90 years on record-breaking Bluebird driven again

Malcolm Campbell's grandson drives his famous Bluebird 90 years on. Credit: Steve Parsons/PA Wire

90 years to the day since Sir Malcolm Campbell set a world land speed record of 150.76mph in 1925, crowds turned out to see his grandson Don Wales drive the famous Bluebird again.

ITV's Ben Chapman went to Pendine Sands to see the record breaking car nearly a century on.

His grandson marked the occasion by driving the famous race car at Pendine Sands in Carmarthenshire - but at a slightly less record breaking speed this time.

Sir Malcolm Campbell and grandson Don Wales who drove the Bluebird again. Credit: PA

The Bluebird holds three world land speed records.

The first achieved by Kenelm Lee Guinness at Brooklands - the world's first purpose-built race track - in 1922 with a speed of 133.75mph.

The second in September 1924, when Sir Malcolm Campbell set a new record of 146mph, which he then bettered the following year, hitting 150.76mph in the Bluebird.