Race footage: https://youtu.be/-y8G9t0aJ60
Race footage: https://youtu.be/-y8G9t0aJ60
GREAT footage elfer !!! .... Thanks
Chuck Miller
Creative Advisor/Message Board Moderator - Early 911S Registry #109
R Gruppe #88
TYP901 #62
'73S cpe #1099 - Matched # 2.7/9.5 RS spec rebuild
'67 Malibu 327 spt cpe - Period 350 Rebuild
’98 Chevy S-10 – Utility
’15 GTI – Commuter
Thanks for posting. Nice to see that footage. Whatever the debate about car we know the driver was a winner of that race!
I was fortunate to have lunch with Gijs Van Lennep last year. Unplanned, we just happened to sit together at an event. Not only discussed the RSR but later the conversation turned to his single seater races for Frank Williams. Prodigious memory that is evident in the film was also clear from our chat — when he heard I had run the formal technical after-action debriefs for the F1 team for a couple of seasons he recounted the trackside discussions he’d had with Frank regarding: wing angles, tyre choices and engine rev limits particularly for the Zandvoort race, so that would’ve been roughly about time of his Porsche RSR drives. Great recall of detail and very animated about things from F1 races that happened about five decades before our lunchtime chat.
“He had two F1 seasons with Williams.
He returned to Formula One in July at 1973 Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort, driving Frank Williams' Iso-Marlboro IR. He qualified 20th and finished 6th, scoring one point. Later in the year, he finished 9th at Austrian Grand Prix at Österreichring and retired at Italian Grand Prix at Monza. In 1974, Van Lennep competed for Williams at Belgian Grand Prix at Nivelles, finishing 14th. His last attempt with Williams, at 1974 Dutch Grand Prix, wasn't successful and he failed to qualify”.
Steve
Last edited by 911MRP; 05-31-2023 at 09:21 AM. Reason: Add photo from Austrian race
If memory serves me it is probably referring to the race in Austria where Porsche fielded a prototype of what was to become the model 73 RS(R). Entered through the Austrian company. Think they did so under that entrant name to not attract too much attention but the eagle eyed Jenks saw through it and wrote about it in Motor Pport that month . Have the original article in my Motor Sport bound copy. Seem to recall the car had abs brakes. It was that article that set my friend the late Lord Lyell off to AFN to buy an RS but they were only launched October. He did however get one the fifty RHD RS quota. I don’t know what chassis that was entered or if that is the Porsche project number fit the work developing the car that was entered in that race however.
Attachment 603757
Steve
Last edited by 911MRP; 03-11-2025 at 04:17 PM.
The latest issue of Sports Car Market has the resolution of R7
"project E42" is not quite the correct term
All factory owned cars were given identity numbers for the financial accounts of the company - ie asset numbers
I911 230 0841n those days the number began with a letter of the year number - ie E was the 1972 MY and F the 1973 MY etc
then they were numbered sequentially as they were taken into the factory financial accounts - so E42 (911 230 0841) was the 42nd E series car to be transferred onto the Porsche asset register as a company owned car
There were exceptions to this numbering series - the R series in 1973 for example like R1
Hugh Hodges
73 911E
Melbourne Australia
Foundation Member #005
Australian TYP901 Register Inc.
Early S Registry #776
"The litigation recently settled, with Schachter coming away with his car vindicated"
"Jacob Shalit filed suit against Schachter, seeking to establish that his car was the real R7"
"Schachter retained noted Porsche expert Andy Prill..Prill engaged Norbert Singer...the car (Schachter's) was taken to Porsche Classic in Germany for inspection"
Terms of the settlement...
-Shalit is free to sell his car but must identify its as a replica..
-The chassis# stamped into Shalit's car must be cut out and surrendered to Schachter
-Shalit's R7 chassis plate must also be surrendered to Schachter