1947 French Grand Prix

The 1947 French Grand Prix was a Grand Prix motor race held at Lyon-Parilly on 21 September 1947 and was won by Louis Chiron driving a Talbot-Lago. The race was marred by an accident involving Pierre Levegh crashing into and killing 2 spectators.

1947 French Grand Prix
Race details
Date 21 September 1947
Official name XXXIV Grand Prix de l'ACF
Location Lyon-Parilly, France
Course length 7.289 km (4.529 miles)
Distance 70 laps, 510.262 km (317.063 miles)
Pole position
Driver Maserati
Time 3:17.9
Fastest lap
Drivers Italy Alberto Ascari Maserati
Fastest lap Italy Luigi Villoresi Maserati
Fastest lap France "Raph" Maserati
Time 3:17.5
Podium
First Talbot-Lago
Second Maserati
Third Talbot-Lago

Entries edit

As the first French Grand Prix held after World War II the entry was quite mixed. Pre-race favourites, the two Alfa Romeo 158s entered by Jean-Pierre Wimille, did not arrive. The entrants which did arrive were two two-seater Delahayes, four sports car Talbot-Lagos with two single seaters for Louis Chiron and Luigi Chinetti, six Maseratis, two of which were the latest 4CLTs for Alberto Ascari and Luigi Villoresi, three ERAs, one of which was Peter Whitehead's aging B-Type, and finally the experimental French CTA-Arsenal.[1]

Report edit

The start of the race was quite eventful. Henri Louveau (in a Maserati 4CL) lead at first from the front row, but was overtaken by fellow Maserati driver Pierre Levegh. Both were overtaken by another Maserati driven by Raph who lead the first lap. Meanwhile, from the back of the grid Villoresi in the newer Maserati had moved up to third place, while Raymond Sommer retired the CTA-Arsenal in its only ever race appearance without completing a lap.[1]

On the second lap Villoresi moved into second place and by the end of the third lap had taken the lead. On the fourth lap he was forced to retire with smoke pouring out of his engine, handing the lead to Raph followed closely by Emmanuel de Graffenried, in another Maserati, who took the lead on the following lap.[1]

Chiron made a slow start but quickly moved up through the field, taking the lead from de Graffenried on the eighth lap. de Graffenried stayed with Chiron until engine overheating forced him to retire after 20 laps, handing second place to Henri Louveau. Thanks in part to just about every competitor suffering from various mechanical issues, the lead two would hold their positions until the end of the race.[1]

After making a fuel stop, on his 24th lap Pierre Levegh crashed his Maserati through a barrier, killing two spectators, after his engine seized.[1]

Not long after half distance, Chiron looked to be experiencing engine problems as an oiled plug caused stuttering. Although this quickly cleared, it was clear that Chiron's car was not running well, and if not for his fellow competitors experiencing trouble themselves he would not have been competitive. Chiron's fuel stop on lap 44 left him with a lead of 48 seconds over Louveau who would himself stop on the next lap, increasing the gap to 1 minute and 35 seconds. Louveau would reduce this lead by over a minute, if not for making a late-race stop, allowing Chiron to continue running at a low enough pace to preserve the car. It was a popular victory, with the slower French cars demonstrating their much stronger reliability over the faster Maseratis, of which just one of six finished.[1]

Classification edit

Pos. No. Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid
1 6   Louis Chiron Talbot-Lago MC 70 4:03:40.7 2
2 24   Henri Louveau Maserati 4CL 70 4:05:18.6 1
3 2   Eugène Chaboud Talbot-Lago Spéciale 69 + 1 lap 3
4 30   Louis Rosier Talbot-Lago Spéciale 69 + 1 lap 7
5 32   Charles Pozzi Delahaye 135S 67 + 3 laps 11
6 4   Franco Comotti Talbot-Lago Spéciale 62 + 8 laps 15
7 38   Peter Whitehead
  Ian Connell
ERA B-Type 61 + 9 laps 6
8 ?   Maurice Varet
  Pierre Meyrat
Delahaye 135S 61 + 9 laps 12
Ret 44   Alberto Ascari Maserati 4CLT 63 Piston 17
Ret 28   Reg Parnell
  Wilkie Wilkinson
ERA E-Type 39 Steering 10
Ret 8   Yves Giraud-Cabantous
  Lord Selsdon
Talbot T26SS 39 Engine 9
Ret 16   "Raph" Maserati 4CL 36 Engine 5
Ret 18   Pierre Levegh Maserati 4CL 23 Accident 4
Ret 22   Emmanuel de Graffenried Maserati 4CL 21 Engine 14
Ret 42   Luigi Villoresi Maserati 4CLT 4 Engine 16
Ret 10   Luigi Chinetti Talbot MD 1 Engine 18
Ret 26   Leslie Brooke ERA E-Type 1 Engine 8
Ret 14   Raymond Sommer CTA-Arsenal 0 Rear axle 13

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Hodges, David (1967). The French Grand Prix. pp. 132–134.
  2. ^ "1947 French Grand Prix". Motor Sport Magazine Database. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
  3. ^ Abeillon, Pierre (1992). Talbot-Lago de course. ISBN 2-9700021-0-8.
  4. ^ "XXXIV Grand Prix de l'ACF • STATS F1". statsf1.com. Retrieved 13 September 2021.

External links edit


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