Recent Updates

 

06/21/2025 12:00 PM

MWIC Bonus Episode 13: Autocar Meets car designer Julian Thomson, GM Advanced Design Europe

 

06/21/2025 12:00 PM

Where I go, Yo-Go: exploring London in an electric golf buggy

 

06/21/2025 12:00 PM

Why I love tools (and not just for fixing my cars)

 

06/21/2025 12:00 AM

New 321bhp Edition 50 is the most powerful VW Golf GTI yet

 

06/21/2025 12:00 AM

Owners told to stop driving 2009-2019 Citroën C3 and DS 3

 

06/20/2025 12:00 PM

Pagani power for peanuts - why now is the Mercedes CL65's time

 

06/20/2025 12:00 PM

Tyre wear in the spotlight as EV-specific rubber gains traction

 

06/20/2025 12:00 PM

How BYD's Blade battery technology slices EV charging times

 

06/20/2025 12:00 AM

First pics: BMW X7 luxury SUV lives on for second generation

 

06/20/2025 12:00 AM

Mercedes 190E to return to racing at 2026 Nurburgring 24 Hours

<<    82   83   84   85   86   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 7348   Next >
Inside the tin shed responsible for thousands of race wins
Sunday, Oct 27, 2024 12:00 PM
shed matt prior opinion Could the Jack French garage at the Atwell-Wilson Motor Museum be the biggest unsung hero in British motorsport?

I feel compelled to write a few more words on the Jack French garage at the Atwell-Wilson Motor Museum, which deserves more than the two paragraphs I could spare in a recent feature, because it feels like such a significant part of British motorsport history.

French was one of the founder members of the 750 Motor Club, created in 1939 to get people racing in Austin 7s. For obvious reasons, it took until the late 1940s to really get going, which is when French made his racing special, Simplicity, in the garage that’s now at the Atwell-Wilson museum; and after that, he and the 750 MC spread the word about how to do it.

The alumni of 750 MC members reads like a motorsport who’s who: Colin Chapman, Eric Broadley, Adrian Reynard, Gordon Murray, Tony Southgate, Brian Hart, Mike Pilbeam and dozens of others were all members.

If you trace their successes forward from their 750 MC days, you will find that they’ve won every major race, and every major championship, in motorsport multiple times.

There are hundreds of championship wins and thousands of race wins, all traceable back through to the 750 MC and, by thread, to French’s shed.

It’s possible that I’m over-egging it, but it is a significant exhibit, because if someone hadn’t given enthusiasts the chance to go motor racing affordably, the UK wouldn’t today be the world’s motorsport epicentre, and I’m not sure what artefact better demonstrates the source of it all.

Perhaps it’s a hard sell: ‘Today, I’m going to look at a nondescript tin shed.’ But to me it feels more significant than, say, the first Lotus car or a championship-winning McLaren. They both owe something to this, and it’s the only one there is.

< Prev    of 7348   Next >
Leave a Comment
* Name
* Email (will not be published)
*
Click on me to change image  * Enter verification code (Click on the CAPTCHA to refresh the image!)
* - Reqiured fields