Masters of Monza

Lewis Hamilton’s virtuoso performance at the Italian Grand Prix was like Jim Clark’s fifty years ago. Clark didn’t win but gave a masterly demonstration. The field was close, not quite hundredths of a second apart like now, with 5sec between the front row of the grid and the back.

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Electric Cars Musk

Gull-wing doors I don’t find very uplifting. There was some engineering point to them in the Mercedes-Benz 300SL of 1952. Its space frame was stiffened by wide sills that would have obliged Kling and Klenk to climb in through a window. When they are unnecessary I am wary.

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Vorsprung durch Auto Union

I always wanted an Auto Union. My favourite Dinky Toy was an Auto Union record car. I can still feel its fins and spats with a five-year-old’s fingers. Dinky only made it from 1936 to 1940. This is a later one rebuilt and shown at Geneva in 2009. It was in my teens, as what Laurence Pomeroy liked to call a student of motor racing, that I realised how important 1930s Auto Unions had been.

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Pebble Beach

Albrecht Graf von Schlitz, genannt von Goertz von Wrisberg (1914-2006), signed my menu at BMW’s dinner celebrating the 1996 Monterey Historic Automobile Races. Since this is Pebble Beach week I looked at souvenirs of my visits to the sunlit coast of California and one of the world’s best classic car events. It was a match for Goodwood even then.

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Missionary Mazda

Holy Grails don’t come often. One that could stretch the useful life of internal combustion by decades is revealed by Mazda. But its announcement is so circumscribed by environmental doublespeak I am not sure whether to believe it or not.

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