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1970 24 Hours of Le Mans

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197024 Hours of Le Mans
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The197024 Hours of Le Manswas the 38th Grand Prix of Endurance and took place on 13 and 14 June 1970. It was the 8th stage of the1970 World Sportscar Championship season.

Once again Porsche had a dominant year in the championship and arrived as strong favourites to get their first outright victory. Their main opposition would come from Ferrari, now armed with the homologated512Smodel. Fully nine917sand eleven 512s from works-supported teams and privateers were entered. However heavy rain through most of the race neutralised much of their power and contributed to a number of serious accidents. In a race of heavy attrition where only seven cars were classified as finishers it was won by race veteranHans Herrmannand co-driverRichard ‘Dickie’ Attwood.

For Herrmann, a veteran of 13 Le Mans, it was particularly sweet having lost by the narrowest margin the previous year. All Porsche's main challengers (Ferrari, Matra, Alfa Romeo) were beaten in the first half of the race. Porsche's dominance was complete – winning all three prizes and taking all the class-wins. The only dark spot was Ickx's accident at the Ford Chicane during the night which killed a track marshal.

This was the year thatHollywoodcame to Le Mans. The race provided the background for theSteve McQueenmovieLe Mans.Some of the racing footage (mainly the first moments of the race) of the motion picture was taken from on board a competing car, as the #29Porsche 908-022 entered by Solar Productions had been fitted with movie cameras but most of the on board footage was useless due to technical issues.[1]

Le Mans in 1970

Regulations[edit]

After only four years, the CSI (Commission Sportive Internationale - theFIA’s regulations body) overhauled its FIA Appendix J, redefining again the motorsport categories. GT cars were now extended toGroup 3(minimum production of 1000 cars) andGroup 4for ‘Special GT cars’ (min. =500). The former Group 4 for Sports Cars became the newGroup 5(min. = 25) while Prototypes stayed asGroup 6.The 5-litre engine limit on the Sports Cars remained – allowing the Porsche 917 and new Ferrari 512 to race, although they were on notice that this would fall to a 3-litre limit for the start of the 1972 season.[2]

TheAutomobile Club de l'Ouest(ACO) was now fully aligned with the FIA's technical regulations.[3]They also made changes to its race regulations. Three drivers were now permitted in each car, and a driver was allowed to switch (once) to another car of the same make during the race.[4]Maximum drive-times were set at 14 hours, in up to 240 minutes at a time with at least a one-hour break between shifts. Night-time, when headlights had to be used, was defined as between 21:00 & 04:30 and luminous car numbers were introduced. Mechanical restrictions remained – a 25-lap distance between oil replenishment and only 4 crew could work on a car on the pit-apron. Finally, every car had to complete the final lap within fifteen minutes to be classified. The most significant change was the abolition of the famous “Le Mans start”: running across the track to get in and start the car. This year the cars would still line up in echelon however the drivers would start in the cars fully strapped in (a full race harness now became compulsory).[4][3]A line of four flagmen would now simultaneously wavele tricolorewhen drivers would start their cars and pull away.[2]

Another 12 km of Armco was added to the track completing the project started the previous year to encircle the track with safety barriers. Also, the Esses and Tertre Rouge corners were widened and resurfaced.[2][3][5]

Entries[edit]

The winning Porsche 917K of Herrmann/Attwood
Martini Racing 917L in blue-green "psychedelic" livery, which placed 2nd overall driven by Larrousse/Kauhsen

This year there were 96 entries for the race, to which the ACO accepted 62 for qualifying. In the end 57 arrived for scrutineering in a very even split between the Prototypes, Sports and GT cars. Nearly a third were just the very powerful Porsche 917 or Ferrari 512 strongly increasing public interest. Significant absentees this year were Ford andAlpine.[4] With such a strong entry list the ACO decided it could drop the smaller 1.3- and 1.6-litre classes for the first time post-war.[2]

Category Classes Prototype
Group 6
Sports
Group 5
GT
Groups 3+4
Total
entries
Large-engines >2.5L classes 12 (+1 reserve) 21 2 35 (+1 reserve)
Medium-engines 2.0 / 2.5L classes 4 (+1 reserve) 1 (+2 reserves) 6 (+7 reserves) 11 (+10 reserves)
Total cars 16 (+2 reserves) 22 (+2 reserves) 8 (+7 reserves) 46 (+11 reserves)

After an inauspicious debut in 1969, extensive work was done by Porsche to fix the stability and reliability of the 917. After being beaten by a supposedly obsolete car,PorschecontractedJohn Wyerand his Gulf-J.W. Automotive Engineering Team to become the official works-supported team and development partner.[6][7]During tests inZeltweg,Wyer's engineer John Horsmann had the idea to increase downforce at the expense of drag, and so a new short tail was moulded with aluminium sheets taped together. This worked well as the new tail gave the 917 better stability.[8]The new version was called the 917K (kurzheckor ‘short-tail’). A new aerodynamic version was developed for Le Mans with support from the external consultant Robert Choulet.[9]The 917 L (langheck) featured a spectacular new "long tail" body with a wing, which had very low drag. They were dubbed “batmobiles”by the media.[6]Two engines were available: the 4.5-litre flat-12 now capable of 550 bhp, and a new 4.9-litre version (590 bhp). Most drivers preferred driving the K even though it gave away as much as 25 km/h (15 mph) in top speed. Thelangheckwas less stable and needed far more concentration to keep on the track.[9][10][11]

Porsche's works drivers had been inherited by the JWAE team who fielded three 917Ks. The lead car was driven byJo SiffertandBrian Redmanwho had already won two rounds in the championship.Pedro Rodriguez(Le Mans winner in1968for Wyer) andLeo Kinnunen,in the second car, had won three races. BritsDavid HobbsandMike Hailwood,who had driven Wyer's Ford the previous year, had the third car with a 4.5-litre engine.[9]A fourth JWA 917K entry was not accepted - the drivers were to have been actorSteve McQueenand reigning F1 world championJackie Stewart.

As Ford had done several years earlier, Porsche also supported a rival, second works team based in Austria (much to Wyer's surprise). The newPorsche Salzburgwas run byLouise Piëch,sister ofFerry Porscheand mother of company Technical DirectorFerdinand Piëch.Vic Elford/Kurt Ahrensran the 4.9-litre 917L, while Swiss-pairing Rico Steinemann/Dieter Spoerry and veteransHans Herrmann/Richard Attwoodhad 4.5-litre Ks.[9]

TheMartini Racingcustomer team also gained some support from Porsche AG, being the other runner of a 917L forGérard Larrousse/Willi Kauhsen.The spectacular livery of this car was an elaborate scheme of whirls and swoops of green on a blue background.[12]The car gained the nickname of theHippie Caror thePsychedelic Porschefrom the team and the media and started the Le Mans tradition of the “art-car” special. The final 917 was co-entered by its owner, the Finnish AAW Racing Team, and British privateerDavid Piper.WithGijs van Lennepas driver, that 917 had already proven very competitive through the championship year.[12]

In June 1969,Enzo Ferrarihad sold half of his company toFiatand that money was able to finance, like Porsche, the construction of the required 25 cars of its new Group 5 car: theFerrari 512S.Based on the 612, Ferrari's Group 7 Can-Am car, it had a 5.0L V12 developing 550 bhp. After a victory atSebringthe car had improved reliability and an aerodynamic long-tail version (coda lunga) was built. Eight such cars were prepared for Le Mans. Four were in the works team, led by their two F1 driversJacky IckxandClay Regazzoni,paired with hill-climb specialist Peter Schetty andArturo Merzariorespectively. Ickx was carrying an injury after escaping from a burning car at theSpanish GPand then suffering a fuel leak atSpajust two weeks ago.[13]In the other cars were Le Mans winnerNino VaccarellawithIgnazio Giuntiand young F1 driversDerek BellandRonnie Peterson.[14]Bell replacedJean Guichetwho had been injured in a road accident and missing his first Le Mans since 1959.[6]

Ferrari 512 S entered by Scuderia Filipinetti and driven by Parkes and Müller
Ferrari 512 S entered by Scuderia Filipinetti and driven by Parkes and Müller

Ferrari customer teams were also equipped with the 512S.Scuderia Filipinettihad three cars led by experienced drivers.Mike Parkes/Herbert Müllerand SwedesJo Bonnier/Reine Wisellin longtails; and ItaliansGianpiero Moretti/Corrado Manfredini (and his Scuderia Picchio Rosso). TheNorth American Racing Team(NART) had two: a longtail driven by AmericansSam Posey/Ronnie Bucknum,and a standard forHelmut Kelleners/Georg Loos (and his Gelo Racing Team). Former regularsEcurie Francorchampsalso entered a longtail, returning after a four-year absence. There was also an entry for the new Spanish Escuderia Montjuich team who ran the open-top “spyder” variant.[15][11]

The only other cars in the big Group 5 class were a pair ofLola T70s.However, even with the 5-litre Chevrolet developing almost 500 bhp, they were no longer any match for the Porsches and Ferraris.[16]

Matra MS660 of Pescarolo/Beltoise during the race
Matra MS660 of Pescarolo/Beltoise during the race

This year the 3-litre Prototypes were not expected to be able to keep up with the power of the big Porsche and Ferraris.Matrahad kept away from the championship to concentrate on winning Le Mans. However, development of the new MS660 had been difficult and only one was ready - entrusted to works driversHenri PescaroloandJean-Pierre Beltoise.Despite using an upgraded F1 V12-engine (detuned back to 420 bhp) it proved slower than the twoMS650sentered. The long-tail MS650 was driven byJack Brabham/François Cevert,whilePatrick Depailler/Jean-Pierre Jabouillehad a short-tail version.[17][13][11]

Autodelta,the racing division ofAlfa Romeo,returned to Le Mans after a difficult year. They had the latest iteration of theT33.The 3-litre V8 developed 400 bhp and its longtail format gave it a bump of 25 km/h (15 mph). The team brought four cars and had a strong driver line-up enticingRolf Stommelen(from Porsche) and ‘Nanni’ Galli (from Matra). The others hadPiers Courage/Andrea de Adamich,Masten Gregory/Toine HezemansandCarlo Facetti/Teodoro Zeccoli.[18][11]

Porsche had their 908/02 spyders that had been very successful the previous year. Martini ran two such cars for Lins/Markoand Spoerry/de Cortanze.[19]A 908 spyder was entered by Solar Productions, which was actorSteve McQueen’s film production company. Driven byHerbert Linge/Jonathan Williamsit was fitted with cameras to record race footage for McQueen’s film. NART had bought the312Pworks cars from Ferrari and two were entered in the Prototype category.[20]Healey returned with its prototype for a third (and final) time, now as an open-top spyder, and with a biggerRepco3-litre V8. It would be driven by Roger Enever and Andrew Hedges.

In the smaller-engine categories, there was a new manufacturer present. French racing-driver turned car-makerGuy Ligierhad his new JS-1 prototype, with a 1.8-litre Ford-CosworthFVC engine that put out 240 bhp. Ligier drove it himself alongsideJean-Claude Andruet.[21]As well as a pair of privateer Porsche 910s there were also threeChevronB16s each with a different engine, the most interesting of which was the innovativeMazda Wankel-rotary.[22]

The GT category was once again dominated by privateer Porsche 911s. Many had been uprated with the new 2.2-litre engine. There was also a new Porsche model, the 914/6. The 1991cc flat-6 engine put out 100 bhp and the car was 40kg lighter than the rival 911s. Entered by“Toto” Veuillet's French team Sonauto, it was driven byGuy Chasseuil/Claude Ballot-Léna.[23]Veuillet himself, as a driver, had given Porsche their first ever class-win at Le Mans back in1951.

Rally-specialist Henri Greder supplied the twoChevrolet Corvettes,the biggest cars in the entry list.[11]Even though General Motors officially had a long-standing ban on racing and supporting privateers, he had a new convertible and had sold his previous car to the Claude Aubriet's Ecurie Léopard. The 7-litre engines now put out 560 bhp and had a top speed of 305 km/h (190 mph).[24]

Practice[edit]

As expected the longtail 917s were extremely fast. But it was Pedro Rodriguez who set the initial pace in the Wyer 917K breaking Stommelen's lap record by a second with a 3:21.9. Though not as quick as the longtails, the Ferraris were still faster than the 917Ks and Nino Vaccarella caused quite a stir on the first night of practise when he clocked the fastest time of 3:20.0. Vic Elford then went out on Thursday and put in a 3:19.8, fractionally faster than Vaccarella to take the pole position.[10]

The Wyer Porsches were third and fifth, split by Merzario's Ferrari, then there was a row of Ferraris: the other two works cars of Ickx and Bell, and the two Filipinetti cars of Parkes and Wisell. Slowest of the 917 qualifiers was the third Porsche-Salzburg car of Herrmann/Attwood, doing a 3:32.6 after struggling with brake-issues, to start 15th.[9][25]

Just ahead of it, in 14th, was the fastest of the Prototypes – the Matra of Brabham/Cevert (3:32.2), ahead of Stommelen's Alfa Romeo in 17th. Yet, after a year of development the Matras were disappointing – coming in three seconds slower than the previous year's 3-litre Porsches.[13]Best of the 2-litres was the new Ligier (4:03.4), and quickest GT was the Léopard Corvette (4:07.2)

The biggest moment of the practice sessions was on Wednesday night when Dieter Spoerry's 908 and Jack Brabham's Matra arrived at the Ford Chicane at the same time. Spoerry's car disintegrated and burst into flames, but the driver got out only lightly injured. However, badly shaken from the experience and an injured leg, he subsequently failed his medical test and the two cars he was cross-entered in (the third Salzburg 917 and the wrecked Martini 908) were withdrawn.[19][13][26][11]

A disconcerting feature of the Wednesday practice was the extreme number of punctures – the JWA team alone had ten, and Ferrari had six. JWA's team managerDavid Yorkeattributed it to the excessive number of bolts and pieces left by the Armco crews the day before. The wide, soft tyres used and hot summer temperatures may also have contributed, but the circuit was swept before the Thursday practice sessions.[10]

Race[edit]

Start[edit]

Cars being pushed into place before the race start. Three Scuderia Ferrari 512 S are visible in the foreground, with the Porsche 917s of Gulf, Martini and Porsche Salzburg behind them.
Cars being arranged at the start line before the race. Three Scuderia Ferrari 512 S are visible in the foreground, with the six Porsche 917s of Gulf, Martini and Porsche Salzburg behind them.

After a very hot week, Friday afternoon brought thunderstorms and then rain overnight. Although further storms were predicted by the time of the race-start the weather was overcast but dry. Most cars that were lined up with wet-tyres were quickly changed back to slicks for the start.[10]

Following the bad (including one fatal) accidents soon after the start of the previous two years, with drivers not having fastened their seatbelts to save time, the ACO finally abolished the traditional “Le Mans start”. This year the cars were lined up in echelon (but a shallower angle to allow easier getaway) with the drivers fully belted and strapped in for the start.[27]From 1971 onwards, races would begin with rolling starts.[28]Reverting this year back to its normal start time of 4pm, the guest starter this year wasDrFerry Porsche,marking Porsche's 20th year of participation.[29]Everyone got away smoothly and at the end of the first lap Elford led Siffert and Rodriguez, then the Ferraris of Merzario and Vaccarella.[13][5]They started lapping tail-enders after only three laps.[10]

But after only seven laps Vaccarella's Ferrari was in the pits with its crankshaft broken, and was out. It was followed soon after by the Gregory/Hezemans Alfa, with its engine wrecked, and then the Alfa was followed to retirement on the 23rd lap, after the first pitstops, by the JWA 917K ofPedro Rodríguez,who stopped at Arnage with a blown engine from cooling fan failure.[8][10]After Elford had set a new lap record, he and Siffert established a clear margin at the front of the field and settled into a routine of alternating the lead.

At 5.30pm the rain finally arrived. Soon after,Reine Wisell,barely able to see through his Ferrari's oil-streaked windscreen had slowed on the side of the road approaching the very fast and tricky Maison Blanche (English:White House) corner. Suddenly four duelling Ferraris arrived at speed: Posey in the NART car raced past. Unsighted, Regazzoni smashed into Wisell followed by the Parkes car that caught fire. Le Mans debutanteDerek Bellhad managed to swerve past Wisell but the excessive gearbox change-downs over-revved his engine and the car broke half a lap later on theMulsanne Straight.Ferrari had four of its leading contenders taken out in one hit, but the only injury was to Parkes with minor burns to his leg.[14][13]

A few laps later, the rain triggered another accident when Carlo Facetti spun his Alfa at Dunlop Curve, hitting the barriers. He got out and was running back to the pits to get two replacement wheels whenMike Hailwood,on his last lap on slicks in the third Wyer Porsche, crashed into the parked Alfa Romeo,[9]leaving just three of the top 10 qualifiers running.[29]

Night[edit]

The rain became torrential around 8pm as dusk fell, sending many cars skating. Helmut Kelleners hit the barriers at the Esses, avoiding a spinning car. Gijs van Lennephad qualified the AAW Racing Team’s 917 11th and with the attrition they had moved up to 3rd by 10pm when co-entrant and driver David Piper spun it in the Esses, nudging the barrier and damaging the front suspension.[12]Due to a faulty batch of third-party supplied parts, all three Matras retired with leaking piston rings within ten laps of each other, when Brabham and Cevert had been leading the prototypes, and running as high as 7th.[17]The French challenge had dissolved within four hours.

Alfa Romeo T33 of de Adamich/Courage during the race. It retired due to engine problems.
Alfa Romeo T33 of de Adamich/Courage during the race. It retired due to engine problems.

It was now that the skill ofJacky Ickxcame to the fore. While others proceeded with caution he made up time, bringing the Ferrari up to third despite his body's discomfort.[13]When the Elford/Ahrens Porsche had to pit with wayward handling (that was traced to a slow puncture, and dropping them to 5th) he moved up to second at midnight. Soon afterward, van Lennep was motoring down the Mulsanne Straight in the AAW 917 at close to 290 km/h when a tyre blew out, possibly due to the earlier damage. His skill kept it on the ground and off the wall but the chassis damage was too severe to continue.[12]The de Adamich/Courage Alfa Romeo was leading the Prototypes, in 6th, until a long pit stop before midnight delayed it. On its next shift Courage ran out of fuel approaching the pits and had to get out and push it. When it arrived it had five people pushing and needed a jump-start to resume – all illegal in the regulations, but the officials either could not or did not see it.[30]

At 1.45am Ickx's epic charge came to a tragic end. He was trying to unlap himself from Siffert when the Ferrari's rear brakes failed approaching the Ford chicane. He crashed into a sodden sandbank and was launched over it, bursting into flame and killing track marshal Jacques Argoud and injuring another. Ickx himself was unharmed.[14][13][31]With all 4 works Ferraris out, the Ferrari challenge to Porsche was effectively over.

The Siffert/Redman JWAE Porsche continued to run strongly, building up a huge 10-lap lead by 2am.[8]That was until Siffert accidentally missed a gear-change lapping back-markers and broke the engine. So at half-time, the lead had passed to the Porsche-Salzburg's third car of Herrmann/Attwood (176 laps) that had been lapping consistently and moving up steadily from its lowly grid position of 15th. Martini's psychedelic longtail was second, three laps back. But soon after water got into electrics and it lost time, dropping two places. Elford/Ahrens had pushed back up to 3rd (172 laps) and the Lins/Marko 908 in 4th (171 laps) had a handy 5-lap lead in the Group 6 category over Stommelen's Alfa Romeo in 5th.

Morning[edit]

The Porsche 914/6 of Ballot-Léna/Chasseuil passes the wrecked Ecurie Léopard Corvette at the Esses
The Porsche 914/6 of Ballot-Léna/Chasseuil passes the wrecked Ecurie Léopard Corvette at the Esses

At dawn the weather turned from heavy rain to a storm. At 6am, after 16 hours, Porsches still held the top four places: Herrmann/Attwood leading with the Elford/Ahrens ‘longtail’ back up to second, the Lins/Marko 908 in third (and first prototype) and the Larrousse/Kauhsen Martini-‘longtail’ in fourth. Fifth was the Stommelen/Galli Alfa Romeo, ahead of the Ferraris of NART (Posey/Bucknum) and Ecurie Francorchamps (Fierlandt/Walker) and the NART 312P (the Alfa's rival in the Prototype category). The French Porsche 914 was leading the GT category, in 10th, in a terrific tussle with Greder's Corvette and the Ecurie Luxembourg 911. Half the field were now retirements.

At 8am the Stommelen/Galli Alfa, just overtaken by the NART Ferrari, was unable to get away from its pitstop without a push-start, for which it was subsequently disqualified within the hour.[13]Then at 8.30am, after 18 hours, Elford's 917 was stopped by engine problems. The rain finally eased off and the track was virtually dry by 9.30am.[30]That allowed Larrousse/Kauhsen to pick up their pace and they moved up to second place by midday and set about trying to catch the leaders.[12]The field was widely spread: Herrmann/Attwood had a 5-lap lead (282 laps) over the two Martini Porsches, a comfortable 15 laps ahead of the Posey/Bucknum Ferrari and a further 12-laps to the Belgian Ferrari (250) with the NART 312P ofAdamowicz/Parsonsin 6th (237 laps).[30][32]

Finish and post-race[edit]

Going into the last hours, most of the leading positions remained unchanged. The two remaining Chevrons had been running at the back of the field for much of the latter half of the race after both needing engine rebuilds. After the BMW engine failed one, the faster Cosworth-engined car carried on as the only survivor in the 2-litre Prototype class. However it was stopped with only 90 minutes to run.[22]The Healey prototype, which had been battling gearbox issues for most of the race, requiring a rebuild. With less than a quarter-hour, and two laps, to go and still in 14th, Roger Enever headed out on a final lap, but for the sake of a 10-cent part, the engine stopped on the Mulsanne Straight and the car would not restart.[33][34]Outlasting the Matras and Alfas, the NART 312P had moved up to 6th but with 3 hours to go it developed a serious misfire. It took a long time to replace the sparkplugs and the team knew they would not reach their target distance. When the electrics finally packed up on the final lap approaching Maison Blanche, spectators jumped the fence and helped push Adamowicz to the line, the 10th car home.[35]

Hans HerrmannandRichard Attwoodin their red and white No. 23 Porsche Salzburg 917K won by five laps. In a great debut for the newMartini Racingteam,Gérard LarrousseandWilli Kauhsenfinished second in the psychedelic 917 longtail[36]and the 908/02 of Rudi Lins andHelmut Markowas third. Despite sounding very rough and errant steering, the Posey/Bucknum NART Ferrari kept going and was rewarded with a fourth place. The Belgian Ferrari was fifth, meeting its required distance by a single lap. Although the French Corvette was the first GT home, it hadn’t achieved its required minimum distance, so the GT prize went to the 914/6 of Ballot-Léna/Chasseuil finishing a lap behind. They had a remarkable run without having to change brakes or even tyres.[23]Three laps further back was the Ecurie Luxembourg 911.

In a typically attrition-filled Le Mans 24 Hours, it was a dominant victory by Porsche: of the sixteen cars running at the end, twelve were Porsches, and the top 3 were all Porsche prototypes. None of the factory Ferraris, Alfas or Matras finished the race, and only 2 privateer Ferraris finished. However, many of the Porsche 911s were slowed by the atrocious weather and covered insufficient distance to be classified. As well as finishing 1-2-3, Porsche had won all four classes that had finishers. The third-placed 908 claimed the Index of Performance while the Martini 917 won the Index of Thermal Efficiency.

Hans Herrmann was a race-veteran at age 42 in his 13th Le Mans and had driven for Mercedes and Porsche in F1 and survived the dangerousMille MigliaandCarrera Panamericanaraces of the 1950s. He had promised his wife to quit racing if he should finally win Le Mans, a success which he had missed narrowly by barely 120 metres in 1969. So he retired with immediate effect, much to the surprise of his Porsche Salzburg team. For someone whose career with Porsche extended back to 1953, with Porsche's first mid-engine car, the550,it was appropriate he was there when the marque finally won its coveted Le Mans outright victory at its 20th attempt.

GT-class Chevrolet Corvette of Greder/Rouget during the race

Later in the year, the FIA acknowledged the weather had severely compromised the GT Corvette with its target distance skewed because of its 7-litre engine compared to the Porsches, and awarded it first-place points for the GT Cup. The ACO did not change its results but did send Greder a cheque equivalent to the GT-winners prize-money.[24]The ACO also released some commercial information: 300 000 spectators, about half of them paying the entry fee. Around 10% were foreigners supervised by an additional 40000 officials, police, emergency staff, journalists and trades people. Three hundred commercial sites (bars, cafés, fairground) raised 6.5 million francs with another 7 million from advertising that barely covered the cost to run the race. The circuit used electricity equivalent to a city of 80000, and over 2.5 million phonecalls were made.[37]

However it was another terrible year for driver deaths and injuries. Just a fortnight before the race, former Le Mans winnerBruce McLarenhad been killed testing his new car. Piers Courage, driving the Alfa Romeo in this race, died during theF1 Dutch GP.To underline the safety problem,Jochen Rindt,1965 Le Mans winner, was killed atMonzabecoming the only posthumous F1 World Champion.[38]

Thirty years later, the second-placed Martini Porsche and its psychedelic paint scheme was voted by a public poll as the “Le Mans Car of the Century”.[12][39]

The Steve McQueen movieLe Mans[edit]

The Solar Productions Porsche 908 during the race. Camera housings are visible at front and rear.
The Solar Productions Porsche 908-022 during the race. Bulky camera housings are visible at front and rear.

A notable presence at this year's race was Solar Productions,Steve McQueen’s film company, at La Sarthe to make a feature film revolving around the race directed byJohn Sturges.McQueen, at that time one of Hollywood’s most bankable action stars, had purchased a Porsche 908 spyder to race. WithPeter Revsonas co-driver, he had come second at theSebring 12 Hoursearlier in the year only 20 seconds behind the Ferrari winner. He was pencilled in to share a JWAE Porsche 917 with current F1 World ChampionJackie Stewartbut his life insurance company refused to cover him for Le Mans. JWAE did however supply two of the cars and a number of mechanics for the film. The 908 was entered for the race and equipped with cameras to record on-track race footage.[40][41]

Happy that the script had a Gulf-Porsche victory, Porsche released their works driverHerbert Lingeto drive the camera-car, alongsideJonathan Williams.For the same reason,Enzo Ferrarideclined to provide any cars for the film, and the Ferraris depicted in the film were supplied by theJacques SwatersEcurie Francorchamps.[40]

However, after filming the first two laps and pitting for a camera change, the car was delayed by a problematic starter motor. The heavy rain also compromised the chances to get daylight racing footage. Despite that, the car collected more than 250,000 feet of film, although the frequent stops meant the car could not cover enough distance to be classified.[40]

As well as using the car, Solar did filming at the April test weekend beforehand and had six cameras positioned around the circuit. Although the ACO was adamant that cameramen would not be positioned in front of the safety barriers by the track. Solar also hired the track for 12 weeks after the race and had 26 Sports and Prototypes on hand. Older Lolas were rebodied and used for the crash sequences. A number of the race's drivers were also on hand, including Attwood, Bell, Elford, Galli, Jabouille, Parkes, Redman, Siffert, Spoerry and Stommelen. In August, Derek Bell suffered minor burns when his Ferrari suddenly caught fire. Later,David Piperhad a far more serious accident when his Porsche blew a tyre at speed. The car smashed into the barriers on both sides of the track and broke in two. Although Piper survived, he had to have his lower right leg amputated.[40][41]

Official results[edit]

Finishers[edit]

Results taken from Quentin Spurring's book, officially licensed by theACO[42]Class winners are inboldtext.

Pos Class No. Team Drivers Chassis Engine Tyre Laps
1 S
5.0
23 AustriaPorsche Konstruktionen-
Salzburg
GermanyHans Herrmann
United KingdomRichard Attwood
Porsche 917K Porsche 4.5L F12 G 343
2 S
5.0
3 GermanyMartini International
Racing Team
FranceGérard Larrousse
GermanyWilli Kauhsen
Porsche 917L Porsche 4.5L F12 G 338
3 P
3.0
27 GermanyMartini International
Racing Team
AustriaHelmut Marko
AustriaRudi Lins
Porsche 908/2LH Porsche 3.0L F8 D 335
4 S
5.0
11 United StatesNorth American Racing Team United StatesRonnie Bucknum
United StatesSam Posey
Ferrari 512S Ferrari 5.0L V12 G 313
5 S
5.0
12 BelgiumEcurie Francorchamps BelgiumBaronHughes de Fierlandt
United KingdomAlistair Walker
Ferrari 512S Ferrari 5.0L V12 F 305
N/C * GT
+5.0
2 FranceGreder Racing
(private entrant)
FranceHenri Greder
FranceJean-Pierre Rouget
Chevrolet Corvette C3 Chevrolet 7.0L V8 G 286
6 GT
2.0
40 FranceÉtablissements Sonauto FranceClaude Ballot-Léna
FranceGuy Chasseuil
Porsche 914/6 GT Porsche 1991cc F6 D 285
N/C * P
3.0
29 United StatesSolar Productions[43] GermanyHerbert Linge
United KingdomJonathan Williams
Porsche 908/2
(Camera Car)
Porsche 3.0L F8 G 282
7 GT
2.5
47 LuxembourgÉcurie Luxembourg LuxembourgNicolas Koob
GermanyErwin Kremer
Porsche 911S Porsche 2253cc F6 D 282
N/C * P
3.0
57
(reserve)
United StatesNorth American Racing Team United StatesTony Adamowicz
United StatesChuck Parsons
Ferrari 312PCoupé Ferrari 3.0L V12 G 281
N/C * GT
2.5
62
(reserve)
FranceR. Mazzia
(private entrant)
FranceRené Mazzia
FrancePierre Mauroy
Porsche 911S Porsche 2195cc F6 275
N/C * GT
2.0
42 SwitzerlandWicky Racing Team FranceSylvain Garant
FranceGuy Verrier
Porsche 911T Porsche 1991cc F6 271
N/C * GT
2.0
67
(reserve)
FranceJ. Dechaumel
(private entrant)
FranceJacques Dechaumel
FranceJean-Claude Parot
Porsche 911S Porsche 1991cc F6 271
N/C * GT
2.5
45 FranceC. Laurent
(private entrant)
FranceClaude Laurent
FranceJacques Marché
Porsche 911S Porsche 2195cc F6 262
N/C * GT
2.0
64
(reserve)
SwitzerlandC. Haldi
(private entrant)
FranceJean Sage
SwitzerlandPierre Greub
Porsche 911S Porsche 1991cc F6 254
N/C * GT
2.0
66
(reserve)
FranceR. Touroul
(private entrant)
FranceJean-Claude Lagniez
FranceClaude Swietlik
Porsche 911S Porsche 1991cc F6 D 231
  • 'Note *:Not Classified because insufficient distance covered.

Did Not Finish[edit]

Pos Class No Team Drivers Chassis Engine Tyre Laps Reason
DNF P
3.0
34 United KingdomDonald Healey Motor Company United KingdomRoger Enever
United KingdomAndrew Hedges
HealeySR XR37 Repco740 3.0L V8 D 264 Electrics
(24hr)
DNF S
5.0
25 AustriaPorsche Konstruktionen-
Salzburg
United KingdomVic Elford
GermanyKurt Ahrens Jr.
Porsche 917L Porsche 4.9L F12 G 225 Engine
(18hr)
DNF P
3.0
36 ItalyAutodeltaSpA United KingdomPiers Courage
ItalyAndrea de Adamich
Alfa Romeo T33/3 Alfa Romeo 3.0L V8 F 222 Engine
(20hr)
DSQ P
3.0
35 ItalyAutodeltaSpA GermanyRolf Stommelen
ItalyNanni Galli
Alfa Romeo T33/3 Alfa Romeo 3.0L V8 F 220 Outside Assistance
(11hr)
DNF P
2.0
49 United KingdomChevronRacing Team United KingdomIan Skailes
United KingdomJohn Hine
ChevronB16 Ford CosworthFVC 1771cc S4 D 213 Engine
(24hr)
DNF P
2.0
44 United KingdomChevronRacing Team United KingdomClive Baker
United KingdomDigby Martland
ChevronB16 BMW1992cc S4 D 187 Engine
(20hr)
DNF P
2.5
61
(reserve)
SwitzerlandWicky Racing Team SwitzerlandAndré Wicky
FranceJean-Pierre Hanrioud
Porsche 907 Porsche 2195cc F6 161 Throttle
(17hr)
DNF S
5.0
20 United KingdomJW Automotive Engineering SwitzerlandJo Siffert
United KingdomBrian Redman
Porsche 917K Porsche 4.9L F12 F 156 Engine
(12hr)
DNF S
5.0
5 ItalySpAFerrariSEFAC BelgiumJacky Ickx
SwitzerlandPeter Schetty
Ferrari 512S Ferrari 5.0L V12 F 142 Accident
(11hr)
DNF GT
2.5
63
(reserve)
SwitzerlandRey Racing
(private entrant)
SwitzerlandJacques Rey
SwitzerlandBernard Chenevière
Porsche 911S Porsche 2247cc F6 D 132 Accident
(13hr)
DNF S
5.0
9 SpainEscuderia Montjuich SpainJosé Juncadella
SpainJuan Fernandez
Ferrari 512S Spyder Ferrari 5.0L V12 F 130 Accident
(12hr)
DNF P
2.0
60
(reserve)
FranceG. Verrier
(private entrant)
FranceDaniel Rouveyran
SwitzerlandWilly Meier
Porsche 910 Porsche 1991cc F6 128 Brakes
(15hr)
DNF GT
2.5
65
(reserve)
SwitzerlandHart Ski Racing
SwitzerlandClaude Haldi
SwitzerlandClaude Haldi
SwitzerlandArthur Blank
Porsche 911S Porsche 2247cc F6 D 124 Transmission
(19hr)
DNF S
2.0
46 FranceC. Poirot
(private entrant)
FranceChristian Poirot
GermanyErnst Kraus
Porsche 910 Porsche 1991cc F6 D 120 Engine
(14hr)
DNF S
5.0
18 United KingdomDavid PiperAutorace
FinlandAAW Racing Team
United KingdomDavid Piper
NetherlandsGijs van Lennep
Porsche 917K Porsche 4.5L F12 G 112 Accident
(11hr)
DNF S
5.0
16 SwitzerlandScuderia Filipinetti
ItalyScuderia Picchio Rosso
ItalyCorrado Manfredini
ItalyGianpiero Moretti
Ferrari 512S Ferrari 5.0L V12 G 111 Transmission
(13hr)
DNF S
5.0
4 BelgiumRacing Team VDS BelgiumTeddy Pilette
BelgiumGustave ‘Taf’ Gosselin
Lola T70Mk. IIIB Chevrolet4.9L V8 F 109 Transmission
(10hr)
DNF GT
2.5
43 BelgiumJ.-P. Gaban
(private entrant)
BelgiumJean-Pierre Gaban
BelgiumWilly Braillard
Porsche 911S Porsche 2195cc F6 D 109 Transmission
(11hr)
DNF P
3.0
31 FranceEquipe Matra Elf FranceJean-Pierre Beltoise
FranceHenri Pescarolo
Matra-Simca MS660 Matra 3.0L V12 G 79 Engine
(7hr)
DNF P
3.0
32 FranceEquipe Matra Elf AustraliaJack Brabham
FranceFrançois Cevert
Matra-Simca MS650 Matra 3.0L V12 G 76 Engine
(7hr)
DNF P
3.0
30 FranceEquipe Matra Elf FrancePatrick Depailler
FranceJean-Pierre Jabouille
Matra-Simca MS650 Matra 3.0L V12 G 70 Engine
(7hr)
DNF GT
2.5
59
(reserve)
FranceJ. Égreteaud
(private entrant)
FranceJean Égreteaud
FranceJean Mésange
Porsche 911S Porsche 2247cc F6 D 70 Engine
(8hr)
DNF P
2.0
50 FranceAutomobiles Ligier FranceGuy Ligier
FranceJean-Claude Andruet
Ligier JS1 Ford CosworthFVC 1786cc S4 D 65 Electrics
(8hr)
DNF S
5.0
10 United StatesNorth American Racing Team
GermanyGelo Racing Team
GermanyGeorg Loos
GermanyHelmut Kelleners
Ferrari 512S Ferrari 5.0L V12 G 54 Accident
(7hr)
DNF S
5.0
22 United KingdomJW Automotive Engineering United KingdomDavid Hobbs
United KingdomMike Hailwood
Porsche 917K Porsche 4.5L F12 F 49 Accident
(5hr)
DNF P
3.0
38 ItalyAutodeltaSpA ItalyTeodoro Zeccoli
ItalyCarlo Facetti
Alfa Romeo T33/3 Alfa Romeo 3.0L V8 F 43 Accident
(5hr)
DNF S
5.0
7 ItalySpAFerrariSEFAC United KingdomDerek Bell
SwedenRonnie Peterson
Ferrari 512S Ferrari 5.0L V12 F 39 Accident
(4hr)
DNF S
5.0
8 ItalySpAFerrariSEFAC ItalyArturo Merzario
SwitzerlandClay Regazzoni
Ferrari 512S Ferrari 5.0L V12 F 38 Accident
(4hr)
DNF GT
+5.0
1 FranceÉcurie Léopard FranceJean-Claude Aubriet
FranceJoseph Bourdon
Chevrolet Corvette C3 Chevrolet 7.0L V8 G 37 Accident
(5hr)
DNF S
5.0
15 SwitzerlandScuderia Filipinetti United KingdomMike Parkes
SwitzerlandHerbert Müller
Ferrari 512S Ferrari 5.0L V12 G 37 Accident
(4hr)
DNF S
5.0
14 SwitzerlandScuderia Filipinetti SwedenJo Bonnier
SwedenReine Wisell
Ferrari 512S Ferrari 5.0L V12 G 36 Accident
(4hr)
DNF S
5.0
21 United KingdomJW Automotive Engineering MexicoPedro Rodriguez
FinlandLeo Kinnunen
Porsche 917K Porsche 4.9L F12 F 22 Engine
(4hr)
DNF P
2.0
48 BelgiumLevi's International Racing Team BelgiumJulian Vernaeve
BelgiumYves Deprez
ChevronB16 Mazda10ATwin Rotor
(1964cc equivalent)
D 19 Engine
(4hr)
DNF S
5.0
6 ItalySpAFerrariSEFAC ItalyNino Vaccarella
ItalyIgnazio Giunti
Ferrari 512S Ferrari 5.0L V12 F 7 Engine
(1hr)
DNF P
3.0
37 ItalyAutodeltaSpA NetherlandsToine Hezemans
United StatesMasten Gregory
Alfa Romeo T33/3 Alfa Romeo 3.0L V8 F 5 Engine
(2hr)
Sources:[44][45][46]

Did Not Start[edit]

Pos Class No Team Drivers Chassis Engine Reason
DNS S
5.0
17 United KingdomGrand Bahamas Racing Team The BahamasRobin Ormes
United KingdomDavid Prophet
Lola T70Mk. IIIB Chevrolet4.9L V8 Did not qualify
DNS P
3.0
28 GermanyMartini International
Racing Team
FranceAndré de Cortanze
SwitzerlandDieter Spoerry
AustriaRudi Lins
Porsche 908/2 Porsche 3.0L F8 Practice accident
DNS P
3.0
39 United StatesNorth American Racing Team United StatesTony Adamowicz
United StatesSam Posey
Ferrari 312PCoupé Ferrari 3.0L V12 Spare car
DNS GT
2.5
41 SwitzerlandWicky Racing Team FranceSylvain Garant
FranceJean Mésange
Porsche 911S Porsche 2195cc F6 Withdrawn
DNQ S
2.0
68 United KingdomR. Johnson
(private entrant)
United KingdomRoy Johnson
United StatesErwin Barnes
ChevronB8 BMW1991cc S4 Did not qualify
DNA S
5.0
24 AustriaPorsche Konstruktionen-
Salzburg
SwitzerlandHans-Heinrich ‘Rico’ Steinemann
SwitzerlandDieter Spoerry
Porsche 917K Porsche 4.5L F12 Withdrawn
DNA S
5.0
26 United KingdomJW Automotive Engineering United KingdomJackie Stewart
United StatesSteve McQueen
Porsche 917K Porsche 4.5L F12 Withdrawn
DNA P
2.5
54 FranceG. Verrier
(private entrant)
FranceGuy Verrier
FranceFrederic Mural
Porsche 907 Porsche 2.2L F6 Reserve

Class Winners[edit]

Class Prototype
Winners
Class Sports
Winners
Class GT
Winners
Prototype
3000
#27 Porsche 908/2 LH Marko / Lins Sports
5000
#23 Porsche 917K Herrmann / Attwood Grand Touring
>2500
no finishers
Prototype
2500
no finishers Sports
2500
no entrants Grand Touring
2500
#47 Porsche 911 S Koob / Kremer *
Prototype
2000
no finishers Sports
2000
no finishers Grand Touring
2000
#40 Porsche 914/6 GT Ballot-Léna / Chasseuil
  • Note:setting a new class distance record.

Index of Thermal Efficiency[edit]

[47]

Pos Class No Team Drivers Chassis Score
1 S
5.0
3 GermanyMartini International
Racing Team
FranceGérard Larrousse
GermanyWilli Kauhsen
Porsche 917L 0.89
2 GT
2.0
40 FranceÉtablissements Sonauto FranceClaude Ballot-Léna
FranceGuy Chasseuil
Porsche 914/6 GT 0.80
3 P
3.0
27 GermanyMartini International
Racing Team
AustriaHelmut Marko
AustriaRudi Lins
Porsche 908/2LH 0.79
4 S
5.0
23 AustriaPorsche Konstruktionen -
Salzburg
GermanyHans Herrmann
United KingdomRichard Attwood
Porsche 917K 0.77
5 GT
2.5
47 LuxembourgÉcurie Luxembourg LuxembourgNicolas Koob
GermanyErwin Kremer
Porsche 911S 0.75

Index of Performance[edit]

Taken from Moity's book.[48][47]

Pos Class No Team Drivers Chassis Score
1 P
3.0
27 GermanyMartini International
Racing Team
AustriaHelmut Marko
AustriaRudi Lins
Porsche 908/2LH 1.151
2 S
5.0
23 AustriaPorsche Konstruktionen -
Salzburg
GermanyHans Herrmann
United KingdomRichard Attwood
Porsche 917K 1.132
3 S
5.0
3 GermanyMartini International
Racing Team
FranceGérard Larrousse
GermanyWilli Kauhsen
Porsche 917L 1.116
4 GT
2.0
40 FranceÉtablissements Sonauto FranceClaude Ballot-Léna
FranceGuy Chasseuil
Porsche 914/6 GT 1.041
5 S
5.0
11 United StatesNorth American Racing Team United StatesRonnie Bucknum
United StatesSam Posey
Ferrari 512S 1.026
6 GT
2.5
47 LuxembourgÉcurie Luxembourg LuxembourgNicolas Koob
GermanyErwin Kremer
Porsche 911S 1.008
7 S
5.0
12 BelgiumEcurie Francorchamps BelgiumBaronHughes de Fierlandt
United KingdomAlistair Walker
Ferrari 512S 1.000
  • Note:A score of 1.00 means meeting the minimum distance for the car, and a higher score is exceeding the nominal target distance.

Statistics[edit]

Taken from Quentin Spurring's book, officially licensed by theACO

  • Fastest Lap in practice – V. Elford, #25 Porsche 917L – 3:19.8secs; 242.69 km/h (150.80 mph)
  • Fastest Lap – V. Elford, #25 Porsche 917L – 3:21.0secs; 241.24 km/h (149.90 mph)
  • Winning Distance – 4,607.59 km (2,863.02 mi)
  • Winner's Average Speed – 192.00 km/h (119.30 mph)
  • Attendance –300 000[37]

International Championship for Makes Standings[edit]

As calculated after Le Mans, Round 8 of 10[49]

Pos Manufacturer Points
1 West GermanyPorsche 63 (69)*
2 ItalyFerrari 36 (38)*
3 ItalyAlfa Romeo 4
4 FranceMatra 4
5 United StatesChevrolet 2
  • Note:Only the best 7 of 10 results counted to the final Championship points. The full total earned to date is given in brackets
Citations
  1. ^"Welcome to Autosports Marketing Associates, LTD.!".Archived fromthe originalon 2008-08-07.Retrieved2008-10-26.
  2. ^abcdSpurring 2011, p.18
  3. ^abcMoity 1974, p.126
  4. ^abcClausager 1982, p.161-3
  5. ^abAutomobile Year 1970, p.204
  6. ^abcClarke 1997, p.88-9: Autosport Jun 11 1970
  7. ^Laban 2001, p.163
  8. ^abcSpurring 2011, p.23-4
  9. ^abcdefSpurring 2011, p.20-2
  10. ^abcdefClarke 1997, p.94-6: Autocar Jun 18 1970
  11. ^abcdefAutomobile Year 1970, p.202
  12. ^abcdefSpurring 2011, p.27
  13. ^abcdefghiClarke 1997, p.90-3: Road & Track Sept 1970
  14. ^abcSpurring 2011, p.28-9
  15. ^Spurring 2011, p.31
  16. ^Spurring 2011, p.39
  17. ^abSpurring 2011, p.35
  18. ^Spurring 2011, p.36
  19. ^abSpurring 2011, p.38
  20. ^"Tony Adamowicz, 1970 le Mans, Ferrari 312P".
  21. ^Spurring 2011, p.41
  22. ^abSpurring 2011, p.42
  23. ^abSpurring 2011, p.32
  24. ^abSpurring 2011, p.33
  25. ^Laban 2001, p.166
  26. ^Clarke 1997, p.101: Motor Jun 20 1970
  27. ^"Welcome to Autosports Marketing Associates, LTD.!".Archived fromthe originalon 2009-02-07.Retrieved2008-10-26.
  28. ^"24 key dates for the 24 Hours".ACO. Archived fromthe originalon 22 April 2012.Retrieved20 April2012.
  29. ^abSpurring 2011, p.19
  30. ^abcClarke 1997, p.99-100: Autocar Jun 18 1970
  31. ^"Jacques Argoud".Motorsport Memorial.Retrieved2018-05-25.
  32. ^Clarke 1997, p.103: Motor Jun 20 1970
  33. ^Spurring 2011, p.40-1
  34. ^Clarke 1997, p.104: Motor Jun 20 1970
  35. ^Spurring 2011, p.43
  36. ^"Welcome to Autosports Marketing Associates, LTD.!".Archived fromthe originalon 2008-08-07.Retrieved2008-10-26.
  37. ^abLaban 2001, p.167
  38. ^"1970 Memorial".Motorsport Memorial.Retrieved2018-05-25.
  39. ^AP."Fans asked to vote for greatest cars in Le Mans history".Autosport.p. 3C.Retrieved2018-05-23– via Autosport.com.
  40. ^abcdSpurring 2011, p.48-50
  41. ^abLaban 2001, p.164
  42. ^Spurring 2011, p.2
  43. ^Stone, Matt (2007).McQueen's Machines: The Cars and Bikes of a Hollywood Icon.Minneapolis, Minnesota: MBI Publishing Company. p. 109.ISBN978-0-7603-38957.Le Mans requires that each car complete a certain distance to be classified a finisher, even if it was running at the end. Only seven cars met that requirement. But the Solar Productions 908, at the hands of Herbert Linge and Jonathan Williams, ran a clean race and, had it completed enough distance, would have finished an impressive ninth overall. The team's pit stops took much longer than the other competitors' did, because not only did the car require refuelling and tire and driver changes, but the cameras needed to be swapped out for those containing fresh film.
  44. ^Spurring 2011, p.46
  45. ^"1970 Le Mans 24 Hrs".www.teamdan.com.Archived fromthe originalon 2010-03-04.Retrieved2018-05-16.
  46. ^"Le Mans 24 Hours 1970 - Racing Sports Cars".www.racingsportscars.com.Retrieved2018-05-16.
  47. ^abSpurring 2011, p.47
  48. ^Moity 1974, p.184
  49. ^"International Championship for Makes".World Sports Racing Prototypes.com.Retrieved2018-05-16.

References[edit]

  • Armstrong, Douglas – English editor (1970) Automobile Year #18 1970-71 Lausanne: Edita S.A.
  • Clarke, R.M. - editor (1997) Le Mans 'The Ford and Matra Years 1966-1974' Cobham, Surrey: Brooklands BooksISBN1-85520-373-1
  • Clausager, Anders (1982) Le Mans London: Arthur Barker LtdISBN0-213-16846-4
  • Laban, Brian (2001) Le Mans 24 Hours London: Virgin BooksISBN1-85227-971-0
  • Moity, Christian (1974) The Le Mans 24 Hour Race 1949-1973 Radnor, Pennsylvania:Chilton Book CoISBN0-8019-6290-0
  • Spurring, Quentin (2011) Le Mans 1970-79 Yeovil, Somerset: Haynes PublishingISBN978-1-84425-539-9

External links[edit]

  • Racing Sports Cars– Le Mans 24 Hours 1970 entries, results, technical detail. Retrieved 16 May 2018
  • Le Mans History– Le Mans History, hour-by-hour (incl. pictures, quotes, YouTube links). Retrieved 16 May 2018
  • World Sports Racing Prototypes– results, reserve entries & chassis numbers. Retrieved 16 May 2018
  • Team Dan– results & reserve entries, explaining driver listings. Retrieved 16 May 2018
  • Unique Cars & Parts– results & reserve entries. Retrieved 16 May 2018
  • Formula 2– Le Mans results & reserve entries. Retrieved 16 May 2018
  • Motorsport Memorial– details of the year's fatal accidents. Retrieved 16 May 2018
  • YouTube– “A Year to Remember” Gulf documentary reviewing the JWA 1970 season including Le Mans, and interviews with John Wyer (30mins). Retrieved 28 May 2018
  • YouTube– Colour footage, incl. Race-prep (7mins). Retrieved 28 May 2018
  • YouTube– Colour footage with music overlaid (8mins). Retrieved 28 May 2018
  • YouTube– German documentary from the Porsche Museum with the race-winning Porsche #23 (10mins). Retrieved 28 May 2018
  • YouTube– Brief interview with Richard Attwood re-united with the race-winning Porsche #23 (3mins). Retrieved 28 May 2018


World Sportscar Championship
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1970 season Next race:
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