My face is very tired and drawn after recovering from a flu, but my mouth was trying to pull a tectonic grin. In my mind and in intention, I was grinning like a loon hearing the car's noises as it purred around the track. I love old cars like this, they can easily outlast most things on the road these days too so long as the owner takes care of it correctly :D
Thank you for this video, Its great to see a bloke who knows a gearbox. I just watched another who had not a clue. You must feel very privileged to drive it, I know I would.
Brought a smile to my face. I remember going to Scotland many years ago and hearing a couple of these behind me and just hauling past effortlessly. Absolutely superb cars. My dad used to say say they fired once every lamppost
What a treat to watch today! I watched "Full Throttle" when I was a kid, and was delighted when it was put onto youtube a few years ago, having never been able to see it again until recently.
Watching this again and how the gearbox is managed, to me, looks like you can float the gears like an American Kenworth or Peterbilt class 8 truck. When floating gears, you don't have to clutch. That in itself saves your leg and the clutch itself. Once you've got it down, it's so smooth and easy to shift gears and NO noise either.
You Can on normal Road - but forget everything about it you want to race. Where older trucks tend to have low HP and strong gearbox, this has quite the opposite. Basically imagine a car with the Engine of a strong truck (at the time) and a gearbox of a bike.. I know it’s a overstatement - but you get the point 🤣
@@psychoduck86 Yeah you do have a point. But bentley was a locomotive engineer, he overbuilt every part of his cars. The 8 litres have a reputation for having bulletproof gearboxes. The blowers gearbox might not be so frail.
Craig, you just put these guys into a very different light. I've seen these Bentleys but haven't ridden in one so your point about shifting makes much more sense. I've been carrying a Class A license and driving semi trucks for way too many years. Once you're comfortable in one, shifting becomes automatic and you don't even think about it until you've covered many miles and think back on the last half hour. With that in mind, most of the work for the drivers was the 100% concentration for several hours and horsing the steering around to keep from either running over a slower inattentive driver or stuffing your car into a bank. I can't imagine 24 hours at Le Mans or any of the other endurance races. Those guys must have been absolutely drained at the end of the race!! I've been around the course at Le Mans when it was just a country road, back in the early 1960s. Safety barriers??? Three and a half miles of what looked like oak trees on both sides of the road that looked to be 3' in diameter with no other barriers when you left the roadway!! It made me think of what it must have been like on that day in 1955!! I have massive respect for those who raced there in those days!!
Although i will never be able to finance and own one of these legendary blowers, but I have developed a great interest to find out about them and the heroes who raced them in Brooklands and Le Mans. This video is so well presented and informative - thank you very much Andrew, great effort - and honour for you to be behind the wheel?!!
Terrific video! As a kid in the 50s, I loved the look of these cars. In the 60s I enjoyed watching them race at Silverstone in the Vintage car races. Superb sound, amazing speed for the era and an imposing presence. I believe it was Etorre Bugatti who said that Bentley made the world's finest racing lorries!
Never heard these cars referred to as Bentley Blowers, but always the other way round as Blower Bentleys, even at the 60 anniversary church service in Blakeney, in the address, it was always Blower Bentley. Still, we live and learn.
Really is a first class video- thank you. The whole era of the Bentley Boys and their activities is just amazing to read. I also watched the two part video of Tim Birken staring Rowan Atkinson. Can be found on RU-vid- a must for all enthusiasts. Now looking to find the book 'Full Throttle'. Thank you again.
👍👌👏 Simply fantastic (car, driver and video)! Thanks a lot for making teaching explaining recording editing uploading and sharing. Best regards luck and health to all involved people.
Fascinating! Mesmerizing! Fantastic! Not just the car, which is amazing enough in itself, but the driver's enthusiasm, knowledge, and excitement! The equivalent for me would be to drive the XK120 that Sterling Moss won in at Le Mans! This was a great, great You Were There video! Congratulation - and thanks - to all involved in its production.
I remember reading about the Bentley Le Mans cars in Tom Macahill's book when I was a teenager about 50 or so odd years ago. Always loved to read his stories. After I grew up and after a few years in the military I learned to drive Semi-Trucks. LOL Double clutching was the way to go with all the transmissions I drove. Up and down shifts, sometimes with 2 or even 3 gearboxes. I'm thinking 4 different ratios would be a piece of cake, even if they weren't spaced evenly. Of course my favorite was the 10 speed Road Ranger, so easy to drive. Regular H pattern with first to the left and back, up through 5th, pull the lever up and back to the first position for 6th and up through the gears to tenth. I wish my current dodge pickup had something along those lines at least 8 gears to get the spacing closer in the upper gears. That's as close as I will ever get to actually driving a Bentley I guess.
Well presented ... Now, this is a real Car, what a machine and it was effortless power at command which you can't get even in today's car's..! .. thank you I enjoyed the drive... now I'll go out and drive my beast to relive the pleasure of watching you grin like a Cheshire cat...
I'm wondering what Tim Birkin (who died young, at the age of 36) would make of one of today's Bentleys if he had had a chance to drive it (or one of today's Bugattis). Or our roads - roads in the late 20s and early 30s would have been practically deserted compared with today's.
I used to go down to le mans every year and once was driving a Dolomite Sprint rapidly down a National road on the way to the circuit in the mid 80s, and one of these must have come past me at well over 100mph, followed by a D-type, and something else very old, I could not believe how fast they were going. Later they were on the parade lap of winners before the start.
What a brilliant video. A motoring vid about a proper car with passion, knowledge and intelligence, and no sign of the three stooges from the Grand Bore.
I had never heard of a Bentley Blower until I read Ian Flemings' Bond books...I don't recall what year Bond's car was, but I do remember he had a particular mechanic keep it in shape.
Brooklands also had to make the cars less noisy due to the complaints of the neighbours....at Brands Hatch, they give the locals special cards for free entry to the track....which I found very helpful, thank you..............................................also, is it right that the pedals are in CAB rather than CBA.??.......which was not mentioned in this video, and it is really important if you want to learn to drive this car, as I do....thanks!
incomparable auto ingles unico marcelo miguens que aprendan desde estos lugares tan lejanos lo verdaderamente bueno no creer que bm como lediceno mercedes es lo mejor en los lugares buenos son autos de medio pelo marcelo miguens
correction : *blower bentley* you have it back to front. I know this because my great grandfather raced blower bentleys. unfortunately, he bet on himself and wasn't as great a driver as sir tim.
benmtley blower is based on end 1920s suprecharged GP car. Of the GP of that time we know that in 1927 people suddenly were stunned by a new Bugatti car that almost went 200 km/h,while the previous did about 180 km/h. bentley blower is faster around teh circuit and also aroudn all the banked corners they used to have !