Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Paul Frère

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Nationality
  
Belgian

Teams
  
Championships
  
0

Parents
  
Maurice Frère

Grandparent
  
Alfred Frère

Active years
  
1952–1956

Entries
  
11

Wins
  
0

Paul Frère wwwbutzisquaredcomwpcontentuploads201412Po

Born
  
30 January 1917Le Havre, France (
1917-01-30
)

Died
  
23 February 2008, Saint Paul de Vence, France

Books
  
Porsche 911 Story, Sports car and competiti, Porsche Boxster Story: Th, My Life Full of Cars: Behind th, Porsche racing cars of the 70s

Similar
  
Olivier Gendebien, Shōtarō Kobayashi, Rainer Günzler, Jerzy Skolimowski

Paul Frère (30 January 1917 – 23 February 2008) was a racing driver and journalist from Belgium. He participated in eleven World Championship Formula One Grands Prix debuting on 22 June 1952 and achieving one podium finish with a total of eleven championship points. He drove in several non-Championship Formula One races.

Contents

Paul Frère Paul Frere 19172008 An obituary by Mark Walton by CAR Magazine

He also won the 1960 24 Hours of Le Mans, driving for Ferrari with fellow Belgian teammate Olivier Gendebien.

Paul Frère PaulFrerejpg

Life

Frère was born at Le Havre in 1917.

He drove for the Ferrari works team, with Peter Collins.

Paul Frère Memories of Paul Frere Pelican Parts Technical BBS

After retiring from active racing in 1960, he worked as an automotive journalist based in Europe (he was the European Editor for Road & Track magazine). He had numerous acquaintances amongst vehicle design engineers, especially in Japan at Honda and Mazda and also worked as a consultant to automobile manufacturers. He also had the opportunity to test numerous road and racing cars as a journalist, one of the highlights being the Audi R8 which he tested and demonstrated during a break in the proceedings of the Test Day of the 2003 24 Hours of Le Mans. At the time he was 86 years old, making him the oldest racing driver to drive a then-current sportscar.

Paul Frère Paul Frere Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Frère, along with Piero Taruffi and Denis Jenkinson, was one of the first writers to treat motor racing as a skill that could be analyzed, explained, and taught. His 1963 book, Sports Car and Competition Driving is still a standard reference in the field. It influenced the development of competition driving schools, such as those founded by Jim Russell, Bob Bondurant, and many others.

Paul Frère Paul Frre a lch le volant 91 ans jour aprs jour

Frère was an expert on Porsche cars, in particular the Porsche 911, writing the definitive book on this series, The Porsche 911 Story. He maintained a close relationship with Porsche over the years. He was also considered an advisor and expert on the 911 by Alois Ruf, a respected Porsche tuner and manufacturer as head of Ruf Automobile, who consulted Frère during the development of Ruf's RGT8 Model.

Paul Frère Paul Frre gravement accident le blog auto

In 1967, Frère gave a cameo appearance in The Departure, a Belgian film about a car-obsessed young man trying to get possession of a Porsche 911 for a race.

Only weeks before his 90th birthday in January 2007, he was badly injured in an accident near the Nürburgring, and was hospitalized for 14 days in intensive care.

Frère died on 23 February 2008 in Saint-Paul-de-Vence (France). Turn 15 at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, formerly the first part of the Stavelot corner, has been renamed in his honour.

Rowing champion

Frère was also a successful rower winning three Belgian championships. In 1946 and 1947 he won the national title in a coxless four. In 1946, he also won it with the coxed four.

Complete Formula One World Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position)

References

Paul Frère Wikipedia