1928 24 Hours of Le Mans

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1928 24 Hours of Le Mans
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Index: Races | Winners

the Le Mans track in 1928 Circuit de la Sarthe Le Mans 1921-1928.png
the Le Mans track in 1928

The 1928 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 6th Grand Prix of Endurance that took place at the Circuit de la Sarthe on 16 and 17 June 1928.

Contents

Bentley director Woolf Barnato and Australian-born Bernard Rubin in a Bentley 4½ Litre gave the company back-to-back victories after a race-long duel with the Stutz of Édouard Brisson and Robert Bloch. In the process they won the inaugural prize for overall distance.

The big publicity from the previous year's race and the White House crash raised manufacturer interest and several British and American companies brought teams to the race. [1] In fact foreign cars outnumbered French ones for the first time. The race started at a record pace, but after two of the Bentleys and the Ariès retired early, it became a one-on-one duel between the Bentley and the Stutz. [1] They traded positions through the night and into the next morning. Going into the final hours the British car was suffering from water leaks and overheating, while the American car was losing its gears. Both teams drove as hard as they dared, and in the end the distance between the two was barely a lap, and both cars exceeded the previous record overall distance.

Salmson achieved consecutive victories in the Biennial Cup, while the new car from Bollack Netter and Co won the Index of Performance.

Regulations

The CSI (Commission Sportive Internationale - the AIACR’s regulatory body) had issued new racing regulations. The Appendix C linked minimum dry-weights (i.e. without liquids, tyres and tools) to engine capacity. These included the following ranges:

Engine
size
Minimum
weight
Over 8000cc1800kg
5001-8000cc1680kg
3001-5000cc1200kg
2001-3000cc860kg
1501-2000cc780kg
1101-1500cc660kg
751-1100cc420kg
501-750cc330kg

In lieu of getting the entrants to drain their cars at scrutineering, the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) decreed that 15kg would cover the weight of fluids on cars over 3-litres and 10kg for those under. The required ‘passenger-ballast’ rule of 60kg per extra seat, after the driver's, was maintained and additional to those minimum weights. [2]

But the main innovation from the ACO this year was the introduction of the Coupe à la Distance for the car that travelled the furthest over the twenty-four hours. Supercharged engines were now allowed (but not into the final round of the 1927-28 Biennial Cup), with their effective capacity regarded as 1.3 times their swept volume. [3] The driving hood test, when cars had to run the first twenty laps with their hoods up, was discarded. However, all convertibles were still required to have a hood fitted, though stowed. [2]

Once again, the ACO adjusted the Index target distances; although only by small margin. Example targets included the following: [2]

Engine
size
1927
Minimum
laps
1928
Minimum
laps
Required Average
speed
3000cc12912992.8 km/h (57.7 mph)
2000cc11812287.7 km/h (54.5 mph)
1500cc10711179.8 km/h (49.6 mph)
1100cc949471.2 km/h (44.2 mph)

The Hors Course rule was relaxed considerably this year – with cars now only disqualified for completing insufficient distance at the 12-hour mark and not every six hours as before. That distance now only had to be 80% of the target distance and not the previous 85%. [2]

The track re-surfacing was completed along its whole length and reflectors were put on the corners for better awareness at night. Roadside picket fencing was put up at all the spectator access areas and the public address system now also covered all those areas. [2]

Entries

After the previous year's short entry list, the ACO was gratified to have a far healthier entry list this year. No doubt motivated by the excitement of 1927, and a prize for an overall winner, there were more cars in the large-engine classes, although Ariès was still the only French manufacturer in that category. Indeed, foreign cars outnumbered French cars for the first time, including new entries from Lagonda, Alvis and Aston Martin from Great Britain, Alfa Romeo and Itala from Italy and Stutz from the USA. After the tough race the previous year, there were only six entries eligible for the 1927-28 Biennial Cup, with Salmson taking only one of its two available spots.

CategoryEntriesClasses
Large-sized engines11 / 9over 2-litre
Medium-sized engines18 / 151.1 to 2-litre
Small-sized engines13 / 9up to 1.1-litre
Total entrants42 / 33

Defending distance winners Bentley arrived with a four-car entry (one kept back for spare parts) and were strong favourites to win the inaugural distance prize. The cars were all 4½-litre tourers, two of them with racing chassis designed by Vanden Plas. The engine put out 130 bhp making them capable of a top speed of 165 kp/h (105 mph). Company director, and chief shareholder, Woolf Barnato drove with his wealthy Australian-born Grosvenor Square neighbour Bernard Rubin. They had the original 4½-litre (nicknamed “Old Mother Gun”) that had been mangled in the White House crash the previous year. The 1927 winner, Dudley Benjafield, was this time paired with 1924-winner Frank Clement. The third car was driven by another of the “Bentley Boys” debutantes, Sir Henry “Tim” Birkin, who was accompanied by the experienced Jean Chassagne, who had chased the team so hard in his Ariès the previous year. [4]

Bentley 4 1/2 -litre 1928 Bentley 4 1/2 Litre, chassis no PM3272 (Lime Rock 2014).jpg
Bentley 4½-litre

Automobiles Ariès again returned with its streamlined 3-litre GP2 surbaissée “tank”. Although showing its age, the 3-litre engine had been tuned to now put out 96 bhp. It was driven by works drivers Robert Laly and Louis Rigal. As before the team also entered a pair of smaller 1.1-litre CC4 cars. [5]

The biggest car in the field, by engine volume and stature was a Stutz BB Blackhawk. Its 5-litre engine produced 125 bhp [6] and the car had been winning many races in the American AAA racing series. It was entered by Charles Terres Weymann, the Paris-based American car-distributor and aviator and driven by Le Mans veterans Édouard Brisson and Robert Bloch formerly of Lorraine-Dietrich. [7]

Stutz Model BB Blackhawk Stutz Blackhawk 5-Litre Indyracer 1928.jpg
Stutz Model BB Blackhawk

After a promising debut in the 1925 race, Chrysler returned with a big four-car team, once again entered by its French distributor, the Grand Garage St Didier Paris. The “72” was the latest version of the same Chrysler Six but had a bigger 4.1-litre sidevalve engine that developed 85 bhp. The team hired a squad of grand-prix drivers: Henri Stoffel (1925 Chrysler driver) was with dual race-winner André Rossignol, up-and-coming race-winner Louis Chiron ran with Cyril de Vere, Conte “Freddie” Zehender was paired with Jacques Ledure while the Cantacuzino brothers (Parisian-resident Romanian aristocrats) had the fourth car. [8]

Chrysler Six 72 Walter P. Chrysler Museum DSC00981 (30965629333).jpg
Chrysler Six 72

Alfa Romeo had been vying with Bugatti for top Grand Prix honours in the mid-1920s. In sports-car racing they were also proving to be the team to beat with the fantastic new design from Vittorio Jano. The 6C-1500 Super Sport dominated Italian races, including winning the new Mille Miglia event. The supercharged 1.5-litre version only put out 75 bhp but gave a top speed of 140 kp/h (85 mph). The Russian émigrée Count Boris Ivanowski entered one for the race. However, the ACO scrutineers rejected it, saying it was “too racy” with too many standard components of a touring car removed to be eligible. [9]

Itala’s best racing days were pre-war, but two cars came to Le Mans for the manufacturer’s only appearance. The Tipo 65 had a twin-cam 2-litre engine producing 70 bhp and capable of 130 kp/h (80 mph). Guy Benoist, winner of four Grand Prix in 1927 was partnered with former Chenard-Walcker driver Christian Dauvergne, while the two French nom-de-plumes “Sabipa” and “Christian” drove the other car. [10]

Like Itala, the British Lagonda company had been racing since before the war. The new 2-litre Speed Model had been very successful in 1927. It had a top speed of almost 150 kp/h (95 mph) and three were entered. Managed by former Bentley driver Bertie Kensington-Moir, he had former other ex-Bentley drivers Baron André d’Erlanger, Douglas Hawkes and Clive Gallop alongside regular drivers Francis Samuelson and Frank King (also Lagonda sales-manager). [11]

Alvis had also established itself in the British racing scene in the 1920s and was now concentrating on touring-car racing. The new FA12/50 model featured innovative front-wheel drive and could get up to 135 kp/h (85 mph) with its 1.5-litre 50 bhp engine. Two cars were entered for their racing debut, driven by Major Morris Harvey and George Purdy and Sammy Davis (race winner with Bentley) with Bill Urquhart-Dykes. However, only Harvey was really familiar with the different driving style of front-wheel drive. [12]

Salmson was back with just a two-car team but looking to emulate their success in 1927 it was strong on paper. The Grand Sport had proven reliability and was entered in the Biennial Cup with 1927 winners, works drivers Georges Casse and André Rousseau. The team also entered the only supercharged car to get to the starting line. With the new rules permitting blown engines taking effect this year, they were ineligible for the ’27-28 Biennial Cup. The 1.1-litre engine with a Cozette supercharger was equivalent to a 1.43-litre engine and therefore had 20 more laps added to its target distance. It was driven by Jean Hasley / Albert Perrot. [13]

After an acrimonious departure from Salmson in 1923, André Lombard was barred from competing for five years. [14] In that time he founded his open company, Automobiles Lombard, making small voiturettes like Salmson. The first production model was the AL3, designed by Edmond Vareille (another ex-Salmson employee). Low-slung, the standard double-overhead-cam 1.1-litre engine had a 4-speed gearbox and had a top speed of 130 kp/h (80 mph). Lombard got ex-Salmson works driver Lucien Desvaux to drive. A second car arrived for Amilcar co-founder André Morel but did not practice. [15]

A new challenger to Salmson for Index honours this year was Bollack Netter and Co (BNC). Founded in 1923, they started with small, quick cyclecars and then introducing models with bigger engines that proved competitive in racing. Three versions of their new Type H were offered (named after famous race-tracks), including the supercharged “Montlhéry” but it was a regular “Monza” model that was bought to Le Mans. This small 2-seater had a Ruby DS 1100 pushrod engine that put out 30 bhp and a three-speed gearbox. It was driven by regular works driver Michel Doré, along with Jean Treunet. [16]

After a terrible 1927 race, Tracta returned with three of their front-wheel drive cars. Along with an improved Gephi, two new Type A models were entered, one with a 1.5-litre SCAP engine and the other with a 1.1-litre SCAP engine. Once again, team co-founder Jean-Albert Grégoire was driving, choosing the smaller Type A for the ‘27-28 Biennial Cup. Race veterans Maurice Benoist and Louis Balart ran the 1.5-litre car, while Roger Bourcier (injured in the road accident before the previous year’s race) drove the Gephi with the first South American at Le Mans: the Argentine Hector Vasena. [17]

Aston Martin had had a difficult beginning, going through several bankruptcies since it was founded in 1913. The first design of the latest incarnation was the T-Type, which was to lead to the next model, the International. It was a four-seat convertible with a 1.5-litre engine and 4-speed gearbox. Two prototypes came to Le Mans, driven by engineer co-owner Augustus “Bert” Bertelli / George Eyston and Cyril Paul with former Bentley mechanic Jack Besant. [18]

Practice

A number of teams found teething problems in the practice session. Fortunately, Morris Motors had purchased the Léon Bollée factory near Le Mans to produce cars for the French market. It routinely offered its facilities to foreign teams needing repair work and machining. This year, Alvis, Lagonda and Aston Martin availed themselves of that offer to get their cars race-ready. . [19] [11] [18]

Race

Start

Just before the start of the race, a light squall came across the circuit. But it soon cleared and the weather was fine for the race. [20] From the start the Bentleys were in front, with Birkin taking the lead, ahead of Brisson in the Stutz, Laly's Ariès the four Chryslers and two of the Lagondas. But not d’Erlanger, who had flooded his engine at the start and had been last away. [20] [11]

Start of the 1928 race Depart des 24 heures du Mans 1928.jpg
Start of the 1928 race

First to fall was the Ariès, put out after only two laps with engine failure. Soon after, Ledure's Chrysler was in the pits with no radiator water after bolts had come loose on the frame. [8] [21]

Birkin leading the other two Bentleys out of Pontlieue hairpin Les Bentley 2, 3, et 4 des 24 Heures du Mans 1928.jpg
Birkin leading the other two Bentleys out of Pontlieue hairpin

In the opening hour, the pace was torrid and the top four cars successively lowered the lap record. [22] Brisson was able to keep up with the Bentleys but Barnato would not let him pass. It was only when the Stutz team protested the blocking tactics to the officials that Bentley signalled to Barnato to pull over. However, another short shower affected the Stutz's handling, letting Barnato pull away. [23] [21] Samuelson had been driving his Lagonda wildly. Ignoring team orders to slow down his luck ran out when he went off at Mulsanne corner and planted the car in the sandbank. He was reversing out when he was struck, ironically, by his teammate d’Erlanger, making up time after his delay at the start. The impact pushed Samuelson's car back through the sandbank and into the wooden fence beyond. It took him two hours to dig it out, whereupon he found the gearbox casing was cracked. Furious and bruised, d’Erlanger made it back to the pits where the front brakes and shock absorbers had to be disengaged to continue on. [11] [1] [24] [21]

Shortly before 7pm, the cars started coming in for their first fuel stops and driver changes. But on his due in-lap, Birkin did not arrive. Barnato reported to the team that he had seen Birkin marooned at Mulsanne corner with a puncture. [4] The rubber had wrapped itself around the axle. After 90 minutes of cutting he got the tyre off and tried to drive back on the rim. He got as far as Arnage until the rim collapsed, pushing him off into the roadside ditch. Unable to move the car with just a single jack he ran the 5km back to the pits. Co-driver Chassagne smuggled a second jack out and ran back to take over the repair. He got going eventually but they had lost three hours in the process. [25] [1]

The Alvis team had planned on running 22-laps shifts but were concerned when their cars began sputtering on 19 laps because of their fuel-tank shape. They were both lucky to make it to the 20-lap minimum, forcing a change in the race-strategy. [19] Bertelli had just taken over his Aston Martin when he had to take to the verge to overtake a slower car blocking him. But he hit a deep ditch wrecking his suspension. [18] [26]

Benjafield inherited the lead but it would not last long, as he fell back with an oil-leak in the engine, dropping him to fourth. [6] This left Rubin and Bloch dicing for the lead. After a thrilling hour of close racing it was Bloch, in the Stutz, who was in the lead as night fell. [22]

Night

Bloch and Brisson kept the Stutz in the lead through the night. Barnato closed in again and Brisson repaid his earlier actions by himself blocking the road, even driving on the road-verge to throw stones up into the closely following Bentley. [25] Later in the night the circuit had bouts of fog and light rain. The Benjafield/Clement Bentley was retired when a water pipe came loose emptying the water pump well before the 20-lap replenishment window. The cause was found to be because the chassis had flexed and broken from the strains of the hard racing. [25] [1]

The three Chryslers continued comfortably in the top-10, until around 3am when Chiron started having trouble with his clutch and fell back. The car was later disqualified when the drivers tried to bump-start the car. [8] Davis had a big moment in the rain when a tyre blew on his Alvis accelerating out of Mulsanne corner. Missing the roadside trees, he managed to limp round to the pits to do the repairs. [19] Having been on schedule as night fell, the supercharged Salmson developed engine problems that meant it was disqualified, alongside one of the SARAs, at the halfway point for insufficient distance. [13] Just before dawn, Barnato and Rubin retook the lead off the Stutz as they stopped for fuel. [6] [22] The Chryslers were third and fourth. The Benoist/Dauvergne Itala, the first of the 2-litres, was close behind [10] with the Alvis cars holding down sixth and seventh. [19]

Morning

Itala #12 coming down the main straight past the pits Itala 12 of Benoist and Dauvergne at the 1928 24 Hours of Le Mans.jpg
Itala #12 coming down the main straight past the pits

Through the morning the Stutz pursued the British team, but Rubin gradually built a lead. Then not long after midday the green Bentley had to pit with a water leak as the radiator worked loose, also due to a cracked chassis like their sister car. But then soon after the Stutz gearbox started giving trouble jumping out of top gear, and the Frenchmen could not keep up their pace. [25] [23] [1]

At 10 am Benoist was trying to lap an Alvis at the Pontlieue hairpin when both tried outbraking each other. Both had to take the escape road. Benoist only got a hundred metres further when he came to a stop in the middle of the road, possibly with a locked brake. It took an hour for him to get back to the pits and get repairs. [10] Another Alvis puncture dropped Urquhart-Dykes down the order. [19] Then at 2.30pm Brisson came in with no top gear and the Stutz lost two laps in the pits. [23]

Finish and post-race

In a tense finish, Barnato nursed the Bentley home with an emptying radiator and a rising temperature gauge. He was alarmed to see the Stutz team signal their car to speed up, but Bloch had his own issues with the fragile gearbox. [6] Trying to time his run to the finish, Barnato arrived at the line a minute too early and had to do an extra lap. With water spattering him from the overheating radiator, he dropped to 50 km/h, free-wheeling down slopes and stopping to let the engine cool a bit. The Stutz overtook him, unlapping itself. In the end it took twenty minutes, and the winning margin over the Stutz was only 13 kilometres (8 miles). [25] The pace of the two cars had been such that they easily broke the distance record, going seven laps further than Bloch and Rossignol had in the Lorraine-Dietrich in the 1926 race.

Winners Woolf Barnato and Bernard Rubin Barnato and Rubin at the 1928 24 Hours of Le Mans.jpg
Winners Woolf Barnato and Bernard Rubin

Two of the Chryslers came in third and fourth after trouble-free runs but were well back. The hard-charging Birkin/Chassagne Bentley had come back through the field to finish fifth. Birkin set a new lap record on his final lap, fully 39 seconds faster than the previous year, to just manage to meet their target of 135 laps. [25] [24] [3] After their respective tribulations it was the Alvis of Harvey & Purdy who won the 1.5-litre class (coming in sixth), while the Benoist/Dauvergne Itala had dropped to 8th, but still had a 5-lap advantage over the last Lagonda running to win the 2-litre class. After the time lost from the Saturday night repairs, d’Erlanger/Hawkes had pushed on to finish 11th. [11]

Salmson repeated its previous year's success, coming in tenth overall and again winning the Biennial Cup, romping in and beating their target by 29 laps. However, they were beaten to this year's Index of Performance by the mighty little BNC that beat the same target by 33 laps, coming 7th overall and first French car home.

Casse and Rousseau, repeat winners of the Biennial Cup Georges Casse et Andre Rousseau sur Salmson GS 1.1L. victorieuse de la 4e Coupe biennale Rudge-Whitworth aux 24 H. du Mans 1928.jpg
Casse and Rousseau, repeat winners of the Biennial Cup

After a terrible race the previous year, Tracta had a complete reversal of fortune with all three of their cars finishing, the best being their 1.5-litre type A finishing 12th. [17] Interestingly, all the cars of both front-wheel drive teams, Tracta and Alvis, finished the race. [3] E.H.P. came away with their best result at Le Mans, finishing second in the Biennial Cup and beating their previous best distance by nine laps. However, the financial pressure of business downturn and the purchase of Bignan forced the company to close in 1929. [27] The SARA of Duval/Mottet was the one nominated for the Biennial Cup. It was delayed through the middle of the race but they made up time to make their target by the slimmest of margins – calculated by the ACO as only 35 metres on its last lap. [28] In contrast, SCAP lost both their cars in the last few hours, just short of their required distances. Despite launching a larger 2.3-litre car, within a year the company had closed. [29]

After much success in the mid-1920s Salmson closed its racing team in 1929 on this high note, as the grand prix cars were getting outdated and the company was moving out of the crowded fast sports-car market. [13] Unfortunately BNC had invested in larger passenger cars, which did not sell. Bollack and Natter were forced out of their own company at the end of the year when it was bought by businessman Charles de Ricou. [16]

Official results

Finishers

Results taken from Quentin Spurring's book, officially licensed by the ACO [30] Although there were no official engine classes, the highest finishers in unofficial categories aligned with the Index targets are in Bold text.

PosClass
**
No.TeamDriversChassisEngineTyreTarget
distance*
Laps
15.04 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Bentley Motors Ltd Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Woolf Barnato
Flag of Australia (converted).svg Bernard Rubin
Bentley 4½ Litre Bentley 4.4L S4 D 135155
25.01 Flag of France.svg Société de Carrosserie Weymann Flag of France.svg Robert Bloch
Flag of France.svg Édouard Brisson
Stutz Model BB BlackhawkStutz 4.9L S8 D 136154
35.08 Flag of France.svg Grand Garage Saint-Didier Paris Flag of France.svg André Rossignol
Flag of France.svg Henri Stoffel
Chrysler Six Series 72Chrysler 4.1L S6 D 134144
45.07 Flag of France.svg Grand Garage Saint-Didier Paris Flag of Romania.svg Ionel Ghica-Cantacuzino
Flag of Romania.svg Gheorghe Ghica-Cantacuzino
Chrysler Six Series 72Chrysler 4.1L S6 D 134140
55.03 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Bentley Motors Ltd Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Sir Henry “Tim” Birkin
Flag of France.svg Jean Chassagne
Bentley 4½ Litre Bentley 4.4L S4 D 135135
61.527 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Alvis Car and Engineering Company Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Maj Maurice Harvey
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Harold Purdy
Alvis FA12/50Alvis 1482cc S4 D 111132
71.132 Flag of France.svg Bollack Netter et Cie Flag of France.svg Michel Doré
Flag of France.svg Jean Treunet
BNC Type H MonzaRuby 1099cc S4 D 99132
82.012 Flag of Italy (1861-1946).svg Itala SA Fabbrica Automobili Flag of France.svg Robert Benoist
Flag of France.svg Christian Dauvergne
Itala Tipo 65 SItala 1991cc S6 D 122131
91.528 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Alvis Car and Engineering Company Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Sammy Davis
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Bill Urquhart-Dykes
Alvis FA12/50Alvis 1482cc S4 D 111130
101.135 Flag of France.svg Société des Moteurs Salmson Flag of France.svg Georges Casse
Flag of France.svg André Rousseau
Salmson Grand SportSalmson 1095cc S4 D 99 [B]128
112.016 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Lagonda Motor Co. Flag of France.svg Baron André d'Erlanger
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Douglas Hawkes
Lagonda 2 Litre Speed ModelLagonda 1954cc S4 D 121126
121.529 Flag of France.svg SA des Automobiles Tracta Flag of France.svg Louis Balart
Flag of France.svg Maurice Benoist
Tracta Type A S.C.A.P. 1481cc S4 D 111119
131.137 Flag of France.svg Automobiles Lombard SA Flag of France.svg Lucien Desvaux
Flag of France.svg Pierre Goutte
Lombard AL3 Grand Air SportLombard 1093cc S4 E 99117
141.136 Flag of France.svg Établissements Henri Précloux Flag of France.svg Guy Bouriat
Flag of France.svg Pierre Bussienne
E.H.P. Type DU CIME 1094cc S6 D 99 [B]116
152.019 Flag of France.svg Société des Applications à
Refroidissements par Air
Flag of France.svg Gaston Duval
Flag of France.svg Gaston Mottet
S.A.R.A. SP7S.A.R.A. 1806cc S6 E 115 [B]115
161.131 Flag of France.svg SA des Automobiles Tracta Flag of France.svg Roger Bourcier
Flag of Argentina.svg Hector Vasena
Tracta Gephi S.C.A.P. 1099cc S4 BF 99110
171.142 Flag of France.svg SA des Automobiles Tracta Flag of France.svg Jean-Albert Grégoire
Flag of France.svg Fernand Vallon
Tracta Type A S.C.A.P. 1085cc S4 D 99 [B]108

Did not finish

PosClass
**
NoTeamDriversChassisEngineTyreTarget
distance*
LapsReason
DNF1.524 Flag of France.svg Société des Construction
Automobile Parisienne
Flag of France.svg Henri Guilbert
Flag of France.svg André Lefèbvre
S.C.A.P. Type OSCAP 1495cc S8 D 11195Engine
(21 hr)
DNF1.139 Flag of France.svg Société des Construction
Automobile Parisienne
Flag of France.svg Lucien Lemesle
Flag of France.svg Henry Godard
S.C.A.P. Type MSCAP 1087cc S4 D 99 [B]91Front axle
(20 hr)
DNF1.526 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Aston Martin Ltd Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Jack Besant
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Cyril Paul
Aston Martin InternationalAston Martin 1495cc S4 D 11182Gearbox
(17 hr)
DNF5.02 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Bentley Motors Ltd Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Frank Clement
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Dr Dudley Benjafield
Bentley 4½ Litre Bentley 4.4L S4 D 135 [B]71Radiator
(10 hr)
DSQ5.05 Flag of France.svg Grand Garage Saint-Didier Paris Flag of Monaco.svg Louis Chiron
Flag of France.svg Cyril de Vere
Chrysler Six Series 72Chrysler 4.1L S6 D 13466Bump start
(night)
DNF1.141 Flag of France.svg Société des Automobile Ariès Flag of France.svg Fernand Gabriel
Flag of France.svg Louis Paris
Ariès CC4Ariès 1083cc S4 D 9951 ? (night)
DNF2.014 Flag of Italy (1861-1946).svg Itala SA Fabbrica Automobili Flag of France.svg “Sabipa” (Louis Charavel)
Flag of France.svg “Christian”
Itala Tipo 65 SItala 1991cc S6 D 12250Engine
(night)
DSQ1.521 Flag of France.svg Automobiles Luart-Poniatowski-
Hougardy Ingenieurs
Flag of France.svg Henri De Costier
Flag of France.svg Sosthene de la Rochefoucauld
Alphi LM CIME 1496cc S6 D 11145Broken panel
(night)
DNF1.525 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Aston Martin Ltd Flag of the United Kingdom.svg George Eyston
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Augustus ‘Bert’ Bertelli
Aston Martin InternationalAston Martin 1495cc S4 D 11132Suspension
(5 hr)
DSQ1.530 Flag of France.svg Société des Moteurs Salmson Flag of France.svg Jean Hasley
Flag of France.svg Albert Perrot
Salmson Grand SportSalmson 1095cc
Supercharged S4
D 10930Insufficient distance
(12 hr)
DSQ2.020 Flag of France.svg Société des Applications à
Refroidissements par Air
Flag of France.svg Émile Maret
Flag of France.svg Gonzaque Lécureul
S.A.R.A. SP7S.A.R.A. 1806cc S6 E 11525Insufficient distance
(12 hr)
DNF2.018 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Lagonda Motor Co. Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Capt Clive Gallop
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Maj E.J. Hayes
Lagonda 2 Litre Speed ModelLagonda 1954cc S4 D 12123Radiator
(evening)
DNF1.140 Flag of France.svg Société des Automobile Ariès Flag of France.svg Arthur Duray
Flag of France.svg Roger Delano
Ariès CC4Ariès 1083cc S4 D 9922 ? (evening)
DNF2.015 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Lagonda Motor Co. Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Capt Francis Samuelson
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Frank King
Lagonda 2 Litre Speed ModelLagonda 1954cc S4 D 12113Accident
(4 hr)
DNF5.06 Flag of France.svg Grand Garage Saint-Didier Paris Flag of France.svg Jacques Ledure
Flag of Italy (1861-1946).svg Conte Goffredo ‘Freddie’ Zehender
Chrysler Six Series 72Chrysler 4.1L S6 D 1345Radiator
(1 hr)
DNF3.09 Flag of France.svg Société des Automobile Ariès Flag of France.svg Robert Laly
Flag of France.svg Louis Rigal
Ariès Type S GP2 SurbaiséeAriès 3.0L S4 D 1303Engine
(1 hr)
Sources: [31] [32] [33] [34] [35]

Did not start

PosClassNoTeamDriversChassisEngineReason
DNS3.011 Flag of Russia.svg Boris Ivanowski
(private entrant)
Flag of Russia.svg Boris Ivanowski
Flag of Italy (1861-1946).svg Attilo Marinoni
Alfa Romeo 6C-1500
Super Sport
Alfa Romeo 1487cc
Supercharged S6
Failed scrutineering
RES2.017 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Lagonda Motor Co. Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Bert Hammond
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg W. Handley
Lagonda 2 Litre Speed ModelLagonda 1954cc S4Reserve entry
DNA3.010 Flag of France.svg Société des Automobile Ariès Ariès Type S GP3Ariès 3.0L S4Did not arrive
DNA2.022 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg DMK Marendaz Ltd Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Capt Donald Marendaz
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg P. Densham
Marendaz Special 11/55 Anzani 1496cc S4Did not arrive
DNA1.123 Flag of France.svg Société des Construction
Automobile Parisienne
S.C.A.P. Type OSCAP 1495cc S8Did not arrive
DNA1.133 Flag of France.svg Cyclecars D’Yrsan Flag of France.svg . Simas
Flag of France.svg . Ego
D’Yrsan Grand SportRuby 1097cc S4Did not arrive
DNA1.134 Flag of France.svg Cyclecars D’Yrsan Flag of France.svg Marquis Raymond Siran de Caranac
Flag of France.svg . de Soussay
D’Yrsan Grand SportRuby 1097cc S4Did not arrive
DNA1.138 Flag of France.svg Automobiles Lombard SA Lombard AL3 Grand Air SportLombard 1093cc S4Withdrawn
DNA75043 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg E. Gordon-England
(private entrant)
Austin 7 Austin 748cc S4Did not arrive


1927-28 Coupe Biennale Rudge-Whitworth

PosClassNo.TeamDriversChassis1928
Index
Result
11.135 Flag of France.svg Société des Moteurs Salmson Flag of France.svg Georges Casse
Flag of France.svg André Rousseau
Salmson Grand Sport1.300
21.136 Flag of France.svg Établissements Henri Précloux Flag of France.svg Guy Bouriat
Flag of France.svg Pierre Bussienne
E.H.P. Type DU1.177
31.142 Flag of France.svg SA des Automobiles Tracta Flag of France.svg Jean-Albert Grégoire
Flag of France.svg Fernand Vallon
Tracta Type A1.103
42.019 Flag of France.svg Société des Applications à
Refroidissements par Air
Flag of France.svg Gaston Duval
Flag of France.svg Gaston Mottet
S.A.R.A. SP71.000

1928 index of performance (Prix Saint-Didier)

PosClassNo.TeamDriversChassisIndex
result
11.132 Flag of France.svg Bollack Netter et Cie Flag of France.svg Michel Doré
Flag of France.svg Jean Treunet
BNC Type H Monza1.333
21.135 Flag of France.svg Société des Moteurs Salmson Flag of France.svg Georges Casse
Flag of France.svg André Rousseau
Salmson Grand Sport1.300
31.527 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Alvis Car and Engineering Co. Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Maurice Harvey
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Harold Purdy
Alvis FA12/501.189
41.137 Flag of France.svg Automobiles Lombard SA Flag of France.svg Lucien Desvaux
Flag of France.svg Pierre Goutte
Lombard AL3 Grand Air Sport1.182
51.136 Flag of France.svg Établissements Henri Précloux Flag of France.svg Guy Bouriat
Flag of France.svg Pierre Bussienne
E.H.P. Type DU1.177
61.528 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Alvis Car and Engineering Co. Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Sammy Davis
Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Bill Urquhart-Dykes
Alvis FA12/501.171
75.04 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Bentley Motors Ltd Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Woolf Barnato
Flag of Australia (converted).svg Bernard Rubin
Bentley 4½ Litre1.148
85.01 Flag of France.svg Société de Carrosserie Weymann Flag of France.svg Robert Bloch
Flag of France.svg Édouard Brisson
Stutz Model BB Blackhawk1.132
91.131 Flag of France.svg SA des Automobiles Tracta Flag of France.svg Roger Bourcier
Flag of Argentina.svg Hector Vasena
Tracta Gephi1.111
101.142 Flag of France.svg SA des Automobiles Tracta Flag of France.svg Jean-Albert Grégoire
Flag of France.svg Fernand Vallon
Tracta Type A1.103

Highest finisher in class

ClassWinning CarWinning Drivers
5 to 8-litreno entrants
3 to 5-litre#4 Bentley 4½ LitreBarnato / Rubin *
2 to 3-litreno finishers
1500 to 2000cc#12 Itala Tipo 65 SBenoist / Dauvergne
1100 to 1500cc#27 Alvis FA 12/50Harvey / Purdy *
750 to 1100cc#32 BNC type H MonzaDoré / Treunet *

Statistics

Citations
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Clausager 1982, p.38-9
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Spurring 2015, p.245
  3. 1 2 3 Clarke 1998, p.54: Motor Jun26 1928
  4. 1 2 Spurring 2015, p.246-7
  5. Spurring 2015, p.269-71
  6. 1 2 3 4 Fox 1973, p.53
  7. Spurring 2015, p.250-1
  8. 1 2 3 Spurring 2015, p.256-8
  9. Spurring 2015, p.281
  10. 1 2 3 Spurring 2015, p.265-6
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 Spurring 2015, p.273-4
  12. Spurring 2015, p.260-3
  13. 1 2 3 Spurring 2015, p.253-4
  14. Spurring 2015, p.53
  15. Spurring 2015, p.271-2
  16. 1 2 Spurring 2015, p.254
  17. 1 2 Spurring 2015, p.267-9
  18. 1 2 3 Spurring 2015, p.278-80
  19. 1 2 3 4 5 Spurring 2015, p.263-4
  20. 1 2 Clarke 1998, p.48-9: Motor Jun19 1928
  21. 1 2 3 Clarke 1998, p.50-1: Motor Jun19 1928
  22. 1 2 3 Spurring 2015, p.244-5
  23. 1 2 3 Spurring 2015, p.252-3
  24. 1 2 Laban 2001, p.58
  25. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Spurring 2015, p.248-50
  26. Clarke 1998, p.52-3: Motor Jun19 1928
  27. Spurring 2015, p.259
  28. Spurring 2015, p.277
  29. Spurring 2015, p.280-1
  30. Spurring 2015, p.2
  31. Spurring 2011, p.284
  32. "Le Mans 24 Hours 1928 - Racing Sports Cars". www.racingsportscars.com. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  33. "Le Mans History". www.lemans-history.com. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  34. "World Sports Racing Prototypes". www.wsrp.cz. Retrieved 26 October 2018.
  35. "Formula 2". www.formula2.net. Archived from the original on 5 July 2017. Retrieved 26 October 2018.

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References