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 The 1962 German Grand Prix, staged at the Nürburgring on the 5th of August, was the sixth round of the 1962 FIA Formula One World Championship.[1] Officially known as the XXVI Grosser Preis von Deutschland, the race would be remembered for an excellent recovery by BRM, after having one of their cars involved in a huge accident in practice.[1]

During the combined practice and qualifying sessions, Graham Hill had hit a T.V. camera that had come away from Carel Godin de Beaufort's car which sent the Englishman off the circuit and into the trees.[1] Emerging uninjured, Hill would start the race from second in a car that had been built overnight, taking on maiden pole sitter Dan Gurney for the race lead at the start.[1] In a race staged in wet, but slowly drying conditions, Hill battled to the lead of the race and won for the second time in 1962 to extend his lead in the Championship.[1]

Gurney, for his part, would finish third after his qualifying success, losing out to John Surtees for second in the opening stages.[1] Jim Clark finished fourth for Team Lotus, although his race was hampered by a terrible start caused by the Scot when he forgot to switch on the fuel pumps on the grid.[1] Bruce McLaren and Ricardo Rodríguez completed the scorers with sixteen finishers in total.[1]

Background[]

Having missed the French Grand Prix and only sending Phil Hill to the British Grand Prix, Ferrari arrived in Germany with a full compliment of 156s.[2] Strikes in Italy over the early summer had severely hampered the scarlet challenge, and so Phil Hill was joined by promising youngsters Giancarlo Baghetti, Ricardo Rodríguez and Lorenzo Bandini as Ferrari sought to reverse their fortunes in 1962.[2] Only Hill and Bandini, however, would be equipped with new cars, with Rodriguez particularly upset by having to drive one of the original development cars, meaning he would be out to prove a point throughout the race weekend.[2]

As one marque returned, there were to be three new appearances on the grid, with much of the attention on one car in particular.[2] Jack Brabham had been secretly developing a Formula Junior car during his last season with Cooper, and now with technical partner Ron Tauranac, the Australian was able to reveal his first Formula One creation, the Brabham BT3.[2] Elsewhere, Gilby finally delivered their 1962 challenger, which had been expected to appear in Aintree a couple of weeks earlier, with Keith Greene débuting the Gilby 62 at the Nürburgring equipped with an engine from BRM.[2] The third new creation was Bandini's updated Ferrari.[2]

Porsche were also out for their home race, with Dan Gurney running their newest 804 while a third awaited in the garage in case either Gurney or Jo Bonnier were in strife.[2] The British constructors were also out in force, with Team Lotus looking to lead the challenge, although their second driver Trevor Taylor would still have to race a 24 rather than Jim Clark's incredible Lotus 25.[2] Lola-Climax had three cars on offer for John Surtees and Roy Salvadori, with Surtees hoping to use the updated third car to full effect after their delightful podium.[2]

Cooper-Climax also hoped that the minor tweaks to their two T60s would propel them to the front of the field, with an older T55 in the garage as a spare.[2] BRM also arrived in Germany with a full compliment, before also calling up a third car for Tony Marsh, although delays meant it was questionable whether the Englishman would race.[2] With the UDT Laystall Racing Team absent after not being invited to take part, the leading privateer outfit in Germany would be the Rob Walker Racing Team, with Maurice Trintignant racing their only car after its (and his) huge accident at Rouen.[2]

Supporting the field were a large number of 1961 equipped privateers, many regulars of both the Championship and the non-Championship Grand Prix.[2] Jackie Lewis and Ian Burgess were hoping to continue their battle from Aintree, while Swiss outfit Ecurie Filipinetti fielded three different cars for their three drivers.[2] Lucien Bianchi also appeared with the Belgian national team using an ENB, while there was a return for Bernard Collomb, who would use a Cooper previously raced by John Surtees.[2]

The Championship battle had become very interesting in Britain, with Graham Hill departing his home race with a slender one point lead after Clark's dominant win. They were followed closely by Bruce McLaren after he laid claim to another podium at Aintree, while Ferrari's Phil Hill had slipped to fourth having failed to score in the previous two rounds. Surtees completed the top five after his confident season with Lola, with fifteen scorers in 1962.

With the season entering its second half, the Intercontinental Cup for Manufacturers was also in the grip of an intense battle, with the top three teams separated by just three points. Lotus-Climax had forged ahead in Britain the Clark, although BRM were just a point behind in second, while Cooper-Climax sat in third, two scores further back. Ferrari's poor attendance meant that they had slipped to a lonely fourth place, and were now under pressure from new boys Lola. Porsche, meanwhile, were the last of the scoring teams, but just three behind the Italian manufacturer in fourth.

Entry list[]

The full entry list for the 1962 German Grand Prix is outlined below:

No. Driver Entrant Constructor Chassis Engine Model Tyre
1 United States Phil Hill Italy Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFAC Ferrari 156 Ferrari 178 V6 1.5 D
2 Italy Giancarlo Baghetti Italy Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFAC Ferrari 156 Ferrari 178 V6 1.5 D
3 Mexico Ricardo Rodríguez Italy Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFAC Ferrari 156 Ferrari 178 V6 1.5 D
4 Italy Lorenzo Bandini Italy Scuderia Ferrari SpA SEFAC Ferrari 156 Ferrari 178 V6 1.5 D
5 United Kingdom Jim Clark United Kingdom Team Lotus Lotus 25 Climax FWMV V8 1.5 D
6 United Kingdom Trevor Taylor United Kingdom Team Lotus Lotus 24 Climax FWMV V8 1.5 D
7 United States Dan Gurney West Germany Porsche System Engineering Porsche 804 Porsche 753 F8 1.5 D
8 Sweden Jo Bonnier West Germany Porsche System Engineering Porsche 804 Porsche 753 F8 1.5 D
9 New Zealand Bruce McLaren United Kingdom Cooper  Car Company Cooper T60 Climax FWMV V8 1.5 D
10 South Africa Tony Maggs United Kingdom Cooper Car Company Cooper T55 Climax FPF L4 1.5 D
11 United Kingdom Graham Hill United Kingdom Owen Racing Organisation BRM P57 BRM P56 V8 1.5 D
12 United States Richie Ginther United Kingdom Owen Racing Organisation BRM P57 BRM P56 V8 1.5 D
14 United Kingdom John Surtees United Kingdom Yeoman Credit Racing Team Lola Mk4 Climax FWMV V8 1.5 D
15 United Kingdom Roy Salvadori United Kingdom Yeoman Credit Racing Team Lola Mk4 Climax FWMV V8 1.5 D
16 Australia Jack Brabham United Kingdom Brabham Racing Organisation Brabham BT3 Climax FWMV V8 1.5 D
17 France Maurice Trintignant United Kingdom Rob Walker Racing Team Lotus 24 Climax FWMV V8 1.5 D
18 Netherlands Carel Godin de Beaufort Netherlands Ecurie Maarsbergen Porsche 718 Porsche 547/3 F4 1.5 D
19 Switzerland Jo Siffert Switzerland Ecurie Filipinetti Lotus 21 Climax FPF L4 1.5 D
20 United Kingdom Jackie Lewis United Kingdom Ecurie Galloise Cooper T53 Climax FPF L4 1.5 D
21 Belgium Lucien Bianchi Belgium Equipe Nationale Belge ENB F1 Maserati 6-1500 L4 1.5 D
22 Italy Carlo Abate Italy Scuderia Republica di Venezia Lotus 18/21 Climax FPF L4 1.5 D
25 United Kingdom Ian Burgess United Kingdom Anglo-American Equipe Cooper T59 Aiden Climax FPF L4 1.5 D
26 Italy Nino Vaccarella Italy Scuderia Republica di Venezia Porsche 718 Porsche 547/3 F4 1.5 D
27 United Kingdom Keith Greene United Kingdom Gilby Engineering Gilby 62 BRM P56 V8 1.5 D
28 Switzerland Heinz Schiller Switzerland Ecurie Filipinetti Lotus 24 BRM P56 V8 1.5 D
29 New Zealand Tony Shelly New ZealandPrivateer Lotus 18/21 Climax FPF L4 1.5 D
30 United States Jay Chamberlain United States Ecurie Excelsior Lotus 18 Climax FPF L4 1.5 D
31 France Bernard Collomb FrancePrivateer Cooper T53 Climax FPF L4 1.5 D
32 Switzerland Heinrich Walter Switzerland Ecurie Filipinetti Porsche 718 Porsche 547/3 F4 1.5 D
33 United Kingdom Tony Marsh United Kingdom Owen Racing Organisation BRM P48/57 BRM P56 V8 1.5 D
34* West Germany Wolfgang Seidel West Germany Autosport Team Seidel Lotus 24 BRM P56 V8 1.5 D
Source:[3]

Practice Overview[]

Qualifying[]

Given the remarkable length of the Nürburgring, there was some surprise when the schedule for the German Grand Prix was revealed, with the combined practice and qualifying sessions running for a total of just four hours.[2] This time was to broken into three sessions over Friday and Saturday, but as many a driver has discovered, a recovery from the circuit could take hours, let alone the time for the repairs themselves.[2] An early issue on the circuit on Friday would cost someone a whole day's running, and so the mechanics took extra care to ensure the cars were running as close to perfect as possible when they left the pits.[2]

Report[]

A small section near the pits allowed drivers to abandon laps early on if they had an issue, and it was the Team Lotus racer Trevor Taylor who proved the value of this concession.[2] Having completed one lap on the "South Turn Circuit" Taylor was about to launch into a flying lap, until a valve head broke and destroyed his new Climax engine.[2] He was able to limp around to the pits on the short circuit and get the car back to have the spare engine fitted and so could reappear before the end of the day.[2] His team mate Jim Clark, however, would have a trouble free run, and was number of drivers aiming to best Phil Hill's qualifying record from 1961.[2]

Nine minutes was the early target for the leaders, and it was not long before Championship leader Graham Hill was on record pace, recording a time of 8:50.2.[2] That record was not to last, however, as Dan Gurney completed a stunning lap to find a further three seconds on Hill's time.[2] Clark was unable to produce a clean lap, although his struggles still resulted in a lap just a second slower than Hill, while the Cooper-Climaxs slowly closed in on the nine minute mark.[2] With rain affecting the Saturday session, Friday proved to be the day of qualifying, and it was Gurney who claimed his, and Porsche's maiden pole position.[2]

It was also on Friday when Hill had one of the biggest accident's of his career, and one that was not the fault of himself or his car.[2] Going down the dip of the sweeping Fuchsröhre bend, Carel Godin de Beaufort dropped the camera attached to the back of his Porsche, with the unit landing in the middle of the racing line.[2] That charging BRM was next on the scene, and with no view of the camera until he crested the hill a few yards away, Hill had no choice but to slam into the camera, ripping off the radiator and throwing oil onto the circuit.[2] The oil was also thrown onto the wheels of the BRM, and so Hill quickly found himself among the trees at the edge of the circuit, a heavy impact ripping off the front suspension from the car.[2]

As Hill climbed from his car, Bruce McLaren came to a stop at the scene of the accident having seen the dust thrown from Hill's departure.[2] The New Zealander was quickly on his way after Hill indicated he was all right, and there was no sign of the accident a few moments later.[2] It was then that Tony Maggs came through the Fuchsröhre, unknowingly hitting the oil slick from Hill's car before the marshals could indicate the problem.[2] The Cooper was immediately thrown off the circuit, but the South African was slightly more fortunate to hit a catch fence supported by a thick bush, and emerged from a twisted T60 shaken but unhurt.[2]

Qualifying Results[]

The full qualifying results for the 1962 German Grand Prix are outlined below:

Pos. No. Driver Constructor Time Gap
1 7 United States Dan Gurney Porsche 8:47.2
2 11 United Kingdom Graham Hill BRM 8:50.2 +3.0s
3 5 United Kingdom Jim Clark Lotus-Climax 8:51.2 +4.0s
4 14 United Kingdom John Surtees Lola-Climax 8:57.5 +10.3s
5 9 New Zealand Bruce McLaren Cooper-Climax 9:00.7 +13.5s
6 8 Sweden Jo Bonnier Porsche 9:04.0 +16.8s
7 12 United States Richie Ginther BRM 9:05.9 +18.7s
8 18 Netherlands Carel Godin de Beaufort Porsche 9:12.9 +25.7s
9 15 United Kingdom Roy Salvadori Lola-Climax 9:14.1 +26.9s
10 3 Mexico Ricardo Rodríguez Ferrari 9:14.2 +27.0s
11 17 France Maurice Trintignant Lotus-Climax 9:19.0 +31.8s
12 1 United States Phil Hill Ferrari 9:24.7 +37.5s
13 2 Italy Giancarlo Baghetti Ferrari 9:28.1 +40.9s
14 32 Switzerland Heinrich Walter Porsche 9:30.0 +42.8s
15 26 Italy Nino Vaccarella Porsche 9:33.8 +46.6s
16 25 United Kingdom Ian Burgess Cooper-Climax 9:39.2 +52.0s
17 19 Switzerland Jo Siffert Lotus-Climax 9:39.3 +52.1s
18 4 Italy Lorenzo Bandini Ferrari 9:39.7 +52.5s
19 27 United Kingdom Keith Greene Gilby-BRM 9:47.1 +59.9s
20 28 Switzerland Heinz Schiller Lotus-BRM 9:51.5 +64.3s
21 20 United Kingdom Jackie Lewis Cooper-Climax 9:58.0 +70.8s
22 6 United Kingdom Trevor Taylor Lotus-Climax 10.09.6 +82.4s
23 31 France Bernard Collomb Cooper-Climax 10:09.7 +82.5s
24 10 South Africa Tony Maggs Cooper-Climax 10:21.2 +94.0s
25 16 Australia Jack Brabham Brabham-Climax 10:21.6 +94.4s
26 21 Belgium Lucien Bianchi ENB-Maserati 10:40.7 +113.5s
DNQ* 29 New Zealand Tony Shelly Lotus-Climax 10:18.6 +91.4s
DNQ* 34 West Germany Wolfgang Seidel Lotus-BRM 10:38.2 +111.0s
DNQ* 30 United States Jay Chamberlain Lotus-Climax 11:12.9 +145.7s
DNQ† 34 West Germany Gunther Seiffert Lotus-BRM 11:38.9 +171.7s
WD 22 Italy Carlo Abate Lotus-Climax Withdrawn
WD 33 United Kingdom Tony Marsh BRM Withdrawn
Source:[4]
  • * To qualify for the start, drivers had to complete five full laps of the circuit.
  • † Seiffert only entered as a reserve driver.

Grid[]

Pos Pos Pos Pos
Driver Driver Driver Driver
______________
______________ 1
______________ 2 Dan Gurney
______________ 3 Graham Hill
4 Jim Clark
John Surtees
______________
______________ 5
______________ 6 Bruce McLaren
7 Jo Bonnier
Richie Ginther
______________
______________ 8
______________ 9 Carel Godin de Beaufort
______________ 10 Roy Salvadori
11 Ricardo Rodríguez
Maurice Trintignant
______________
______________ 12
______________ 13 Phil Hill
14 Giancarlo Baghetti
Heinrich Walter
______________
______________ 15
______________ 16 Nino Vaccarella
______________ 17 Ian Burgess
18 Jo Siffert
Lorenzo Bandini
______________
______________ 19
______________ 20 Keith Greene
21 Heinz Schiller
Jackie Lewis
______________
______________ 22
______________ 23 Bernard Collomb
______________ 24 Tony Maggs
25 Jack Brabham
Lucien Bianchi
______________
______________ 26
______________ 27 Trevor Taylor*
28


  • * Taylor allowed to start at the back of the grid despite failing to set five full laps.

Race[]

As the teams arrived on the circuit for the race on Sunday it looked as if they would be better of with canoes rather than cars, as heavy rain hit the Nürburgring overnight on Saturday, and had continued to pound the circuit until midday.[2] By lunch the rain had stopped although dark clouds remained, with the on circuit action starting with a six lap GT race before the scheduled Grand Prix start at 2:00 pm.[2] Yet, as the finishing touches were being made to the cars, including a new engine for Jack Brabham, the heavens opened once again with the FIA opting to delay the start.[2] It was 3:00 before the rain stopped, and the FIA allowed all of the drivers to do a full lap of the circuit, as the army of marshals cleared away debris washed onto the circuit.[2] A start time of 3:15 was quickly given, as a light drizzle began to fall on the circuit.[2]

Report[]

With the light drizzle adding to the damp conditions, many of the drivers fought to keep their equipment dry, with the engineers leaving it late to clear the grid.[2] The flag dropped a 3:15 on the dot and twenty five of the twenty six starters leapt away from the grid, all bar Jim Clark on the front row.[2] The Scot was too busy making sure that his goggles would not steam up as the five second warning was made with the raising of the flag, meaning he forgot to turn on the fuel pumps.[2] As Dan Gurney leapt away with the rest of the field, Clark was left as a green and gold island in the middle of the circuit his engine having dried the little fuel it had in the carburettor just as the flag dropped.[2]

With Clark left standing on the grid until his fuel pumps had put fuel all the way through his engine, Gurney was battling for the lead along the back straight.[2] The American had got away smartly, although Graham Hill and John Surtees had managed to keep with him, and so were roaring along in the Porsche's wake.[2] There was a flash of scarlet behind them, Phil Hill having had one of the best starts of his career to launch away from the fourth row, taking car after car in the first corners to fun in fourth.[2] But, as the field roared past the grandstands that littered the circuit, there must have been joy in the hearts of 360,000 fans for Gurney led the opening lap with a small gap behind.[2]

The first casualty of the race was to be the second Team Lotus entry, as Trevor Taylor suffered a bizare failure halfway round the opening lap.[2] Limping around the first lap with a very unhealthy Climax engine, Taylor had just crested the run to the Karussell when all eight cylinders came on line, throwing full power through the rear axle at a point where Taylor should have been slowing.[2] The sudden surge saw him thrown into the trees, with the Lotus 24 smacking into a tree, bending the front of the car and leaving him on the sidelines uninjured.[2] His team mate Clark, meanwhile, was making up for his thirteen second delay, taking car, after car, after car as he rose seventeen places on the opening lap.[2]

Clark was continuing to pick off the cars ahead at every opportunity, Brabham and Richie Ginther the next to fall on his charge, as Graham Hill stalked Gurney ahead.[2] Whereas Clark now had nothing to lose, Hill was plotting to take the lead of the race to extend his Championship hopes, and so opted to force Gurney into a mistake rather than take a chance in the treacherous conditions.[2] The pressure did not tell until the end of the lap, as the BRM appeared ahead of the Porsche to the delight of the BRM crew, with Gurney trying to fight back.[2]

Behind came Surtees, whom had taken Phil Hill on lap two in a move that saw the American also passed by Bruce McLaren and Jo Bonnier.[2] The Brit now began to move onto the back of Gurney, who was now trying to keep Graham Hill from disappearing into the distance before the end of lap three.[2] For Graham Hill the ability for him to pull away was still being hampered, with the extinguisher in his cockpit coming away from its bracket and rolling around under his legs.[2] Those three were soon clear from McLaren in fourth, with the New Zealander just ahead of Bonnier and the first pair of Ferraris.[2]

Clark was now running in eighth and about to engage Ricardo Rodríguez, who was doing an incredible job in the ancient Ferrari 156 to run just behind team mate Phil Hill.[2] Before the end of the lap the Scot was passed the Mexican, as all three flashed past Bonnier, the Swede suddenly losing pace partway round the lap.[2] Up ahead Gurney was attempting to make a repair on the fly, attempting to strap down his battery before the contacts came away along the long back straight.[2] He just ran out of space before he could finish the job, and in running wide allowed Surtees to sneak past for second.[2]

German Grand Prix 1962 I

Graham Hill swings through the German Grand Prix ahead of John Surtees and Dan Gurney as the rain returned.

The next time through it was Graham Hill leading from Surtees, the Lola-Climax still hanging valiantly on to the gearbox of the BRM, with Gurney now far enough behind to lose the slipstream effect.[2] McLaren remained a lonely fourth, but was about to be busy as Clark brushed past Phil Hill for fifth as numerous reports of failures began to affect the privateers.[2] Carel Godin de Beaufort was the four-cylinder privateer leader at the end of lap five, with Ian Burgess challenging, after both had been passed by a charging Tony Maggs in the factory run Cooper T55.[2]

The rain was now beginning to fall slightly heavier once again, and Clark now claimed fourth from McLaren, taking over five seconds a lap out of the New Zealander on his way past.[2] The lead battle, meanwhile, had tightened up, with Hill now having to defend heavily from Surtees and Gurney, the two having eased off briefly for a time before relaunching their attempts at victory.[2] Phil Hill was now tumbling away from the second group, falling to the continued charge of Maggs who was dragging Burgess and de Beaufort with him.[2] The lower powered cars were enjoying an rare advantage in the wet, with the conditions meaning they could use the throttle more effectively than the more powerful cars ahead.[2]

Phil Hill dropped out on the next lap through, just in time to see team mate Lorenzo Bandini being hounded by the lesser cars behind.[2] Up ahead, Clark was providing a spectacular display of his driving skill, with his Lotus dancing across the wet tarmac to take several seconds out of Gurney in the space of a single lap.[2] Yet, as he pulled to within ten seconds of the leaders, Clark had a dramatic slide through the quick run through Fuchsröhre, just holding onto the green and gold Lotus, prompting him to ease off the pace.[2]

Bandini and de Beaufort were scrapping as the race entered its final phase, the older Porsche pulling alongside the new Ferrari in the run to the Süd-kehre.[2] Bandini braked early in the increasingly poor conditions while de Beaufort slammed onto the brakes a second later.[2] The Dutchman's momentum carried him wide, and his heavy braking threw the car into a time wasting, but otherwise un-costly spin.[2]

The top three were still sliding their cars around the circuit almost in unison, with Hill still under pressure from Surtees.[2] Gurney dropped slightly further back as the cars started the final lap, and on numerous occasions Surtees had the front of the Lola level with the back of the BRM but could not force his way through.[2] Hill's defence held to the line leaving him to sweep home just a couple of seconds ahead of his fellow countryman, with Gurney just a couple of seconds further back.[2]

Results[]

The full results for the 1962 German Grand Prix are outlined below:

Pos. No. Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 11 United Kingdom Graham Hill BRM 15 2:38:45.3 2 9
2 14 United Kingdom John Surtees Lola-Climax 15 +2.5s 4 6
3 7 United States Dan Gurney Porsche 15 +4.4s 1 4
4 5 United Kingdom Jim Clark Lotus-Climax 15 +42.1s 3 3
5 9 New Zealand Bruce McLaren Cooper-Climax 15 +1:19.6 5 2
6 3 Mexico Ricardo Rodríguez Ferrari 15 +1:23.8 10 1
7 8 Sweden Jo Bonnier Porsche 15 +4:37.3 6
8 12 United States Richie Ginther BRM 15 +5:00.1 7
9 10 South Africa Tony Maggs Cooper-Climax 15 +5:06.8 23
10 2 Italy Giancarlo Baghetti Ferrari 15 +8:14.7 13
11 25 United Kingdom Ian Burgess Cooper-Climax 15 +8:15.3 16
12 19 Switzerland Jo Siffert Lotus-Climax 15 +8:18.5 17
13 18 Netherlands Carel Godin de Beaufort Porsche 15 +9:11.8 8
14 32 Switzerland Heinrich Walter Porsche 14 +1 lap 14
15 26 Italy Nino Vaccarella Porsche 14 +1 lap 15
16 21 Belgium Lucien Bianchi ENB-Maserati 14 +1 lap 25
17* 20 United Kingdom Jackie Lewis Cooper-Climax 10 Engine 21
Ret 16 Australia Jack Brabham Brabham-Climax 9 Throttle 24
Ret 1 United States Phil Hill Ferrari 9 Suspension 12
Ret 27 United Kingdom Keith Greene Gilby-BRM 7 Suspension 19
Ret 17 France Maurice Trintignant Lotus-Climax 4 Gearbox 11
Ret 4 Italy Lorenzo Bandini Ferrari 4 Accident 18
Ret 15 United Kingdom Roy Salvadori Lola-Climax 4 Gearbox 9
Ret 28 Switzerland Heinz Schiller Lotus-BRM 4 Oil pressure 20
Ret 31 France Bernard Collomb Cooper-Climax 3 Gearbox 22
Ret 6 United Kingdom Trevor Taylor Lotus-Climax 0 Accident 26
DNQ 29 New Zealand Tony Shelly Lotus-Climax
DNQ 34 West Germany Wolfgang Seidel Lotus-BRM
DNQ 30 United States Jay Chamberlain Lotus-Climax
WD 22 Italy Carlo Abate Lotus-Climax
WD 33 United Kingdom Tony Marsh BRM
Source:[5]
  • * Lewis was still classified despite failing to complete the final lap, the Brit being judged to have completed enough of the race distance.

Milestones[]

Standings[]

Victory for Graham Hill and the poor start for Jim Clark meant that the Englishman led the Scot by seven points, the largest gap at the top of the standings all season. Another good result for John Surtees saw him leap into the top three, jumping ahead of Bruce McLaren after a rare failure for the New Zealander to score. Phil Hill had now dropped to fifth with his continued poor form, while the single point for Ricardo Rodríguez meant there were three Ferrari drivers tied on four points.

As with the Drivers' Championship, the Intercontinental Cup for Manufacturers had been stretched in Germany, with BRM now over thirty points for the season. With dropped scores now enforced, BRM's tally was registered as 31 although they had in fact claimed 32 points, although they still sat four points clear of Lotus-Climax regardless. Behind Team Lotus came Cooper-Climax, a further four points behind, while a second podium for Surtees pushed Lola-Climax ahead of Ferrari, who also fell behind Porsche.

Drivers' World Championship
Pos. Driver Pts +/-
1 United Kingdom Graham Hill 28
2 United Kingdom Jim Clark 21
3 United Kingdom John Surtees 19 ▲2
4 New Zealand Bruce McLaren 18 ▼1
5 United States Phil Hill 14 ▼1
6 United States Dan Gurney 13
7 South Africa Tony Maggs 9
8 United Kingdom Trevor Taylor 6
9 United States Richie Ginther 4
10 Italy Lorenzo Bandini 4
11 Mexico Ricardo Rodríguez 4 ▲2
12 Australia Jack Brabham 3 ▼1
13 Italy Giancarlo Baghetti 3 ▼1
14 Sweden Jo Bonnier 2
15 Netherlands Carel Godin de Beaufort 2
Intercontinental Cup for Manufacturers
Pos. Team Pts +/-
1 United Kingdom Lotus 31 (32)
2 United Kingdom BRM 27
3 United Kingdom Cooper-Climax 23
4 United Kingdom Lola-Climax 19 ▲1
5 West Germany Porsche 16 ▲1
6 Italy Ferrari 14 ▼2

References[]

Images and Videos:

References:

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 'GRAND PRIX RESULTS: GERMAN GP, 1962', grandprix.com, (Inside F1 Inc., 2016), http://www.grandprix.com/gpe/rr108.html, (Accessed 29/05/2016)
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 2.17 2.18 2.19 2.20 2.21 2.22 2.23 2.24 2.25 2.26 2.27 2.28 2.29 2.30 2.31 2.32 2.33 2.34 2.35 2.36 2.37 2.38 2.39 2.40 2.41 2.42 2.43 2.44 2.45 2.46 2.47 2.48 2.49 2.50 2.51 2.52 2.53 2.54 2.55 2.56 2.57 2.58 2.59 2.60 2.61 2.62 2.63 2.64 2.65 2.66 2.67 2.68 2.69 2.70 2.71 2.72 2.73 2.74 2.75 2.76 2.77 2.78 'XXIV GERMAN GRAND PRIX', motorsportmagazine.com, (Motor Sport Magazine, 01/09/1962), http://www.motorsportmagazine.com/archive/article/september-1962/51/xxiv-german-grand-prix, (Accessed 29/05/2016)
  3. 'Germany 1962: Race Entrants', statsf1.com, (Stats F1, 2016), http://www.statsf1.com/en/1962/allemagne/engages.aspx, (Accessed 29/05/2016)
  4. 'Germany 1962: Qualifications', statsf1.com, (Stats F1, 2016), http://www.statsf1.com/en/1962/allemagne/qualification.aspx, (Accessed 29/05/2016)
  5. 'Germany 1962: Result', statsf1.com, (Stats F1, 2016), http://www.statsf1.com/en/1962/allemagne/classement.aspx, (Accessed 29/05/2016)
V T E Germany German Grand Prix
Circuits Nürburgring (1951–1954, 1956–1958, 1960–1969, 1971–1976, 1985, 2008–2013*), AVUS (1926, 1959), Hockenheimring (1970, 1977–1984, 1986–2006, 2008–2014*, 2016, 2018–2019)
Nurburgring2002
Hockenheimring2002
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European Championship Races 19321933–193419351936193719381939
Non-Championship Races 1926 • 192719281929193019311932–19331934
* Nürburgring and Hockenheimring alternated between each other during these years.
V T E 1962 Formula One Season
Constructors Brabham • BRM • Cooper • Emeryson • ENB • De Tomaso • Ferrari • Gilby • LDS • Lola • Lotus • Porsche
Engines Alfa Romeo • BRM • Climax • De Tomaso • Ferrari • Maserati • OSCA • Porsche
Drivers Ashmore • Baghetti • Bandini • de Beaufort • Bianchi • Bonnier • Brabham • Burgess • Campbell-Jones • Chamberlain • Clark • Collomb • Estéfano • Ginther • Greene • Gregory • Gurney • Hall • Harris • G. Hill • P. Hill • Ireland • Johnstone • Lederle • Lewis • Lippi • Love • Maggs • Mairesse • Mayer • McLaren • Penske • Pieterse • Pon • Prinoth • R. Rodríguez • Salvadori • Schiller • Seidel • Seiffert • Serrurier • Settember • Sharp • Shelly • Siffert • Surtees • T. Taylor • Trintignant • Vaccarella • Walter
Cars Brabham BT3 • BRM P48/57 • BRM P57 • Cooper T53 • Cooper T55 • Cooper T59 • Cooper T60 • De Tomaso 801 • De Tomaso F1 • Emeryson 61 • ENB F1 • Ferrari 178 • Gilby 62 • LDS Mk1 • Lola Mk4 • Lotus 18 • Lotus 18/21 • Lotus 21 • Lotus 24 • Lotus 25 • Porsche 718 • Porsche 787 • Porsche 804
Tyres Dunlop
Races Netherlands • Monaco • Belgium • France • Britain • Germany • Italy • United States • South Africa
Non-championship Races Cape GP • Brussels • Lombank • Lavant • Glover • Pau • Aintree 200 • International Trophy • Naples GP • 2000 Guineas • Crystal Palace • Reims GP • Solitude GP • Kannonloppet • Mediterranean GP • Denmark • Gold Cup • Mexico • Rand GP • Natal GP
See also 1961 Formula One Season • 1963 Formula One Season • Category
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