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Mechanics, Monaco and memories

May 19th, 2008 | Rob Widdows | 7 Comments

First, a note of thanks. Last week I was talking about mechanics – you know, the guys who get all the messing around and none of the credit. I was hoping that a few of these chaps would get in touch and, guess what, they have.

So my ‘Mechanics Tales’ series is at least safe for a few months more. Damien (my Editor) is pleased, or relieved, one of the two.

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1971 European F2 Championship. Cranleigh, Surrey, UK. 4th November, Rondel Racing F2 Team including L - R: Clive Walton, Ron Dennis, Neil Trundle and Preston Anderson.

I was encouraged to hear from Neil Trundle, a man who has been there, done it, got the t-shirts, the videos and the trophies. Neil established the Project 4 team with Ron Dennis, the outfit that built the ProCars for BMW, wowed the paddocks with its presentation and persuaded the mighty Marlboro to support its bid for the old McLaren team. The rest, as they say, is history.

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Dutch Grand Prix, Zandvoort, Holland. 29th - 31st August 1980. Alain Prost (McLaren M30-Ford Cosworth), 6th position.

Neil still works with Ron, at the McLaren Technology Centre in Woking, where he’s in charge of the gearbox department. This is all to cut a very long story short but Mr Trundle has agreed to tell me a few mechanics tales so you will no doubt enjoy reading those in the months to come.

This week I’m going to see Neil Davis, who worked for Ken Tyrrell for many years and looked after the cars of Jackie Stewart. It was he who featured in our picture of the paddock tunnel at the (proper) Nürburgring last week. Meanwhile, in next month’s magazine, it will be the turn of David “Dorky” Lowe who is a protégé of both Neil Davis and Roy Topp at Tyrrell and who was terribly injured at Imola in 1996 when Jos Verstappen left the pits while Dorky was still re-fuelling the Arrows. But we’ll be looking at a happier phase of his life in the pitlane with Paul Stewart Racing when he looked after David Coulthard in Formula 3.

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San Marino Grand Prix, Imola, Italy. 3rd - 5th May 1996. Jos Verstappen (Footwork FA17 Hart).

I won’t be in Monte Carlo this coming weekend but I will be glued to the television. This is absolutely one of my favourite Grands Prix, along with Spa-Francorchamps, Montreal and Monza. Well, and Suzuka, but that’s not every year now. Why do I love Monte Carlo? Because of the speed and the skill. You can feel the speed, get close to the cars for once, and you can only wonder the skill involved in threading a Grand Prix car around the streets. And the noise. Ah, that noise, as the cars scream around the Principality, the shriek of those engines ricocheting off the buildings. First thing in the morning it is just thrilling, makes the hairs on the back of your neck bristle.
Many years ago I watched a practice session in Monaco with Jenks. We stood behind the barrier at the old Tabac and at the swimming pool section. We could, if we’d been mad enough, have reached out and touched the cars. “You’ve got to realise,” he said, peering up at me through his spectacles, “that this place really shows you who is that bit special, who’s really got it. But even the cars at the back are quick, even the slowest drivers are going fast.”

I remember that every time I see these guys dancing and sliding around the streets, the best of them within millimetres of the barriers. Fantastic place.

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Monaco Grand Prix, Monte Carlo, Monaco. 25th - 27th May 2007. Lewis Hamilton, McLaren MP4-22 Mercedes.

There may not be much overtaking but overtaking isn’t everything in motor racing. I’d rather watch no overtaking in Monaco than in Hungary or Malaysia, for example. I’d rather watch Hamilton or Raikkonen in Monaco than the whole field at Barcelona. And, it is possible to overtake in Monte Carlo. Not easy, but possible.

7 comments to “Mechanics, Monaco and memories”

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  1. My son, Tim, also looked after David Coulthard at Stewart Racing in Formula 3, shared a house with him in Milton Keynes Village and still looks after hin planning the Red Bull F1 Cars builds after doing his time in Pit Crews with Arrows, Stewart, Chris Fox Historic and Jaguar F1.Ask him about David and a Supercharged M.G.TC!

    Paddy Willmer.

  2. Dear Paddy
    Thanks very much for this! Good to hear from so many people.
    Please send me Tim's contact details and I will put him on my list of mechanics to interview. Sounds very interesting to me.
    Hope you're enjoying the magazine.
    RW

  3. Dear Paddy

    Please send me Tim's contact details. This sounds like a great idea for my series in the magazine.

    RW

  4. Dear Paddy

    This sounds like a great story for my mechanics series - many thanks! Please send me contact details for Tim and I will put him on my list.
    Thanks, and regards
    RW

  5. The mechanics series is really excellent, many thanks for memories of times when mechainics really had to work on instinct, without all the sophisticated modern aids.

    It would be entertaining to read memories of some of the "foreign" works team members from the 60s - Porsche's travelling circus (Porsche Systems Engineering, I can remember rows of very dirty 911s in the Brands paddock, it looked as though half the team had just driven there from Stuttgart), Ferrari's pasta kitchen (everything stopped for lunch) and the Alfa Romeo works mechanics (several of them hanging off the back of the works Alfa Romeo service van while the driver did a circuit of the Brands car park until he found the way into the paddock - hilarious!)

  6. Dear Rob

    Only just seen your reply. You can contact Tim on tim.willmer@redbulltechnology.com

    Good luck and thanks.

    Paddy

  7. Dear Rob

    I also have a colleague that i think would be interesting for your mechanic series. He worked at Tyrrell, Arrows, Stewart and Jaguar as well as Nissan (Rally and Group C) and Subaru. Can you email your contact details please and i can get in touch?

    Thanks
    Nick

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Rob Widdows

Rob was brought up on racing, being taken to Goodwood as a small child and devouring his father’s copies of Motor Sport. During a career in newspaper, radio and TV journalism he created the ‘Track Torque’ motorsport show on radio and was Indycar commentator for Eurosport before co-founding the Festival of Speed and Revival events. He was marketing director of the Goodwood Road Racing Company.

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