Re: Critical Mass - Blind Man's Bluff = SPLIT THREAD
The midget that we built was rather unusual, it had a Chevy 2, 4 cylinder engine laying on it’s side. This engine did not have a cross-flow head, the intake and exhaust were on the same side. In the photo, you can see the injector stacks pointing up, and the exhaust header was below them, making things pretty cramped up. This made the CG very low, and it took some doing to get it to handle on a dirt track, but once we got it figured out it was pretty awesome. Jack Yeley won the Arizona Racing Association Championship with this car. One memorable race at Manzanita Speedway, the track was real muddy, and I had a couple of big rain tires from the “Warthog”, that were a very soft compound. We put one on the right front for the heat race, and wore it out, but for the main we put the other one on, and it stuck like glue in the turns, and smoked everybody off and won the race, but the tire wouldn’t have lasted for more the 3 or 4 more laps, it was down to the cord when Yeley pulled in.
One of the Formula Fords that I was working on was an old, old Lotus, and when the guy brought it in he said that he had run the Bisbee Hill Climb, and finished in last place, and wanted me to try to make it more competitive. His name was Terry Davis, a real nice guy, and told me do whatever I wanted to the car. We tore it down and cut it all up, moving the radiator from the front to the side, just in front of the left rear tire, updated the suspension, shocks, springs, anti-roll bars, and all of that. Then we built a new body for the Lotus, staying just inside the fuzzy area of the rule book. I also fudged a little on the engine rules of course, but not enough that would be detected by the scrutineers. I called Terry when it was finished, and when he came to pick it up, he couldn’t figure out where his Lotus was, he wandered around the shop looking for it, passing by just a few feet from it. Of course we all started laughing, telling him that if it was a snake, it would have bit him. Colin Chapman himself wouldn’t have recognized it, it bore no resemblance to a Lotus. Terry was very pleased with the “new look”, and said that he hoped it ran as good as it looked. He took it to the Bisbee Hill Climb, and finished in first place! I’m sure a lot of “purists” who restored old cars would not have been pleased with what I had done to this antique Lotus, but to me “nothing is sacred” when it comes to racing.
Larry
The midget that we built was rather unusual, it had a Chevy 2, 4 cylinder engine laying on it’s side. This engine did not have a cross-flow head, the intake and exhaust were on the same side. In the photo, you can see the injector stacks pointing up, and the exhaust header was below them, making things pretty cramped up. This made the CG very low, and it took some doing to get it to handle on a dirt track, but once we got it figured out it was pretty awesome. Jack Yeley won the Arizona Racing Association Championship with this car. One memorable race at Manzanita Speedway, the track was real muddy, and I had a couple of big rain tires from the “Warthog”, that were a very soft compound. We put one on the right front for the heat race, and wore it out, but for the main we put the other one on, and it stuck like glue in the turns, and smoked everybody off and won the race, but the tire wouldn’t have lasted for more the 3 or 4 more laps, it was down to the cord when Yeley pulled in.
One of the Formula Fords that I was working on was an old, old Lotus, and when the guy brought it in he said that he had run the Bisbee Hill Climb, and finished in last place, and wanted me to try to make it more competitive. His name was Terry Davis, a real nice guy, and told me do whatever I wanted to the car. We tore it down and cut it all up, moving the radiator from the front to the side, just in front of the left rear tire, updated the suspension, shocks, springs, anti-roll bars, and all of that. Then we built a new body for the Lotus, staying just inside the fuzzy area of the rule book. I also fudged a little on the engine rules of course, but not enough that would be detected by the scrutineers. I called Terry when it was finished, and when he came to pick it up, he couldn’t figure out where his Lotus was, he wandered around the shop looking for it, passing by just a few feet from it. Of course we all started laughing, telling him that if it was a snake, it would have bit him. Colin Chapman himself wouldn’t have recognized it, it bore no resemblance to a Lotus. Terry was very pleased with the “new look”, and said that he hoped it ran as good as it looked. He took it to the Bisbee Hill Climb, and finished in first place! I’m sure a lot of “purists” who restored old cars would not have been pleased with what I had done to this antique Lotus, but to me “nothing is sacred” when it comes to racing.
Larry
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