Jump to content

1982 Paris–Dakar Rally

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1982 Paris–Dakar Rally
← Previous eventNext event →
Host country Frankreich
 Algerien
 Mali
 Senegal

1982 Dakar Rally also known as the 1982 Paris–Dakar Rally was the 4th running of the Dakar Rally event. 382 competitors took part. The brothers, Claude Marreau and Bernard Marreau, won for the Renault team while Cyril Neveu won the motorcycle category for the Honda team.[1]

Stages

[edit]
Stage Date From To Total (km)
1 1 January Frankreich Paris Frankreich Olivet
2 2 January Frankreich Olivet Frankreich Sète
3 January Transportation to Africa
3 4 January Algerien Algiers Algerien Ouled Djellal 470
4 5 January Algerien Ouled Djellal Algerien Hassi Messaoud
5 6 January Algerien Hassi Messaoud Algerien Bordj Omar Driss 414
6 7 January Algerien Bordj Omar Driss Algerien Tit 568
7 8 January Algerien Tit Algerien Timeaouine 538
8 9 January Algerien Timeaouine Mali Gao 740
10 January Rest day in Gao
9 11 January Mali Gao Mali Mopti 538
10 12 January Mali Mopti Mali Gao 570
13 January Rest day in Gao
11 14 January Mali Gao Mali Tombouctou 424
12 15 January Mali Tombouctou Mali Niono 558
13 16 January Mali Niono Mali Nioro du Sahel 517
14 17 January Mali Nioro du Sahel Senegal Tambacounda 310
15 18 January Senegal Tambacounda Senegal Dara 306
16 19 January Senegal Dara Senegal Tiougoune 250
17 20 January Senegal Tiougoune Senegal Dakar 100

Results

[edit]

Cars

[edit]

Bikes

[edit]
Pos. Rider Land Marque
1 Cyril Neveu  Frankreich Honda
2 Philippe Vassard  Frankreich Honda
3 Grégoire Verhaegue  Frankreich Barigo
4 Guy Albaret  Frankreich Yamaha
5 Michel Merel  Frankreich Yamaha

Trucks

[edit]
Pos. Driver
co-drivers
Land Marque
1 Georges Groine /
Thierry de Saulieu /
Bernard Malferiol
 Frankreich Mercedes
2 Pierre Laleu /
Bernard Langlois
 Frankreich Mercedes
3 Jan de Rooy /
Gérard Straetmans
 Niederlande DAF
4 Claude Hervé /
Jean-Claude Garcia
 Frankreich Acmat
5 Etienne Martinez /
Jean-Paul Oligo
 Frankreich Mercedes

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "History of Dakar - RETROSPECTIVE 1979-2007" (PDF). Dakar Rally. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 June 2010. Retrieved 7 January 2009.