Helm Glöckler Explained

Helmut Glöckler
Nationality: West German
Birth Date:13 January 1909
Team(S):non-works Cooper
Races:1 (0 starts)
Championships:0
Wins:0
Podiums:0
Points:0
Poles:0
Fastest Laps:0
First Race:1953 German Grand Prix
Last Race:1953 German Grand Prix

Helmut Erik "Helm" Glöckler (13 January 1909 in Frankfurt am Main – 18 December 1993 same place) was a German amateur racing driver.

Biography

Glöckler raced a Deutsch-Bonnet in Formula 3 in 1951, and won the sports car racing event at the 1953 Eifelrennen with a new Porsche 550.[1]

He also won the sports car class Alpine Cup trophy in the 1951 Österreichische Alpenfahrt rally driving a highly modified Renault 4CV.[2]

He entered the 1953 German Grand Prix in an Equipe Anglaise Cooper, this being his one and only attempt at a World Championship race, but he blew his engine during qualifying and so did not compete in the race. Had he qualified for the race, he would be the first ever driver to use number 0 in a Formula One race, twenty years before Jody Scheckter became the first to race in number 0 at the 1973 Canadian Grand Prix.

He raced a Porsche 550 in the 1953 24 Hours of Le Mans with Hans Herrmann, and again in the 1954 24 Hours of Le Mans with Richard von Frankenberg.

Until recently, Helm Glöckler GmbH in Frankfurt bore his name, running a motorcycle dealer and workshop, and other enterprises.

Family

Glöckler's cousin Walter created the small Porsche powered spyder in 1951 that later inspired the factory to produce the Porsche 550.[1]

Complete World Championship results

(key)

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Leffingwell, Randy . Porsche legends . MBI Pub. Co . Osceola, WI . 2002 . 35 . 0-7603-1364-4 .
  2. Book: Martin Pfundner . Alpine Trails & Rallies: Mountain Motor Sport 1910–1973 (Those were the days...) . Veloce Publishing . 2005 . 68 . 1-904788-95-5 . 2009-06-16.