1913 Grand Prix season

Grand Prix season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1913 Grand Prix season consisted of Grand Prix races in Europe and the United States. Once again, the Peugeot works cars were the team to beat, continuing their success. This year the French Grand Prix was held in Amiens. The ACF introduced a fuel-economy formula for the race to discourage bigger-engined cars. Peugeot drivers Georges Boillot and Jules Goux claimed a 1-2 victory for the company after Zuccarelli had been killed in practice.

In the United States, the growing expense of hosting the Vanderbilt Cup and American Grand Prize meant they were not held this year. So it was that the Indianapolis 500 became the premier American event this year. The Europeans crossed the Atlantic for the race and Goux had a comfortable 13-minute margin of victory for Peugeot ahead of Spencer Wishart’s new Mercer.

Peugeot did not contest the Coupe de la Sarthe at Le Mans where Paul Bablot and Albert Guyot, in the new Delage Type Y, had a 1-2 victory themselves. However, with the new 3-litre EX-5 variant, Peugeot won the last major race of the year with Boillot and Goux finishing 1-2 at the Coupe des Voiturettes.

By winning five of the fourteen races in the series, Earl Cooper in the new Stutz, was acclaimed as the AAA national champion for the year.

Major races

Sources:[1][2][3][4]

More information Date, Name ...
Date Name Circuit Race
Regulations
Race
Distance
Winner’s
Time
Winning driver Winning
constructor
Report
11/12 May Italy VIII Targa Florio
(Giro di Sicilia)
Sicily Targa Florio 980 km 19h 19m Italy Felice Nazzaro Nazzaro Tipo 2 Report
30 May United States III Indianapolis 500 Indianapolis AAA 500 miles 6h 35m France Jules Goux Peugeot L-76 Report
26 May Russia I Russian Grand Prix St Petersburg 2h 24m Russia Georgy Suvorin Benz 29/60 hp Report
15 Jun Spain RACE Grand Prix Guadarrama Tourer cars 303 km 3h 34m Spain Carlos de Salamanca Rolls-Royce Report
15 Jun France I Circuit de Provence Trets 300 km France Georges Boillot Peugeot EX-3 Report
12 Jul France XIII French Grand Prix Amiens ACF 920 km 7h 54m France Georges Boillot Peugeot EX-3 Report
5 Aug France III Grand Prix de France Le Mans Formula Libre 540 km 4h 22m France Paul Bablot Delage Type Y Report
5 Aug France II Coupe de la Sarthe Le Mans Voiturette 540 km 5h 48m Italy Jean Porporato Grégoire Report
13 Aug Belgium II Grand Prix du RACB Spa Formula Libre . Derney Springuel Report
21 Sep France VIII Coupe des Voiturettes
(Coupe de l’Auto)
Boulogne Voiturette 625 km 6h 05m France Georges Boillot Peugeot EX-5 Report
Close

Technical

The innovative Peugeot L-76 had appeared the previous year. Powered by a four-cylinder 7.6L engine with a twin-overhead camshaft, with four valves per cylinder developing 148 bhp.[5] In March Jules Goux took one to Brooklands where he raised the record for the flying half-mile to 109.99 mph (177.01 km/h).[6][7]

The Peugeot engine was the first to use Dry-sump lubrication that would become standard as racing cars needed engines lowered to drop their centre of gravity.[8] With the variety of racing regulations, Peugeot set about developing modified versions of the 7.6-litre engine. Cylinder inserts made it a 7.3-litre engine, while a 5.7-litre was made for the Grand Prix EX-3 model[6] and a 3.0-litre voiturette version for the new EX-5.[9] The team also introduced wheels secured by winged wheel-nuts that allowed them to be hammered off far quicker in pit-stops than the old-style “artillery-wheels” of other teams.[6]

Season review

References

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