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ARCHITECT, THIBAULT LAGARDÈRE, BUILT THE CAR DURING COVID LOCKDOWNS An architect used his passion for old vehicles to build a racing car during Covid lockdowns from the disposable fuel tank
of a Mirage jet. This novel use of ‘belly tanks’ – so called because in World War Two they were fixed to the belly of fighters before being dropped when empty – became popular in America
during the 1940s and 1950s. Thibault Lagardère, from Lunel, near Montpellier, built the car, nicknamed Golgoth 1 after a comic book character, to compete in a class of the September Normandy
Beach Race. He estimates it reaches speeds of 120-130km/h. “The running gear has to come from a vehicle from before 1949, so I used the parts from an old Renault C4,” he said. He found the
tank, which was used but not dropped during France’s operations in Africa, in Marseille. “You can find anything there,” he said. The tank could be lifted with one hand before the engine, a
4.5 litre, 100HP petrol engine from a Marmon military lorry built by Simca, and its transmission were fitted. The motor is a French version of a Ford one that was designed in the 1930s. The
Normandy event does not involve vehicles racing each other or timed runs. The emphasis is on the joy of running old machinery and watching it in action. RELATED ARTICLES IN PICTURES: WOODEN
VERSION OF ICONIC CITROËN 2CV SET TO BE AUCTIONED TREE-MENDOUS! AUCTION OF UNIQUE WOODEN CITROËN 2CV BREAKS WORLD RECORD FRENCH CAR COLLECTOR HELPS OTHER OWNERS FIND OLD TYRES TO FIT