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Aintree Motor Racing Circuit

Coordinates:53°28′37″N2°56′26″W / 53.47694°N 2.94056°W /53.47694; -2.94056
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Motor racing circuit in Liverpool, England
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Aintree Motor Racing Circuit
LocationAintree,Merseyside,England
Coordinates53°28′37″N2°56′26″W / 53.47694°N 2.94056°W /53.47694; -2.94056
Opened1954
Major eventsFormula One
British Grand Prix
(1955, 1957, 1959, 1961–1962)
Grand Prix Circuit (1954–1964)
Length4.828 km (3.000 mi)
Turns8
Race lap record1:51.8 (United KingdomJim Clark,Lotus 25,1963,F1)
Club Circuit (1954–present)
Length2.470 km (1.535 mi)
Turns4

Aintree Motor Racing Circuit is a 3 mi (4.8 km) motor-racing circuit in the village ofAintree,Metropolitan Borough of Sefton,Merseyside, England. The circuit is within theAintree Racecourse, and used the same grandstands as horse racing. It was built in 1954 as the "Goodwood of the North", because the two venues had so many things in common. The track was well-surfaced and relatively flat, ranging from 49 to 98 ft (15 to 30 m) in elevation.

History

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A Vanwall VW5 before the start 1957 British Grand Prix

The circuit hosted theFormula OneBritish Grand Prix five times, in1955,1957,1959,1961 and1962.

In addition to the Grands Prix, which were organised by theBritish Automobile Racing Club, the circuit held eleven non-championship Formula One races, known as theAintree 200, first won byStirling Moss in 1954 with the last winner beingJack Brabham, in April 1964 (Brabham had made his Formula One debut at the circuit in the 1955 British GP). Aintree was the location for the famous race in 1955 in which Moss won his first British Grand Prix, driving a Mercedes. Two years later, he andTony Brooks became the first British drivers to win the British Grand Prix and a round of the Formula One World Championship in a British car, theVanwall. The 1957 Grand Prix, titled the "European Grand Prix", was the premier Formula One event of the season, attracting 150,000 spectators.

The full Grand Prix circuit was last raced on in 1964, but part of it – the 1.535 mi (2.470 km) Club Circuit – remained open, and was operated by the Aintree Circuit Club from the mid-1960s to the late 1990s. In the 1980s the 108 Car Club (St. Helens) brought rallying back to Aintree Circuit revitalising the circuit's use with new ideas. The Club Circuit is situated within the Aintree Grand National Course, and itself encloses a public nine-hole golf course operated by Aintree Racecourse.

Events

[edit]

A limited amount of motorsport continues today in the form of car sprints, track days and motorcycle racing on the Club Circuit.

Motorcycle events have been organised by Aintree Motor Cycle Racing Club since 1982; it holds six events at Aintree each year.

Car events are organised by Liverpool Motor Club in the form of three sprints, in May, June and September, and two track days in April and August on the Club Circuit.

In addition, the Club Circuit sees occasional use by visiting events such as the Greenpower Electric Car Races for Schools,[1] Sporting Bears Motor Club giving Dream Rides for charity,[2] and bicycle racing.

Records

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Nick Algar, the 2010 British Sprint Champion, set a new course record of 35.82 seconds on the 1.148 mi (1.847 km) sprint course on 26 June 2010 in aGould GR55 3500cc. The record was previously set by Roy Dawson on 8 September 2007 in the same car, in a time of 36.03 seconds. Nick Algar's speed through the finish line speed trap was 172 mph (277 km/h), although he did manage a speed of 176 mph (283 km/h) on an earlier run that day. As of March 2023[update], his record still stood, despite several drivers attempting to beat it.

The official race lap records at the Aintree Motor Racing Circuit are listed as:

CategoryTimeDriverVehicleEvent
Full Circuit: 4.828 km (1954–1964)
Formula One1:51.800[3]Jim ClarkLotus 251963 Aintree 200
Formula Two2:04.400[4]Tony BrooksCooper T431958 BARC Aintree 200

References

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  1. ^"Welcome to the Greenpower Education Trust - Greenpower".www.greenpower.co.uk. Retrieved13 July 2017.
  2. ^"Domain name expired". Archived fromthe original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved26 March 2012.
  3. ^"1963 BARC 200".Motor Sport Magazine. 27 April 1963. Retrieved2 December 2022.
  4. ^"1958 Aintree F2".Motor Sport Magazine. 19 April 1958. Retrieved2 December 2022.

External links

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