| Re: Grand Prix - The Movie Mesa
There is a layout of the full 10Km circuit, used from 1922 to 1933, on Wickipedia. I imagine, at that time, the main straight would have been split in two with a line of straw bails.
I have never been to Monza but it is clear from film & TV coverage that the main straight was wide enough to cope with being used with twin, parallel, tracks. Nowadays only the outer track is used but you can still see where the inner track starts to turn right, up onto the banking. I remember the very sad day that Ronnie Peterson crashed, and later died, at this point. The flag had been dropped before all the cars had come to a stop on the grid. This caused the cars towards the back of the grid to bunch up as they approached the narrowing, closed off inside track with horrendous consequences for Ronnie.
TV shots also show the exit off of the banking back onto the main straight. Nowadays when F1 cars exit the Parabolica they move across from the inner track to the outer track. I wonder if any crashes happened in the old days when a car lost it exiting the parabolica, slid wide through the straw bails, assuming they used them, and into the path of other cars coming off of the banking.
David said, “None of the current circuit crosses over the old circuit and to my best belief under it as well.” But I have always thought that the bridge we see from in car shots, as cars race down to the Ascari chicane must be where the old banking crosses over the current circuit? Hopefully I will be able to get there one day, walk what is left of the old banking, soak up the atmosphere and imagine what it must have been like to race there.
Tom
I just did a search on YouTube and “Monza 1931” shows, from 5-10secs, a clip of a car coming onto the main straights off the banking as other cars are exiting the Parabolica. Also visible is a line of what look like straw bails separating the two tracks but they only run for about 100m. I suppose that was to let cars from either track move over to the Pits. |