1946 Turin Grand Prix Explained

Type:GP
Grand Prix:Turin
Date:1 September
Year:1946
Official Name:III Gran Premio del Valentino
Country:Italy
Location:Valentino Park
Turin, Italy
Course Mi:2.789
Course Km:4.489
Distance Laps:60
Distance Mi:167.724
Distance Km:269.926
Course:Street circuit
Pole Driver:Giuseppe Farina
Pole Team:Alfa Romeo
Pole Country:Italy
Pole Time:2:18.6
Fast Driver:Jean-Pierre Wimille
Fast Team:Alfa Romeo
Fast Time:2:22.1
Fast Country:France
First Driver:Achille Varzi
First Team:Alfa Romeo
First Country:Italy
Second Driver:Jean-Pierre Wimille
Second Team:Alfa Romeo
Second Country:France
Third Driver:Raymond Sommer
Third Team:Maserati
Third Country:France
Weather:Light rain from lap 30, turning to heavy rain before the finish
Previous Round:1946 Nations Grand Prix
Race No:3
Season No:3
Season:1946
Description:Grande Épreuve 3 of 3 in the 1946 Grand Prix season

The 1946 Turin Grand Prix (formally known as the III Gran Premio del Valentino) was a Grand Prix motor race held on 1 September 1946 on a temporary street circuit at Valentino Park in Turin, Italy. It was the first time the event had been held since the end of the Second World War, as well as the first ever Formula One race, as the race regulations anticipated the official introduction of the new formula on 1 January 1947. It was also the third of the Grandes Épreuves of the 1946 Grand Prix season, a selection of prestigious Grands Prix recognised by the AIACR.[1]

The race was attended by 120,000–200,000 spectators.[2] [3]

Background

The 1946 Turin Grand Prix was the first Grand Prix to be held in Italy in the post-war era. Given the recentness of the Second World War, the vast majority of the cars on the grid were pre-war voiturette-class racing cars. With the absence of the German manufacturers that dominated the pre-war Grand Prix circuit, the field was instead dominated by the rivalry between fellow Italian manufacturers Alfa Romeo and Maserati.

The Grand Prix was also the motor racing debut of Turin-based Cisitalia, who, despite not qualifying for the race itself, would go on to win the accompanying Coppa Brezzi at the same venue the following Tuesday, with founder Piero Dusio behind the wheel.[4]

Technical regulations

The race was run to the 1947 Grand Prix Formula technical regulations, which allowed for either 1500cc supercharged engines or 4500cc naturally-aspirated engines.[5] The regulations, while not in force, had been proposed by the Commission Sportive Internationale (CSI) as late as March 1946[6] and was approved by the Association Internationale des Automobile Clubs Reconnus (AIACR) on 24 June 1946, in the same meeting that officially changed their name to the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA).[7] These regulations would remain unchanged throughout the inaugural season of the Formula One World Championship in 1950.

It was widely regarded by contemporary sources that the race would be a test of the new regulations. All the cars that qualified for the race met the 1500cc supercharged specification except for Eugène Chaboud's Delahaye, which ran a 3500cc naturally-aspirated engine in the 4500cc class.

Qualifying

Qualifying took place over the course of the two practice sessions on 30-31 August 1946. Due to a deal with Lotteria della Solidarietà Nazionale, in which 20 lottery tickets would be issued, with the accompanying winning driver earning the ticket-holder the jackpot of one million Lira, the 20 fastest drivers would qualify for the race.

Qualifying classification

PosNoDriverTeamCarTime
18 Giuseppe FarinaAlfa CorseAlfa Romeo 1582:18.6
252 Jean-Pierre WimilleAlfa CorseAlfa Romeo 1582:19.0
354 Carlo Felice TrossiAlfa CorseAlfa Romeo 1582:20.6
446 Achille VarziAlfa CorseAlfa Romeo 1582:20.8
522 Consalvo SanesiAlfa CorseAlfa Romeo 1582:22.4
648 Tazio NuvolariScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL2:24.6
756 Louis ChironEcurie AutosportMaserati 4CL2:28.2
816 Giorgio PelassaScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL2:28.8
924 Raymond SommerScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL2:29.6
1058 Franco CorteseScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL2:30.6
1128 Arialdo RuggieriScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL2:30.8
1240 Enrico PlatéScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL2:31.4
1342 Reg ParnellPrivate entryERA C2:31.8
1444 Guido BarbieriPrivate entryMaserati 4CL2:33.2
1550 Peter WhiteheadPrivate entryERA E2:34.2
1636 Henri LouveauScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL2:35.0
174 Discoride LanzaEcurie TricoloreMaserati 4CM2:36.6
1864 Emilio RomanoPrivate entryMaserati 4CL2:36.6
1918 Leslie BrookePrivate entryERA B2:38.2
2010 Eugène ChaboudEcurie FranceDelahaye 135S2:39.2
DNQ2 "Raph"Ecurie Naphtra CourseMaserati 6CM2:39.4
DNQ68 Ciro BasadonnaEcurie AutosportMaserati 4CL2:44.2
DNQ34 Piero DusioCompagnia Industriale Sportiva ItaliaCisitalia D462:45.4
DNQ6 Harry SchellEcurie Lucy O'Reilly SchellMaserati 6CM2:46.8
DNQ26 Piero TaruffiCompagnia Industriale Sportiva ItaliaCisitalia D462:48.6
DNQ12 Georges GrignardEcurie FranceDelahaye 1352:49.2
DNQ62 Luigi "Gigi" PlatéPrivate entryTalbot-Darracq 7003:00.2
DNA14 Secondo CorsiPrivate entryMaserati-
DNA20 Toulo de GraffenriedEcurie AutosportMaserati 4CL-
DNA30 Roger WormserPrivate entryMaserati 6CM-
DNA32 Ciro BasadonnaEcurie AutosportMaserati 4CL-
DNA60 Gianni CattinaPrivate entryMaserati-
DNA66 Giacomo PalmieriPrivate entryMaserati 4CL-
DNA70 Eric VerkadeEcurie AutosportMaserati 4CL-
Sources: [8] [9] [10]
Notes

† – Alternative Driver, car originally entered by Louis Chiron

Race

Almost instantly after the start of the race, polesitter Farina experienced an irreparable transmission failure, while Whitehead managed to get into the lead before problems with his supercharger led to him dropping down the order. This left the Alfas to break away from the pack. Maserati's challenge was not aided by team leader Nuvolari, who, seeming to be suffering from suspension problems from the start, lost one of his rear wheels on lap 10. Thankfully, he managed to bring the car to a stop without further incident, though the wheel itself ended up in the Po. The race, typical for the time, was one of high attrition; half of the field had retired by the mid-point when the rain began. In the end, the front-runners consisted of Wimille in first and Varzi in second, but still in hot pursuit. It seemed as though Wimille would be able to keep the lead until the end of the race, until lap 50 when the Alfa Romeo team held out a pit board for Wimille reading "1. Varzi; 2. Wimille", dictating the desired finishing order. Wimille then allowed Varzi past to give him the victory.[11] [12] Sommer crossed the line two laps down to take third, and the crowd was very impressed with Chaboud's drive, having started last and finishing fourth, albeit five laps down to the leaders.

While Maserati would go on to win the majority of Grands Prix in 1946, the dominance of Alfa Romeo under the new formula regulations would prove itself consistent as the team would go on to dominate the following years, ultimately resulting in their car winning the first two seasons of the Formula One Championship in an equally dominant fashion.

Race classification

PosNoDriverTeamCarLapsTime/RetiredGrid
146 Achille VarziAlfa CorseAlfa Romeo 158602:35:45.84
252 Jean-Pierre WimilleAlfa CorseAlfa Romeo 15860+0.82
322 Raymond SommerScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL58+2 Laps9
410 Eugène ChaboudEcurie FranceDelahaye 135S55+5 Laps20
526 Enrico PlatéScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL55+5 Laps12
654 Carlo Felice TrossiAlfa CorseAlfa Romeo 15851+9 Laps3
756 Louis ChironEcurie AutosportMaserati 4CL50+10 Laps7
818 Leslie BrookePrivate entryERA B50+10 Laps19
94 Discoride LanzaEcurie Naphtra CourseMaserati 4CM48+12 Laps17
Ret44 Christian KautzPrivate entryMaserati 4CL32Engine14
Ret50 Peter WhiteheadPrivate entryERA E30Gearbox15
Ret36 Henri LouveauScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL25Collision16
Ret40 Franco CorteseScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL16Magneto10
Ret28 Arialdo RuggieriScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL11Supercharger11
Ret48 Tazio NuvolariScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL9Lost wheel6
Ret16 Giorgio PelassaScuderia MilanoMaserati 4CL8Lost wheel8
Ret24 Consalvo SanesiAlfa CorseAlfa Romeo 1586Ignition5
Ret64 Emilio RomanoPrivate entryMaserati 4CL2Ignition18
Ret42 Reg ParnellPrivate entryERA C1Gearbox13
Ret8 Giuseppe FarinaAlfa CorseAlfa Romeo 1580Differential1
Sources:

Notes

† – Alternative Driver, car originally entered by Guido Barbieri

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Etzrodt . Hans . Grand Prix Winners 1895-1949: Part 3 (1934-1949) . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070806054345/http://www.kolumbus.fi/leif.snellman/gpw3.htm . 6 August 2007 . The Golden Era of Grand Prix Racing.
  2. Farinelli . Aldo . 3 September 1946 . I vincitori dei milioni e della corsa . La Nuova Stampa . Italian . 206 . 3 . 2 January 2024.
  3. October 1946 . Turin G.P. . Motor Sport . 22 . 10 . 8.
  4. News: Henry . Maurice . 4 September 1946 . Les Debuts Victorieux De Cisitalia . 2 January 2024 . L'Équipe . 1–2 . French.
  5. News: Farinelli . Aldo . 1 September 1946 . Motori e milioni al Circuito del Valentino . Cars and Millions at the Valentino Circuit . 1 January 2024 . La Nuova Stampa . 3 . Italian.
  6. News: Henry . Maurice . 2 March 1946 . La Formule De Course 1938-1939 Reste Applicable . French . L'Équipe . 2 January 2024.
  7. News: Henry . Maurice . 26 June 1946 . Le vicomte de Rohan réélu président de l'AIACR . French . L'Équipe . 2 January 2024.
  8. News: Farinelli . Aldo . 31 August 1946 . Fra i primi venti biglietti estratti . 2 January 2024 . La Nuova Stampa . 2 . Italian.
  9. News: Henry . Maurice . 31 August 1946 . Le Grand Prix De Turin . 2 January 2024 . L'Équipe . 1–2 . French.
  10. Book: F 1 R Torino 1946.
  11. News: Henry . Maurice . 2 September 1946 . Wimille Avait Course Gagnée A Turin . 2 January 2024 . L'Équipe . 1–2 . French.
  12. News: Henry . Maurice . 4 September 1946 . Jean-Pierre Wimille espère qu'une prochaine fois Alfa-Romeo lui permettra de jouer le premier rôle . 2 January 2024 . L'Équipe . 2 . French.