I was able to photograph the old Spa-Francorchamps course in 2010. It was a kind of pilgrimage. With few exceptions, only the best drivers won at Spa. Jimmy Clark, who famously hated the place, won four straight Belgian Grands Prix. Other famous GP winners: Tazio Nuvolari, Rudi Caracciola, Juan Fangio (3 times), Alberto Ascari (twice), Phil Hill, Dan Gurney, and Bruce McLaren.
Spa still holds the record for the fastest sports car race ever run. Pedro Rodriguez and Jackie Oliver averaged 156 m.p.h. for 1000 kilometers including pit stops in 1971. The record is unlikely ever to be broken. Courses that could, like Le Mans and Monza, have been adding chicanes for the past 40 years.
I was ambivalent about my pilgrimage. Old Spa was insanely dangerous, even by the standards of the time. Coming of age in that racing culture, I subscribed to the conventional wisdom then, that "a racer knows the risks when he gets into the car." I'm now ashamed of that attitude. Racing will always be dangerous. But you shouldn't have to bet long odds on your own survival, against the house. Passive safety is a good thing, even if it encourages some racers to take excessive risks. These days, they bet (with the odds in their favor) that they will walk away from a steaming pile of junk. Convictions aside, I still watch YouTube videos of Old Spa. I am in awe of drivers who raced it.
A lap was flat-out or "just a lift," except for Les Combes and Stavelot: 130 m.p.h. sweepers, and Eau Rouge, the hairpin before the old start-finish line. The movement toward passive safety in course design began with Jackie Stewart's crash in the 1966 Belgian Grand Prix. After 1970, Grand Prix drivers refused to race there. By 1977, Spa was closed even to small-bore sports car racing. Being comprised of public roads, it could not be made safe by modern standards.
New Spa, which includes about 25% of the old track, is a purpose-built facility with state-of-the-art passive safety. (New public roads now bypass this section of track.) It remains my favorite course because Eau Rouge and Pouhon are so fast and hard to get perfectly, lap after lap. It's about four miles long, half the length of Old Spa.
Track map: Old Spa, 1925-1977. Pictures below are from Les Combes to past La Carriere. |
Les Combes today. A fast lefthand sweeper leading onto a downhill straight. |
Malmedy: Burnenville straightens slightly before entering this right-left ess (the lefthander is just out of the picture). Malmedy is flat-out unless your'e negotiating traffic. |
The house is at the exit of Stavelot, a 130 m.p.h. sweeper, which required shifting down 1 or 2 gears. |
Entry to the La Carriere left-right sweeper. This was a lift in a high-powered car; flat-out in a low-powered one. |
Looking against race direction back toward La Carriere's exit. |
3 comments:
That is some beautiful countryside.
I don't follow racing much, but this was interesting, my mind went to that Isle of Man motorcycle race while reading this.
Yeah, it is. The Ardennes remind me of the Alleghenies, just not as high, and more manicured. The Dragon and GSNP-even the Gatlinburg area-are more "wild." Never been to the UK or Ireland--next trip?
The Watchtowers could easily "do" the TT if you like: fly into Shannon, do Dublin and the race, take a ferry across, and depart London. Ten days.
I was there in May this year and the house on the photo "Looking against race direction back toward La Carriere's exit" was offered for sale! Only 500 meters from the current race track. =)
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