By Phil Hill. During a 10-year span beginning in May, 1952, American Phil
Hill drove 88 races in sport racing Ferraris. In those events he had a
remarkable 25 wins and 51 top-3 finishes on race courses as varied as the flat
airport track in Palm Springs, California and Germany’s hilly, twisting
Nürburgring. In that decade, Hill won the 24 Hours of Le Mans and the 12 Hours
of Sebring three times, but also went plummeting off a cliff on Sicily’s
tortuous Targa Florio circuit. His first Ferrari drive at Le Mans began in the
face of the most tragic accident in the history of motorsport, while his last
brought the final win for the automaker’s famous Testa Rossas.
In Ferrari, A Champion’s View, Hill again drives many of the
cars in which he competed during his long and honoured career with the great
company from Modena. He describes the machines’ technical features, and puts
the reader in the cockpit, explaining what the cars were like to drive. Hill
also takes the reader to both ends of Ferrari’s sports racing history, from the
pre-World War II Auto Avio Costruzioni 815 to the 333 SP of the late 1990s. And
America’s champion remembers the great drivers who did not survive in this
deadly sport.
John Lamm has been an automotive writer and photographer for
the past 35 years, 29 of them with Road & Track magazine, where he is
editor-at-large.
- Illustrations:190 colour and 30 black and white photographs and
illustrations
- Printers: Hatcher Press, San Carlos, CA., USA.
- Publication Date August 10, 2004
- Page Size 330mm x 240mm, 192 pages
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