Race driver, Mark Walker, was lucky to escape serious injury, following a Goodwood crash that destroyed a 120-year-old car.
Coming out of the final corner in a race for Edwardian era machines, he lost control of his Darracq 200hp. It subsequently ploughed into the barriers, wrecking the machine.Â
Without a safety harness of any sort, Walker was thrown from the car into the wall. However, he was able to walk away from the incident, apparently unscathed. Â
He was chasing down leader Julian Majzub in a Sunbeam Indianapolis at the time. At the final chicane, he ran wide onto the grass and lost control.
The storied car had set a land speed record of 122.45mph in 1906. It last sold at auction in 2006 for £200,000 but was reduced to a wreck after the incident.
The crash cost Walker what looked likely to be a second win of the weekend, having taken out Saturday’s first race. But because he never finished the Sundary race, the overall weekend winner of the SF Edge Trophy was a 1907 Mercedes 120hp driven by Ben Collings.
The Goodwood meeting is an annual event that features historic racing cars as well as modern-day supercars and grand prix racers.