Brooklands
Motoring Festival a Great Success
Bugatti
Beats All Comers in Double Twelve
Competition
Riley
Sprints to Top Honours on the Track
A
1926 Bugatti Type 35 which was sold to its first
owner by Brooklands personality Malcolm Campbell made a triumphant
return to
the Birthplace of British Motorsport. It beat a strong field
of
immaculate classic cars to take overall first place in the Brooklands
Double Twelve
competition on Sunday for its current owner, Chris Jaques. And in a
similarly
nail-biting finish on the Mercedes-Benz World circuit next door, Pete
Candy’s
1936 Riley Special “Super Rat” stole first place in
the Brooklands Speed Trials
by just 0.2 sec from Terry Crabb’s ERA R12C. The
two competitions kept a
strong crowd at the 2010 Brooklands Double Twelve Motoring Festival
– organised
by Brooklands
Museum
and the Vintage Sports-Car Club – captivated throughout two
days of motoring
action, spectacle and glamour which culminated with the
Museum’s Royal Patron
Prince Michael of Kent
presenting the Double Twelve prizes.

In
the Double Twelve competition – in which car and
driver had to excel in both complicated driving tests and the rigorous
judging
of a concours d’élégance to be in with
a chance of winning – the Bugatti
narrowly but decisively beat Simon Taylor’s beautiful 1937
Bentley 4¼ litre
Sedanca Coupé, which was a winner at last year’s
Pebble Beach concours in the
USA. Other class winners included John Dennis’ 1907/16
Berliet-Curtiss racer,
Alex Pilkington’s 1930 Alfa Romeo 1750 Zagato, Bryan
Smart’s 1973 Porsche 2.7
RS Carrera and Jo Moss’ 1973 Morgan Plus 8.
Another
historic Grand Prix Bugatti claimed honours in
the Brooklands Speed Trials – this time it was Martin
Overington’s spectacular
1927 Type 35B grand prix car, which was the fastest Vintage (pre-1931)
car,
taking just 1.36 longer to cover the 900 metre course than
Candy’s time of 43.0
sec. The fastest road-going sports car was Andrew Mitchell’s
1937 HRG 1½ litre,
and honours in the closely-fought Edwardian (pre-1919) class
– with six giant
racers taking part - went to Karl Foulkes-Halbard’s
5 litre 1907 Corbin
Vanderbilt Cup car.
Brooklands
Museum Director Allan
Winn
said: “The 2010 Brooklands Double
Twelve Motoring Festival proved to be a real hit with competitors and
spectators alike. We were very pleased to see so many families and
enthusiasts
enjoying the biggest competition event held at Brooklands since the
original
circuit closed in 1939. We look forward to building on the success of
this
weekend at the next event in June 2011.”