RACING DRIVER

Jo Vonlanthen

1942 - Today

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Joseph Vonlanthen (born 31 May 1942) is a former racing driver from Switzerland. He participated in one Formula One World Championship Grand Prix, on 17 August 1975, driving a Williams. He retired with engine failure, scoring no championship points. Vonlanthen started in Formula Vee, before progressing to Formula Three, where he won the Swiss Formula 3 Championship. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Jo Vonlanthen is the 459th most popular racing driver (up from 491st in 2019), the 578th most popular biography from Switzerland (up from 580th in 2019) and the 12th most popular Swiss Racing Driver.

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Among RACING DRIVERS

Among racing drivers, Jo Vonlanthen ranks 459 out of 1,080Before him are Adolfo Schwelm Cruz, Wolfgang Seidel, Stefano Modena, Werner Haas, Pierre Gasly, and Éric Bernard. After him are Alfredo Pián, Masten Gregory, Teddy Pilette, Ettore Chimeri, Fritz d'Orey, and Maurício Gugelmin.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1942, Jo Vonlanthen ranks 529Before him are Lorenzo Piretto, Kevin Conway, Anita Roddick, Catharina Lodders, Jeetendra, and Donald Rayfield. After him are Michael Nesmith, Teddy Pilette, Imran N. Hosein, Rudolf Belin, Han Pil-hwa, and Gideon Toury.

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In Switzerland

Among people born in Switzerland, Jo Vonlanthen ranks 578 out of 1,015Before him are Richard Dürr (1938), Elizabeth Thompson (1846), Toni Branca (1916), Jacques Chessex (1934), Alfred Neveu (1890), and Lauro Amadò (1912). After him are Walter Graf (1937), Georges Trombert (1874), Jean-Denis Délétraz (1963), Ricardo Rodríguez (1992), Werner Günthör (1961), and Paola del Medico (1950).

Among RACING DRIVERS In Switzerland

Among racing drivers born in Switzerland, Jo Vonlanthen ranks 12Before him are Mick Schumacher (1999), Romain Grosjean (1986), Heinz Schiller (1930), Max de Terra (1918), Loris Kessel (1950), and Toni Branca (1916). After him are Jean-Denis Délétraz (1963), Ottorino Volonterio (1917), Heini Walter (1927), Albert Scherrer (1908), Sébastien Buemi (1988), and Peter Hirt (1910).