Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

howard_marsden.jpg

(Source; The Age)

Polite, urbane, charming and, above all, immensely knowledgeable about all things related to motor racing, Howard Marsden spent a life in the fast lane.

But despite his 40-year exposure to the hyped world of the racetrack, Marsden always exuded a sense of calm dignity and understood that success, while mainly due to hard work and painstaking preparation, occasionally owed more than a little to serendipity and chance.

The 61-year-old, who died last week after a seven-month battle with cancer, was a high achiever in his chosen career.

Over the years the English-born Marsden managed race teams, drivers and competition programs at top international levels for companies such as Ford and Nissan and worked with formula one icons such as John Surtees - the only man to have won the world championship on two wheels and four - and Sir Frank Williams, for whom he was once company manager.

In his most recent position - head of Ford Australia's motor sport program - the tall, lean, softly spoken Marsden was a familiar figure in the media room at V8 supercar rounds, from where he inevitably watched proceedings unfold on closed-circuit monitors.

He was always happy to explain the ins and outs of the Ford teams' set-ups on different tracks and to decode the nuances of things such as tyre performance for journalists, this one included, who couldn't quite get their head around the subject. Never was he patronising and never did he take anyone's knowledge for granted.

Although Ford teams were at this time regularly taking a pounding from the Holden squads, he met defeat with good grace and never tried to make excuses. It is a cruel irony that this year, the season that Ford has turned the corner and dominated Holden, his illness meant he was rarely to be seen.

Before taking on the role as general manager of Ford Racing in 1999, Marsden had worked for Tickford Vehicle Engineering (now FPV) since 1992 as product planning manager.

Dual Bathurst winner and 1995 V8 supercar champion John Bowe echoed the feelings of Ford drivers when he reflected on the legacy of success Marsden brought the company in Australia. "You look back to the early 1970s and it was Howard, Allan Moffat and the GTHO Falcons that were winning everything. Howard came in again in 1999 and he set about putting plans in place to see Ford return to the front.

"He was fully aware that it was not going to happen overnight and this year's results with seven wins from eight races are due to the planning he put in place."

Marsden started his involvement with Ford's European racing programs in 1963, while as a sideline he and the company prepared cars for the films Grand Prix and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. He also helped set up a race team for American actor and renowned petrolhead, the late Steve McQueen.

Marsden moved to Australia and in 1971 became manager of the Falcon touring car program, introducing the Falcon GTHO Phase III and Phase IV.

After Ford decided to step back, Marsden moved to Datsun/Nissan, where he masterminded four Australian Rally Championship wins from 1976-79 with Ross Dunkerton, George Fury and Geoff Portman.

In the 1980s he returned to circuit racing when he directed Nissan's Australian touring car championship program, scoring class victories at Bathurst. He was also part of the Japanese company's entry into world sportscar racing, including Nissan's bid to win the famous 24-hour race at Le Mans.

Nissan turned to circuit racing in the 1980s and Marsden directed Nissan's Australian Touring Car Championship program before returning to Europe, where he was involved in Nissan's rally and sports car racing programs.

Marsden is survived by his wife, Christine, and daughter Samantha and son Grant.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/24183-howard-marsden-rip/
Share on other sites

What a great man, and his death a great loss.

The success that Ford are currently experiencing in V8Supercars is directly attributable to his dedication to Ford's V8Supercar programme. I am a huge Ford supporter and thank him for his efforts over the years. I can now hold my head high and proud.

Vale, Howard Marsden

uh....... well I posted this mainly for his contributions to Nissan.

I guess that nobody has heard of him...

When Barry Sheene died, there were pages of posts for him, and I can't recall Bazz doing too much for Nissan.

Marsden however, did great things for Nissan, and even if everyone here is too young to remember it, then they should at least be made aware of his contributions to motorsport and the Nissan name.

:uh-huh:

I had the pleasure of having dinner with Howard a few years back. He was a great guy who achieved much in motor sport and his influence on the Bathurst Winning GTR's as well as the current ford and the GTHO's of the past cannot be underestimated. He was a real gentlemen who had a great love and knowledge for his craft and achieved more doing it than most. His loss will be sorly felt in the motor sport community.

RIP.

A sad day in the motorsport community, will be greatly missed.. you cannot over look the efforts of marsden in the 80s with such great teams like the Group C bluebird driven by Fury.

As said, nissan motorsport fans will be devastated

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Latest Posts

    • After my last update, I went ahead with cleaning and restoring the entire fuel system. This included removing the tank and cleaning it with the Beyond Balistics solution, power washing it multiple times, drying it thoroughly, rinsing with IPA, drying again with heat gun and compressed air. Also, cleaning out the lines, fuel rail, and replacing the fuel pump with an OEM-style one. During the cleaning process, I replaced several hoses - including the breather hose on the fuel tank, which turned out to be the cause of the earlier fuel leak. This is what the old fuel filter looked like: Fuel tank before cleaning: Dirty Fuel Tank.mp4   Fuel tank after cleaning (some staining remains): Clean Fuel Tank.mp4 Both the OEM 270cc and new DeatschWerks 550cc injectors were cleaned professionally by a shop. Before reassembling everything, I tested the fuel flow by running the pump output into a container at the fuel filter location - flow looked good. I then fitted the new fuel filter and reassembled the rest of the system. Fuel Flow Test.mp4 Test 1 - 550cc injectors Ran the new fuel pump with its supplied diagonal strainer (different from OEM’s flat strainer) and my 550cc injectors using the same resized-injector map I had successfully used before. At first, it idled roughly and stalled when I applied throttle. Checked the spark plugs and found that they were fouled with carbon (likely from the earlier overly rich running when the injectors were clogged). After cleaning the plugs, the car started fine. However, it would only idle for 30–60 seconds before stalling, and while driving it would feel like a “fuel cut” after a few seconds - though it wouldn’t fully stall. Test 2 – Strainer swap Suspecting the diagonal strainer might not be reaching the tank bottom, I swapped it for the original flat strainer and filled the tank with ~45L of fuel. The issue persisted exactly the same. Test 3 – OEM injectors To eliminate tuning variables, I reinstalled the OEM 270cc injectors and reverted to the original map. Cleaned the spark plugs again just in-case. The stalling and “fuel cut” still remained.   At this stage, I suspect an intermittent power or connection fault at the fuel pump hanger, caused during the cleaning process. This has led me to look into getting Frenchy’s fuel hanger and replacing the unit entirely. TL;DR: Cleaned and restored the fuel system (tank, lines, rail, pump). Tested 550cc injectors with the same resized-injector map as before, but the car stalls at idle and experiences what feels like “fuel cut” after a few seconds of driving. Swapped back to OEM injectors with original map to rule out tuning, but the issue persists. Now suspecting an intermittent power or connection fault at the fuel pump hanger, possibly cause by the cleaning process.  
    • For race cars, this is one part where I find having the roll cage bar having gone through a hole in the floor better than the build it up on a ledge inside... The Merc I help on, the main hoop ends are marked on the car, and the jack is marked... Jack goes under a few inches and lifts one whole side of the car up... Removes that fight for long slim jacks for race car duties!   My biggest issue for the daily drivers I work on, is my jacks don't go high enough. The jacks start out on a few blocks, jack it up, then start a second jack under it on more blocks, and then I can get an axle stand under it. My axle stands are presently in use, and are nearly fully extended. The car is sitting with barely more than a cm of clearance to get the wheel off the studs! Sarah's Kluger is the same, as it has an ungodly amount of droop available in the suspension and a distinct lack of good jacking points!
    • Happy? Yep, my to do list is getting shorter and shorter. Either this light approaching is the end of the tunnel, or I'm about to be hit by a train... Ha ha ha   Also, Duncan isn't that far out of town that you need to make a multi day drive out of it. 😛
    • Sorry I meant that we are building the EH for a client.
    • LOL, when one "money pit" is never enough Noice, and excellent work mate
×
×
  • Create New...