Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Pebble Beach On The Street...Mecca Part, 2

Following the show in Carmel on Tuesday and the Automobilia Event on Wednesday, there's Thursday of Car Week in Monterey. This is an event that has grown in popularity over the years as it's free and gives a chance to get up close to the Pebble Beach show cars before they take their stage on Sunday.

The cars take a 26 mile tour down Hwy 1 to Big Sur Lodge, head back and park in Carmel at about noon. The streets are then taken over by spectators. This also gives a chance to actually hear these cars run.

Pedestrians line Ocean Ave. as the cars roll into town with people craning to get a look and listening to the sweet exhaust notes.

It's pretty crowded at first, wall to wall cars and onlookers, then the crowd thins out and gives you time to check them out.

These are rolling works of art! This Bugatti sits quietly taking it all in as people drool over it.


This unrestored Alfa ran in the 1947 Indy 500 race. Complete with original patina, this car had the cameras clicking more than most.

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Sunday, August 29, 2010

Monterey Car Week...Mecca, Part 1

That's right...it's now really a "Monterey Car Week."

Not long ago, it was 3-4 days centered around the Monterey Historics and Pebble Beach Concour with some auctions thrown in for good measure. Now it's evolved into an entire week of car stuff for those addicted. Starting this year for the first the time the public was invited to attend the Monterey Motorsports Pre-Reunion event at Laguna Seca the weekend before the big event. In past the Pre-Historics were reserved for the racers...not so now. There is a name change as well, it was the Monterey Historics before, now it's called the Monterey Motorsports Reunion.

Blog follower, John Goriup attended the Pre-Reunion and is sharing his awesome photos of the event.

The Altec Lansing IMSA GTU 914/6.

The Brumos/Peter Gregg 935 with a Shelby Daytona Coupe hiding behind. Not this one, but a Daytona recently sold for 7 Mil. and the owner was driving the heck out of this one.

The ex-Pedro Rodriguez 002-917...Wow!

A flat-eight cylinder RS-61 with a Scarab in the background.

As you can see in the photos, not a horde of spectators knew about this event. It was a great time to get up close, check out the machinery and take photos as well as watch the racing. Don't tell anyone, but the cost of the local hotel rooms and admission fee is a lot lower this weekend as well.

I have more "Cool" photos from John that I'll be posting as we go.

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Thursday, August 26, 2010

The Hoodlums

In a previous post, "San Diego Rodders Riot," we saw how kids took a local race track issue into their own hands. Here are some photos of the event in San Diego in 1960.

August 21, 1960 -- Police stop a Corvair on El Cajon Blvd. in San Diego. The women were part of a group protesting the closure of Hourglass Field, near Miramar after an August 8th accident that injured four people.

Kids cruised back and forth with signs, "We Want A Dragstrip." They were to get their way, first with San Diego Raceway in Ramona, then Carlsbad Raceway. Love the cardboard sign taped to the back of mom and dad's car.

Police filled a "Paddy Wagon" near Menlo Bakery with hoodlums arrested during the El Cajon Boulevard Riot. More than 100 were hauled away after a protest turned into illegal street racing between 35th and 40th streets, drawing police with tear gas and batons. (San Diego Historical Society Photographs)

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Monday, August 23, 2010

Speaking About Janis

Speaking about Janis Joplin and her psychedelic 356 Cab...It seems she liked to sit on the hood as well as the "Badass Chicks".

Here are a couple of shots of her car.

The Lord never did buy Janis Joplin that Mercedes Benz...

I did a post about Janis and her Cab some months ago, if you missed it, here it is. "Janis's Cab."

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Friday, August 20, 2010

Badass Chicks

Forget Janis Joplin's psychedelic 356- it's Tura Satana's Porsche in "Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!" that I remember now when I think of mid-60s Porsches in the movies...

"Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!" is a 1965 exploitation film directed by Russ Meyer.


Three thrill-seeking go-go dancers (remember go-go dances in the 60s)— Billie (Lori Williams), Rosie (Haji), and their leader, Varla (Tura Satana) — encounter a young couple in the desert while drag racing. After killing the boyfriend (Ray Barlow) with her bare hands, Varla drugs, binds, gags and kidnaps his girlfriend, Linda (Susan Bernard). It goes all down hill from there.

The film was shot in the extreme western parts of the Mojave Desert. However, some of the scenes appear to have been filmed farther east, near Baker, California.

However, while Tura had a non-Lucas equipped '64/'65 356, her sidekicks, Haji and Lori Williams, were forced to make do with less menacing British iron in the movie.
More on the Badass Chicks here.

via: Jalopnik

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Monday, August 16, 2010

Coronado 2010

RUNWAY RUMBLE...CORONADO VINTAGE RACES ARE BACK

Fleet Week Coronado Speed Festival salutes the nation’s military, celebrates Shelby American marque at 13th annual “Race at the Base.” It’s recognized as the birthplace of naval aviation, but on Sept. 25-26, Naval Air Station North Island will highlight a different type of machine as 250 prestigious historic racecars gather for the 13th annual Fleet Week Coronado Speed Week Festival.

Known as the “Race at the Base,” the Fleet Week Coronado Speed Festival features nine different race groups divided according to make, age and horsepower. The cars race at high speeds on a spectator-friendly 1.7-mile course constructed in mere days on the runways and taxiways of the military base. The track is set against the stunning backdrop of San Diego Bay.

This year’s marque will celebrate the rich race heritage of Shelby American cars, from the legendary Cobra and the Daytona Coupe to the GT40 and GT350. These amazing vehicles have always pushed the envelope of performance and promise a thrill for event spectators.

Again this year the Porsche Club will have a "Hospitality Tent" with breakfast items, snacks, and refreshments during the day, however no lunch will be offered. The tent will be open from 8 AM to 3 PM both days. We will also again this year have Porsche Corral Parking. For Corral parking passes all you need to do is: send a "stamped self addressed envelope" requesting a pass. One pass is good for one car and is good for both days. Please send you're request to: John Straub, 9215 Brier Rd. La Mesa, CA. 91942. For more info, 619-667-3826 or email me at: Vintgracer@aol.com

General Admission tickets can be purchased from: http://www.fleetweeksandiego.org/

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Friday, August 13, 2010

Destination Speed

Bonneville...How Fast Can I Go!

It kinda' looks like a surreal far-away planet. The photo is by Jeff Earle of Steve Huff as he readies himself for a pass. Have you ever wondered..."How fast can I go?"

As a kid I would read "Speed Magazines" about Mickey Thompson and his Challenger I streamliner that he drove to 406.60 mph on the Salt Flats in 1960 and only wonder what that would be like. He was the first American to reach 400 mph.

To drive a car with four wheels at speed on the salt takes some cajones...to do it on two wheels takes....

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Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Speaking About Hour Glass

Here's a car you only see at "Vintage Races" now...it's a Arnolt Bristol. This was Bill Watkins posing for a mug shot before taking to the Hour Glass Field track in 1959.
Check out some of the cars in the background...two Volvo PV444's with numbers on them along with his pit crew. He seems pretty confident, I'm not sure if this was before his race or after.

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Friday, August 6, 2010

San Diego Rodders Riot

Very cool, It's a long read, but I think you will like it. Here is the article from the "SD UT." It takes us from San Diego's first drag strip at Paradise Mesa that was closed in 1959 and Hour Glass Field also closed in 1959 to what was going to be called "The Best Drag Strip in the Country", back in the day. It's hard to believe that kids would have done this...but they did.

"1960 Melee Sparked Creation of Local Raceways," By Richard Crawford July 24, 2008.

"The drag street riot on El Cajon Boulevard is symptomatic of the disrespect for authority so pronounced in some areas of our society. Those who riot or endanger the public safety to enforce their demands on government and law-abiding citizens cannot be tolerated. San Diego must not be intimidated."....The San Diego Union, Aug. 23, 1960.

It began as a mass demonstration on El Cajon Boulevard near Cherokee Avenue in City Heights. Young car-racing enthusiasts from throughout the county gathered to protest the lack of a legal drag strip in San Diego. When the protest turned into street racing, police moved in with tear gas and batons. More than 100 people were arrested in the bedlam that followed, known thereafter as the El Cajon Boulevard Riot, which led to the creation of raceways in Ramona and Carlsbad.

Drag-strip racing had been growing in popularity for many years. By 1959, there were an estimated 200 drag strips in the United States. Racers in San Diego used what was called the country's oldest official drag-race course, a retired airstrip on Paradise Mesa east of National City. A new housing development closed the Paradise track in 1959. With no other drag strips available, hot rodders used an old Navy airfield near Miramar Naval Air Station called Hourglass Field. Races sponsored by the California Sports Car Club were held on a 1.8-mile track. Unsanctioned drag racing also took place while the Navy turned a blind eye. But when a racing accident hurt four people Aug. 6, 1960, the Navy closed the field. Car clubs lobbied city and county officials for a drag-racing site. San Diego Police Chief A.E. Jansen was unsympathetic, saying, “Drag strips actually stimulate highway recklessness among those viewing such contests.” One car-club member cautioned, “If we don't get the strip, cars will be dragging in the streets.” The warning would prove prophetic.

In mid-August, fliers began appearing at drive-in theaters, coffee shops and car-club headquarters announcing a “mass protest meeting” on El Cajon Boulevard at 1 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 21. A disc jockey, Dick Boynton of KDEO, spread the news to listeners. That night, hundreds of teenagers and young adults began gathering along the boulevard. About 1 a.m., some in the crowd blocked off the street and began racing. Between 35th and 40th streets, “cars, of all models and shapes, raced two abreast,” the Union reported. “Thousands of spectators lined the sidewalk and center island, leaving almost no room for the cars to pass.” More than 65 police officers moved in about 2 a.m. and ordered the demonstrators to disperse. Throwing tear-gas grenades at the feet of the spectators, they waded into the crowd with riot sticks. “Almost everyone was running toward their cars,” a witness recalled. “Other people were on the ground, unable to run because of the tear gas.” About 100 demonstrators stood their ground at a service station lot and “threw a barrage of soft-drink bottles and rocks at the police.” Three young men broke into the Coca-Cola bottling plant on 38th Street, cracked open cases of Coke and began heaving glass bottles over a fence at the police. It took three hours to quell the “mob,” estimated at 3,000, the Los Angeles Times reported. Two police officers were hurt; others had their uniforms torn. A few officers lost their guns in the melee. Eighty adult demonstrators and 36 juveniles were arrested. For the ID technicians in the Police Records Bureau, it was quite a night. Two techs on duty the day after, a Monday, were swamped with fingerprint cards that had to be checked for warrants or prior arrests through huge index name files. The cards then were classified and searched individually in numerous drawers crammed with thousands of fingerprint cards from previous years. That Monday night brought more unrest and fingerprint cards for the harried ID techs. Cruising in caravans in San Diego and El Cajon, drag racers taunted police. About 100 people were arrested – some charged with disorderly conduct, others with weapons violations. More than 30 juveniles were picked up for curfew violations. Two days later, police arrested a printer named Herbert Sturdyvin, 20, on suspicion of conspiracy in the printing and distribution of the mimeographed fliers that police blamed for the original mass demonstration. Sturdyvin was released without having to post bail and was never charged.

The following weekend, police braced for more disorder rumored to be stirred from sympathizers coming from Los Angeles. The demonstrations failed to materialize. After the riot, new demands were heard in the community for an authorized drag strip. The San Diego City Council promised to appoint a committee to “study the possibilities.” The president of the National Hot Rod Association pledged help from his organization in getting an official strip, but insisted that enthusiasts would have to “reform” their conduct. Eventually, the campaign for a drag strip was rewarded. The San Diego Raceway opened in Ramona in 1963 and operated until it became a runway for Ramona Airport. The Carlsbad Raceway which would be called, at the time, the "Best Drag Strip in the Country," opened in 1964 and hosted drag racing until the track closed in 2004.

Richard Crawford is a local historian.


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Sunday, August 1, 2010

Hour Glass Field...Racing's Past

The real romance of the sports car was cemented after WWII when American service men took home memories of the British soft-tops. Real race tracks were far and few to be seen...so old airports and some street circuits were being used. Hour Glass Field was one of these venues to be put into action.

In 1956 the Navy made the airfield available to the San Diego Junior Chamber of Commerce and the San Diego Region Sports Car Club of America (SCCA) for automobile racing. In 1957 a 1.8 mile track was laid out and the California Sports Car Club and San Diego Region SCCA staged races there for three years until late 1959 as part of the regional road racing circuit. Steve McQueen driving his black Porsche Speedster was just one of the many famous race car drivers that saw action at the track. Ken Miles was another, driving a Porsche 550 Spyder.

The track ran parallel to and within a hundred yards of old Highway 395, now called Interstate 15.


Some of the British cars line up for a photo opp.

Jack McAfee driving a 550A won in the small bore 25 lap race in 1959.

Car number 217, a Berkeley, leads an MG through one of the corners.

The field was also used for motorcycle racing and unauthorized drag racing. In early August of 1960, after three bystanders were injured during a drag race, the Navy shut down the airfield to racing. This led to an organized mass protest and a riot the night of August 20 and 21 in San Diego that the San Diego Union dubbed the "Drag Strip Riot" and socialists call one of the first major youth riots of the 1960s. Remember, in a previous post, San Diego's first drag strip, Paradise Mesa had been shut down in 1959.

In 1967, the Miramar campus of the San Diego Community College was built on the site of the airfield. The Porsche Club of America, San Diego Region ran a few autocross events on what was left of the track in 1976 and 1977.

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