Walter Schneider (motorcyclist)

Walter Schneider
Nationality German
Motorcycle racing career statistics
Grand Prix motorcycle racing
Active years1954 - 1959
First race1954 Isle of Man Sidecar TT
Last race1959 Belgian Sidecar Grand Prix
First win1955 Isle of Man Sidecar TT
Last win1959 Belgian Sidecar Grand Prix
Team(s)BMW
Championships2
Starts Wins Podiums Poles F. laps Points
7 N/A N/A
Isle of Man TT career
TTs contested6 (1954 - 1959)
TT wins3
First TT win1955 Sidecar TT
Last TT win1959 Sidecar TT
Podiums4

Walter Schneider (January 15, 1927 – March 27, 2010) was a German motorcycle, sidecar and car racer. In 1958 and 1959 he became Sidecar World Champion with Hans Strauß.[1]

Beginning his racing as a sidecar passenger in 1949 with Kurt Bäch before switching to the driver's seat the following year with Hans Wahl in the sidecar in the junior category. Moving to senior in 1951, by 1953 he finished fourth in the German Sidecar Championship on a privately prepared machine.

With a works BMW ride for 1954, the team soon were on the pace finishing fourth in their first race, the Sidecar TT on the Clypse Course.[2] With every GP a top five finish including a second in Germany, they ended the title in fourth position.

In 1955 Schneider and Strauß managed their first win, in the Sidecar TT, again on the Clypse Course. With two third places and a second they finished the season in third. The 1955 season was not so good, with only two points finishes ending up in tenth overall. 1957 was much better for the team, with two seconds and a first, at the Belgian motorcycle Grand Prix, finishing second in the title race.

1958 was their greatest season so far with wins at the Isle of Man, Belgium, and Germany and second at The Netherlands, it was enough to win them the world championship.[3]

The 1959 season saw almost as dominant a performance as the previous year, with two wins and two seconds enough to net another championship.[4]

After winning his second world title, Schneider decided to retire from sidecar competition, only to take up car racing. After a massive crash in a BMW car in 1964 where he plunged several hundred metres down a slope, he decided to retire from competition.[5][6]

In 1958 Schneider had opened a motor garage, later expanding to car repairs and finally a new car dealership selling Volkswagen, Audi and Skoda.[7]

References

External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Fritz Hillebrand
with Manfred Grunwal
World Sidecar Champion
with Hans Strauß

1954-1959
Succeeded by
Helmut Fath
with Alfred Wohlgemuth


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