Fangio 1950 San Remo Grand Prix images
Fangio 1950 San Remo Grand Prix images
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Discussion

chelsea9899

Original Poster:

35 posts

83 months

Monday 26th July 2021
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Hi all,

I wonder if someone might be able to point me in the right direction as I'm having no luck. I'm trying to find images of Fangio after he won the 1950 San Remo Grand Prix which was raced at the Ospedaletti Circuit, specifically of him with his winners trophy. It's a long shot I know, but I have my fingers crossed.

It was his debut race for, and debut win for Alfa Romeo in the "Alfetta" 158.

Any help would be appreciated!

Many thanks!

Eric Mc

124,013 posts

281 months

Wednesday 28th July 2021
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Surely the Alfa 158 was winning races in 1948 and 1949?

thegreenhell

19,953 posts

235 months

Wednesday 28th July 2021
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Simon Moore's Monoposto book has a couple of photo's of the race itself, but nothing of the post-race.

Eric Mc

124,013 posts

281 months

Wednesday 28th July 2021
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Just did a quick check, the Alfetta won its first race in 1938.

Leithen

13,204 posts

283 months

Wednesday 28th July 2021
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Asking the question in the Nostalgia Forum over at Autosport (Previously Atlas F1) is probably your best bet.

https://forums.autosport.com/forum/10-the-nostalgi...

ettore

4,571 posts

268 months

Wednesday 28th July 2021
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Could try the LAT archive - is pretty extensive

Leithen

13,204 posts

283 months

Wednesday 28th July 2021
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This thread on Autosport Forums appears to be on the subject.

https://forums.autosport.com/topic/76338-alfa-158-...

CanAm

11,511 posts

288 months

Wednesday 28th July 2021
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Eric Mc said:
Surely the Alfa 158 was winning races in 1948 and 1949?
Don't be silly Eric. Everyone knows that single-seater motor racing was invented by the FIA in 1950. There was nothing before then, nothing at all. Just a void.

thegreenhell

19,953 posts

235 months

Wednesday 28th July 2021
quotequote all
CanAm said:
Eric Mc said:
Surely the Alfa 158 was winning races in 1948 and 1949?
Don't be silly Eric. Everyone knows that single-seater motor racing was invented by the FIA in 1950. There was nothing before then, nothing at all. Just a void.
But why bring it up in this thread?

ettore

4,571 posts

268 months

Thursday 29th July 2021
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thegreenhell said:
But why bring it up in this thread?
Because of the original comment in the first post...

...quite logical really?

The wonderful Alfetta was originally a voiturette (formula 2 equivalent) car from just before the war. Grand Prix racing is obviously much older than formula 1 but the post war rules (4.5 litre unsupercharged or 1.5 litre supercharged) meant the Alfa became F1 sharpish. The application of wartime supercharging tech begat the 149 with ultimately about 450bhp from 1.5 litres in 1950..

Wonderful things but successful from the thirties to the fifties..

Eric Mc

124,013 posts

281 months

Thursday 29th July 2021
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I was trying to post a similar comment yesterday but kept getting an "Error 403" message. I don't know why.

The 158/159 family were a pre-war design. By normal standards, they would have been obsolete by about 1943/44 but the war intervened and they were the best Grand Prix (Voiturette) standard cars available after the war had ended. I like the story that they had been bricked up in a cheese factory to hide them from war booty hunters for the duration of the war.

Roofless Toothless

6,643 posts

148 months

Thursday 29th July 2021
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I am old enough to remember my first die cast model racing cars when a kid. They were ERAs and Alfettas just like this. They still seem like ‘proper’ racing cars to me.

thegreenhell

19,953 posts

235 months

Thursday 29th July 2021
quotequote all
ettore said:
Because of the original comment in the first post...

...quite logical really?

The wonderful Alfetta was originally a voiturette (formula 2 equivalent) car from just before the war. Grand Prix racing is obviously much older than formula 1 but the post war rules (4.5 litre unsupercharged or 1.5 litre supercharged) meant the Alfa became F1 sharpish. The application of wartime supercharging tech begat the 149 with ultimately about 450bhp from 1.5 litres in 1950..

Wonderful things but successful from the thirties to the fifties..
While that's true, the original post doesn't contradict that in any way, or contain any statements that require such clarification.

Eric Mc

124,013 posts

281 months

Thursday 29th July 2021
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It needed correcting though as it intimated that the Alfa 158 won its first race in 1950 - which was far from the reality.

FourWheelDrift

91,039 posts

300 months

Thursday 29th July 2021
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Eric Mc said:
It needed correcting though as it intimated that the Alfa 158 won its first race in 1950 - which was far from the reality.
He didn't say that at all.

chelsea9899 said:
Hi all,
It was his debut race for, and debut win for Alfa Romeo in the "Alfetta" 158.
Which means it was Fangio's debut for Alfa Romeo and Fangio's first win in an Alfetta.

thegreenhell

19,953 posts

235 months

Thursday 29th July 2021
quotequote all
Eric Mc said:
It needed correcting though as it intimated that the Alfa 158 won its first race in 1950 - which was far from the reality.
Fangio won his first race for Alfa Romeo in 1950 in the 158. That is what is said.

Eric Mc

124,013 posts

281 months

Thursday 29th July 2021
quotequote all
It said "debut win for Alfa Romeo" which didn't make it clear to me that it was meant to mean it was Fangio's debut win in an Alfa Romeo.

I can see now that this is what was meant but initially it didn't read that way to me.

tertius

6,914 posts

246 months

Thursday 29th July 2021
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Eric Mc said:
It said "debut win for Alfa Romeo" which didn't make it clear to me that it was meant to mean it was Fangio's debut win in an Alfa Romeo.

I can see now that this is what was meant but initially it didn't read that way to me.
Must confess I read it the same way.

Eric Mc

124,013 posts

281 months

Thursday 29th July 2021
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It was easy to misunderstand - but I can see what he meant now.

People just need to take a bit more care when they are constructing their sentences.

dr_gn

16,576 posts

200 months

Thursday 29th July 2021
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Eric Mc said:
It was easy to misunderstand - but I can see what he meant now.

People just need to take a bit more care when they are constructing their sentences.
“It was his debut race for, and debut win for Alfa Romeo in the "Alfetta" 158.”

If he’d meant what you thought, he’d have written “debut win for Alfa Romeo WITH the Alfetta 158”, but that would then have made the first part of the sentence wrong.

Alfa Romeo wouldn’t have a debut win IN the Alfetta 158, so I don’t see why the sentence is wrong - you just didn’t understand it correctly.