- Vic Elford
Former F1 driver
Name = Vic Elford
Nationality = flagicon|UK British
Years = F1|1968 - F1|1969, F1|1971
Team(s) = Cooper, McLaren,BRM
Races = 13
Championships = 0
Wins = 0
Podiums = 0
Points = 8
Poles = 0
Fastest laps = 0
First race =1968 French Grand Prix
First win =
Last win =
Last race =1971 German Grand Prix
Le Mans drivers
Years = 24hLM|1967 – 24hLM|1974, 24hLM|1983
Team(s) = Porsche System
Porsche KG Saltzberg
Autodelta SpA
Automobiles Charles Pozzi
"Robert Buchet"
Rondeau
Best Finish = 6th (24hLM|1973)
Class Wins = 2 (24hLM|1967, 24hLM|1973)Victor Henry Elford (born in
London ,June 10 ,1935 ) is a formersportscar racing ,rallying andFormula One driver fromEngland . He participated in 13 World Championship F1 Grands Prix, debuting onJuly 7 ,1968 . He scored a total of 8 championship points.Nicknamed "Quick Vic" by his peers Elford was mainly a famous sports car competitor as well as a successful rally driver, associated often with
Porsche .In 1967 Vic was European rally champion in a works Porsche 911. Among other victories he won the 1968
Rally Monte Carlo in aPorsche 911 and only a week later the24 Hours of Daytona in aPorsche 907 , Porsche's first ever overall win in a 24 hour race.Later that year, he also won the
Targa Florio teamed with veteranUmberto Maglioli in a famous come-from-behind race after he lost 18 minutes in the first lap due to a tyre failure. Vic established several lap record. Elford then entered theFrench Grand Prix and finished fourth in his first F1 race – a wet one, too.By finishing the
1969 Monaco Grand Prix despite troubles, he became the only pilot to do well in both famous events in Monte Carlo.Racing in the
World Sportscar Championship forMartini against the mightyJWA Gulf team, he was clocked at over 380km/h in thePorsche 917 LH in practise for the24 Hours of Le Mans 1971. He went on to win the 197112 Hours of Sebring in aPorsche 917 K, as well as several1000km Nürburgring races. A Targa Florio, Sebring & Daytona winner, his favorite track was nonetheless the Nürburgring despite the disappointing results in his three F1 attempts there, of which the first two ended in lap 1 accidents. His two last GPs were at the Ring, too. In addition to the 1000km, Elford won some 500km races there, winning a total of 6 major races. Only Rudolf Caracciola and Stirling Moss beat that record.Vic Elford lap records included: Targa Florio, Nurburgring, Daytona, Sebring, Norisring, Monza, Buenos Aires, Road Atlanta, Laguna Seca, Riverside and Le Mans.
On 4th February 1967 at
Lydden Race Circuit , he won the first everRallycross event. Later that year he won the 84 Hour "Marathon de la Route" event at theNürburgring , on the full 28km long combined versions that was rarely used since the 1930s. Fellow pilotsHans Herrmann andJochen Neerpasch preferred "the rallye driver" to steer thePorsche 911 through the 7 hours long, four consecutive night turns in rainy and foggy conditions. The winning car was fitted with a semi-automaticSportomatic transmission, as was another Porsche 911S entered by the factory team.Although he raced 5 years for Porsche, Vic Elford also raced for Ford, Triumph, Lancia, Alfa-Romeo, Ferrari, Chaparral, Shadow, Cooper, Lola, Chevron, Subaru. He also drove MacLaren in F1 & CanAm, Chevrolet in TransAm.
Overseas, Elford was also racing in
CanAm and theDaytona 500 ofNASCAR ."Quick Vic" nowadays lives in South
Florida ,United States .Bibliography
Elford has authored a number of books on the subject of motorsport:
* "Porsche High Performance Driving Handbook" ISBN 0879388498 (1994)
* "Vic Elford: Reflections on a Golden Era in Motorsports" ISBN 1893618528 (2005)Complete World Championship Formula One results
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External links
* [http://www.vicelford.com/now.html "The Official Web Site" of Vic Elford]
* [http://www.classicrallies.com/view_experience/1 "Reflections on a golden era of motorsports" interview of Vic Elford]
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