Re: Critical Mass - Blind Man's Bluff = SPLIT THREAD
I forgot, in 1970 they ran Langhorne, Pennsylvania before Milwaukee, though that would be the last time they ran Indy cars there .Langhorne had been a “D” shaped dirt track for many years, with many fatalities there, it had a dip in the backstretch that was known as “puke hollow”, and was very treacherous. Paving the track didn’t help matters at all. In fact it made it worse. The line that the Indy cars ran there made it like there was no straightaway at all, the cars were always in a turn, loading the right front so heavily that the suspension and front bulkheads were buckeling from the constant “G” forces. Johnny Rutherford crashed trying to qualify. Dockery made the show, and with the Ford 4 cammer engine, we had none of the previous problems. Early in the race, Sammy Sessions crashed coming off what would be turn four, he hit the wall hard, and in those days the cars held 75 gallons of methanol fuel, and when he hit the wall, it was like a water balloon bursting. There was fuel everywhere, and caught fire. Sammy’s feet were pinned in the car, and he kept pointing there. His car had an access panel just above the foot petals, and some brave soul got it open, and got his feet free so that he could get out of the car. Firemen, and also pit crewmen were using fire extinguishers to keep the fire away from Sammy even as the plexiglass windshield was melting. They got Sammy clear of the fire, but by then the grass area between the track and the grandstands was burning, and fuel was running across the track and into the pit area, and other cars were driving through the burning fuel , other cars were trying to stop causing several cars behind to crash, and Darrell was involved in that mess, and smashed the nose, radiator and oil tank. We were not able to restart the race due to the damage. Luckily Sammy was not injured. They got the mess cleaned up, and restarted the race. Bobby Unser won the race followed by his brother Al.
We took our car back to our garage 10 at Indy and made the necessary repairs so that we could run the next race that was at Milwaukee. We got the car there, and Darrell qualified good enough to make the show, and was running pretty good, but later in the race he got tail- ended and spun into the infield, and was done for the day. Back to garage 10 we went again, and Darrell said that he was ready to call it quits, and head for home. I packed up and went back to California, and home. I found out later that Dockery had decided to run another race, this one at Raceway Park in Indianapolis, on the road course there. The Ford engine blew up there, and Darrell and Gordon went home after that. We had done the best we could with what we had, Dockery had completed the rookie test, and had run with the big dogs, and he was content with that. He never tried to run Indy cars again. I went to work for Bill Simpson again with my pal Jim Ward to get a car ready for the Indy car race in Argentina. Simpson had a 67 Gurney Eagle that we would modify, and run a Turbo Offy. This race was scheduled for February 1971, and Jim and I had a lot to do to get the Eagle which was now going to be renamed a “Beagle” ready for this fiasco. The “Beagle” was because it was going to be a Burton modified Eagle, and we thought it was a clever idea, and I made a decal (name plate) for the nose of the car with “Snoopy” on it, and it was entered as a “Simpson Beagle.” I have several photos that I can add to my posts along with the story of this trip to Argentina.
Larry
I forgot, in 1970 they ran Langhorne, Pennsylvania before Milwaukee, though that would be the last time they ran Indy cars there .Langhorne had been a “D” shaped dirt track for many years, with many fatalities there, it had a dip in the backstretch that was known as “puke hollow”, and was very treacherous. Paving the track didn’t help matters at all. In fact it made it worse. The line that the Indy cars ran there made it like there was no straightaway at all, the cars were always in a turn, loading the right front so heavily that the suspension and front bulkheads were buckeling from the constant “G” forces. Johnny Rutherford crashed trying to qualify. Dockery made the show, and with the Ford 4 cammer engine, we had none of the previous problems. Early in the race, Sammy Sessions crashed coming off what would be turn four, he hit the wall hard, and in those days the cars held 75 gallons of methanol fuel, and when he hit the wall, it was like a water balloon bursting. There was fuel everywhere, and caught fire. Sammy’s feet were pinned in the car, and he kept pointing there. His car had an access panel just above the foot petals, and some brave soul got it open, and got his feet free so that he could get out of the car. Firemen, and also pit crewmen were using fire extinguishers to keep the fire away from Sammy even as the plexiglass windshield was melting. They got Sammy clear of the fire, but by then the grass area between the track and the grandstands was burning, and fuel was running across the track and into the pit area, and other cars were driving through the burning fuel , other cars were trying to stop causing several cars behind to crash, and Darrell was involved in that mess, and smashed the nose, radiator and oil tank. We were not able to restart the race due to the damage. Luckily Sammy was not injured. They got the mess cleaned up, and restarted the race. Bobby Unser won the race followed by his brother Al.
We took our car back to our garage 10 at Indy and made the necessary repairs so that we could run the next race that was at Milwaukee. We got the car there, and Darrell qualified good enough to make the show, and was running pretty good, but later in the race he got tail- ended and spun into the infield, and was done for the day. Back to garage 10 we went again, and Darrell said that he was ready to call it quits, and head for home. I packed up and went back to California, and home. I found out later that Dockery had decided to run another race, this one at Raceway Park in Indianapolis, on the road course there. The Ford engine blew up there, and Darrell and Gordon went home after that. We had done the best we could with what we had, Dockery had completed the rookie test, and had run with the big dogs, and he was content with that. He never tried to run Indy cars again. I went to work for Bill Simpson again with my pal Jim Ward to get a car ready for the Indy car race in Argentina. Simpson had a 67 Gurney Eagle that we would modify, and run a Turbo Offy. This race was scheduled for February 1971, and Jim and I had a lot to do to get the Eagle which was now going to be renamed a “Beagle” ready for this fiasco. The “Beagle” was because it was going to be a Burton modified Eagle, and we thought it was a clever idea, and I made a decal (name plate) for the nose of the car with “Snoopy” on it, and it was entered as a “Simpson Beagle.” I have several photos that I can add to my posts along with the story of this trip to Argentina.
Larry
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