, July 21 1964, Ron Bucknum and his Honda (1964) The car was initially entered for the
Belgian Grand Prix at
Spa-Francorchamps, but the car was not ready in time. The car actually competed for the first time at the
German Grand Prix at the beginning of August. As well as Honda's F1 debut, this race was also the debut for their American driver
Ronnie Bucknum, and to make things even trickier the race took place on the daunting
Nürburgring circuit, widely considered to be one of the most demanding in the world. Of the 24 entrants, only the fastest 22 would qualify. Bucknum was lucky to qualify as he ended the practice sessions third-slowest. The two non-qualifiers were the
Scirocco-
Climax of Belgian driver
André Pilette, which was hopelessly off the pace, and
Carel Godin de Beaufort, who was killed during the session in a tragic accident at the wheel of his privately entered
Porsche 718. Bucknum was some 20 seconds slower than the next slowest competitor,
Giancarlo Baghetti at the wheel of a
BRM, and almost a minute off the pole time of
John Surtees's
Ferrari. Despite a poor qualifying, Bucknum had a better race and consistently ran just outside the top ten throughout the race, ahead of many of the independent
Lotus and BRM entrants. Despite a spin late in the race, allowing
Richie Ginther's BRM to pass him, the reliability of the Honda allowed him to finish 13th as many of his rivals broke down (or crashed in
Peter Revson's case), four laps behind winner Surtees. The team then missed the
Austrian Grand Prix before returning for the
Italian Grand Prix at the iconic
Autodromo Nazionale Monza. Bucknum's qualifying was greatly improved as he qualified 10th, ahead of the
Brabham of double world champion
Jack Brabham and comfortably clear of the mark required to qualify for the race as one of the 20 fastest drivers. He was only three seconds shy of Surtees, who was the pole sitter once again, and this marked a huge improvement for the Japanese team. Although a poor start left him down in 16th, he quickly climbed through the field and ran as high as 7th before a brake failure forced him out of the race on lap 13. His ability to keep pace with the works BRM and Brabham cars in this race gave great hope for the future of Honda in F1. The next race was the
United States Grand Prix at
Watkins Glen. As there were only 19 entrants, there was no threat of failing to qualify, and Bucknum was well within three seconds of
Jim Clark's pole time for Lotus. The high quality of the field, however, meant that he was down in 14th place, although he did outqualify 1961 world champion
Phil Hill, now driving for
Cooper. He once again ran the race just outside the top ten, fighting for long periods with the Lotuses of
Walt Hansgen (works) and
Mike Hailwood (
RPR) and
Richie Ginther's BRM. However, on lap 51 a cylinder head gasket in one of the Honda's twelve cylinders failed, and Bucknum was out of the race. This was to be the end of Honda's debut season, as they did not travel to the
final race in
Mexico City. The RA271 was replaced for by the
RA272, so its best result remains 13th place at its debut race in Germany. Its best grid place was Bucknum's 10th place at Monza. ==Recent outings==