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Grand Prix Problems

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IMAGE number

LAL297436

Image title

Grand Prix Problems

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Medium

gouache on paper

Image description

Grand Prix Problems. Every car, no matter how skilfully it is designed or how expensive it may be, has its breaking point at which its components fail under the stress of speed. One of the dangers of high speed racing is the car's tendency to fly like an aeroplane. Graham Hill encountered this during practice runs for the German Grand Prix in 1966 (see top left). Wings were attached to cars in 1969 to improve road handling, but the wing on Graham Hill's car collapsed in the 1969 Grand Prix, and he crashed. Jochen Rindt, with a similar fault, struck Hill's car. Original artwork.

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© Look and Learn / Bridgeman Images

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Largest available format 3984 × 2554 px 2 MB
Dimension [pixels] Dimension in 300dpi [mm] File size [MB]
Large 3984 × 2554 px 337 × 216 mm 2.2 MB
Medium 1024 × 657 px 87 × 56 mm 648 KB

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