Category Archives: RacingDocs

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Erik Brandenburg

2007 Brandenburg made the second place in the Transsibiria-Rallye.

He is also FalconerDoc and drives with the eagle in the Porsche to flying places….

This fighting eagle is my co-pilote when I go for chase, the co-pilot seat is taken out and he is sitting in a big wooden box filling half of the 911 …..tough, what?? kind regards

Driver profile Transsibiria Rallye (DE):
Name, Vorname: Dr. Brandenburg, Erik
Alter: 40
Wohnort: Hamburg, Deutschland
Geburtsort: Hamburg, Deutschland
Beruf: Arzt
Fahrzeug: Porsche 911 Safari
Team: Dr. Brandenburg Racing
Beifahrer: Preuss, Stephan
Rallye-Erfahrung: Gewinner des Marlboro Adventure-Teams, USA, 1989
Camel Trophy Syberia, Sieger des ”Best Drivers Awards”,
Zweiter Platz Gesamtklassement 1990
Camel Trophy Malaysia, Urwald, 1993
Zahlreiche nationale Rallyes, Auto und Enduro
Rallye-Erfolge:
Art der Vorbereitung: Zwei Jahre Arbeit am Wagen…!
Grund der Teilnahme: Um das Land und tolle gleichgesinnte Kameraden kennen zu
lernen.
Selbsteinschätzung: Wir beißen…!!! Wir brauchen keinen Schlaf! Adrenalin pur und
Kameradschaft!
Hobbys: Falkenjagd mit Beizvogel und Adler, Rallye-Sport und
Katamaran-Wettbewerbe
Motto: Lasst uns Spaß haben, nette Leute treffen und Natur erleben!
Kommentar: Auf geht’s! Danke an Richard Schalber und seine Crew

youtube collection

Magazine-article

Der Hamburger

work


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Jonathan Palmer

Jonathan Charles Palmer (born 7 November 1956) is a British businessman and former Formula One racing driver. Before opting for a career in motor racing, Palmer trained as a physician at London’s Guy’s Hospital. He also worked as a junior physician at Cuckfield and Brighton hospitals.

He is currently the majority shareholder and Chief Executive of MotorSport Vision (MSV), a company that runs six UK motorsport circuits, the PalmerSport corporate driving event at Bedford Autodrome and several racing championships including British Superbikes and GB3.[3]

Prior to his business life, Palmer was active in Formula One between 1983 and 1989, and drove for TyrrellWilliamsRAM, and Zakspeed. He won 14 Championship points from 83 starts. He also raced a Group C Porsche in sports car events between 1983 and 1990, winning the 1984 1000 km of Brands Hatch with co-driver Jan Lammers and taking second place at the 1985 24 Hours of Le Mans with co-drivers James Weaver and Richard Lloyd.

Palmer helped develop the McLaren F1 road car, and drove one to a new speed record for production cars.

Following his education at Brighton College, Palmer raced an Austin Healey Sprite and a Marcos in club events while he was a medical student at Guy’s Hospital.[4] He went on to work as a doctor at Cuckfield and Brighton hospitals, and opted for a professional driving career after he had participated in Formula Ford from 1978 to 1980. He won the British Formula 3 Championship in 1981,[5] and landed a Williams Formula One test drive in 1982. The following year he won the European Formula Two Championship, and the British Racing Drivers’ Club awarded him their Gold Star.

Palmer joined Williams as a test driver for the 1982 and 1983 seasons whilst racing in F2, and made his Formula One debut at Brands Hatch on 25 September 1983, driving a Williams in the European Grand Prix. This drive was a ‘thank you’ from Frank Williams and Patrick Head. He finished 13th out of 26 starters. Moving to the Skoal Bandit RAM March team in 1984, his six finishes yielded one 8th place, three 9th, one 10th, and one 13th. He joined Zakspeed in 1985, starting in eight races and retiring from all except the 1985 Detroit Grand Prix, where he finished 11th. Sixteen starts with the same team in 1986 resulted in eight retirements and a best finish of 8th in Detroit.

In 1987, Palmer talked with McLaren boss Ron Dennis about becoming the team’s No. 2 driver to double World Champion Alain Prost. Dennis ultimately signed Stefan Johansson, and Palmer joined Tyrrell a week before the season’s opening race in Brazil. Although outpaced by its turbocharged competitors, Tyrrell’s naturally-aspirated Cosworth-powered car proved reliable, and it was nimble on tighter circuits. Palmer won championship points in three races, and it was in the Australian Grand Prix that he achieved his career-best fourth-place finish. He also won the Jim Clark Cup, a championship for drivers of normally aspirated cars. He stayed with Tyrrell for the next two seasons, during which his best results were two 5th-place finishes and three 6th. At the end of 1989 he signed as McLaren’s test driver.

Web Palmer Sport

audio report Palmer

wikipedia DE
wikipedia EN


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Iain Corness

Iain Corness (1932 – 30.01.2023) was a leading MGB competitor of the 1960’s.

He was born in Northern Ireland in November 1941 and came to Australia as a “10 quid pom”.
Gained medical degree in Brisbane and practiced there.

He took up amateur racing and eventually developed an MGB into the fastest in the world. This was extremely modified and included a Twin Cam head from an MGA fitted to the MGB block.

He raced many times at Oran Park and Warwick Farm, in some fantastic production sports car races. He gained sponsorship from British Leyland and the car was turned out in a great blue and white colour scheme. He had an equally well-presented Ford F100 ex ambulance also in the team colors as his tow car. The MGB came to be called the “SuperBee” and was covered in a great track test in October 1970 Sports Car World.

Eventually CAMS changed the rules for Prod Sports as development was getting out of hand. This outlawed the SuperBee and Ross Bond’s Austin Healey amongst other. Sometime later he developed a team of three radical Fort Escort Sports Sedans. These had space frame chassis and Mazda rotary engines. They were sponsored by Bryan Byrt Ford and looked very impressive in blue and white paint schemes. Iain was the lead driver. I don’t recall them racing at Sydney circuits, staying in Queensland.

In 1997 Iain moved permanently to Thailand settling in Pattaya. This is a city of 120,00 on west Thailand coast. It’ s main attraction for Iain was it had the only race circuit in Thailand.

He took up a Consultancy at the Bangkok Pattaya Hospital.

He continued racing in Thailand until age 80, mainly in a modified Ford Escort. See the attached YouTube video which is very interesting.

Pattaya’s Dr. Iain – Racing cars throughout his Life! – YouTube

He wrote a bestselling book titled “Farang, Thailand through the eyes of an expat” . Subsequently he wrote a sequel.

Both books available through Amazon.

This Shannons article describes the development of the SuperBee:
MGA and MGB: Aussie doctor and the world’s fastest ‘Super Bee’ – Shannons Club

Iain was a truly unique character and larger than life.

report on MGA club website


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Falk Guddat

Falk Guddat is RacingDoc

Sinc the 2021 season Falk Guddat is also active in motor sport. On the Nürburg-Ring (RCN) he participated in the team of www.monkeystateracing.com in a BMW 325i.

presentation in his web

web work


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Gunther Philipp

Gunther Philipp (8 June 1918 – 2 October 2003) was an Austrian film actor, physician and swimmer.[2]

From 1949 to 2002 he appeared as an actor in 147 movies for cinema and television, mainly in comic roles. As an author, Philipp wrote 21 film scripts.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=37YfeJ6MoBY

During World War II, Philipp studied acting at the Max Reinhardt Seminar and at the University of Vienna philosophy, majoring in psychology and then medicine. In 1943 he received his doctorate in medicine (Dr. med. univ.) He held the Austrian record in the 100-meter breaststroke for 14 years. He was also in the squad of the Austrian Olympic team in Berlin in 1936, but was not nominated for political reasons because he did not want to join the National Socialist-dominated “First Vienna Amateur Sports Club”. After the war, he ran a practice in Eberstalzell in Upper Austria and was active until in the 1990s at the Vienna University Clinic for Neurology and Psychiatry.

Selected filmography

Sporting successes

  • 1935 Austrian record 100 m breaststroke
  • 1937 an Austrian record 100 m breaststroke
  • 1938 Austrian record 100 m breaststroke 3 x.
  • 1939 the Austrian record in the 100 m breaststroke (at the same time European year best performance: 1:11,3)
  • 1939 academic world record at the German University Championships in Schrießheim Mannheim / year highs 100 m breaststroke (second in the world rankings)
  • 1962 Austrian State Championship on Ferrari 250 GT
  • 1963 Austrian State Championship on Ferrari GTO
  • 1963 four times first in the Grand Prix of Austria (Zeltweg)

wikipedia DE
wikipedia EN
IMDb