A race I am unlikely to forget. As a 16 year old I watched it from Forrest Elbow, or at least the start of it from there. A few years later I worked for BMC at Zetland in charge of the paint store those were the days, I agree with many others here that the racing was far more exciting then with production cars, than it is now with the super tourers and also much more meaningful too. Many thanks for the upload.
I gotta say, I really like this commentator a lot better than most modern ones. He has just the right combination of humour and serious race commentary with no bias, without a lot of the silly shit a lot of modern commentators come up with.
For those who may not know, Forrest's Elbow was named after Jack Forrest, a motorcycle racer who mashed his elbow in a crash on that corner, back in 1947. Typical Aussie humour. :-D
Aged 22 in ‘66, I was the proud owner of a brand new Cooper S. I drove it 500 miles non-stop, once. I’ve never been so knackered in my life, and I wasn’t pushing it half as much as these guys.
I have 2 1:43 Minis from the Bathurst races numbers 22 C and 17 C haven't things change so much over the years. very brave guys back then no barriers etc .
Great to see this footage of Bathurst when it was interesting and exciting to watch. I turned 18 in 1965 and my first car was a Mini with a 1000cc engine, sadly not a Cooper but what a fun car to drive.
Car 13C is the winning MORRIS Cooper S that was driven by Rauno Altonen and co-driver Bob Holland. It would be a museum piece and somebody has obviously shelled out heaps and put it under wraps...lucky B. p.s. Mini Cooper S's are the current day crap made by BMW...they don't win anything.
Or could be that someone ordered the original number plate long after the original was written off later by a later road use owner. Or so the story goes.
Looking at these old races I can see why older friends were so keen on the mini's and cortina's now. Great fun seeing street cars hammered testing endurance and performance.
Irishman Paddy Hopkirk was famous for his handbrake turns from gymkanas and being a BMC Team Rally driver. Altonen was also a member of the BMC rally team. The year after this Hopkirk returned to Oz (I think Altonen did too) and competed in a leg of the then WRC. On the leg that went through Wollongong Paddy tore off a wheel on the section of dirt road between Mount Keira and Mount Kembla. He continued to drive it for at least five K's to complete the section.
. 00:16:27 Dunlop CR65 - a legendary tyre, also available in ten inch size, obviously, red spot hard or white spot soft (or the other way around). 😎 👍 🚜
I was 15 then...just getting interested in Cars....1st was an Austin A40 Farina....I thought I was Christmas....first newie was a Mini Deluxe in 1969....cost $1600 ....ended up rolling it on a gravel road ...against all the current advice at the time that you 'couldn't roll a mini' LOL. Great Video and great memories, thanks!
The Flying Brick, surely the greatest little car "ever". The shitful bloody thing that BMW are floggin' now , does "not" deserve to wear the Mini badge, let alone a "Cooper S" badge, it's a shit box!
@@robthelog223 just wondering if you've driven a new mini? not trying to be a smart arse either mate, its just i shared your opinion up until i drove one. they're definitely not the same, but their are similarities where i feel they've tyred to take the good bits from the old and built the new one around it. This business of having four doors and slapping a cooper s badge on anything they shove out the door is "A bloody shambles" though that may have happened since you made that comment
'All over bar the shouting" mwahahaha haven't heard that for yonks! Funny seeing the pit crew change tires with the standard supplied wheel brace but it was a production class race.
Back in 1979 ; I had a Bathurst model 68 Cooper S , Works motor Alloys , race seat all the good stuff ; Did 125 mph , Beat all my mates V8 S 👍⁉️⁉️What a car 🤔👍👍👍Wish I still had it 🤔Be worth a fortune
The time you raced by the seat of your pants and in 76 i had my first cooper s then built my first racer and used her on the streets and went on to building cars for others after work in the evening and weed ends ;-) miss those days
Peter Whitchurch, he also directed the off track scenes and was genuinely interested in the sport and how best to represent the race on film in what was relatively new ground for Australia.
This what car racing should be all about now like it was back then stuff the v8 super cars it bloody boring same old same old not worth watching any more not even exciting to watch
Back in 78 , I bought a 68 Mini Cooper S , With a balanced and Blue printed Motor, Extractors , 45 mm Weber , Alloys flared Guards, Racing seats , even had Ferrari seat belts,, It was a rocket 🚀 , Wish I still had it , I had it up to 125 mph 🤪🤫🤫 Beat all my mates hotted up cars ⁉️Great fun Car
We were part of a team to do the official lap scoring to assist the then BMC works team . all from the Mini Car Club of NSW located in the apprentice training school bus From BMC parked in Hell Corner the first corner .
1250cc?? I know of the 850cc engines, 1000, 1100, 1275, but not 1250 a special maybe or a mistake. The Minis advantage would be thru the corners, and under brakes ( disc front, drum rear ) but the others would be quicker down Conrod Straight
Yes a mistake. The Cooper S needed the 1275 to be on the pace. If the Valiant V8 had sold enough with the disc brake option to qualify for the race the result might have been different. The Studebakers too had to be driven much slower than they qualified so the wheels would not fall off and the drum only brakes burn up as they did when pushed as fast as they could go but not last.
Would have been a touch more interesting if the VC V8's had been able to run the optional Disc Brakes. Been a long time since racing was true 'Production Cars' like these - the scrutineering after the race doesn't get much mention now,... least not since the Ford Sierra's ;)
@H HOUR HOTEL Not enough sold with discs to qualify for series homologation. The VC V8 drivers spent the day pulling the A904 back down through the gears to stop at the bottom of Conrod. Torqueflites are that strong....
I love Minis, no doubt, but it was a different story the following year when Ford entered the 289 inch Falcons ruclips.net/video/_zbqjJqCZD0/видео.html
The minis were still competitive for years, it's not all about cubic inches, granted they probably didn't win as much when the big V8 were involved, but just the fact they hardly need to brake for corners, and they are so low, means they can keep a lot of speed into the corners, which gives them an advantage over the bigger cars. Have a look at the historic racing from Goodwood and you can see the Mini's Cortina's and Alfa's keep up with the big V8 iron.
Me mates mum had an Australian built Mini K. It was a burnt orange colour, Calypso Red or Orange. Anyway, that little mini K could go like fuck. Mrs. Mac traded it in for a spankin new mini clubman in 75 but it didn't go as good as the little mini K from Aussie, go Aussie hahaha, I'm a Kiwi, root me boot hahaha
and to think... we can buy a 1999 JDM mini, pop a honda B18 engine in, and rule 2020.... (eg my 1999 mini rocks lol) 50 years after minis ruled Bathurst
Super cars ruined all this when you had the likes of Moffat whinged about production cars not being race cars,,,, duh,,,, wanker!! it was a production car endurance race that was raced on Sunday and mr. average bought the same car on Monday.
Agreed, the expression I grew up with was win on Sunday, sell on Monday. That just meant that what you saw is what you bought, not the crap that is Bathurst racing today. Can't buy one of them and drive to work! Cheers Mate, John, Australia.
A race I am unlikely to forget. As a 16 year old I watched it from Forrest Elbow, or at least the start of it from there. A few years later I worked for BMC at Zetland in charge of the paint store those were the days, I agree with many others here that the racing was far more exciting then with production cars, than it is now with the super tourers and also much more meaningful too. Many thanks for the upload.
I gotta say, I really like this commentator a lot better than most modern ones. He has just the right combination of humour and serious race commentary with no bias, without a lot of the silly shit a lot of modern commentators come up with.
The real Bathurst! Road cars on the track, bring it back!
Please.
That was awesome, sheer bliss for us Mini fans. Thanks for uploading.
REAL Morris or Austin Minis too !!
For those who may not know, Forrest's Elbow was named after Jack Forrest, a motorcycle racer who mashed his elbow in a crash on that corner, back in 1947. Typical Aussie humour. :-D
Aged 22 in ‘66, I was the proud owner of a brand new Cooper S. I drove it 500 miles non-stop, once. I’ve never been so knackered in my life, and I wasn’t pushing it half as much as these guys.
I bought a new Morris Cooper S in 1968. I went on my honeymoon in it three months later. September 1, 1968. I still have the same wife.
Should have kept the cooper s
@@philhuxtable433would have been the cheapest option.
I have 2 1:43 Minis from the Bathurst races numbers 22 C and 17 C
haven't things change so much over the years.
very brave guys back then no barriers etc .
Great to see this footage of Bathurst when it was interesting and exciting to watch. I turned 18 in 1965 and my first car was a Mini with a 1000cc engine, sadly not a Cooper but what a fun car to drive.
and at the Finish line, thier was 9 mini cooper s in the first 9 places outright. AWESOME little car, LEGEND
It was first through eight, then the VC V8 and then another mini in tenth.
Some really famous names amongst the Cooper S drivers.
Great classic footage, amazing camera work by these film guys.
I checked the current status on the Mini Cooper S - which was numbered 13C in this race.
The car is still listed in 2019 as being road registered.
Car 13C is the winning MORRIS Cooper S that was driven by Rauno Altonen and co-driver Bob Holland. It would be a museum piece and somebody has obviously shelled out heaps and put it under wraps...lucky B.
p.s. Mini Cooper S's are the current day crap made by BMW...they don't win anything.
Or could be that someone ordered the original number plate long after the original was written off later by a later road use owner. Or so the story goes.
As a mini owner, this was great to watch. :-)
Ah, the good old days of motor racing. When things go wrong, light up a Gallaher and chill out.
I had no idea they used to race the early crowns awesome!
Looking at these old races I can see why older friends were so keen on the mini's and cortina's now. Great fun seeing street cars hammered testing endurance and performance.
I love that many of them have their road registration plates still on.
Irishman Paddy Hopkirk was famous for his handbrake turns from gymkanas and being a BMC Team Rally driver.
Altonen was also a member of the BMC rally team. The year after this Hopkirk returned to Oz (I think Altonen did too) and competed in a leg of the then WRC. On the leg that went through Wollongong Paddy tore off a wheel on the section of dirt road between Mount Keira and Mount Kembla. He continued to drive it for at least five K's to complete the section.
.
00:16:27
Dunlop CR65 - a legendary tyre, also available in ten inch size, obviously, red spot hard or white spot soft (or the other way around). 😎 👍 🚜
Anyone who cracks the ton in a mini definitely has my respect…
Bloody fast with your bum about 2 inches off the ground..
Hero status !
I was there and I remember the excitement. This was real driver and car and not the mighty dollar moguls.
Loved the cars from this period.... you could really throw them around and so simple compared to modern cars to work on.....
this is epic, thank you for uploading it
Real racing, Cars exactly like you and I could own. Bathurst sorts them all out !
This is real street racing. You knew what your car was all about.
I was 15 then...just getting interested in Cars....1st was an Austin A40 Farina....I thought I was Christmas....first newie was a Mini Deluxe in 1969....cost $1600 ....ended up rolling it on a gravel road ...against all the current advice at the time that you 'couldn't roll a mini' LOL.
Great Video and great memories, thanks!
The Flying Brick, surely the greatest little car "ever". The shitful bloody thing that BMW are floggin' now , does "not" deserve to wear the Mini badge, let alone a "Cooper S" badge, it's a shit box!
never lift off in a corner. In a mini.
@@robthelog223 just wondering if you've driven a new mini? not trying to be a smart arse either mate, its just i shared your opinion up until i drove one. they're definitely not the same, but their are similarities where i feel they've tyred to take the good bits from the old and built the new one around it. This business of having four doors and slapping a cooper s badge on anything they shove out the door is "A bloody shambles" though that may have happened since you made that comment
My Dad was driving the Cooper S #25 C George Forrest in the roll over.....he was saved by the seatbelt so glad no other driver hit him.
Thank you for those amazing videos :-)
Please, keep posting.
Great videos. Thanks for the effort in putting them up
I was 3 yrs old by then and still familiar names!
6:35. " It's a track that doesn't suit the big cars."
Well, what happened from the following year ?
I had to laugh when the commentator said " this is not a track for the big cars".
'All over bar the shouting" mwahahaha haven't heard that for yonks! Funny seeing the pit crew change tires with the standard supplied wheel brace but it was a production class race.
8:46 , nsw plate , must have drove it to the track
and its still registered
Back in 1979 ; I had a Bathurst model 68 Cooper S , Works motor Alloys , race seat all the good stuff ; Did 125 mph , Beat all my mates V8 S 👍⁉️⁉️What a car 🤔👍👍👍Wish I still had it 🤔Be worth a fortune
The time you raced by the seat of your pants and in 76 i had my first cooper s then built my first racer and used her on the streets and went on to building cars for others after work in the evening and weed ends ;-) miss those days
Só eu que acho as corridas de antigamente mais emocionantes que as atuais?
No mate, there's heaps of us.
In the blend line tv channel you can find people racing with all types of cars still.
www.youtube.com/@BlendLineTV/videos
They're all I watch.
Amusing and witty race commentator .
He was of a narrator really,
Peter Whitchurch, he also directed the off track scenes and was genuinely interested in the sport and how best to represent the race on film in what was relatively new ground for Australia.
Yes. Absolutely fabulous.
This what car racing should be all about now like it was back then stuff the v8 super cars it bloody boring same old same old not worth watching any more not even exciting to watch
Back in 78 , I bought a 68 Mini Cooper S , With a balanced and Blue printed Motor, Extractors , 45 mm Weber , Alloys flared Guards, Racing seats , even had Ferrari seat belts,, It was a rocket 🚀 , Wish I still had it , I had it up to 125 mph 🤪🤫🤫 Beat all my mates hotted up cars ⁉️Great fun Car
I would have been the Ferrari seat belt that made all the difference...was it factory red ?
This is Gold, go cuz Rauno👍👍👍
We were part of a team to do the official lap scoring to assist the then BMC works team .
all from the Mini Car Club of NSW located in the apprentice training school bus From BMC parked in Hell Corner the first corner .
It’s a mini invasion!! Great to see :)
1250cc?? I know of the 850cc engines, 1000, 1100, 1275, but not 1250 a special maybe or a mistake. The Minis advantage would be thru the corners, and under brakes ( disc front, drum rear ) but the others would be quicker down Conrod Straight
Yes a mistake. The Cooper S needed the 1275 to be on the pace.
If the Valiant V8 had sold enough with the disc brake option to qualify for the race the result might have been different.
The Studebakers too had to be driven much slower than they qualified so the wheels would not fall off and the drum only brakes burn up as they did when pushed as fast as they could go but not last.
Would have been a touch more interesting if the VC V8's had been able to run the optional Disc Brakes.
Been a long time since racing was true 'Production Cars' like these - the scrutineering after the race doesn't get much mention now,... least not since the Ford Sierra's ;)
@H HOUR HOTEL Not enough sold with discs to qualify for series homologation.
The VC V8 drivers spent the day pulling the A904 back down through the gears to stop at the bottom of Conrod. Torqueflites are that strong....
0:17 nothing like a top up before the race, another 3 bottles under the seat for ya!
Go the Mini!
mini heaven
wow good cars
This is far better than the super rubbish you have now.
I wonder whos idea it was to put a human bollard at the end of the pit lane? Brave man lol
Cause less damage to the car than a concrete one, lol.
It looks so fun!
Put a 12 pack in a cooler on the passenger seat and GOFERIT!
ah the days when racers didnt bother with axle stands and a single trolly under the sump would do it for working underneath ;)
Farking enjoyed that....ta!✌️
how
Go karts are hard on tyres. real cars are fun to watch..
only 1 holden entered in 66, wow.
and that was lazy hr
Sped up, sound dubbed, and over zealous commentary, are all hall marks of the sixties news shows.
Cooper S would have felt like driving a racing car against a sea of barges
No mention of the mighty Bellets
omg
Go the Valiant.
The only bad thing here was the cigarette smoking.
The race sponsor was a tobacco / cigarette company.
Leave out the politics
Rauno Aaltonnen! (or however you spell his Finnish name, spellings) - RAUNO Aaltonnen - I eventually remembered. 🙂
😎
You're very close....one letter out...still very good 👍👍👍👍
I love Minis, no doubt, but it was a different story the following year when Ford entered the 289 inch Falcons ruclips.net/video/_zbqjJqCZD0/видео.html
The minis were still competitive for years, it's not all about cubic inches, granted they probably didn't win as much when the big V8 were involved, but just the fact they hardly need to brake for corners, and they are so low, means they can keep a lot of speed into the corners, which gives them an advantage over the bigger cars. Have a look at the historic racing from Goodwood and you can see the Mini's Cortina's and Alfa's keep up with the big V8 iron.
Me mates mum had an Australian built Mini K. It was a burnt orange colour, Calypso Red or Orange. Anyway, that little mini K could go like fuck. Mrs. Mac traded it in for a spankin new mini clubman in 75 but it didn't go as good as the little mini K from Aussie, go Aussie hahaha, I'm a Kiwi, root me boot hahaha
No roll cage 100mph I like it better f1 any day!
and to think... we can buy a 1999 JDM mini, pop a honda B18 engine in, and rule 2020.... (eg my 1999 mini rocks lol) 50 years after minis ruled Bathurst
Toyota all about quality back then its a shame they forgot that the stuff they make now is crap
The Japanese did pretty well, but obviously the future lies with the British Motor Corporation
Super cars ruined all this when you had the likes of Moffat whinged about production cars not being race cars,,,, duh,,,, wanker!! it was a production car endurance race that was raced on Sunday and mr. average bought the same car on Monday.
Agreed, the expression I grew up with was win on Sunday, sell on Monday. That just meant that what you saw is what you bought, not the crap that is Bathurst racing today. Can't buy one of them and drive to work! Cheers Mate, John, Australia.
Mini;s are like flies no soul . fast but a pest
thats your opinion, everybody has an opinion, its just you're wrong
i wanted to see the wheel roll the rest of the way down the hill