1962 German Grand Prix Explained

Type:F1
Country:West Germany
Grand Prix:German
Date:5 August
Year:1962
Official Name:XXIV Grosser Preis von Deutschland
Location:Nürburgring
Nürburg, West Germany
Attendance:350,000
Course:Permanent racing facility
Course Mi:14.173
Course Km:22.810
Distance Laps:15
Distance Mi:212.595
Distance Km:342.015
Weather:Heavy rain showers
Pole Driver:Dan Gurney
Pole Team:Porsche
Pole Time:8:47.2
Pole Country:USA
Fast Driver:Graham Hill
Fast Team:BRM
Fast Time:10:12.2
Fast Lap:3
Fast Country:UK
First Driver:Graham Hill
First Team:BRM
First Country:UK
Second Driver:John Surtees
Second Team:Lola-Climax
Second Country:UK
Third Driver:Dan Gurney
Third Team:Porsche
Third Country:USA

The 1962 German Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held at the Nürburgring on 5 August 1962. It was race 6 of 9 in both the 1962 World Championship of Drivers and the 1962 International Cup for Formula One Manufacturers. The 15-lap race was won by BRM driver Graham Hill after he started from second position. John Surtees finished second for the Lola team and Porsche driver Dan Gurney came in third. The race was notable for having six different constructors taking the first six positions.[1]

Race

After a heavy midday downpour, the race was delayed by over an hour as streams of water and mud covered parts of the track. It never dried fully, and the race was run in wet conditions.[2] Graham Hill drove masterfully in the wet conditions, followed by John Surtees who was gradually proving himself a great driver.[2] He reached third position in the championship with this race, but was not to score any more points in 1962. Dan Gurney's Porsche had less than impressive handling but he finished third after passing Phil Hill, whose Ferrari was doing much better than at Aintree just 2 weeks prior. Hill, however, had to pit with oil on his visor and retired with a broken rear suspension soon thereafter. After a disastrous strike had kept them out of the last two races, Ferrari returned in force with four 156s built to different specifications. Hill had the newest version, with a six-speed transmission mounted fore of the engine. Giancarlo Baghetti drove a car with the usual transmission and finished tenth, whereas Ricardo Rodríguez drove last year's model with the 65 degree Tipo 188 engine - and got the best result of the team, finishing sixth. Lorenzo Bandini used a development car, with a regular nosecone, smaller radiator, and modified front and rear suspension. He crashed on the third lap, while in eleventh position.[3]

Jim Clark absentmindedly forgot to turn on the fuel pump at the start, losing thirteen seconds and being in 26th place after the start. A rapid climb began, and he passed seventeen cars on the opening lap. He was closing in to the leaders with three to four seconds per lap, but after a few near crashes in the middle of the race he chose to ease off the pace a bit.[1] Clark finished fourth, ahead of Bruce McLaren in a V8 Cooper. The other V8-engined Cooper was driven in practice by Tony Maggs, but a German TV-company's camera fell off Carel Godin de Beaufort's Porsche in practice, causing Graham Hill and Maggs to crash and total their cars.[3] Maggs ran a Climax-engined backup car and finished ninth. The Grand Prix Drivers' Association's policy was to not carry cameras due to the safety risks, but de Beaufort was not a member.[2]

Three new cars appeared in this race; the new BRM V8-engined Gilby, driven by Keith Greene, retired after about half the race with gearbox problems. The Belgian Maserati-engined ENB finished last; this car was a hodgepodge of parts from three old Emerysons equipped with a sharknose-style front end. This was its only appearance, and a hard worked Lucien Bianchi was only allowed to start thanks to the fact that several faster racers had not finished the minimum-required five laps. Gurney's fastest qualifying lap was 8:47.2; the ENB's fastest lap was 10:40.7, nearly two minutes slower.[4] Most importantly, Jack Brabham's new BT3 finally appeared after a marathon effort by his mechanics. He spun the main bearings on the first day practice, and qualified with an engine built using parts from Trevor Taylor's car (his engine bent a valve). He started the race from the rear of the field, with the Climax engine from his Lotus 24. He climbed to ninth place by the end of the first lap, but then his throttle broke and he had to retire after nine laps. Nonetheless, Brabham was happy with the car, particularly the handling.[3]

Classification

Qualifying

PosNoDriverConstructorGapGrid
Q1Q2Q3
17 Dan GurneyPorsche9:08.88:47.29:20.51
211 Graham HillBRM9:01.88:50.29:15.3+3.02
35 Jim ClarkLotus-Climax9:17.28:51.29:51.7+4.03
414 John SurteesLola-Climax9:08.68:57.59:45.0+10.34
59 Bruce McLarenCooper-Climax9:08.49:00.79:28.1+13.55
68 Jo BonnierPorsche9:10.89:04.09:12.2+16.86
712 Richie GintherBRM9:05.99:06.19:16.1+18.77
818 Carel Godin de BeaufortPorsche9:12.99:17.59:31.8+25.78
915 Roy SalvadoriLola-Climax9:29.19:14.110:36.7+26.99
103 Ricardo RodríguezFerrariNo time9:14.29:20.3+27.010
1117 Maurice TrintignantLotus-Climax9:27.19:19.09:30.7+31.811
121 Phil HillFerrariNo time9:33.09:24.7+37.512
132 Giancarlo BaghettiFerrariNo time9:28.110:07.3+40.913
1432 Heini WalterPorscheNo time9:30.010:16.1+42.814
1526 Nino VaccarellaPorsche9:33.89:35.710:21.4+46.615
1625 Ian BurgessCooper-Climax10:20.19:42.69:39.2+52.016
1719 Jo SiffertLotus-Climax10:04.09:39.39:56.7+52.117
184 Lorenzo BandiniFerrariNo time9:39.710:26.4+52.518
1927 Keith GreeneGilby-BRM10:08.110:22.79:47.1+59.919
2028 Heinz SchillerLotus-BRM11:20.49:51.59:55.0+1:04.720
216 Trevor TaylorLotus-ClimaxNo timeNo time9:57.0+1:09.826
2220 Jackie LewisCooper-Climax9:58.0No time10:35.4+1:10.821
2331 Bernard CollombCooper-Climax10:09.710:11.914:09.4+1:22.522
2429 Tony ShellyLotus-ClimaxNo timeNo time10:18.6+1:31.4DNQ
2510 Tony MaggsCooper-Climax(9:12.7)(9:04.8)10:21.2+1:34.023
2616 Jack BrabhamBrabham-ClimaxNo timeNo time10:21.6+1:34.424
2734 Wolfgang SeidelLotus-BRM10:38.2No time10:44.1+1:51.0DNQ
2821 Lucien BianchiENB-Maserati11:55.510:42.510:40.7+1:53.525
2930 Jay ChamberlainLotus-Climax11:36.2No time11:12.9+2:25.7DNQ
-34 Günther SeiffertLotus-BRMNo time11:38.912:54.1+2:51.7
Source:[5]
Notes

Race

PosNoDriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
111 Graham HillBRM152:38:45.329
214 John SurteesLola-Climax15+ 2.546
37 Dan GurneyPorsche15+ 4.414
45 Jim ClarkLotus-Climax15+ 42.133
59 Bruce McLarenCooper-Climax15+ 1:19.652
63 Ricardo RodríguezFerrari15+ 1:23.8101
78 Jo BonnierPorsche15+ 4:37.36 
812 Richie GintherBRM15+ 5:00.17 
910 Tony MaggsCooper-Climax15+ 5:07.023 
102 Giancarlo BaghettiFerrari15+ 8:14.713 
1125 Ian BurgessCooper-Climax15+ 8:15.316 
1219 Jo SiffertLotus-Climax15+ 8:15.517 
1318 Carel Godin de BeaufortPorsche15+ 9:11.88 
1432 Heini WalterPorsche14+ 1 Lap14 
1526 Nino VaccarellaPorsche14+ 1 Lap15 
1621 Lucien BianchiENB-Maserati14+ 1 Lap25 
Ret20 Jackie LewisCooper-Climax10Suspension21 
Ret1 Phil HillFerrari9Suspension12 
Ret16 Jack BrabhamBrabham-Climax9Throttle24 
Ret27 Keith GreeneGilby-BRM7Suspension19 
Ret15 Roy SalvadoriLola-Climax4Gearbox9 
Ret17 Maurice TrintignantLotus-Climax4Gearbox11 
Ret4 Lorenzo BandiniFerrari4Accident18 
Ret28 Heinz SchillerLotus-BRM4Oil Pressure20 
Ret31 Bernard CollombCooper-Climax2Gearbox22 
Ret6 Trevor TaylorLotus-Climax0Accident26 
DNQ29 Tony ShellyLotus-Climax    
DNQ34 Wolfgang SeidelLotus-BRM    
DNQ30 Jay ChamberlainLotus-Climax    
DNQ34 Günther SeiffertLotus-BRM    
WD- Tony MarshBRMCar not ready
WD-Lotus-ClimaxWithdrawn

Notes

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
PosDriverPoints
1 Graham Hill28
2 Jim Clark21
23 John Surtees19
14 Bruce McLaren18
15 Phil Hill14
Source: [7]
Constructors' Championship standings
PosConstructorPoints
11 BRM31 (32)
12 Lotus-Climax27
3 Cooper-Climax23
14 Lola-Climax19
15 Porsche16
Source:

External links

Notes and References

  1. IMS9 . Skyfall över Tysklands GP . Deluge on German GP . 24 . sv . Blunsden . John . Lerum, Sweden . Illustrerad Motor Sport . 9 . September 1962 .
  2. [#IMS9|Blunsden]
  3. [#IMS9|Blunsden]
  4. Web site: Lucien Bianchi and the ENB-née-Emeryson . 8W . autosport.com . Mattijs . Diepraam . 2016-05-22 .
  5. Web site: 1962 German GP Qualification. www.chicanef1.com. 6 August 2020.
  6. Web site: 1962 German Grand Prix race report: Hill the rain meister at the Nordschleife. September 1962. Motor Sport Magazine. Jenkinson. Denis. 6 August 2020.
  7. Web site: Germany 1962 - Championship • STATS F1. www.statsf1.com. 18 March 2019.