Thread: Televising the old Nürburgring
-
10th Apr 07, 23:41 #1
Televising the old Nürburgring
Can someone answer this for me? How were F1 races at the Nürburgring Nordschleife televised live? I presume they were on German TV, because almost all national networks in Europe that I know of used to show their own GPs live (and the BBC did a fair few overseas ones too), but how did they manage to show anything like a whole lap, or even a good proportion of one? The only film that exists of Lauda's crash in 1976, after all, is amateur footage.
I'd be fascinated if anyone knows!
-
10th Apr 07, 23:53 #2
I don't know if they were shown live, but for about 1/2 of the track, they had a helicopter w/camera follow the cars at least on the copy I have. It's an amazing track, that's for sure.
-
10th Apr 07, 23:54 #3
The first live GP ever shown on TV anywhere was the 1976 Japanese GP which was the last race of the season and the title decider. Cameras were provided by the BBC because James Hunt had a potential shot at the title.
Lauda's accident in 1976 happened before this date, and because of safety concerns, the racetrack has never held an F1 GP since.
The answer to this question:
How? Never; in fact never televised live ever.Horse! You have failed in your mission! We are lost with no sign of Sweetville. Do you have any final words before your summary execution?
-
11th Apr 07, 00:05 #4
Sorry, but I know this isn't true. Several GPs were shown live by the BBC before that. For example, the 1967 and 1969 Italian GPs were definitely broadcast live by the BBC. The British GP was certainly covered live by the BBC before 1976 as well. There is archive footage that backs this up, notably as carried on the Grand Prix 500 retrospective programme at the end of the 1990 season.
The 1976 Japanese GP was also shown by both ITV and the BBC. ITV's commentary was by Barrie Gill, the BBC's by Murray Walker.
-
11th Apr 07, 00:06 #5
-
11th Apr 07, 00:18 #6
I can recall seeing the '69 race live. I can confirm that there was a lot of helicopter footage.
Duncan Rollo
The more you learn, the more you realise how little you know.
-
11th Apr 07, 00:36 #7
-
11th Apr 07, 00:39 #8
-
11th Apr 07, 02:31 #9
- Join Date
- Oct 2001
- Posts
- 132
Very interesting question!
Had a quick look through my footage of the 1975 German GP, there seems to have been a total of nine mounted TV cameras that year.
CAM1: Within the Südkehre of the start/finish loop, capturing the cars coming down the straight, then panning full circle to follow them around the loop and down the back straight.
CAM2: On the entry to Hatzenbach, covering the first three corners of that section. Located inside of the Ring between the first and second turn.
CAM3: Situated somewhere atop of Ex-Mühle, covering Wehrseifen, Breidscheid and the climb towards the Bergwerk right hander.
CAM4: On the hill next to the Steilstrecke, covering Klostertal, the climb towards Karussell as well as the first half of that turn.
CAM5: Panning along the Karussell from the inside of the turn for close-up shots of the cars going through and then exiting the corner up the hill.
CAM6: Exit of the Karussell section with the fast left-hand sweeper towards Hohe Acht.
CAM7: The quick right turn on the exit of said sweeper and the entry into Hohe Acht.
CAM8: Looking towards the exit of Tiergarten in the background, Hohenrain in the foreground, then following the cars through that double chicane onto the start/finish straight.
CAM9: Mounted atop the grandstand right at the finish line, enabling it to cover the entire start/finish straight (plus the pits and the score board).
And then back to CAM1 again, and so on. The huge gaps between CAM2 and CAM3 (Hatzenbach >> Wehrseifen), CAM3 and CAM4 (Bergwerk >> Mutkurve), and CAM7 and CAM8 (Hohe Acht >> Tiergarten) seem to have been covered exclusively via helicopter, at least that year. I've seen b/w footage from the 1960s with at least two additional cameras, one looking down towards Flugplatz, the other situated at Brünnchen, though these may have been on film, not for TV.
-
11th Apr 07, 09:30 #10
Many thanks for your fascinating replies, Shirk and Zsolt.

The issue of live GP coverage in the 1960s and up until the late 1970s is an interesting one. In the UK, many people believe that nothing was shown until the BBC started its Grand Prix highlights show in 1978. However, they had actually done quite a few live races before that, mainly the 'glamour' races, as Murray Walker has put it, like Monaco and Monza (the earliest live BBC footage I've ever seen of a GP is Italy in 1967), but also of course the British GP. I believe the BBC also showed the German GP from the Nürburgring, at least on occasions, from 1969. Raymond Baxter was the main commentator in this period, but Murray Walker did some when Baxter couldn't, notably the 1969 Italian GP where he was almost overcome by the excitement of the finish, and confused Jochen Rindt's Lotus with Jean-Pierre Beltoise's Matra!
Clips of some of these races have obviously been shown in the past, but I find it really disappointing that most of the videos/DVDs of old Grands Prix are made up of film footage shot for the likes of Shell and Ferodo at the time, because the original TV coverage of some races is still out there.
-
11th Apr 07, 16:01 #11
There's some great footage out there, you just have to look for it. Do a Google search.
-
11th Apr 07, 16:12 #12
ITV's World of Sport also showed some races. I certainly remember the 1978 Swedish GP being introduced by Dickie Davies, but I'm not sure it was shown in full or live.
Riccardo Patrese - 256GPs 1977-1993
-
25th Apr 07, 08:04 #13
- Join Date
- Jul 2004
- Posts
- 18
The BBC showed a considerable, live amount of the 1961 Monaco Grand Prix although it was interspersed with various other programmes.
I remember managing to fit my Sunday School attendance in between broadcasts.
-
25th Apr 07, 13:19 #14
-
5th May 07, 08:08 #15
- Join Date
- Jan 2007
- Location
- Leeds, United Kingdom
- Posts
- 406
I've seem some very high quality TV footage of the '73 German GP, with Stewart and Cevert out front. Lots of helicopter shots were employed to cover the more remote parts of the track.
-
7th May 07, 21:25 #16
futuretiger9, I have a copy of the race on dvd, you are correct. There is about a 9 min. clip of the 1967 German GP on Youtube. VERY cool footage. Those cars were really flying!
-
11th Jun 07, 22:07 #17
- Join Date
- Aug 2004
- Posts
- 510
that's from 50 years of Formula-1 onboard
it's surteess in a honda and another chap?
they were literally flying over some crests, incredable footage
Last edited by tsarcasm; 11th Jun 07 at 22:08. Reason: spelling
-
11th Jun 07, 22:14 #18
- Join Date
- Jan 2007
- Location
- Leeds, United Kingdom
- Posts
- 406
-
29th Jul 07, 23:53 #19
I've just watched the 1967 German GP clip in question. It's fabulous, but I'd venture to say that it's not TV footage. Don't know the origin of the film — maybe it's one of the Shell or Ferodo productions of the day.



LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks



Reply With Quote


Bookmarks