Challenge International de Tourisme 1932 - Rally Over Europe

Rally Over Europe

The second part of the Challenge was a 7363 km rally over Europe, on a path: Berlin - Warsaw - Kraków - Prague - Brno – Vienna - Zagreb - Postumia (checkpoint) - Vicenza - Rimini - Rome - Firenza - Bellinzona - Torino – Albenga (checkpoint) – Imperia (checkpoint) - Cannes - Lyon - St. Gallen - Stuttgart - Bonn - Paris - Deauville – Rotterdam - Dortmund – Hamburg - Copenhagen – Laholm (checkpoint) - Gothenburg - Laholm (checkpoint) - Copenhagen - Hamburg – Berlin. 39 aircraft took part in the race. Main waypoints were Rome and Paris. Longest secion was Berlin – Warsaw (518 km), the shortest - Brno – Vienna (106.4 km).

The rally started on August 21. From the beginning, the German crews tried to take advantage of faster aircraft and make up for the points lost in the technical trials. The Italians tried to be the first in Rome, racing against the Germans. On the other side, the Poles, with slower planes, tried to keep a good cruise speed and flight regularity, which were awarded with points in the rally. On the first day, most crews reached Vienna or Zagreb, while the Italians reached Vicenza. Ambrogio Colombo and three Germans (von Massenbach, Seidemann and Marienfeld) got as far as Rimini. Three crews withdrew on the way due to breakdowns. On August 22, the competitors landed in Rome, but the German pilot Hans Seidemann was first. Only 33 crews reached Rome, three had forced crash landings (among others, the Romanian Aleksander Papana flying Monocoupe 110).

On August 23, the competitors took off from Rome. On that day, two Italian Bredas crashed due to weak wing construction (one mechanic died bailing out). As a result, Italy decied to withdraw all the Italian teams from the Challenge, Ambrogio Colombo being the leader by then. On August 24, the 25 remaining crews reached Paris. On August 27, the competitors finished in Berlin. The first pilot in Berlin, and the fastest in the whole race, was the German Hans Seidemann with a cruise speed of 213 km/h, flying the Heinkel He 64b. The next seven results were also German. Franciszek Żwirko arrived in 11th place, with a cruise speed of 191 km/h.

Top results of the rally:
Pilot country aircraft average speed points
1. Hans Seidemann Germany Heinkel He 64b 213 km/h - 220 pts
2. Wolfgang Stein Germany He 64c 208 km/h - 220 pts
3. Dietrich von Massenbach Germany He 64c 206 km/h - 220 pts
4. Walter Marienfeld Germany Darmstadt D-22a 205 km/h - 220 pts
5. Wolf Hirth Germany Klemm Kl 32 203 km/h - 220 pts
6. Fritz Morzik Germany He 64c 200 km/h - 220 pts
7. Otto Cuno Germany Kl 32 198 km/h - 218 pts
8/9. Reinhold Poss Germany Kl 32 197 km/h - 217 pts
8/9. Robert Fretz Switzerland Kl 32 197 km/h - 217 pts
10. Robert Lusser Germany Kl 32 193 km/h - 213 pts
11/12. Franciszek Żwirko Poland RWD-6 191 km/h - 211 pts
11/12. Josef Kalla Czechoslovakia Praga BH-111 191 km/h - 211 pts
13. Jerzy Bajan Poland PZL.19 188 km/h - 206 pts

After the technical trials and the rally, Franciszek Żwirko held first place in the general classification with 456 points, with Reinhold Poss in second with 451 pts, Wolf Hirth in third with 450 pts and Robert Fretz (Suiss) in fourth with 448 pts. Fritz Morzik was fifth with 444 pts.

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