.3 | 47 |
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Alpine A210 | Renault-Gordini 1.3L I4 | 219 | |
21st | P 5.0 | 23 |
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Ferrari 412P | Ferrari 4.0L V12 | 208 | |
22nd | P 1.15 | 56 |
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Alpine A210 | Renault-Gordini 1.0L I4 | 204 | |
23 | P 1.15 | 55 |
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Alpine M64 | Renault-Gordini 1.0L I4 | 201 | |
24 | P + 5.0 | 3 |
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Ford GT40 Mk.IV | Ford 7.0L V8 | 188 | |
25th | P + 5.0 | 6th |
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Ford GT40 Mk.IIB | Ford 7.0L V8 | 183 | |
26th | S 5.0 | 16 |
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Ford GT40 Mk.I | Ford 4.7L V8 | 179 | |
27 | P + 5.0 | 5 |
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Ford GT40 Mk.IIB | Ford 7.0L V8 | 179 | |
28 | GT + 5.0 | 9 |
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Chevrolet Corvette | Chevrolet 7.0L V8 | 167 | |
29 | P 2.0 | 29 |
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Matra MS630 | BRM 2.0L V8 | 155 | |
30th | P 5.0 | 25th |
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Ferrari 412P | Ferrari 4.0L V12 | 144 | |
31 | GT 2.0 | 67 |
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Porsche 911S | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 134 | |
32 | GT 2.0 | 60 |
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Porsche 911S | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 126 | |
33 | S 5.0 | 18th |
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Ford GT40 Mk.I | Ford 4.7L V8 | 116 | |
34 | P 5.0 | 20th |
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Ferrari 330P3 Spyder | Ferrari 4.0L V12 | 105 | |
35 | P 2.0 | 40 |
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Porsche 907 / 6L | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 103 | |
36 | P + 5.0 | 8th |
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Chaparral 2F | Chevrolet 7.0L V8 | F. | 91 |
37 | P 5.0 | 22nd |
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Ferrari 412P | Ferrari 4.0L V12 | 88 | |
38 | P + 5.0 | 4th |
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Ford GT40 Mk.IV | Ford 7.0L V8 | 86 | |
39 | P 2.0 | 39 |
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Porsche 910 / 6L | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 84 | |
40 | P 1.15 | 58 |
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Alpine A210 | Renault-Gordini 1.0L I4 # | 67 | |
41 | P + 5.0 | 14th |
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Mirage M1 | Ford 5.7L V8 | F. | 59 |
42 | GT 5.0 | 17th |
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Shelby Mustang GT350 | Ford 4.7L V8 | 58 | |
43 | P 2.0 | 30th |
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Matra MS630 | BRM 2.0L V8 | 55 | |
44 | P 1.6 | 44 |
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Lotus Europa Mk.47 | Cosworth 1.6L I4 | 42 | |
45 | P 1.15 | 53 |
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CD SP66C | Peugeot 1.1L I4 | 35 | |
46 | P 5.0 | 26th |
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Ferrari 365P2 | Ferrari 4.4L V12 | 30th | |
47 | P + 5.0 | 15th |
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Mirage M1 | Ford 5.7L V8 | 29 | |
48 | P 1.15 | 52 |
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CD SP66C | Peugeot 1.1L I4 | 25th | |
49 | P + 5.0 | 12 |
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Lola T70 Mk.III | Aston Martin 5.0L V8 | F. | 25th |
50 | S 5.0 | 62 |
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Ford GT40 Mk.I | Ford 4.7L V8 | 20th | |
51 | P 1.15 | 54 |
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Costin Nathan | Hillman 1.0L I4 | 15th | |
52 | P 1.3 | 50 |
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Marcos Mini GT | BMC 1.3L I4 | 13 | |
53 | P + 5.0 | 11 |
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Lola T70 Mk.III | Aston Martin 5.0L V8 | F. | 3 |
54 | GT 2.0 | 43 |
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Porsche 911S | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 2 | |
Not started | ||||||||
55 | P + 5.0 | 10 |
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Bizzarini GT Strada 5300 | Chevrolet 5.3L V8 | 1 | |
Not qualified | ||||||||
56 | GT 5.0 | 60 |
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Ferrari 275GTB / C | Ferrari 3.3L V12 | 2 | |
57 | P 1.3 | 68 |
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Hrubon | Renault-Gordini 1.3L L4 | 3 | |
reserve | ||||||||
58 | GT 2.0 | 66 |
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Porsche 904GTS | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 4th | |
59 | GT 2.0 |
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Porsche 911 | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | 5 | ||
60 | S 5.0 |
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Ford GT40 | Ford 7.0L V8 | 6th |
1 not allowed 2 not qualified 3 not qualified 4 reserve 5 reserve 6 reserve
Only in the entry list
Here you can find teams, drivers and vehicles that were originally registered for the race, but did not take part for various reasons.
Item | class | No. | team | driver | chassis | engine | tires |
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61 | P 4.0 | 6th |
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Porsche 910 / 6K | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | ||
62 | S 5.0 | 15th |
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Ford GT40 | Ford 4.7L V8 | ||
63 | P 2.0 | 19th |
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Matra MS620 | Ford 2.0L V8 | |
64 | P 5.0 | 22nd |
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Ferrari 330P4 | Ferrari 4.0L V12 | |
65 | P 5.0 | 26th |
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Ferrari 365P2 / P3 | Ferrari 4.0L V12 | |
66 | GT 5.0 | 27 |
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Ferrari 275GTB / 4 | Ferrari 3.3L V12 | ||
67 | P 3.0 | 29 |
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Alpine A211 | Renault-Gordini 3.0L V8 | ||
68 | P 3.0 | 30th |
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Alpine A211 | Renault-Gordini 3.0L V8 | ||
69 | P 2.0 | 31 |
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Ferrari Dino 206SP | Ferrari 2.0L V6 | |
70 | P 2.0 | 31 |
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Matra MS630 | BRM 2.0L V8 | |
71 | P 2.0 | 32 |
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Ferrari 206SP | Ferrari 2.0L V6 | |
72 | P 2.0 | 33 |
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Ferrari 206SP | Ferrari 2.0L V6 | |
73 | P 2.0 | 33 |
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Matra MS630 | BRM 2.0L V8 | |
74 | P 2.0 | 34 |
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Alfa Romeo T33 | ||
75 | P 2.0 | 35 |
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Alfa Romeo T33 | ||
76 | P 2.0 | 36 |
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Alfa Romeo T33 | ||
77 | P | 50 |
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Alpine M64 | ||
78 | P 1.3 | 50 |
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ASA 411 | |||
79 | P 5.0 | 60 |
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Ford GT40 | Ford 4.7L V8 | ||
80 | P 1.3 | 63 |
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Marcos Mini GT | BMC 1.3L I4 | ||
81 | P 3.0 |
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Porsche 910 | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | ||
82 | P 3.0 |
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Porsche 910 | Porsche 2.0L Flat-6 | ||
83 | GT 5.0 |
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Ferrari GTB | |||
84 | P 5.0 |
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Ford GT40 | Ford 4.7L V8 | ||
85 | AC Ace |
Class winner
Racing data
- Registered: 85
- Started: 54
- Valued: 15
- Race classes: 10
- Spectators: 310,000
- Honorary starter of the race: François Missoffe , French Minister for Youth and Sport
- Weather on the race weekend: cloudy and warm
- Route length: 13.461 km
- Driving time of the winning team: 24: 00: 00,000 hours
- Total laps of the winning team: 396
- Distance of the winning team: 5232.900 km
- Winner's average: 218.038 km / h
- Pole position: Bruce McLaren - Ford GT40 MK IV (# 2) - 3: 24.400 = 236.082 km / h
- Fastest race lap: Denis Hulme - Ford GT40 MK IV (# 2) and Mario Andretti - Ford GT40 MK IV (# 3) - 3: 23.600 = 237.971 km / h
- Racing series: 7th round of the 1967 Sports Car World Championship
literature
- Christian Moity, Jean-Marc Teissèdre, Alain Bienvenu: 24 heures du Mans, 1923–1992. Éditions d'Art, Besançon 1992, ISBN 2-909-413-06-3 .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Helmut Zwickl: The fastest. Famous racing cars, legendary drivers. Ueberreuter, Vienna et al. 1974, ISBN 3-8000-3125-6 , p. 80.
- ↑ Helmut Zwickl: The fastest. Famous racing cars, legendary drivers. Ueberreuter, Vienna et al. 1974, ISBN 3-8000-3125-6 , p. 82.
- ^ Ronnie Spain: GT 40. An Individual History and Race Record. Osprey, London 2003, ISBN 0-85045-637-1 , p. 106.
- ^ The 1967 Ford Mark IV: Legend of Le Mans. Accessed November 20, 2019 (German).
Previous race 1000 km race on the Nürburgring in 1967 |
Sports car world championship |
Successor race of the Hockenheim Grand Prix in 1967 |