Goodwood
Revival Meeting
Friday 18th to Sunday 20th September 2009
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The
Goodwood Revival Meeting is a popular annual motor racing
event many classic car enthusiasts thoroughly enjoy for its
mouthwatering cars, breathtaking driving on the track and
the wonderful period feel of a race meeting with a mid 1960s
ambiance. That period feel - "a magical step back
in time" - is from a combination of the pre mid-sixties
cars on and off the track and also the willingness of most
people attending to dress in a style and in clothing of the
period. In fact it's a good opportunity to chase out the moth
from an old and much loved sports jacket!
Well over recent years a group of V8 enthusiasts have met
up over the three days and shared a stroll around the circuit
and paddock and watched practice and the racing. The sight
of Mk 7 Jaguars leaning into the bends, Astons and Ferrari
250LMs drifting through Fordwater and the growl of the Cobras
are simply wonderful.
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The
air displays with Spitfires, Hurricanes and Mustangs are a joy to
see and hear together with the fly past of a Lancaster.
The event is an extraordinary experience as it as alive and real
as the race meetings at Goodwood before the circuit closed back
in the mid sixties. The cars are raced with serious effort by modern
classic sportscar drivers (like the V8 Register members David Franklin
in a Ferrari 250LM and Ron Gammons in a Lotus 19) and by many racing
heroes from the past like Stirling Moss, Jack Brabham and Tony Brooks.
We even have V8 Register member Barry Sidery-Smith out in his MGB
- he is both a relic from sportscar racing in sixties and someone
who is still actively racing today! The attention to detail by Lord
March's team is truly extraordinary too - little touches that contribute
to a wonderfully complete re-creation of an earlier age of motor
sport with a relaxed feel and an underlying sense of style and fun.
More

The sight of a full grid racing down to Madgwick Corner
is a wonderful. What a delight to see historic cars driven with
vigour and not just standing in dusty museums! (Photo:
Goodwood Circuit)
V8 enthusiasts
at the Goodwood Revival meeting
Well for the Goodwood Revival 2008 we are continuing
the informal V8 Gathering. John Targett will be over from
Akron Ohio and regulars like Mike and Phylida Maude-Roxby, Bryan
Ditchman, Howard Gosling, Jim Gibson and Sue Walker, Ken Willis,
Ron and Valerie Gammons and Victor Smith will be there.
Do get in touch with Victor Smith on 0208 392 9434 beforehand
or on 07770 822977 over the Goodwood Revival weekend. There
is good mobile phone coverage at the Circuit although often the
networks are fully engaged so that getting a connection can be difficult
at times!
Getting
to Goodwood
In terms of getting to Goodwood, you have two choices based on the
direction from which you approach Goodwood Circuit - from the
north or from the south - and that will determine the
car park you will be directed to, unless you have been allocated
a particular car parking sticker by the organisers. Whichever route
you decide to take, it is well worth timing your journey to arrive
before 8.00am or earlier to avoid the slow moving queues for
the car parks. The Goodwood Circuit management are very efficient
at handling the car parking traffic flows. You will be directed
into one of the public car parks (level grass fields) and parked
in rows.
Approaching from the north through Singleton village on the A286
from Midhurst. You can reach Midhurst from the A3 (London-Portsmouth
road) at Milford or from Pulborough and Petworth to the east and
Winchester from the west on the A272. It's a wonderful drive over
the downs passing Goodwood racecourse.
A route to the north east car park
from the north of Goodwood (for example if you are coming down from
the North, for example from the A3 at Milford) takes you east of
Singleton village to East Dean and then south to a crossroads just
east of the north east car park. It is available as a PDF download.
More
Approaching from the south from the roundabout on the A27.
You reach this roundabout from the M27 to the west or from the east
on the A27 from Arundel and further east or from the A285 from Petworth
or the A29 Pulborough & Billingshurst. Congestion on the
A27, even before you reach that roundabout, is legendary, so
unless you arrive before 8.00am lengthy delays are likely on the
A27 and then once off the roundabout and on the secondary road leading
north to Goodwood Circuit (also marked for Goodwood Airfield) there
is usually a slow traffic queue until you are directed to one of
the public cars parks (see the bottom RH corner of the plan below).
Finding
your way around the Circuit
Circuit plan - with the key features for the Revival
Race meeting. (Plan: Goodwood Circuit Revival
Programme 1998)

Enlarged plan of entrance to the Circuit, grandstands, enclosures
and the subway to the paddock. (Plan:
Goodwood Revival Programme 1998)
Where
to meet up
A convenient meeting place is at the bar and teashop marked "F1"
on the plan above which is near the main pedestrian entrance
(marked on the plan above) and the pedestrian subway to the Paddock.
The Paddock is on the inside of the track. It is a convenient point
because it is only 50 yards (45 metres) from the main ticket control
point at the head of the path leading from the road passing the
entrance to the Circuit. So if you are not familiar with Goodwood
all you have to do is walk dead ahead from the ticket control barrier
and then you will see the marquee with the bar and teashop diagonally
to your left. Call Victor Smith on 07770 822977 and we will
agree a meeting time.
On Saturday and Sunday mornings between 8.30am to 9.30am Victor
Smith and Bryan Ditchman are usually to be found at the Spitfire
Restuarant, marked "F2" on the plan above enjoying
a 1950s English breakfast - they will be happy to see you there!
The Spitfire Bar overlooks the parked WW2 aircraft which are usually
fired up early in the morning - just before 9am - for a short display
and then again at lunchtime.

Now
just a few notes on dress for the Goodwood Revival meeting
Lord March has very successfully revived motor racing at
Goodwood by capturing the style and feel of motor racing as it was
in the early 1960s. He has restored the Circuit substantially as
it was when it closed for racing in the mid-sixties and he has made
quite exceptional efforts in achieving this - he even has haymaking
in progress on the inside of the track and the hay set in stoops
to dry as it would have been forty years or more ago. This of course
adds to the period feel and is a benefit to photographers! The cars
on the track are all pre mid-sixties machines, and there are many
motor racing personalities from the fifties and sixties present
together with current drivers of classic and historic racing and
sports cars. But his attention to detail and desire to share the
sense of fun he so evidently enjoys in motor racing goes further
- he has period props and characters dressed in RAF uniforms and
period clothing, not to mention all manner of vehicles from the
forties, fifties and sixties. He has aircraft parked up and flying
from WW2. There are times as you walk around you feel you are back
in the sixties as there are so few signs of later years! Visitors
are encouraged to participate too by dressing in a style of the
period.

Two Goodwood Revival regulars enjoying the Paddock
sights - yes even cheeky schoolgirls from St Trinians! But be assured
a St John Ambulance team were on hand nearby with a de-fibrolator!
Mike and Bill look as if September 1962 was just yesterday, but
how long can they keep the moth at bay!! (Photo:
Victor Smith)
Most visitors
do dress in sympathy with the style of the event
- ladies wear summer dresses, pastel shades and pearls, and even
wartime austerity dresses or suits - and men shake out their old
sports jackets or blazers, twills, neckwear (a tie, bowtie or cravat)
and brogues, together a hat and give the moth a surprise! Some visitors
appear in drainpipe trousers and Teddyboy jackets. The period feel
is further enhanced by the groups from local drama schools playing
various parts from the 1960s - one group last year was a schoolmistress
with a class of girls from St Trinians which caused some
amusement.

School mistress struggling to control her class from St Trinians
- the actors are provided by a local drama school. The attention
to detail and sense of fun are hallmarks of the approach Lord March
and his team have to re-creating the feel and atmosphere of Goodwood
in the 1950s and 60s. (Photo: Victor Smith)
So trainers, baseball
caps and modern logo adorned sweatshirts are not at all welcome
and only an insensitive few appear in them. To get from the public
enclosures into the Paddock on the inside of the track via the pedestrian
tunnel (see the plan above), the stewards appear to check both paddock
transfers and that visitors are suitably dressed. For photographers
in the Paddock it is wonderful because it means the attire of the
human backdrop is very much as it would have been when the cars being
prepared for the various events were originally competing at the Circuit
some 40 years ago or more.
Where
to watch the racing and enjoy the sights and sounds

The start line at Goodwood - an impressive
sight with Mk 7 & 9 Jaguars, Sunbean Rapiers, A35s, Riley 1.5s
and Morris Minors set to give battle again. The view here is from
the grandstand on the outside of the Circuit, facing the Pits.
One
of the pleasures of attending the Goodwood Revival meeting is a
stroll right round the outside of the track with several
chums in the morning during practice pausing at the bars on the
way for an occasional pint of ale. Do try and get round to Fordwater
(a high speed corner on the far side of the Circuit - see the bottom
LH side of the plan of the Circuit above) because the sight of an
Aston or a Ferrari drifting through, brushing the apex at 130mph
is beyond description - not to mention the sound of the engines
on full-song! A seat in one of the grandstands during the
racing programme is useful and a welcome relief for the legs too!
It's also a great benefit if it rains! Another popular spot is a
grass covered mound by the chicane on the outside of the track
where you get a good view of the cars as they race up from Woodcote
Corner to the slowest part of the lap. Spectating from the roof
of the pits (see the spectators massed above the pits in the
photo above) is another interesting viewpoint particularly during
the one hour race when you have the driver changes below in the
pits.
Standing on the grass bank at Madgwick Corner is also a very
useful viewing point as it is a complex corner with a great deal
of action. It is also a good spot for the air display as the aircraft
usually follow the line of the main grass runway and pass right
over the Madgwick banking!

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V8 Register - MG Car Club
Goodwood
Revival 2007 report
with photos
1.45MB
PDF file
Report
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Getting
to Goodwood
Finding
the NE car park
Finding your way round the Circuit
Where to meet up
Notes on dress for Goodwood
Where to watch the racing & see the sights
V8 Register contact number over the weekend
Victor Smith on
07770 822977
Goodwood website
at www.goodwood.co.uk
is well worth a visit where you can book tickets online or by calling
the ticket office on
01243 755055
From the pits
looking across to the old control tower on the outside of the track,
now a restaurant serving morning coffee, lunch and afternoon
teas. (Photo:
Victor Smith)
The Goodwood
Cricket Match on the Thursday afternoon is a very popular event
for enthusiasts who arrive early for the weekend. You can see Goodwood
House in the background. The weather in recent years has been glorious.
(Photo: Victor Smith)
So there is plenty
to do and all the better in good company. Do get in touch if you
are planning to go there, or whilst you are there, so you can meet
fellow V8 enthusiasts. Finally don't forget your shooting stick
to give your legs a break during the day! Let's hope we have good
weather again this year!
V8
Register
MG Car Club
PO Box 888
London SW14 7YT
Email
V8 Registrar
0208 392 9434
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