Ards Circuit
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The Ards Circuit was a motorsport
street circuit A street circuit is a motorsport racing circuit composed of temporarily closed-off public roads of a city, town or village, used in motor races. Airport runways and taxiways are also sometimes part of street circuits. Facilities such as the p ...
in
Northern Ireland Northern Ireland ( ga, Tuaisceart Éireann ; sco, label= Ulster-Scots, Norlin Airlann) is a part of the United Kingdom, situated in the north-east of the island of Ireland, that is variously described as a country, province or region. Nort ...
used for
RAC Tourist Trophy The RAC Tourist Trophy (sometimes called the International Tourist Trophy) is a motor racing award presented by the Royal Automobile Club (RAC) to the overall victor of a motor race in the United Kingdom. Established in 1905, it is the world's ol ...
sports car races from 1928 until 1936, when eight spectators died in an accident. Industrialist and pioneer of the modern
agricultural tractor A tractor is an engineering vehicle specifically designed to deliver a high tractive effort (or torque) at slow speeds, for the purposes of hauling a trailer or machinery such as that used in agriculture, mining or construction. Most common ...
,
Harry Ferguson Henry George "Harry" Ferguson (4 November 188425 October 1960) was a British mechanic and inventor who is noted for his role in the development of the modern agricultural tractor and its three point linkage system, for being the first person ...
was instrumental in setting up the race. As Northern Ireland's premier sporting event, it regularly attracted crowds in excess of a quarter of a million people.


Description

The triangular circuit long ran between the towns of Dundonald,
Newtownards Newtownards is a town in County Down, Northern Ireland. It lies at the most northern tip of Strangford Lough, 10 miles (16 km) east of Belfast, on the Ards Peninsula. It is in the Civil parishes in Ireland, civil parish of Newtownard ...
(known as ''Ards'') and
Comber Comber ( , , locally ) is a town in County Down, Northern Ireland. It lies south of Newtownards, at the northern end of Strangford Lough. It is situated in the townland of Town Parks, the civil parish of Comber and the historic barony of Cast ...
in
County Down County Down () is one of the six counties of Northern Ireland, one of the nine counties of Ulster and one of the traditional thirty-two counties of Ireland. It covers an area of and has a population of 531,665. It borders County Antrim to the ...
, Northern Ireland. Races were run in a clockwise direction, starting at 11 am. Initially races were of 30 laps for a total distance of ; from 1933 races were of 35 laps for a total distance of . The entries were handicapped to cater for cars of different sizes and capabilities, and
W. O. Bentley Walter Owen Bentley, MBE (16 September 1888 – 13 August 1971) was an English engineer who founded Bentley Motors Limited in London. He was a motorcycle and car racer as a young man. After making a name for himself as a designer of aircraft a ...
wrote that large cars could often be baulked by smaller ''baby cars'' on the winding sections so the circuit did not suit the larger Bentley or Rolls-Bentley cars. The only long straight stretch for high speeds was from Newtownards to Comber. The circuit started at Dundonald at the Dundonald Hairpin, then past the R.A.C. Grandstand to the Quarry Corner. The Central Bar was a popular viewing point for the Dundonald Hairpin. At Dundonald the Carpark, Enclosure and Pits were near the R.A.C. Grandstand, and the pits were still visible until the 1960s. At Newtownards the right-angle Town Hall corner led to the Newtownards - Comber straight. In 1936 with the race run in ''shocking weather'' and with contestants ''spinning off the road in all directions'' a local driver Jack Chambers skidded on the Newtownards railway bridge while approaching the Strangford Arms in Newtownards, demolishing a lamp post and mowing down a crowd standing against the wall. The driver (Chambers) was not seriously injured but eight spectators were killed, and the race was the last on the circuit after reactions that spectators should be adequately safeguarded.


Rolls-Royce entries

In 1934
Edward Ramsden Hall Edward Ramsden Hall (17 July 1900 – 12 May 1982) was an English racing driver. He was born in Milnsbridge into a wealthy Yorkshire family in 1900, the heir to a successful textiles business which funded his motor racing and other sporting e ...
a ''competent and successful amateur racing driver'' who had competed in the TT races of 1928, 1929, 1930, 1931, 1932 and 1933 on the Ards Circuit asked
Rolls-Royce Rolls-Royce (always hyphenated) may refer to: * Rolls-Royce Limited, a British manufacturer of cars and later aero engines, founded in 1906, now defunct Automobiles * Rolls-Royce Motor Cars, the current car manufacturing company incorporated in ...
for support as a private entry in 1934. He had taken the Bentley 3½-Litre; to Italy for a ''
Mille Miglia The Mille Miglia (, ''Thousand Miles'') was an open-road, motorsport endurance race established in 1927 by the young Counts Francesco Mazzotti and Aymo Maggi, which took place in Italy twenty-four times from 1927 to 1957 (thirteen before World ...
'' practice (to save his M.G. for the race itself ), and was impressed by its performance. It was the first new Bentley model or ''Derby Bentley'' after Rolls-Royce acquired Bentley in 1931, and was known as ''the silent sports car''. The company was initially reluctant, but Arthur Sidgreaves agreed and Rolls-Royce supplied a support team. Rowbotham thought the project ''sheer lunacy'' as a lone entry could be forced off the road by a works entry or a minor mechanical fault, and the Engineering Department knew nothing about racing (the last Rolls-Royce entries in a TT race were on the Isle of Man in 1905 and 1906 – winning in 1906). He would be responsible for the car, which was prepared in the factory and then a non-stop 12 hours endurance run; the power of the ''slightly hotted-up engine'' was increased from 114 bhp to 131 bhp. Eddie Hall and his wife (who was his pit manager) were both worried about the car’s quietness and lack of drama or final adjustments before the race. A previous entry of theirs ''had required four different types of sparking plug to keep it firing on its six cylinders''. During the second pit stop one of the wheel nuts partially seized and the stop took 5½ minutes. Several smaller cars were on their third lap before the larger cars like the Bentley and the two Lagondas driven by Hon Brian Lewis and John Cobb started. There was a dramatic duel with Lewis’s Lagonda who passed Hall and took the lead when Hall slid on the road by the butcher’s shop in Comber; Hall, Lewis and Cobb ran in a pack for the first few laps, then Cobb fell behind. After the race the team celebrated in Belfast, and
Ernest Hives Ernest Walter Hives, 1st Baron Hives (21 April 1886 – 24 April 1965), was the one-time head of the Rolls-Royce Aero Engine division and chairman of Rolls-Royce Ltd. Hives was born in Reading, Berkshire to John and Mary Hives, living at 31 C ...
put in an expense account ''To champagne – £45''. Hall averaged 78.4 mph for the race with the best average speed of any entrant. He came second and 17 seconds behind to Dodson in a M.G. who won with a time of 6 hours, 13 minutes and 24 seconds. Hall had done ''far better than I (Rowbotham) thought possible''. So Hall ran again in 1935, losing on handicap by 1 minute and 13 seconds to a Riley, and again the fastest time of the race with an average speed of 80.34 mph. In 1936 Hall drove single-handed a Bentley with the larger 4¼-litre engine. In ''shocking weather'' he averaged 80.81 mph, again the highest speed. He was second on handicap, beaten by 26 seconds by Dodson & Dixon in a Riley. In the large class Hall was up against teams of three Lagondas and three Delahydes (which Rowbotham considered a semi-racing car as the very short Delahyde chassis could not carry a normal four-seater body). A Lagonda, the next big car, was almost nine minutes behind him. After 1936 the circuit was abandoned, to Rowbotham’s relief as he thought three entries with a lone car was ''tempting fate to the limit ... a 100-1 chance''. The record of the highest average speed in all three races helped the Sales department, as some old Bentley customers doubted if the first ''Derby'' Bentley ''the silent sports car'' could out-perform its famous predecessors. He said it was easier to make a car go fast than to operate under all climate conditions for the average customer. Their Continental testing required 25,000 road miles (while provided free holiday transport e.g. to winter skiing at Davos!). They were finding with increased cars on the road that London traffic disclosed problems not disclosed by the Chateauroux trials, so included two or three thousand miles of driving in London traffic. Typical problems were clutch troubles, plugs misfiring or overheating from running the engine while standing in a traffic jam.


References

* * (5th edition, 1st edition 1964) {{Northern Ireland racing circuits Defunct motorsportsport venues in Northern Ireland Sports venues in County Down