The 1926 Grand Prix season was the second AIACR World Manufacturers' Championship season and the first running to new 1.5-litre regulations. The championship was won by Bugatti and its Type 35 was the dominant car of the year.
The schedule was increased from four to five championship races. The Belgian round was dropped but the British Grand Prix and San Sebastián Grand Prix were added. Many races had promising entry lists, but when a number of cars did not arrive, it led to farcical races with just a handful of starters and only a couple of finishers.
The leading French teams of Bugatti, Delage and Peugeot arrived for the Targa Florio as, once again, the major Italian teams did not enter. The race was marred by the death of two-time winner Giulio Masetti, crashing his privateer Delage on the first lap. Once again it was the small, nimble Bugatti of Bartolomeo Costantini that held off the rest of the pack. When the works Delage team was withdrawn following Masetti's death, it left Costantini led his team to a 1-2-3 victory.
The opening race of the championship was the Indianapolis 500. Frank Lockhart was a young rookie who substituted in to race for an ill Pete Kreis. Starting from back in the pack he soon joined the leaders and took the front on lap 60. On lap 71, rain forced a stop to the race for over an hour. Upon the restart, Lockhart built up his lead again, so at the 400-mile mark he had a 2-lap lead over the field. At that point rain returned, and he became the first rookie winner since 1914, in the rain-shortened race.
The European rounds of the championship were plagued by entry withdrawals of the works teams, leaving just a handful of starters to contest the races. The most embarrassing was the premier French Grand Prix where only the three Bugatti works cars started, and Jules Goux won, being the only classified finisher. The Delages were fast but poorly designed with the exhaust system placed right beside the drivers’ legs causing burns and exhaustion so that the team lost race-winning opportunities from numerable pit-stops to rest and recover. They did win the inaugural British Grand Prix as Bugatti did not enter and the new Talbots were still too under-developed. In the end, by virtue of being the only team to run the mandatory three races, Bugatti won the second Constructor's Championship.
Outside the championship, Formula Libre races (literally, open formula) were very popular across France and Italy and a number were staged with large fields of local drivers. Germany held its first Grand Prix, won by the young Rudolf Caracciola in difficult wet conditions that caused several serious accidents.
Rnd | Date | Name | Circuit | Race Regulations | Weather | Race Distance | Winner's Time | Winning driver | Winning constructor | Fastest lap | Report |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 31 May | XIV International 500 Mile Sweepstakes | Indianapolis | AAA | rain | (500 miles) 400 miles* | 4h 15m | Frank Lockhart | Miller Type 91 | not recorded | Report |
2 | 27 Jun | XX French Grand Prix | Miramas | AIACR | hot | 510 km | 4h 39m | Jules Goux | Bugatti Type 39A | Jules Goux Bugatti | Report |
3 | 18 Jul | IV Gran Premio de San Sebastián / IV European Grand Prix | Lasarte | AIACR | hot | 780 km | 6h 52m | Jules Goux | Bugatti Type 39A | Louis Wagner Delage | Report |
4 | 7 Aug | I RAC Grand Prix [6] | Brooklands | AIACR | fine | 460 km | 4h 01m | Robert Sénéchal Louis Wagner | Delage 15S8 | Henry Segrave Talbot | Report |
5 | 5 Sep | VI Italian Grand Prix | Monza | AIACR Voiturette | sunny | 600 km | 4h 20m | “Sabipa” (Louis Charavel) | Bugatti Type 39A | Meo Constantini Bugatti | Report |
Note: *Race stopped because of weather
The Indianapolis 500 also counted towards the 1926 AAA Championship Car season held in the United States
Major non-championship races are in bold Sources: [7] [2] [3] [8] [9]
Date | Name | Circuit | Race Regulations | Weather | Race Distance | Winner's Time | Winning driver | Winning constructor | Report | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
21 Mar | I Circuito del Pozzo | Verona [10] | Formula Libre Voiturette | cloudy then rain | 250 km | 2h 15m | Alessandro Consonno | Bugatti Type 35 | Report | |
A | 28 Mar | II Premio Reale di Roma | Valle Giulia [11] | Formula Libre | fine | 300 km | 3h 01m | Conte Aymo Maggi | Bugatti Type 35 | Report |
II Grand Prix de Provence | Miramas | Formula Libre Voiturette | cloudy | 250 km | 1h 55m | Henry Segrave | Talbot 70 | Report | ||
B | 25 Apr | IX Coppa Florio | Medio Madonie [12] | Targa Florio | sunny then cloudy | 540 km | 7h 21m | Meo Constantini | Bugatti Type 35T | Report |
XVII Targa Florio [note 1] | 540 km | 7h 21m | Meo Constantini | Bugatti Type 35T | ||||||
29 Apr [13] 2 May [14] | II Gran Premio di Tripoli | Tagiura [15] | Formula Libre | sunny | 390 km | 3h 31m | François Eysermann | Bugatti Type 35 | Report | |
2 May | III Circuito di Alessandria | Alessandria [16] | Formula Libre | fine | 260 km | 2h 49m | Giovanni Alloatti | Bugatti Type 22 Brescia | Report | |
II Coppa Vinci | Messina [17] | Formula Libre | sunny | 260 km | 3h 42m | Renato Balestrero | OM 665 S | Report | ||
9 May | I Coppa Etna | Catania [18] | Formula Libre | sunny | 350 km | 3h 54m | Conte Aymo Maggi | Bugatti Type 35A | Report | |
23 May | IV Circuito del Savio | Ravenna [19] | Formula Libre Cyclecar | sunny | 290 km | 2h 21m | Conte Gastone Brilli-Peri | Ballot Indianapolis 1919 | Report | |
30 May | III Coppa della Perugina | Perugia [20] | Formula Libre | sunny | 300 km | 2h 38m | Emilio Materassi | Itala Special 5.8L | Report | |
12 Jun | V Eifelrennen | Nideggen [21] | Formula Libre Sports Cars | sunny | 400 km | 6h 07m | Gustav Münz | Ford 3.0L Spezial | Report | |
27 Jun | I Coppa del Marchese Ginori | Florence [22] | Formula Libre | ? | 240 km | 2h 03m | Emilio Materassi | Itala Special 5.8L | Report | |
11 Jul | I German Grand Prix | AVUS | Formula Libre Sports Cars | fine then heavy rain | 390 km | 2h 54m | Rudolf Caracciola | Mercedes 1924 GP | Report | |
18 Jul | I Circuito di Camaiore | Lucca [23] | Formula Libre Cyclecar | ? | 190 km | 2h 40m | Baconin Borzacchini | Salmson VAL | Report | |
C | 25 Jul | II Spanish Grand Prix | Lasarte | Formula Libre | fine then showers | 690 km [24] | 5h 36m | Meo Constantini | Bugatti Type 35 | Report |
II Grand Prix de la Marne | Reims-Gueux | Formula Libre | fine then rain | 320 km | 2h 50m | François Lescot | Bugatti Type 35 | Report | ||
1 Aug | II Grand Prix du Comminges | Saint-Gaudens [25] | Formula Libre | 410 km | 3h 58m | Louis Chiron | Bugatti Type 35 | Report | ||
7 Aug | III Coppa Acerbo | Pescara | Formula Libre | hot | 510 km | 5h 03m | Luigi Spinozzi | Bugatti Type 35 | Report | |
D | 15 Aug | VI Coppa Montenero | Montenero | Formula Libre | sunny | 225 km | 2h 55m | Emilio Materassi | Itala Special 5.8L | Report |
E | 27 Aug [14] 28 Aug [13] | VI Grand Prix de Boulogne | Boulogne-sur-Mer [26] | Voiturette | sunny | 450 km | 4h 21m | Capt George Eyston | Bugatti Type 39 | Report |
28 Aug | III Grand Prix de la Baule | La Baule [27] | Formula Libre | ? | 100 km | 51m | Louis Wagner | Delage 2LCV | Report | |
5 Sep | IV Gran Premio del Vetturette | Monza | Voiturette | sunny | 400 km | 3h 01m | André Morel | Amilcar 6C | Report | |
F | 12 Sep | I Gran Premio di Milano | Monza | Formula Libre | fine | 400 km | 2h 36m | Meo Constantini | Bugatti Type 35C | Report |
II Grand Prix du Moto Club de Marseille | La Baule | Formula Libre | ? | 50 km | 29m | “Foc” | Bugatti Type 37 | Report | ||
II Solituderennen | Solitude [28] | Formula Libre | rain | 450 km | 4h 50m | Otto Merz | Mercedes 1924 GP | Report | ||
20 Sep | I Circuito Ligure-Piemontese | Novi Ligure [29] | Formula Libre Touring | sunny | 270 km | 2h 15m | Federico Valpreda | Chiribiri Monza C | Report | |
G | 25 Sep | VI Junior Car Club 200 | Brooklands | AIACR Voiturette | cold | 200 miles | 2h 40m | Henry Segrave | Talbot 700 GPLB | Report |
17 Oct | VI Circuito del Garda | Salò [30] | Formula Libre | sunny | 250 km | 2h 50m | Conte Aymo Maggi | Bugatti Type 35C | Report | |
I Grand Prix du Salon | Montlhéry | AIACR | rain | 200 km | 1h 59m | Albert Divo | Talbot 700 GPLB | Report |
Sources: [31] [32] [2] [9] [33] [34] [35]
Entrant | Constructor | Chassis | Engine | Tyre | Driver | Rounds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alfa Corse | Alfa Romeo | P2 8C/2000 | Alfa Romeo 2.0L S8 s/c | Conte Gastone Brilli-Peri | A | |
Conte Giovanni Bonmartini | A | |||||
Usines Bugatti | Bugatti | Type 39A Type 35 Type 35C | Bugatti 1.5L S8 s/c Bugatti 2.0L S8 Bugatti 2.0L S8 s/c | Meo Constantini | 2, 3, 5; B, C, F | |
Jules Goux | 2, 3, 5; B. C, F | |||||
Pierre de Vizcaya | 2 | |||||
Ferdinando Minoia | 3; B, C | |||||
Louis Dutilleux | 3* | |||||
“Sabipa” (Louis Charavel) | 5 | |||||
Automobiles Delage | Delage | 15 S8 2LCV | Delage 1.5L S8 s/c Delage 2.0L V12 s/c | Robert Benoist | [2], 3, 4; B, C | |
? Edmond Bourlier | [2], 3 | |||||
André Morel | 3; C | |||||
Louis Wagner | 3*, 4; C | |||||
Robert Sénéchal | 3*, 4 | |||||
André Dubonnet | 4 | |||||
Albert Divo | B | |||||
René Thomas | B | |||||
Duesenberg Bros | Duesenberg | Type 91 | Duesenberg 1.5L S8 s/c | F | Peter DePaolo | 1 |
Ben Jones | 1 | |||||
Miller Automobiles | Miller | Type 91 | Miller 1.5L S8 s/c | F | Earl Cooper | 1 |
Bennett Hill | 1 | |||||
Dave Lewis | 1 | |||||
Chevrolet Bros | Ford-Frontenac | Model T | Frontenac 1.5L | F | Jack McCarver | 1 |
Locomobile Junior 8 | Fengler | Junior 8 | Locomobile 1.5L | F | Cliff Durant | 1 |
“Leon Duray” | 1 | |||||
Eddie Hearne | 1* | |||||
Harry Hartz | Miller | Type 91 | Miller 1.5L S8 s/c | F | Harry Hartz | 1 |
Fred Comer | 1 | |||||
Tony Gulotta | 1 | |||||
Wade Morton | 1* | |||||
Albert Schmidt | Schmidt | Argyle 1.5L | F | Lora L. Corum | 1 | |
Steve Nemesh | 1 | |||||
Ste Industrielle de Materiel Automobile | SIMA | Violet 1.5L F4 2-stroke Violet 750cc F2 2-stroke | Marcel Violet | [2], [3], [5]; [C], E | ||
Michel Doré | [2], [3], [5]; [C], [E] | |||||
Max Fourny | [2], [3], [5]; [C] | |||||
Maurice Benoist | [5]; E | |||||
. Stanton | E | |||||
STD Motors Ltd | Talbot Sunbeam Sunbeam | 700 GPLB GP . | Talbot 1.5L S4 s/c Sunbeam 2.0L S4 s/c Sunbeam 4.0L V12 s/c | Henry Segrave | [2], [3], 4, [5]; C, D, G | |
Albert Divo | [2], [3], 4, [5]; A, [E], G | |||||
Jules Moriceau | [2], [3], 4, [5]; E*, G | |||||
Hugo Urban-Emmerich | E | |||||
SA des Automobiles Jean Graf | Jean Graf | Spéciale | CIME 1.5L S4 | Jean Graf | [3], [5]; [C], F | |
William Grover-Williams | [3] | |||||
? . Maleterre | F | |||||
? . Coudray | [F] | |||||
Officine Meccaniche | O.M. | Tipo 865 GP Tipo 665 S | O.M. 1.5L S8 O.M. 2.2L S6 | Ferdinando Minoia | [3], [4], [G] | |
Giuseppe Morandi | [3], [4], [G] | |||||
Renato Balestrero | [3], [D] | |||||
? Dick Oates | [G] | |||||
Alvis Car & Engineering Co | Alvis | GP | Alvis 1.5L S8 s/c | Maurice Harvey | [4]; G | |
Earl of Cottenham | G | |||||
Bamford & Martin Ltd | Aston Martin | GP | Aston Martin 1.5L S8 | George Eyston | 4 | |
Basil Eyston | G | |||||
Fab. Torinese Velivoli Chiribiri & Cie | Chiribiri | 12/16 Monza | Chiribiri 1.5L S4 s/c | Umberto Serboli | 5 | |
Luigi Platé | [5] | |||||
Officine Alfieri Maserati SpA | Maserati | Tipo 26 | Maserati 1.5L S8 s/c | Ernesto Maserati | 5; F | |
Emilio Materassi | 5; F | |||||
Guido Meregalli | [5] | |||||
Alfieri Maserati | B | |||||
SA des Autos et Cycles Peugeot | Peugeot | Type 174 Sport | Peugeot 3.8L S4 | André Boillot | B | |
Louis Wagner | B | |||||
Sta Ceirano Automobili Torino | Ceirano | N150S | Ceirano 1.5L | Luigi Beccaria | D | |
Paolo Pavesio | D | |||||
Gusmano Pieranzi | D | |||||
Pietro Cattaneo | [D] | |||||
? Aldo Colombo | [D] | |||||
Société des Moteurs Salmson | Salmson | VAL | Salmson 1.1L S4 | George Duller | E | |
? . Bourdan | E | |||||
George Newman | E | |||||
Georges Casse | G | |||||
Pierre Goutte | G | |||||
Lionel de Marmier | G | |||||
Société Nouvelle de l'Automobile Amilcar | Amilcar | C6 | Amilcar 1.1L S6 | André Morel | [D], G | |
? Charles Martin | G | |||||
Arthur Duray | G | |||||
? Bill Humphreys | [G] |
Entrant | Constructor | Chassis | Engine | Driver | Rounds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Private Entrant | Eldridge | Special | Anzani 1.5L S4 | Ernest Eldridge | 1, 3; [C] |
Private Entrant | Guyot | Spéciale | Schmid 2.0L S6 sleeve-valve supercharged | Albert Guyot | 1, 3; [C] |
Private Entrant | Miller | Type 122 | Miller 2.0L S8 s/c | Ralph Hepburn | 1 |
Private Entrant | Miller | Type 122 | Miller 2.0L S8 s/c | Frank Lockhart | 1 |
Private Entrant | Bugatti | Type 39A | Bugatti 1.5L S8 s/c | Capt Malcolm Campbell | 4; [E], G |
Private Entrant | Halford | Special | Halford 1.5L S6 s/c | Maj Frank Halford | 4; G |
Private Entrant | Itala Special | 55 | Hispano-Suiza 5.8L S4 | Emilio Materassi | A, B, D |
Private Entrant | Sunbeam Delage | GP 2LCV | Sunbeam 2.0L S4 s/c Delage 2.0L V12 s/c | Conte Giulio Masetti | A, B |
Private Entrant | Bugatti | Type 35 Type 35C | Bugatti 2.0L S8 Bugatti 2.0L S8 s/c | Conte Aymo Maggi | A, D |
Private Entrant | Bugatti | Type 35 | Bugatti 2.0L S8 | Franco Mazzotti | A, D |
Private Entrant | Salmson | VAL | Salmson 1.1L S4 | Baconin Borzacchini | B, D |
Private Entrant | Bugatti | Type 35T | Bugatti 2.3L S8 | William Grover-Williams | C, [E] |
Private Entrant | Alfa Romeo | RL Targa Florio | Alfa Romeo 3.0L S6 | Bruno Presenti | D |
Private Entrant | Bugatti | Type 35 | Bugatti 2.0L S8 | Louis Chiron | F |
Note: * was raced as a relief driver. Those in brackets show, although entered, the driver did not race
The racing death of star Antonio Ascari in 1925, along with a number of serious and fatal accidents drove the AIACR (forerunner of the FIA) to consider changes to its racing regulations. In October of that year, they resolved to combat the dramatic increase in power and speed from supercharging by dropping the engine capacity from 2-litres to 1.5-litres (albeit still open to be fitted with or without a supercharger). The minimum weight was also reduced from 650 to 600 kg. The AAA Contest Board (AAA), in the United States, followed the change adopting similar rules, to an equivalent drop from 122 to 91 cubic inches. Minimum width remained 80 cm with two seats, though only one driver was on board. [36]
For the second year of the Championship, the Belgian Grand Prix was not held this year but two new races were added to the schedule in its stead. Brooklands had resolved its noise-control issues with neighbouring estates and would host the first British Grand Prix. The European Grand Prix was awarded to the Spanish Automobile Club. However, the promoters were concerned the 1.5-litre formula would be poorly supported and therefore also arranged a second race (held a week later) to Formula Libre regulations that would be their official Spanish Grand Prix. [37] This year, along with the mandatory attendance of the Italian GP, teams had to also participate in any two of the other four races to be eligible for the championship. [38]
Meanwhile, the regulations for the Targa Florio engine limits remained as they were. [39] Like Grand Prix events, riding mechanics were now optional. [40] Once again, the Targa Florio and Coppa Florio were held simultaneously, and this year both events were run over the same five laps. The Coppa Florio was only open to factory teams who had registered. After Peugeot became the first manufacturer to win the Coppa Florio twice they earned its permanent ownership. However, they chose to offer it up for ongoing challenges if it would be contested alternately in Italy and France. [41] In May, the cities of Milan and Turin changed their rules of driving on the left side of the road to line up with the rest of Italy that drove on the right. [42]
The new regulations demanded new engines and pushed engineers to think of innovative ways to get the same power from the smaller size. By using a shorter stroke, engines could greatly increase their speed, up to 7000-8000rpm. [36]
Faced with high development costs, Alfa Romeo and Sunbeam instead chose to retire their works teams from racing. [43] [36] Other teams were already prepared. Ettore Bugatti had developed his Type 35 chassis the previous year with a 1.5-litre engine, and finally accepted the need for supercharging with the new Type 39A. Although conventional, the Bugatti was reliable (only running at 5500rpm for its 120 bhp) with excellent balance and road-holding. [44] In non-championship, Formula Libre races, Bugatti still refused to conform to supercharging the Type 35, instead chose to enlarge the engine to get more power, up to 2.3 litres as the new Type 35T. [45] The marque's reliability made them the cars of choice for privateer drivers and wealthy amateurs.
Sunbeam's designer, Louis Coatalen, and engineer, Vincenzo Bertarione, went across to the Paris-based sister-company of Talbot. [46] Their 1.5-litre cars had been racing very successfully in the former voiturette class. The new supercharged Talbot 700 GPLB was delayed in appearing but was the fastest in the field. [44] [47] Problems arose through the season with broken front axles, poor brakes and fractured supercharger casings. [48]
Delage too had a new head engineer: Albert Lory was promoted, and his first design was a straight-8, twin-cam engine boosted by two superchargers. The power output of 170 bhp was the first racing engine to break the magical 100 bhp per litre mark. But with sixty bearings it was intricate and expensive. Less thought was put into channelling away the enormous heat production that would scold and burn the drivers’ feet and legs. It also caused a vacuum effect that sucked exhaust fumes back into the cockpit adding to their discomfort. [49] [43]
Without the need for a riding mechanic, both the Talbot and Delage designs put the drivetrain beside, rather than under, the driver. This in turn meant the cars could be lower giving far better road-holding. The smaller front profile would be more aerodynamic, and all of this enabled the cars to keep their high speeds.
The SIMA-Violet car was designed by Marcel Violet. With a two-stroke 1.5-litre engine, it was so light it needed to carry 200 kg of ballast to reach the weight regulations, which made it uncompetitive. However, it performed better in hill-climb events where no ballast was required. [50] Diatto had got into financial difficulty, which was the incentive for the Maserati brothers to go and start their own company. They were supported in this venture by Conte Diego de Sterlich. [51] Using the engine and chassis parts Alfieri had designed for the last Diatto racer, their first grand prix car was the Maserati Tipo 26, named for the current year. Like others it had twin-overhead camshafts and a Roots-style supercharger. [44] [51]
In Germany, the two major companies Daimler and Benz merged in June and would henceforth be known as Daimler-Benz, and its cars as Mercedes-Benz. [52] In the US, both Harry Miller and Fred Duesenberg developed supercharged 1.5-litre engines for the new formula.
Manufacturer | Model [53] [54] | Engine | Power Output | Max. Speed (km/h) | Dry Weight (kg) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bugatti | Type 39A | Bugatti 1492cc S8 supercharged | 120 bhp | 190 | 740 |
Delage | 15 S8 | Delage 1487cc S8 supercharged | 170 bhp | 210 | 750 |
/ Talbot | 700 GPLB | Talbot 1489cc S4 supercharged | 140 bhp | 210 | 700 |
Maserati | Tipo 26 | Maserati 1491cc S8 supercharged | 120 bhp | 200 | 720 |
Officine Meccaniche | 865 GP | OM 1496cc S8 supercharged | 118 bhp | 195 | 715 |
Miller | Type 91 | Miller 1468cc S8 supercharged | 154 bhp | ||
Duesenberg | Type 91 | Duesenberg 1.5L S8 supercharged | |||
Aston Martin | Aston Martin 1486cc S4 | 55 bhp | 160 | 660 | |
Chiribiri [55] | 12/16 Monza | Chiribiri 1453cc S4 supercharged | 95 bhp | 165 |
The French works teams returned to Italy for the Targa Florio. The Coppa Florio was run in conjunction with it – open to works teams only, unlike the Targa. Both were run over five laps while the smallest, 1100cc cars only ran three laps. Peugeot ran two of its successful 174 S 4-litre sports cars for André Boillot and Louis Wagner. Delage had three of its 1925 grand-prix cars with René Thomas, Albert Divo and Robert Benoist. Bugatti had yet another iteration of its Type 35, the Type 35T with a 2.3-litre engine. The drivers were the team-leader Bartolomeo Costantini, veteran Jules Goux and Ferdinando Minoia. The French were competing against a solid field of privateers, led by the local hero, and two-time winner, Conte Giulio Masetti racing another Delage, Emilio Materassi in his 5.8-litre Itala Special and Renato Balestrero in a works-supported OM. Alfieri Maserati also arrived with his brand new Tipo 26. [56]
The race started at 7am, with the cars flagged off at 3-minute intervals. At the end of the first lap, Costantini (the 1925 winner) led from Minoia, with Materassi, Wagner, Dubonnet, Divo, Goux and Maserati all about 3 minutes behind on elapsed time. Boillot hit a dog and had to retire his Peugeot. But the biggest tragedy was when Masetti crashed only 27 km into the race. He went wide at a corner (possibly from a steering or brake fault), rode up the stone banking and rolled, fatally crushing Masetti against the steering wheel. The three works Delages were withdrawn as they got the news. [57] The Bugattis continued to build their lead over the next laps while Goux moved up the field to third. Costantini kept up his pace and led home a 1-2-3 finish for Bugatti, becoming a two-time winner. Maserati was 8th, winning the 1500cc class. [58] [59] [60] [61]
The opening race of the championship was the Indianapolis 500. Defending champions, Duesenberg had five cars entered. Last year's winner Peter DePaolo ran its new supercharged 1.5-litre model along with Ralph Mulford and Bob McDonogh while rookie Ben Jones had a 2-stroke special. Their biggest rivals, once again, was from Harry Miller and his own new supercharged 91 cubic inch car. After a strong run in 1925, Miller persisted with his front-wheel drive model for Dave Lewis and Earl Cooper. Bennett Hill raced a regular 122 as a third works car. The regular customer team run by Harry Hartz had three cars for Hartz, Fred Comer and Tony Gulotta while another dozen drivers also ran their own Millers. This year, Cliff Durant's Junior-8 team ran three Fengler cars with Locomobile engines for himself, Leon Duray and Harlan Fengler. Englishman Ernest Eldridge also arrived with two of his home-made specials raced by himself and Douglas Hawkes.
Forty cars were entered to qualify but it was marred by the death of Herbert Jones. The 22-year old was the youngest driver in the field. He had Ralph DePalma’s Miller from 1925 (renamed an Elcar Special) but crashed on his second qualifying lap when he clipped the inside wall at speed. The car rolled trapping Jones underneath and he died of his injuries the next day. [62] [60] After qualifying, Cooper had the fastest time, sharing the front row with Hartz and Duray's Fengler with a field of 28 cars. Three Duesenbergs failed to qualify, including the 10-race veteran Mulford. Fengler was another who failed to qualify. [4] Pete Kreis was too ill with flu and handed his drive over to young rookie Frank Lockhart who had shown great speed qualifying as a relief driver. [43]
In front of a record crowd of 145,000, Hartz led the first lap, but Phil Shafer from the second row then overtook him. Meanwhile, Lockhart had quickly moved from 20th to 5th in the first five laps. He, Shafer and Lewis then duelled for the lead over the next 150 miles. When Lewis pitted on lap 60, Lockhart took the lead. He was still leading on lap 71 when heavy rain forced a red flag, stopping the race for an hour. When it resumed, the Millers of Lockhart and Hartz vied back and forth for the lead. Lewis retired on lap 91 with engine issues. But the rain hung around and returned after 200 miles, when the race was stopped again. Lockhart had a two-lap lead over Hartz and was declared the winner in the rain-shortened race. Miller had its first Indy-500 victory, and took the first four places with Pete DePaolo, finishing 5th in the first Duesenberg. Lockhart was the first rookie to win the race since 1914 and split the $34000 prizemoney with Kreis. Hartz was second for the third time in five years. [43] [63] [64] The 1926 AAA championship was raced over 24 events at seven speedways. Lockhart went on to claim four other wins, tied with Harry Hartz who also had five victories. Hartz, however, was more consistent with 17 top-five placings to comfortably win the AAA championship. [4] [65]
Just the second year into such a prestigious international tournament, the 1926 season was quite a debacle. The first European round of the World Championship was the French Grand Prix – this year held at the very fast Miramas oval in the south. To reduce speeds, hairpin corners were put at each end. Despite being held in the middle of the year, neither Delage or Talbot were ready and did not arrive. When the small French SIMA-Violet team also pulled out, it left the farcical situation where only the Bugatti works team of three cars arrived for the premier event of the year. The organisers had forgotten to include a clause allowing them to cancel (or at least postpone) the Grand Prix. What followed was one of the most embarrassing World Championship races ever held in any era. [66] Regular Bugatti drivers Costantini and Goux were joined by Spaniard Pierre de Vizcaya. De Vizcaya's supercharger gave out before half time, falling an hour behind. Costantini had also lost ten minutes in the pits when his car would not restart, so Goux had a comfortable lead. The two cars circulated the track for the next three hours, with Costantini also having supercharger problems and stopping every other lap to cool the engine. Goux won by sixteen laps as the sole classified finisher, but at least it gave the Bugatti team the handsome prize of FF100,000. By contrast, the cyclecar race in the afternoon had over 30 entries, won by Salmson over the new challenge from Amilcar. [67] [43]
The next round, three weeks later, was the San Sebastián Grand Prix. Another promising entry list of 21 was once again stymied by non-appearances, this time also including OM, Jean Gras and the privateers Albert Guyot and Ernest Eldridge. Delage did arrive with their new cars and team drivers Robert Benoist, Edmond Bourlier and André Morel, with Louis Wagner as a reserve. The Bugatti team had three cars, with Ferdinando Minoia back for De Vizcaya. During practice in the hot Spanish sun, the Delage drivers soon found the exhaust and engine heat unbearably hot. The mechanics drilled holes in the engine covers, but it proved unsuccessful. On a sweltering 44 °C race-day, all three drivers were overcome by the heat and had to pit. Benoist had led the first six laps until he had to stop to change spark plus, as Minoia had a lap earlier. Morel took over the lead and pitted to refuel on lap 10. Overcome by heat exhaustion he was taken to hospital, while Wagner took over his car, but he only lasted five laps. Benoist pitted on lap 12, also totally exhausted. Sometime-Bugatti driver, Robert Sénéchal was in the crowd at the race and offered his assistance to Louis Delâge. Gratefully accepted, he took over Benoist's car, rejoining two laps down having never driven a Delage before. Bourlier, meanwhile, had been duelling with Goux for the lead, until he too pitted – his legs badly burned. Sénéchal had soon pitted to rest after only a few laps, so took Bourlier's car out next. [68] While the Delages were faster, the stops to relieve the drivers lost them that time. Meanwhile, the Bugattis kept running. Although Sénéchal was able to pass Costantini when the latter stopped to change tyres, he could not catch Goux, who took his second victory of the season. [43] [69] [45] After the race the Delages were disqualified for using an unregistered driver, however this was overturned by the AIACR three months later as Ettore Bugatti had agreed to it during the race. [70]
By the time of the inaugural British Grand Prix a fortnight later, the Delages had been modified. Their drivers were Benoist, Wagner and Sénéchal. Bugatti did not send their works team, but local driver Malcolm Campbell had his entered. The Talbots were finally ready and driven by Henry Segrave, Jules Moriceau and joined by Albert Divo who had raced for Delage the previous year. The other entries were George Eyston for Aston Martin and aircraft designer Maj Frank Halford in his own Halford Special. [60] To imitate a road course, sandbanks were added to the Brooklands oval to create artificial chicanes. [43] [44] [48] With only nine starters, it was a bit strange to see the sight of the starting grid, with the first eight cars on the front row, and Sénéchal's Delage alone on the second row. From the start, the Talbots shot into the lead, led by Divo. But although fast, they were still unreliable, and Moriceau's front axle collapsed at the end of just the first lap. [71] [48] Those delicate axles and poor brakes meant they had to brake far earlier allowing Benoist to keep up. Divo, Segrave and Benoist were lapping the tail-enders on only the fifth lap although Divo was stopped soon after. Segrave lost a tyre on lap 15, putting Benoist in the lead. The Delages were improved, but the exhaust-pipes were still causing immense discomfort to the drivers. All their drivers were soaking their smouldering boots in buckets of water at each stop. Benoist continued to build his lead over Segrave and Sénéchal. Just at the halfway point Segrave pitted to fix an ongoing engine issues when the car caught fire forcing his retirement. Privateers Halford and Campbell kept circulating reliably six laps down, along with Divo trying to make up his lost time. [72]
Benoist's smooth run ended on lap 63 when he pitted to change all four wheels. His overheated exhaust then stopped his engine restarting and he lost six laps, evaporating his lead. Once back in the race he started rebuilding his lead over Sénéchal, whose own exhaust broke. Wagner (already scalded from his own car that had retired early) relieved him. The heat finally overcame Benoist on lap 81. Once again, the car would not restart, and when Dubonnet took the car out as the relief-driver, he had lost the lead. Not expecting to drive, he raced in his suit without a helmet. About the same time, Halford parked his Special with a broken drive shaft. Divo had driven back to third when his supercharger packed up. This just left three cars running for the last dozen laps. Despite stopping every other lap to cool his feet, Wagner had enough of a lead to win. Campbell had overtaken Dubonnet near the end and bought his Bugatti in second ten minutes later. Segrave, in his Talbot, had put in the fastest lap on lap 2. [60] [45] [73]
For the final race - the Italian Grand Prix - the only two manufacturers eligible for the title were Bugatti and Delage, as no others had competed in at least two of the earlier rounds. But with a 6-point difference, Delage could not win so chose not to attend, and neither did Talbot. Despite several days of practice, the OM team could not get any engine reliability and chose not to start. The three works Bugattis were driven by Costantini, Goux and Louis Charavel (who raced under the pseudonym “Sabipa”). Their competition then, were two cars from Maserati (driven by Ernesto Maserati and Emilio Materassi) and Roberto Serboli's Chiribiri. So, to avoid another farcical championship race, the officials opened the grid up to 1100cc voiturettes. This added a further seven cars (Amilcar, BNC and Marino but not Salmson. Costantini took the lead at the start, and while the Maseratis were initially competitive, both cars retired on only the fifth lap. Serboli's Chiribiri burst into flames when it pitted on the 24th lap, though the driver got out uninjured, and when Goux retired on lap 42, it left the two remaining Bugattis to cruise round for a simple 1–2 victory. Although Costantini had dominated the race, his engine started badly misfiring. Losing twelve minutes in the pits, allowed “Sabipa” to pass and eventually win by seven minutes (two laps). [74] [75] In the 400 km voiturette race, run simultaneously, the winner was André Morel in the works Amilcar (being only four laps behind the Bugattis at the time). [76]
Outside of the championship and its 1.5-litre restrictions, motor-racing was popular, attracting big crowds and large fields. The season had started in March in Italy with the first Circuito del Pozzo at Verona and the second Grand Prix of Rome. The field included a number of 2-litre cars raced in the championship from the year before. Emilio Materassi led initially in his Itala. Conte Brilli-Peri took over in his ex-works Alfa Romeo P2 and held the lead to the penultimate lap. But his three stops for fuel and tyres allowed Conte Aymo Maggi's Bugatti, which did not need to stop, to close the gap. Maggi caught up and passed him on the last lap to win by eight seconds.
The second Provence GP, at Miramas, was run across five heats to qualify for a final. Segrave won from his teammate Moriceau in their Talbot 700s, beating the Bugattis of William Grover-Williams and Louis Chiron.The second Marne GP was held on a new road course near Reims, a very fast triangular track of long straights joined by sharp hairpins. The Reims track would become a centre for French motor-racing over the next four decades. The Spanish Grand Prix, run a fortnight after the World Championship San Sebastián Grand Prix, instead run to Formula Libre regulations, allowed the teams to run their 1925 2-litre Grand Prix cars. The three regular Delage drivers had recovered from their earlier ordeal and faced the three unsupercharged Bugatti T35s of the works team, and two 2.3-litre Targa-spec privateers. Also starting was Henry Segrave in a 4.5-litre Sunbeam – the car that held the flying kilometre speed record. [77] Once again, the King and Queen were in attendance, on a cooler day than the previous round. From the start, Segrave bolted into the lead, but when rain started on the 4th lap, his bigger car became more unwieldy and he soon retired with a broken front axle – an ailment apparently not exclusive to the smaller Talbot sister-cars. Morel took the lead briefly until he, and teammate Benoist, were both put out with spark-plug issues. At the halfway point, the rain had eased and Costantini had a 6-minute lead over Wagner's remaining Delage, with Goux, privateer “Williams” and Minoia a lap behind. Maintaining his fast pace, Costantini won with a 2-lap lead over Goux who finished second after Wagner, relieved by Benoist, had their issues. Minoia's Bugatti was the only other car to go the distance. [78]
The Italian races were characterised by sizeable fields in 1100, 1500, 2-litre, and larger classes. The contrast between the poorly supported Italian Grand Prix and Milan Grand Prix, held just a week later also at Monza was stark, where the latter had 20 starters across the four classes. Bugatti and Maserati both arrived with two cars (for Costantini, Goux, Ernesto Maserati and Materassi respectively). Henry Segrave bought his 4.5-litre Sunbeam (now with a reinforced front axle) while Brilli-Peri raced Materassi's Itala Special. It was these cars that formed the leading pack at the start. Segrave's gearbox gave up after twelve laps, leaving Costantini and Goux leading by two laps. Despite a puncture for Goux, they held on for a dominant 1–2 victory. [79]
Although now in the AIACR, the German Automobile Club had declared that they did not want their drivers competing. The German races were run with a combination of racing and sports cars, and hill-climbs carried an equal weighting in prestige. The circuits used (aside from AVUS) also reflected this with long, difficult tracks with many elevation changes. A German Grand Prix was officially held for the first time at AVUS in July. It was the first international race held in Germany since the war. [80] A national race for sports-cars the previous year on the Kaiserpreis circuit in the Taunus mountains had been won by August Momberger in a supercharged NSU 1.3-litre. However, it is not recognised as the inaugural German Grand Prix. [69] With no strong local Grand Prix cars, and hoping for a German victory, the organisers opened the event up to a mixture of sports, touring and grand prix cars. A big field of 38 cars, including sports and modified racing cars started this year's event. As well as works cars from OM, NSU, Brennabor and NAG, there were a raft of privateers and gentlemen-drivers, including Jean Chassagne and Hugo Urban-Emmerich running British Talbots. Favourites were the two factory-supported Mercedes cars of Adolf Rosenberger and a young, up-and-coming Rudolf Caracciola. They ran 1924 2-litre Grand Prix cars, modified to carry a second seat and unofficially assisted by Alfred Neubauer and his team. [81]
Several weeks before the race, Kurt Neugebauer had almost had a major accident when his NAG got into a slide at 150k/h on a wet AVUS track. During practice, Luigi Platé's Chiribiri collided with Wilhelm Heine's NAG and crashed, killing Platé's mechanic and severely injuring both drivers. On race day, an immense ground of 230000 people arrived. [82] In a staggered start, with the bigger cars flagged off first, Caracciola stalled his car and lost a minute. At the end of the first lap, Rosenberger was leading on elapsed time. Ferdinando Minoia, in the OM, put in the fastest lap of the race on lap two to get up to second, but soon had engine trouble and had to pit. Then after four laps it began to rain, making the track slippery and treacherous. It negated the power of the bigger cars, allowing the smaller Talbots to stay close. Rosenberger led from Urban-Emmerich and Chassagne. Caracciola pitted, losing seven minutes to change spark plugs. [83] Then at the end of the 6th lap Rosenberger crashed coming out of the North Curve, overcome by leaking fuel fumes. [84] Skidding on the slippery track at over 150kph the car piled into the scoreboard and timekeepers' hut, killing two of the officials and seriously injuring the other while Rosenberger and his mechanic were slightly injured. Three laps later, Urban-Emmerich also crashed at the North Curve. He went wide, breaking through the border fence and injuring several spectators, though the driver got the car back to the pits. Then just half a lap later, Chassagne crashed and rolled the other Talbot at the South Curve. Through all this mayhem, Caracciola raced on in fifth, five minutes behind the leader, lapping the fastest in the field. The rain stopped by the 13th lap. A lap later, the Mercedes was in the lead and pulling away. After the 20 laps Caracciola won by over three minutes from the 2.6-litre NAG [85] of Christian Riecken (who was also the technical director of that company). [82] Caracciola's skill in the difficult conditions earned him the nickname Regenmeister (“rain-master”). [86]
Mercedes arrived as a works team at Solitude in September, running their 2-litre 1924 cars again, this time for Otto Merz and Christian Werner. It was the first race for Alfred Neubauer as the team manager, a role he would fill for another thirty years. A small field also included the NSU works team with their supercharged 1.5-litre cars. Merz won comfortably in a race that ended in heavy rain. [87]
In Britain, racing at Brooklands still was immensely popular. Outside the Grand Prix the premier event was the Junior Car Club 200. A huge field of 38 cars took the start, all labelled as “Specials” by the organisers so that the public would not be confused between the cars racing on the track and those on public sale. Although no works teams were officially entered, there were team-entries running the latest Talbot, Alvis, Aston Martin, Salmson and Amilcar models, along with the previously seen Halford and Eldridge specials. On a sunny but cold day, Henry Segrave and Albert Divo finally got the reliability to get a 1–2 victory. [88]
Jules Goux, now 42, retired at the end of the season. A veteran who had been racing since 1906 with teams including Peugeot and Ballot, he had victories in the Targa Florio (1908), Indianapolis 500 (1913) and the first Italian GP (1921) as well as this year's victories. [60] [74] [89] Meo Costantini also retired at the end of the season but would stay with Bugatti as their team manager. [90] During the year, Bugatti put out a brochure advertising that its cars had won 503 victories from January to September – almost two a day somehow, which must have included many class victories as well as outright ones. [49] Despite the advances in engine power and technology, it was clear that the new regulations were not inspiring manufacturer support, and therefore not exciting the populace. [44]
Table lists the highest race position for each manufacturer. [91]
Note: To be eligible for the championship, manufacturers had to take part in three of the Grand Prix including the Italian GP. * non-participation disqualified the manufacturer from the championship
|
|
Pos | Driver | Team | ROM | TGF | IND | FRA | SEB | ESP | GBR | MNT | BOU | ITA | MIL |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bartolomeo Costantini | Usines Bugatti | 1 | Ret | 3 | 1 | 2 | 1 | ||||||
Jules Goux | Usines Bugatti | 3 | 1 | 1 | 2 | Ret | 2 | ||||||
Emilio Materassi | Private Entry Officine Alfieri Maserati | Ret | 4 | 1 | Ret | Ret | |||||||
Aymo Maggi | Officine Alfieri Maserati Private Entry | 1 | Ret | ||||||||||
Frank Lockhart | Private Entry | 1 | |||||||||||
Robert Sénéchal | Automobiles Delage | [2] | 1 | ||||||||||
George Eyston | Bamford & Martin Ltd Private Entry | Ret | 1 | ||||||||||
"Sabipa" (Louis Charavel) | Usines Bugatti | 1 | |||||||||||
Ferdinando Minoia | Usines Bugatti | 2 | 5 | 4 | |||||||||
Gastone Brilli-Peri | Alfa Corse | 2 | 5 | ||||||||||
Harry Hartz | Harry Hartz | 2 | |||||||||||
Edmond Bourlier | Automobiles Delage | 2 | |||||||||||
Malcolm Campbell | Private Entry | 2 | DNS | ||||||||||
Bruno Presenti | Private Entry | 2 | |||||||||||
? . Bourdan | Soc. des Moteurs Salmson | 2 | |||||||||||
Louis Wagner | SA des Autos et Cycles Peugeot Automobiles Delage | 6 | [4] | 3 | Ret [1] | ||||||||
Giovanni Bonmartini | Alfa Corse | 3 | |||||||||||
Cliff Woodbury | Private Entry | 3 | |||||||||||
Robert Benoist | Automobiles Delage | WD | Ret | Ret [3] | 3 | ||||||||
Baconin Borzacchini | Private Entry | ? | 3 | ||||||||||
Marcel Violet | Ste Industrielle de Materiel Automobile | 3 | |||||||||||
? Arturo Farinotti | Private Entry | 3 | |||||||||||
Franco Mazzotti | Private Entry | 4 | 4 | ||||||||||
Fred Comer | Harry Hartz | 4 | |||||||||||
André Morel | Automobiles Delage | 4 | Ret | ||||||||||
George Newman | Société des Moteurs Salmson | 4 | |||||||||||
Louis Chiron | Private Entry | 4 | |||||||||||
Mario Lepori | Private Entry | 5 | Ret | ||||||||||
André Dubonnet | Private Entry Automobiles Delage | 5 | [3] | ||||||||||
Pete DePaolo | Duesenberg Brothers | 5 | |||||||||||
? Jules Ferry | Private Entry | 5 | |||||||||||
Franco Cortese | Private Entry | 5 | |||||||||||
/ Boris Ivanowski | Private Entry | [5] | 5 | ||||||||||
Ugo Stefanelli | Private Entry | 8 | 6 | ||||||||||
Pasquale Croce | Private Entry | 6 | 9 | ||||||||||
Frank Elliott | Private Entry | 6 | |||||||||||
Federico Valpreda | Private Entry | 6 | |||||||||||
Francis Samuelson | Private Entry | 6 | |||||||||||
Pos | Driver | Team | ROM | TGF | IND | FRA | SEB | ESP | GBR | MNT | BOU | ITA | MIL |
italics show the driver of the race's fastest lap.
Only those drivers with a best finish of 6th or better are shown. Sources: [92] [93] [94] [95] [96] [97] [98] [99]
Pietro Bordino was an Italian racing driver. One of Italy's top racing drivers of the 1920s, Bordino won the 1922 Italian Grand Prix. One of the few European drivers of the period to compete on the regular American Indy car circuit, composed largely of board ovals, he won twice during the 1922 U.S. racing season.
The 1931 Grand Prix season was a watershed year, with the advent of the AIACR European Championship. After several years of Grand Prix racing in the doldrums with little technical development, 1931 saw new models come from all three main manufacturers: Bugatti, Maserati and Alfa Romeo.
The 1925 Grand Prix season was the first year for the new AIACR World Manufacturers' Championship season. The championship was won by Alfa Romeo, with its P2 model.
The 1927 Grand Prix season was the third AIACR World Manufacturers' Championship season and the second run to a 1.5-litre engine limit. In a dominant display, the championship was won by Delage, with team driver Robert Benoist winning four of the five Grand Prix.
The 1928 Grand Prix season saw the Monegasque driver Louis Chiron, and his Bugatti, take seven Grand Prix victories.
The 1911 Grand Prix season consisted of Grand Prix races in the United States and Europe. It was a significant year as European racing gradually came out of the doldrums. A Grand Prix was held in France again. The first Indianapolis 500 was held at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, joining the American Grand Prize as a leading race.
The 1913 Grand Prix season consisted of Grand Prix races in Europe and the United States. Once again, the Peugeot works cars were the team to beat, continuing their success. This year the French Grand Prix was held in Amiens. The ACF introduced a fuel-economy formula for the race to discourage bigger-engined cars. Peugeot drivers Georges Boillot and Jules Goux claimed a 1-2 victory for the company after Zuccarelli had been killed in practice.
The 1914 Grand Prix season consisted of Grand Prix races across Europe and the United States until abbreviated by the outbreak of World War I.
The 1921 Grand Prix season saw motor racing in Europe blossom again. The French Grand Prix was held for the first time since 1914, at La Sarthe, Le Mans. and the inaugural Italian Grand Prix was held in Montichiari, near Brescia. The 3-litre formula of the AIACR, already in use at Indianapolis, was adopted by those Grand Prix meaning manufacturers could design on a common formula.
The 1922 Grand Prix season had several notable events during the year. The AIACR governing body brought in a 2-litre formula for Grand Prix. French companies brought out straight-8 engines for their cars but it was FIAT's 6-cylinder engine that took the trophies. Veteran Felice Nazzaro won the French Grand Prix, held near Strasbourg. It was a tainted victory though, as Nazzaro's nephew was killed when his FIAT's suspension broke in the latter stages of the race. An almost identical accident also happened to team-mate Pietro Bordino, though he was only slightly injured. Pierre de Vizcaya's Bugatti finished second, nearly an hour behind.
The 1923 Grand Prix season was part of a watershed year for motor racing that saw significant advances in motor-racing engineering, design and events. Fiat's chief designer, Guido Fornaca, developed the 805, the first supercharged car to win a Grand Prix. Benz appeared with the first mid-engined racer and, along with Bugatti and Voisin, produced some of the first efforts at aerodynamics on racing cars. With the United States also adopting the 2-litre formula, Harry Miller could use the smaller engine size to design the first single-seater race-car, ideally suited to American oval racing.
The 1924 Grand Prix season saw Grand Prix motor racing spread further across Europe and North America. In Italy a number of new open-road events were held. In France two new circuits were opened – at Montlhéry near Paris and Miramas near Marseille.
The 1929 Grand Prix season was another interim year, where most races were run to Formula Libre rules due to a lack of regulations from the AIACR that would be popular for race organisers and manufacturers. This blurred the line between racing cars and sports cars with both competing in the same races. Bugatti won the major international races, with their drivers Louis Chiron and "W Williams". The Italian Championship proved very competitive, attracting many top drivers. There it was Alfa Romeo, using their 4-year old P2 model that claimed more victories, than their main competition coming from Bugatti and Maserati.
The 1930 Grand Prix season continued the malaise that had taken over the sport. Although there was little technical advance more privateer teams were forming, getting some factory support. The AIACR continued to mandate its fuel-regulated Formula Libre rules. Across the Atlantic, the AAA abandoned the AIACR regulations. Their new regulations were derisively called the “Junk Formula” by purists, opening up to their own version of Formula Libre: with modified stock-standard cars of up to 366 cu in (6-litres) with two seats.
The 1924 French Grand Prix, officially named the XVIII Grand Prix de l'A.C.F., was a Grand Prix motor race held at Lyon on 3 August 1924 and the designated European Grand Prix of the 1924 season. The race took place over 35 laps of a shortened version of the circuit used in 1914 for a total distance of 810.09 km.
The 1926 Italian Grand Prix was a Grand Prix motor race held at Monza on 5 September 1926.
The 1920 Grand Prix season saw further activity in motor-racing gradually increase. Europe was still recovering from the end of the war and the terrible pandemic that swept the continent. Automotive companies were gradually re-establishing themselves after re-tooling from a wartime footing and getting production lines rolling again.
The 1925 French Grand Prix was a Grand Prix motor race held at Autodrome de Linas-Montlhéry on 26 July 1925. It was the third race of the inaugural AIACR World Manufacturers' Championship. The race, which was 80 laps, was won by Robert Benoist driving a Delage 2LCV after starting from 8th place.
The first Grand Prix of theRoyal Automobile Club, commonly referred to as the 1926 British Grand Prix was a Grand Prix motor race held at the Brooklands circuit on 7 August 1926.
The 1926 Targa Florio was a Grand Prix motor race held on the 108km Medio Circuito Madonie in Sicily, Italy on 25 April 1926. There were two separate races held simultaneously, one for up to 1100cc Cyclecars held over 3 laps for a total distance of 324km, and the main race for Formula Libre cars over 5 laps for a total distance of 540km. The longer race also featured the 1926 Coppa Florio which was open only to factory entered cars. The Cyclecar race was won by Baconin Borzacchini driving a Salmson, while the longer race and Coppa Florio were won by Meo Costantini in his factory entered Bugatti.