The Greatest Cheats in Racing History

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  • čas přidán 8. 11. 2020
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    #AutoRacing #Cheating #SmokeyYunick
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Komentáře • 3,7K

  • @bangboats3557
    @bangboats3557 Před rokem +788

    Smokey literally was a legend in his own lifetime, My favourite story was the car with golf ball sized dents all over the roof. NASCAR officials looked at the roof long and hard trying to decide if it was legal etc, but it was a smokescreen, the dents didn't do anything but it drew attention away from many other less than legal modifications.

    • @daniellowe6116
      @daniellowe6116 Před rokem +33

      @@GeorgiaRidgerunner That's not quite right, I believe after they shaved the dimples into the car they moved the clay shavings to the trunk so the weight would be equal. So the dimples did help, but not enough to equalize 800 pounds of clay

    • @MrTheHillfolk
      @MrTheHillfolk Před rokem +14

      Those are the fun mods.
      All of a sudden a guy has a purple spoiler so he must know something, so next everyone has one 😂😂

    • @MorrisDugan
      @MorrisDugan Před 11 měsíci +40

      @bangboats3557 Speaking of smokescreens...
      This is an adaptation of an Old Eastern World tale, told about the legendary figure Mulla Nasrudin.
      For a long time, Smokey was often traveling back and forth across the Canadian border. The Customs people would ask him his occupation. He'd reply, "I'm a smuggler," so they searched his car thoroughly, and found nothing. The same thing would happen every time he'd make the crossing, and it went on for decades. After he retired, he was at a bar near the border, and a retired Customs official saw him, and couldn't help asking, "Hey, Smokey, all those years you told us you were a smuggler, and yet we never found anything. What gives? What were you smuggling, if anything?"
      Smokey replied, "Cars."

    • @stevelee5724
      @stevelee5724 Před 11 měsíci +1

      😁

    • @jesse75
      @jesse75 Před 9 měsíci +8

      I know a building contractor that purposely baits building inspector's like that.

  • @terryjacob8169
    @terryjacob8169 Před 3 lety +5359

    Smokey wasn't a cheat, he was a creative engineer who explored the gaps in the rule book. It wasn't his fault that the rulemakers weren't as smart as he was.

    • @stewartw.9151
      @stewartw.9151 Před 3 lety +198

      That is the name of the game in all serious competition and not only motor racing!

    • @MDAdams72668
      @MDAdams72668 Před 3 lety +121

      @@stewartw.9151 In fact in life rules are not made to be broken they are made to be used

    • @waltbullet1287
      @waltbullet1287 Před 3 lety +65

      Ain't cheating till your cought!,,,great legend

    • @eldeahnojames6508
      @eldeahnojames6508 Před 3 lety +14

      😅😂I actually want to reply the exact same thing

    • @TheOMGWTFBBQ777
      @TheOMGWTFBBQ777 Před 3 lety +53

      imagine that in the online gaming world. "he wasn't a cheater just exploring the gaps in the rule book".

  • @davidtaylor5204
    @davidtaylor5204 Před rokem +120

    I think it was Richard Petty, who was being interviewed by someone before a race, where the interviewer said something like, "I understand they found fifty violation on the car you're racing today," and Petty drawled, "Yeah, well, they didn't find the other fifty."

  • @flyinbrianz22
    @flyinbrianz22 Před rokem +345

    I resent them being called "cheats" or "unfair advantage". These guys were innovators! Smokey was a MASTER of innovation. He belongs in the NASCAR Hall of Fame!

    • @anzaca1
      @anzaca1 Před rokem +11

      If the rules don't say you can't do it, it's not cheating.

    • @snyperwulffgaming9575
      @snyperwulffgaming9575 Před 11 měsíci +13

      To be fair, it isn't cheating if it isn't in the rulebook. It's only cheating after it's been put in the rulebook as illegal. So really, they aren't cheating. And the unfair advantage thing well, it's also not their fault they figured out ways to optimize their vehicles.

    • @MorrisDugan
      @MorrisDugan Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@snyperwulffgaming9575 Look at tennis. It took many, many years before "oversize" rackets became common. They never "updated" the rule book to eliminate them.

    • @colbytherres8189
      @colbytherres8189 Před 11 měsíci +10

      Rule 666 "Thinking outside the box is not permitted due to whining competitors"

    • @flyinbrianz22
      @flyinbrianz22 Před 11 měsíci

      @@colbytherres8189 True statement!

  • @boataxe4605
    @boataxe4605 Před 3 lety +1876

    There’s a story about a driver who complained to the officials that another driver was cheating, an official asked “How do you know?” And he replied “Because I’m cheating every way I know how and I can’t catch him”.

    • @WizzRacing
      @WizzRacing Před 3 lety +241

      It went, How do you know that they're cheating? Because were cheating and they beat us...
      It was Smokey Yunick....

    • @ExternalInputs
      @ExternalInputs Před 3 lety +191

      @@WizzRacing That's why Lance Armstrong was treated with such suspicion in cycling. Over the years, many of his peers got caught doping, so how was he managing to beat them if he was clean, as he claimed to be? Was he superhuman? No, he just hadn't been caught.

    • @Channelscruf
      @Channelscruf Před 2 lety +47

      @davidoffon If all of the top 10 cyclists are cheating (the are), none of them are.

    • @fuglbird
      @fuglbird Před 2 lety +2

      @davidoffon Lance Armstrong was stripped of all his Tour de France titles after an investigation revealed that he was the key figure in a wide-ranging doping conspiracy.

    • @fuglbird
      @fuglbird Před 2 lety +4

      @@ExternalInputs He was caught!

  • @thekrieg4204
    @thekrieg4204 Před 3 lety +1568

    I fully died when he goes “They had to be from a factory, they never said who’s factory.”

    • @rickyrick9328
      @rickyrick9328 Před 3 lety +25

      so did your ghost type this?

    • @joeywirt7953
      @joeywirt7953 Před 3 lety +54

      I've pulled this card myself. I race in a series where the rules are the cars must be stock+roll cage. Rules don't say stock to make and model 😂

    • @MrMosebysLobby
      @MrMosebysLobby Před 3 lety +24

      @@joeywirt7953 if it was me id throw a toyota century v12 stock in a car if they wanted stock lol

    • @enolastraight577
      @enolastraight577 Před 3 lety +25

      Our family are vendors, making a living selling goods at festivals. Some festivals stipulate the goods must be "hand-made"....AHH.... but you didn't say WHOSE hands made our goods!

    • @michaelslee4336
      @michaelslee4336 Před 3 lety

      @Sadra Keyhany
      Yeah, can’t do that. Go look up homogolation rules.

  • @wymple09
    @wymple09 Před rokem +145

    I knew a guy who ran an illegal engine in dirt track stock car racing. This was way back when you could "claim" either of the 1st 2 finishers engine for 750 bucks. That was a design to keep the costs down so guys ran pretty stock. He deliberately ran an exhaust leak up at the manifold and 1 tappet too loose so it sounded like crap & nobody wanted to pay for an engine they thought was on it's way out.

    • @Houndini
      @Houndini Před 5 měsíci +7

      That is pretty common around these small dirt tracks. Lot these track owners are not in it for being honest. Back in wild days in 70’s & 80’s was a very easy way laundry drug money. 200 seats & have an attendance of 987. And 179 in the infield.

    • @randytomlinson4515
      @randytomlinson4515 Před 3 měsíci +2

      H​@@Houndini

  • @namesakeone
    @namesakeone Před rokem +96

    One more aspect of that Penske Trans Am fueling rig: the middle container contained dry ice. Gasoline apparently contracts at cold temperatures, so by "freeze-drying" the gasoline in those fueling rigs, they could increase the volume and put one or two more gallons in the car at pit stops. Beside that, the rig had condensation forming on the center tank, which "psyched out" the competing teams.

    • @quillmaurer6563
      @quillmaurer6563 Před rokem +15

      I noticed frost on the barrel in one of the photos shown in the video, was wondering why that was. Thanks for answering that, interesting hack!

    • @TotallyNoCat
      @TotallyNoCat Před 4 měsíci +3

      Why would that pysch them out? Thanks in advance.

    • @BrunodeSouzaLino
      @BrunodeSouzaLino Před 2 měsíci +2

      That was also tried in F1 and it's very dangerous as small temperature changes can cause the gasoline to expand and explode.

  • @MrMpm3001
    @MrMpm3001 Před 3 lety +499

    That second brake booster to assist with pad changes was absolutely brilliant.

    • @ONEIL311
      @ONEIL311 Před rokem +5

      I want it in my car now

    • @brianc9642
      @brianc9642 Před rokem +1

      I seem to remember they had a version of that in the Camaro prior, but too lazy to confirm it.

    • @kennydemartini2169
      @kennydemartini2169 Před rokem +12

      The story is bogus. There is absolutely no way you can suck the caliper pistons back in the calipers with a vacuum booster. The back of the master cylinder is air tight. All the booster does is assist in pedal pressure. Think about it.

    • @hughbarton5743
      @hughbarton5743 Před rokem +4

      I think you are correct, upon consideration. What backs the pads off the rotor is run out on the disc surface, which is why changing pads always involves using force on the caliper( hammer, clamp, etc.) to create the space to remove the pads.....
      This could be simulated by plumbing some of suction on the hydraulic side of the brakes, but a brake booster couldn't do it.
      Fun story, though. And, to be blunt, if it would have worked, Roger and Mark would have done it in a heartbeat!

    • @kennydemartini2169
      @kennydemartini2169 Před rokem +3

      @@hughbarton5743 I suppose someone could build a pump strong enough to suck the pistons in, but I wouldn't recommend it, and surely no engine vacuum could ever do it. I think they would have used the 4 piston calipers back then. Just wedge a screwdriver on each side of the rotor, push against the pads to shove the pistons back, pull the pin and pads, and slide some new pads in. I do it all the time on the C3 Vettes. It doesn't take much time.

  • @johnterpack3940
    @johnterpack3940 Před 2 lety +277

    My favorite cheat happened at the corporate level. NASCAR said teams could run aluminum manifolds, but not aluminum heads. So Ford designed the FE engine to where half the head became part of the manifold. They shaved something like 75 pounds off the nose of the car. Always struck me as a bizarre design until I learned the motivation behind it.

    • @nickherring1981
      @nickherring1981 Před rokem +15

      That's awesome, I've always been an FE fan and always wondered why they designed the heads and intake that way. Another reason why Ford is the best automaker.

    • @jtheglin1640
      @jtheglin1640 Před 10 měsíci +8

      No shit thats why they are like that? Always thought it seemed unnecessary but thats pretty cool

    • @FunnyBallet-fq8sx
      @FunnyBallet-fq8sx Před 4 měsíci +1

      Smoke was crooked

    • @wydopnthrtl
      @wydopnthrtl Před 3 měsíci +1

      Us OEM engineers ain't as dumb as many a mechanic seems to think.

    • @brianferus9292
      @brianferus9292 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Had a 428 scj in my 69 mach one and always wondered why it was designed that way

  • @ir8d8rads
    @ir8d8rads Před rokem +44

    There was a rule forbidding "port grinding" of cylinder heads. So he built a pump to circulate a slurry of abrasive through the ports and valve pockets in the head, and left it running overnight. Next morning he found it was so effective it had eroded a hole in the head so he had to start over. The technique is still used to this day as a method of flowing intake tracts.

    • @jonrajsl291
      @jonrajsl291 Před 4 měsíci +5

      EXTRUDE HONE STILL DOES IT TO THIS DAY.

  • @addictedtoid5375
    @addictedtoid5375 Před 10 měsíci +35

    Did Smokey magically turn a 66 Chevelle into a 68 chevelle? Wow guy you sure do know your car stuff. I'm impressed! 🤣

    • @DansGarageNC
      @DansGarageNC Před 2 měsíci +5

      Why did I have to scroll this far down to find a comment on this?

    • @MoreBollocks-ui2zs
      @MoreBollocks-ui2zs Před měsícem

      I made it that far into the video before I realized the guy is a dipshit. The story takes place in 1967 for Christ sake.

    • @cdaway2024
      @cdaway2024 Před 16 dny

      REMEMBER THIS GUY LOVES LIARS, I MEAN CHEATERS.

  • @utharaptortrex
    @utharaptortrex Před 3 lety +432

    Like a teacher of mine used to say "you're allowed to cheat all you want, you're just not allowed to be caught doing it".

    • @WaywardPondering
      @WaywardPondering Před 3 lety +13

      My boss more or less says the same thing which still shocks me. “Do whatever you want just don’t let me catch you.” In my experience, a boss never says the quite part out loud.

    • @likemau5552
      @likemau5552 Před rokem

      That's one of things that breeds corruption 20 years later, but the states are set up for corruption anyway

    • @josephastier7421
      @josephastier7421 Před 9 měsíci +1

      You're not in trouble until you get caught.

  • @michaelmccarthy4615
    @michaelmccarthy4615 Před 3 lety +557

    Motorsports is one of the few sports where cheating is almost expected if not winked at.
    "If you ain't cheatin', you ain't trying "

    • @runeshark22
      @runeshark22 Před 3 lety +29

      and honestly it makes it more fun. I mean if someone cheats in a ball sport, your options are steroids, ball inflation, or pay refs to make bad calls. Its boring, and doesn't have any trickery to it. In racing though, there's a million things to do, and probably 10 million more we haven't thought of, all to make it lighter, or speed up maintenance, or make more power, all through either clever bending of the rules (looking at lancia in 1983), or disguising all the hacks to avoid getting caught (like the lead helmet at the nascar weigh in). Either way, it makes for a more entertaining race. If ya didn't cheat ya didn't win

    • @michaelmccarthy4615
      @michaelmccarthy4615 Před 3 lety +13

      @@runeshark22 motosports is almost pure in its design.
      Age, sex, race, disability make no difference. Anyone can give it a real try. Even drugs won't help a driver. Its about time and money in preparation to compete, More of both is better and not discouraged. Winners are rarely disputed and human judges aren't needed. Technology always pushes motorsports forward... its unrelenting.

    • @runeshark22
      @runeshark22 Před 3 lety +5

      @@michaelmccarthy4615 i dunno dude, drugs might help. go to lemans with an old school bull hauler's toothpick, he's run that race back to back with laser focus. But yes i agree, it all comes down to human ability, innovation, and ingenuity judged by a totally objective mediator. Nobody is lookin at the recordings to see who wins an nhra event

    • @michaelmccarthy4615
      @michaelmccarthy4615 Před 3 lety +3

      @@runeshark22 im not sure how drugs can help with focus, concentration, reflexes, or fine motor skills to operate controls, and pedals accurately. Drugs would seem counterintuitive to the skill sets needed to operate a machine. Unless there are newer wild drugs !! ;)

    • @michaelmccarthy4615
      @michaelmccarthy4615 Před 3 lety +2

      Do they test NASCAR drivers for drugs before or after a race ??
      Do they really need to like other sports?
      Its the machine cheating, not the driver.

  • @rafaelsaez5596
    @rafaelsaez5596 Před 8 měsíci +41

    Smokey driving off in anger in the Chevelle after just having the fuel tank taken off the car is just fucking hilarious.

  • @zeph_os
    @zeph_os Před rokem +49

    The 20ft fuel device reminds me of a report I modeled in university where I had to use Bernoulli's Equation and a model I built to verify that the exit velocity of a fluid was a function of the height itself. I only had a height difference of just over a foot but it was enough to get me an extra .5kg / s of water flowing out. I can only imagine what the flow rate of the gasoline must've been, kudos to the team for using physics to their advantage

    • @Scotty-vs4lf
      @Scotty-vs4lf Před 11 měsíci

      if the numbers he said were accurate (he said 3.5 seconds and 30 gallons) then it would be about 8.57 gallons per second

  • @Nerd3Ddotcom
    @Nerd3Ddotcom Před 2 lety +142

    Many years ago when I was on a pit crew at Mesa Marin we had a crew chief that loved finding holes in the rules. One rule limited the amount of lead that could be used in the car for weight distribution. Lead. Nobody said anything about steel. The fuel cell was a 20 gallon cell with a 15 gallon bladder and a 2" thick slab of steel in the bottom of the cell, under the blader. No body ever figured out how we got our front/rear weights so good. They were looking for extra lead. We could tell them in all truth. Nope, there's no extra lead in there. A couple of roll cage "tubes" on the left side weren't tubes. Solid round bar.

  • @aaroncone6778
    @aaroncone6778 Před 3 lety +395

    Half of the Nascar rulebook, was written because of Smokey Yunick, the other half was written, because of Junior Johnson..

    • @54raceman
      @54raceman Před 3 lety +15

      Probably not far off

    • @doughopkinsjr
      @doughopkinsjr Před 3 lety +15

      And moonshine running laws too

    • @tylercady3985
      @tylercady3985 Před 3 lety +33

      Also you can't forget Ray Everham's "T-rex". A car so good NASCAR changed the rules to ban it as soon as the race ended

    • @mitchyman935
      @mitchyman935 Před 3 lety +19

      @@tylercady3985 you know Smokey and Ray where good buddies I have a suspicion that there was a bit of Smokey in that car and if not definitely inspiration

    • @tylercady3985
      @tylercady3985 Před 3 lety +10

      @@mitchyman935 inspiration probably. I saw a video on it that said that car was the brainchild of all of Hendrick's engineers combined, then Ray just fine tuned it to get the speed

  • @Brian-uy2tj
    @Brian-uy2tj Před rokem +18

    I worked for a large corporation that makes large "things" shall we say, and there are tons of engineers involved. Most people see engineering as a stodgy and boring career but when you work in a place where situations are constantly having to have an engineering solution, it gets very interesting, it really does.

  • @jaygribbin6790
    @jaygribbin6790 Před rokem +13

    That acid dipped story was told by Sam Posey in relation to his Dodge.The inspector stopped for a chat with the mechanic after inspection and leaned on the roof which dented. He immediately failed the car and so they went to the local dealer and cut the roof off a new car and welded it to the racecar.

  • @VINwiki
    @VINwiki  Před 3 lety +531

    "Interpreting the rules"

    • @marcelalcejuste257
      @marcelalcejuste257 Před 3 lety +8

      Just like tom brady.

    • @MrBatriste
      @MrBatriste Před 3 lety +6

      Shrewding intensifies

    • @Bcarv615
      @Bcarv615 Před 3 lety +2

      Tomato tah-mah-toe

    • @calvinr5248
      @calvinr5248 Před 3 lety +2

      The WRC Ford Focus "Boost Bumper" has to be included on this list!

    • @anagennao
      @anagennao Před 3 lety +3

      I knew this was going to be good!
      You should do a piece on Smokey Yunick's Fiero.

  • @KMcNally117
    @KMcNally117 Před 3 lety +468

    "Ain't no rule saying dogs can't drive!"
    Air Bud: NASCAR

  • @davesoverthere
    @davesoverthere Před rokem +5

    The best example of Penske's creative interpretation of the rules was the Mercedes-Benz Ilmor "pushrod" engine they used at the '94 Indy 500.

  • @Tommy_Mac
    @Tommy_Mac Před rokem +20

    Acid dipping was a common thing for NHRA door slammer cars. That might be where they got the idea. I helped on a 69 Mustang convertible that was dipped. The convertible was chosen because in the early '70s, NHRA allowed full cages in convertibles-for safety. It was also a hidden back-half car, way before that was common. Had 16" wide slicks also. That car was evidently one of two convertibles built in '69 that had a 428 Cobra Jet/4 speed in it. It held a national record for a while. It was later converted back to stock by someone and then sold at Barrett Jackson for a LOT of money, about 10-15 years ago.Drag racing back then was a lot of fun. Too much money came into the sport and turned it into a business. That's a shame. It was fun while it lasted though!

    • @Slicearms
      @Slicearms Před 3 měsíci +1

      When they diped it in acid to lose weight didn’t they regain it with a roll cage

  • @pianoz4u1
    @pianoz4u1 Před 3 lety +649

    One unique thing Smokey did when he was racing the Hudson Hornet, was to change the rotation of the engine and power train. Instead of running clockwise, it ran counter clock wise. This made the Hornet run the curves better from the torque of the engine.

    • @v12tommy
      @v12tommy Před 2 lety +86

      I'm not sure that is accurate. I know he did that with an Indy car though. It was referred to as the Reverse Torque Special. Sounds pretty radical, but is was fairly simple in nature. It was a Kurtis Kraft body, with an Offy in it. Since the Offy was originally a marine engine, you could simply order one that turned the opposite direction, since that is commonplace in boats. (Offy #210 is the one Smokey ordered) Then he used a Halibrand quick change in the rear, but he ordered a FWD model, designed to rotate the opposite way.

    • @texasredneck9226
      @texasredneck9226 Před 2 lety +25

      Don't forget his head porting tricks and cam tricks!

    • @V8Lenny
      @V8Lenny Před 2 lety +8

      But it was not a success either.

    • @V8Lenny
      @V8Lenny Před 2 lety +5

      @@v12tommy Offy was not a marine engine , it was Peugeot race engine from 1910s

    • @v12tommy
      @v12tommy Před 2 lety +26

      @@V8Lenny I'm not sure where you got your information, but that is incorrect. Leo Goossen, who designed the Offy, didn't even start working for Harry Miller until 1919. I believe you are referring to the 1912 4 cylinder Peugeot built by "Les Charlatans", which was the first ever DOHC automobile engine, but that is about where the similarities end between that engine and an Offy. The birth of the Offy really occurred in 1926, when powerboat racers were looking for a cheaper option for racing, compared to the exotic engines of the era. The front 4 cylinders of a 310 cu in Miller straight 8 were used to make a 151 cu in 4 cylinder. It was 2 valves per cylinder, and has almost no common parts to a 220 or 255 Offy, but the Miller Marine 151 is considered by many to be the birth of the modern Offy. It eventually found its way from boats into a car for the first time in 1930, in order to set a new land speed record.

  • @mynamejeff4820
    @mynamejeff4820 Před 3 lety +1173

    Smokey wasn’t a “cheater” he was a “defensive cheater” he only cheated to keep up with every one else’s cheating also everyone cheated and just bribed the inspector so the inspectors all hated him because he never paid them he was just to good at it and he was very into his fuel

    • @TheMoirLabel
      @TheMoirLabel Před 3 lety +106

      "If you ain't cheating, you ain't trying"

    • @AZBEEMR
      @AZBEEMR Před 3 lety +29

      @@TheMoirLabel Or winning!

    • @Free_Krazy
      @Free_Krazy Před 3 lety +20

      @@AZBEEMR Or even competing when you think about it.

    • @WichieWich
      @WichieWich Před 3 lety +32

      @@TheMoirLabel well said joe biden well said 😂

    • @mynamejeff4820
      @mynamejeff4820 Před 3 lety +4

      I learnt it from a podcast past gas podcast it’s donut media podcast I am a huge fan heard them all and watch the channel both great

  • @__-pl3jg
    @__-pl3jg Před rokem +16

    This would make a great movie about each team trying to out cheat one another.

    • @marydesmond9595
      @marydesmond9595 Před 4 měsíci +1

      hollywood would only screw it up!

    • @__-pl3jg
      @__-pl3jg Před 4 měsíci +1

      ​@@marydesmond9595 - You're probably right. They'd make Smokey Yunick a trans woman of color who's struggling against the rules of the game that were intrinsically designed to oppress her/him/they. On second thought...🤔...F Hollywood.

    • @TheNitroG1
      @TheNitroG1 Před měsícem

      I think they made this movie and called it ford v ferrrari.

  • @rbspider
    @rbspider Před rokem +9

    I was in a book club that was on CZcams and we all ordered the Smokey books and would read a chapter and talk about it the next week . This guy had a great war story, great race story. He was the Forrest Gump of racing. Was always so close to being rich.

  • @fullcirclerepair2655
    @fullcirclerepair2655 Před 3 lety +200

    Smokey yunick was one of the best in the world. I'm a retired machinist in building hot rod motors I read his books and learn everything about small block Chevys and everything ever invented and tested and prototyped in his shop. There's only one smokey, thank you for speaking on him not many people know that much about him

    • @martinh4630
      @martinh4630 Před 2 lety +10

      I went to the auction when his garage closed. All the special bits had gone by then but I bought a couple of stock items as a memory of the great guy who influenced so much.

    • @rhyswilliams4893
      @rhyswilliams4893 Před rokem +1

      Would have been intresting if he made his way over to build f1 cars. They love an initiative engineer. 😊

  • @noahstuart606
    @noahstuart606 Před rokem +685

    My grandpa raced legend cars when I was a kid I remember sitting with him one afternoon as he was scrolling the new rule book getting ready for the season and he jumped off his recliner and told me to come help him in the shop, the rule book stated the radiator needed to be mounted in front of the engine but never said the car actually needed a radiator. So grandpa drilled the frame rail and welded a bung essentially turning his the chassis/roll cage into the radiator. First test he said the car was running 20 degrees cooler than normal plus the power was up with all the fresh air coming in with a hot radiator blocking it. There was rule stating how large the radiator could be the next year 😂

    • @Leatherface123.
      @Leatherface123. Před rokem +47

      That’s badass

    • @marksimpson2689
      @marksimpson2689 Před rokem +46

      If there’s no rule it can’t be cheating

    • @SeptemberWhite
      @SeptemberWhite Před rokem +39

      @@marksimpson2689 if there's no rule against it it's not cheating and since they can't change the rules in the middle of the race I guess they have to wait to reprint the book until next year!!!

    • @snjert8406
      @snjert8406 Před rokem +15

      …what.
      That would heat soak the chassis and roll cage and then overheat. There’s no efficient way to get rid of the heat.
      Sure, it would take some time, but it wouldn’t work forever. Otherwise this would be implemented a lot I bet.

    • @marksimpson2689
      @marksimpson2689 Před rokem +5

      @@SeptemberWhite exactly, unless it’s Production Saloons in NZ speedway as it says in the rules if something isn’t mentioned it’s not allowed

  • @siroccowind736
    @siroccowind736 Před rokem +6

    I lived in Daytona in the late 60's just a short distance from Smokey's shop. Next to him was Ray Fox, they shared the same building but had them set up separately. Painted in different color to appear as two different auto shops. I do remember that Smokey was the only one who could make cars that would keep up with the factory prepared race cars in the big races. All the other cars were just also rans.

  • @THEDonnyB
    @THEDonnyB Před 9 měsíci +2

    Smokey Yunick and Junior Johnson are some of the greatest minds of all time. They could bend the rules requiring new rules to be made while breaking other rules and getting away with it all because they knew how to achieve both.

  • @curly27784
    @curly27784 Před 3 lety +180

    The car in the Smokey Yunick segment was a 66 Chevelle. It took two years to build and he ran it in 68.

    • @thegizmo759
      @thegizmo759 Před 2 lety +26

      you caught the guy calling the car a 1968 too the car was a 1967 with a 1966 nose a guy i knew who worked for smokey told me that

    • @laserguy007
      @laserguy007 Před 2 lety +10

      I thought it was a 67 in rear n a 66 nose...

    • @leonardhill1218
      @leonardhill1218 Před rokem +9

      Yep not 68.

    • @ORflycaster
      @ORflycaster Před rokem +14

      I immediately headed for the comments when the "car historian" called that Chevelle a '68 after reportedly seeing it in person.

    • @randyk1919
      @randyk1919 Před rokem +2

      My first car was a '66 Chevelle. Indeed, the front is absolutely a '66, and the rear looks to me like a '67. There are hardly any noticeable differences between those two model years other than that.

  • @davidm7824
    @davidm7824 Před 3 lety +18

    I used to race go-karts and we all ran the same engine. It had a large combustion chamber and low compression ratio. The head and cylinder was cast as one unit. It came with short reach spark plug so I replaced it with the longest reach plug that they make thus raising the compression a lot. It worked, I went from being a back marker to the fastest overnight. It was not illegal then but 3 years later they made a rule change making it illegal. I had found a loop hole!!!!!!!!!!

  • @lelandlewis7207
    @lelandlewis7207 Před rokem +7

    I built engines and worked on a couple of stock cars. Smokey's comment that "It's not cheating, it's creative interpretation of the rules." has always stuck with me. Our cars and engines were always legal, but always on the edge of the rules or with things that they didn't think of.
    We had to run stock rotating assembly and no drilling to lighten the crank, so I took a 350 crank and had it cut to small journal sizes which cut friction and lightened to whole assemble; legally?
    Smokey once built a Granada which had to have stock brakes. He took a rearend out of a Lincoln Versailles which gave him 4 wheel discs. Tech said they were illegal because Grenadas don't have 4-wheel discs. Smokey pointed out that it says "stock", not "original" brakes. It's all in the interpretation.

  • @Marc-uw4lw
    @Marc-uw4lw Před rokem +10

    Great stories! Glad you mentioned the Porsche 917 because apparently they built some of the 25 road-going versions with truck axles in order to get past the FIA’s homologation rule. Porsche didn’t have the time or the money to build those cars properly. There’s some incredible motorsport stories out there. Would be great to see some more videos on this!

    • @ExternalInputs
      @ExternalInputs Před rokem +6

      They weren't road-going versions, Porsche was forced to build the 25 cars needed for homologation before they were allowed to race any. Building 25 cars in due course was usually sufficient, and Porsche felt they were being singled out by the FIA. However, smarting at the inference that they wouldn't be able to complete the task, they worked tirelessly to build the cars, drawing even secretaries in to help.
      Apparently some of the cars had live rear axles installed in a makeshift manner instead of transaxles and engines as time got the better of them. They just hoped that every one of the 25 cars lined up for inspection wouldn't be closely scrutinised by the FIA, and fortune ended up favouring the brave.

    • @99bimmer
      @99bimmer Před 11 měsíci

      There's a video on that story on this channel too

  • @Wagner669
    @Wagner669 Před 3 lety +288

    This guy has all the best stories!
    And his story-telling way is absolutely fantastic!
    Just a guy, on a chair, narrates a simple story and it's f-king amazing!

    • @behindthen0thing
      @behindthen0thing Před 3 lety

      Needs to get rid of that beard though

    • @Tobbe...
      @Tobbe... Před 3 lety +5

      @@behindthen0thing in what way does his beard interfere with the story?
      He is telling the story so good that I'm not even reflecting on his appearance, but instead "seeing" the scenario that he's talking about. 😍

    • @Carlos.Rivera
      @Carlos.Rivera Před 3 lety +1

      A podcast style would be great too

    • @sassyquin707
      @sassyquin707 Před 3 lety +3

      Despite his annoying drop in decibels every other word

    • @kennydemartini2169
      @kennydemartini2169 Před rokem +2

      He's very gullible too. Some of these tales are impossible.

  • @DigitalCarAddict
    @DigitalCarAddict Před 3 lety +1317

    One of my favorite stories so far!

    • @PL3AYRE
      @PL3AYRE Před 3 lety +2

      Sup dca love ur channel

    • @ishaklemfadel5055
      @ishaklemfadel5055 Před 3 lety +7

      Never thought I’d see you here but this actually makes sense

    • @samuelrush1546
      @samuelrush1546 Před 3 lety

      I was just watching one of your event week videos

    • @joshdanial8945
      @joshdanial8945 Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah

    • @rugrt1
      @rugrt1 Před 3 lety

      Years ago I ran 65 Chevy in NHRA Super Stock class . I remember meeting Grumpy Genkins in judges pit and they flagged him for changing the air flow over his windshield by putting half a gasket extra on bottom of windshield to change the angle.

  • @bobkonradi1027
    @bobkonradi1027 Před rokem +10

    One thing that was not mentioned about Smokey's Chevelle was he moved the body back on the chassis to get a better weight distribution. If you look at the front fender on Smokey's car, the front wheels are up against the front bumpers. The wheelbase was the same as stock, but the body was back several inches on the frame. Another thing, and it couldn't be called a "cheat" by anybody, but an "innovation." On his Indy car one year, he moved the driver to the left side of the car to bias the weight so it could go through a turn better. It worked.

  • @MorrisDugan
    @MorrisDugan Před 11 měsíci +1

    When I was a kid in the early 60's, a relative gave me a stack of Popular Science magazines, and one of their features was Smokey Yunick's "Say Smokey" column.

  • @Arrica101
    @Arrica101 Před 2 lety +88

    One of the best parts of "cheating" was in the Monaco rally when Alpha Romeo started the rally dirt tyres and changed from dirt to road tyres when the dirt section ended. No where in the rules did it say your weren't allowed to do this but it was expected that you finish the stage on the same tyres you started on. They smashed Audi who were decimating everyone in the Quattro

    • @sesamstraathooligan9587
      @sesamstraathooligan9587 Před rokem +17

      I think you'll find that was Lancia ;)

    • @comet7760
      @comet7760 Před rokem +3

      @@sesamstraathooligan9587 yea, wasn't it the salt one

    • @JohnSmith-rw8uh
      @JohnSmith-rw8uh Před 11 měsíci +5

      There was no rules to say it was illegal... and Audi got the rules changed allowing 4wd cars.... and it was Lancia. btw its Alfa Romeo

    • @99bimmer
      @99bimmer Před 11 měsíci +4

      Yeah, It was Lancia, and they also bought all the road salt in town at one of the Rallys to thaw all the ice before the 037 did its run

    • @JohnSmith-rw8uh
      @JohnSmith-rw8uh Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@99bimmer at the monte carlo rally.

  • @calsurflance5598
    @calsurflance5598 Před 2 lety +29

    Bruce Canepa told me the Javelin brake story. He said , Penske convinced Porsche to list the 917 brakes in their parts catalog. Until then they had not been available, “over the counter”, just through the Porsche racing division. Also, the front suspension arms were all custom fabricated on the Javelin.
    Donahue had an engineering degree from Browns University, and was brilliant. As a 13 year old, I had the opportunity to meet him in Boston shortly after his Indy win. He stayed after his lecture and talked with me for a half an hour about a new turbo 917 Can Am car they were building. He really lit up talking about. It was his baby!

  • @jayreiter268
    @jayreiter268 Před rokem +2

    Jill St. John did that with her elbow on one of the Scarabs. Our auto shop teacher had connections. One of the graduates worked at Traco. A couple of us would go and watch. One time he stopped us in the alley. Jill had a photo taken resting her elbow on the car and dented it. It was a finished car and people were pissed. It was interesting watching. The first time I had seen a planishing hammer, English wheel and a buck used to form panels.

  • @shafferjoe1962
    @shafferjoe1962 Před rokem +1

    Thank you John I love how you tell stories and I love the stories that you tell so I cannot thank you enough.

  • @joecramer9256
    @joecramer9256 Před 3 lety +236

    Attention Vinwiki: please do more stories about the old racing days ! The bigger guy who told about 24 hours of les man ( sorry don't know his name ) was great too!

    • @aakashthaker
      @aakashthaker Před 3 lety

      Which episode?

    • @brightmoor
      @brightmoor Před 3 lety +4

      @@aakashthaker not sure if he’s talking about this one or not, but here is John Ficarra telling the story of the 1965 Le Mans race - czcams.com/video/iR8FP1_pjn0/video.html
      All of Ficarra’s stories are good, but that Le Mans one is one of my favorites of his.

    • @aakashthaker
      @aakashthaker Před 3 lety +2

      @@brightmoor Thank you so much brother! Needed some quality content to binge on!

    • @colinmunro7337
      @colinmunro7337 Před 3 lety

      Same dude no get,that's the whittion 935 story and the Ferrari one.

    • @EmyrDerfel
      @EmyrDerfel Před 3 lety +1

      Jay Lamm talking about the 24 Hours of Lemons?

  • @EfrenBailey
    @EfrenBailey Před 3 lety +102

    I laughed out loud when I heard Porsche regarding the 'Factory Parts' story. That's just brilliant!

    • @christopherwhull
      @christopherwhull Před 3 lety +5

      Roger Penske does not own all kinds of dealerships just to make money, it is so that any part ever made is available to his race team 24/7/365. He does not own a truck line to make money, it is so every engine nameplate takes his call. He owns the tire testing tracks so if he needs tire testing time the schedule is his first. He made a skunk works engine program that cost in excess of what the rest of the teams spent in total just to have the hottest ride for the month of may.
      Not many race teams can get away with all the nameplates on speed dial at the same time and still get the best of the best from them. Sure he has a net worth of billions, he has blown that much paying engineers and manufactures for amazing chunks of race gear not everyone else has.
      Root for him in some divisions and root against him in others. His family is sane and will be good stewards of 16th & Georgetown.

    • @doubleT84
      @doubleT84 Před 3 lety

      There's a German interview series (alte Schule - oldschool) on CZcams that has an interview with Porsche 917 test and race driver Willi Kauhsen. One time he recalled how he went to Ferdinand Piech, telling him that the brakes go soft, meaning the whole brake caliper is warm and widens with the pressure of the pistons. So Piech ordered the new and improved brake calipers to be designed and made by Porsche's racing team. Before that, they had experimented with all kinds of brakes. So, yes, these were probably the best brakes at that time.

  • @cjespers
    @cjespers Před rokem +4

    I don't know how many of the cheats were actually used, but they make great stories. Thanks for the video.

  • @rand49er
    @rand49er Před rokem +2

    Great stories told in an amusing way. Thanks! Loved it!

  • @duster0669
    @duster0669 Před 2 lety +12

    I racer told me once, "You can cheat all you want, until you start winning. Then they'll catch you."

    • @josephastier7421
      @josephastier7421 Před 11 měsíci

      Same way the casinos look the other way if people under 21 play the slot machines, only to suddenly want ID if they win big.

  • @asd36f
    @asd36f Před 3 lety +127

    One of my favourite non-mechanical cheats was the swiftie that Harry Schell pulled out late in qualifying for the 1959 United States Grand Prix at Sebring. His quickest time had been 3 minutes 11 seconds, but just before the end of the session he managed a 3 minute 5 second lap, putting him on third place on the grid behind Stirling Moss and Jack Brabham
    The reason for his fast lap only came out after the race. Just beyond the MG bridge and before the Esses was a sharp right turn that apparently led nowhere. Schell found, however, that it connected with the end of the Warehouse Straight, bypassing the entire straight and the Warehouse Hairpin. On his final qualifying lap he used this short cut, thus cutting 6 seconds of his previous best lap time.

  • @quicksesh
    @quicksesh Před 4 měsíci

    I am not a NASCAR fan but listening to you talk about it and the enthusiasm you have for these stories is very entertaining and enlightening.

  • @HarryWHill-GA
    @HarryWHill-GA Před rokem +2

    I've always been more of a ship/boat guy than a car guy but I LOVE these stories.

  • @mack1305
    @mack1305 Před 3 lety +42

    I went to the Darlington museum as a teenager with my dad. The one thing that struck with me was someone had filled the roll cage with fuel to get an advantage.

    • @austinknowlton1783
      @austinknowlton1783 Před rokem +2

      I've been to that museum.

    • @Samqdf
      @Samqdf Před rokem +3

      I have heard of a roll cage being sealed up and being used as a Nitrous tank

    • @kz6fittycent
      @kz6fittycent Před rokem

      @@Samqdf I think that was the Dodge Boys back in the 90's.

    • @josephastier7421
      @josephastier7421 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@Samqdf Oh that's awesome.

  • @brysonalden5414
    @brysonalden5414 Před 3 lety +79

    I went from crew member to driver to tech inspector at my local track, and I can say that liberal interpretations of the rule book, and outright disdain for the rules, was not, um, uncommon.

  • @maxlampe4853
    @maxlampe4853 Před 11 měsíci +1

    My grandpa drives an exact replica of Mark Donohue Z/28 with the number 6 on it. He races on the East Coast at Lime Rock, Watkins Glen, and Thompson. He's been part of the HRG and VRG racing groups for a good ten years now, and i think he would get a real kick watching this video! Awesome storytelling as well!

  • @cashtalks6253
    @cashtalks6253 Před rokem +61

    Could you imagine what racing would be today without all the rulebook?
    Can you imagine just how exciting it would actually be again?

    • @wiredforstereo
      @wiredforstereo Před rokem +8

      You mean, one or two people would be uncatchable. Not exciting at all.

    • @kurtu5
      @kurtu5 Před rokem +8

      @@wiredforstereo And then a yea later it would be three to four people, and a year after that a dozen and a year after that, they would be racing around the moon.

    • @heirofaniu
      @heirofaniu Před rokem +8

      It would become so prohibitively expensive that no one could compete.

    • @probablyinconsistent4756
      @probablyinconsistent4756 Před rokem +13

      I think danger is a big factor too. If you let race teams build whatever they want the cars start to become insanely dangerous

    • @mrconancat
      @mrconancat Před rokem +5

      @@probablyinconsistent4756 Aww come on. Group B wasn't THAT bad.

  • @dylanwakley2553
    @dylanwakley2553 Před 3 lety +32

    ‘We’re all looking for sneaky ways to get ahead, but it’s more fun when that’s at 200mph’ love that haha

  • @MrUltraworld
    @MrUltraworld Před 2 lety +42

    If you can find Smokey's book, I highly recommend it. During the war, he was a bomber pilot and had many crazy exploits flying all over Africa and Europe. It's nearly 1,000 pages but I could not put it down.

    • @ExternalInputs
      @ExternalInputs Před rokem +2

      I found the bomber pilot section the most interesting. It contained information that never made it into other WW2 historic publications.

  • @RisenGlorfindel
    @RisenGlorfindel Před 11 měsíci +3

    My great uncle was Jerry Karl. He was Smokey’s last driver and boy were they meant for each other. We have some absolutely wild stories about what they and my grandfather got into.

  • @KidFury27
    @KidFury27 Před 5 měsíci

    John is the best story teller on this channel. I could listen to him for hours.

  • @aasberry1
    @aasberry1 Před 2 lety +16

    Along with a few others, I was fortunate enough to sit at a breakfast table with him at SEMA. He was almost totally deaf; so he did all the talking. He told the gas line story. Another was ride height. There is a minimum height on the front. He would place appropriate size stones between the spring coils to bring it up. Once around the track and the stones were crushed and fell out. Dropped the front down.
    One thing he wouldn't talk about was his zero heat loss engine.

  • @wilsonlaidlaw
    @wilsonlaidlaw Před 2 lety +285

    I was at a dinner some years ago, where John Coombs (Jaguar) and Frank Sytner (BMW/Alpina) were present. They were trying to outdo each other with tales of totally outrageous cheating at motor races. The one I really liked was from the 1950's, when race cars had knock off eared centre lock wheel nuts. There was a race where the rules said that at some point, each car had to come in to the pits and change their rear tyres with only the driver and co-driver working on the car. John and his chief mechanic got up in the middle of the night and went round all the other competitors with the largest copper hammer they could find, and tightened the heck out of the centre lock nuts. When John's D-type came into the pits, it was away again in less than half a minute. They had a two lap lead on the rest of the field by the time the poor struggling drivers had managed to get their wheel nuts unscrewed.

    • @tacomas9602
      @tacomas9602 Před rokem +7

      Lmfao

    • @benjaminjones5029
      @benjaminjones5029 Před rokem +3

      Wheels coulda fallen off next lap after threads stretched and killed a driver.

    • @wilsonlaidlaw
      @wilsonlaidlaw Před rokem +12

      @@benjaminjones5029 You really cannot tighten those very large and deep threads on a Rudge Whitworth centre lock spline drive wheel with a hammer, enough to strip the threads. On my later peg drive centre lock wheels on an F2 car, using a far smaller thread, the nut was torqued with a 3/4" drive impact tool to 450 foot/lbs, far more than you could get with a hammer.

    • @benjaminjones5029
      @benjaminjones5029 Před rokem +5

      @@wilsonlaidlaw Sorry I thought I said stretched threads not stripped threads.
      Stripping threads normally occurs due to incorrect threading.
      Stretching threads occurs due to deformation from over-loading.
      With a two inch metal lug attached I'll beat that 610Nm nut straight off with a hammer no worries.
      If you'd struggle with it that's fine, no worries Mr. F2.
      Guess you don't really ever see the need to use a torque wrench to avoid over tightening?🤔

    • @RitzStarr
      @RitzStarr Před rokem +1

      no you weren't lol

  • @mousermind
    @mousermind Před rokem +2

    Regarding "unfair advantages", if anyone can do it, but you're the only one who thought of it, it's bloody fair.

  • @hoppinonabronzeleg9477
    @hoppinonabronzeleg9477 Před rokem +1

    Colin Chapman was the Uk's version of Roger Penske. He was the master of acid etching! I read somewhere in Motorsport magazine, that someone entered a 2 stroke engine in a 1500 cc category, it won, as it was running at twice the cycle time. a rival team complained it should be entered in the 3 litre class. This was upheld, but rule changes were made!

  • @alexnutcasio936
    @alexnutcasio936 Před 3 lety +45

    Smokey was brilliant. The things he did to and for NASCAR can not be underestimated. He not ONLY cheated the Rule Book, he cheated the wind.

    • @randolphscott2958
      @randolphscott2958 Před 3 lety +4

      And he knew how to build a badass 396 too.

    • @dmc2554
      @dmc2554 Před 3 lety +2

      OVERestimated, bro

    • @donoberloh
      @donoberloh Před 2 lety

      He only cheated the rule book if the exact rule was in there.

    • @bryanfranks1378
      @bryanfranks1378 Před 2 lety

      @@donoberloh he never cheated the rule books

  • @velvetjones1856
    @velvetjones1856 Před 3 lety +48

    Smokey was a genius and probably the smartest engine guy around.
    It's not cheating if it is not prohibited in the rules. It was true in the old days and still is today.

    • @klaykid117
      @klaykid117 Před 3 lety +2

      He has a spot in the automotive Hall of Fame not for racing but for how much his cheating innovations contributed to the overall Auto industry. He had over like 200 patents if I recall correctly

  • @warnabrotha95YT
    @warnabrotha95YT Před rokem +2

    Wish that "What wins on Sunday sells on Monday" could be more impactful now as it was then.

  • @dakistle
    @dakistle Před 11 měsíci +1

    I heard the word "cheat" way too many times. This is innovation.

  • @heavenhelpus479
    @heavenhelpus479 Před 2 lety +26

    Love that description of how fast the fuel would come on after they increased pressure. You could feel the car go "thunk" as it squatted down suddenly. Hilarious.

  • @williamdeans101
    @williamdeans101 Před 3 lety +29

    i was a fabricator in nascar for 30 years, the car museums are loaded with my work, including great cheats like the shoe box gas tank and nitrous tank alternator, plenty of chopped tops and narrowed cars and im the originator of gluing lug nuts to the rim.
    i got very little credit / it all went to the owners. in return i was friends of most of the greats doing what i loved
    ,racing.
    my hats off to 2 of the greatest of all time, freddie lorenzen and ralph moody.

    • @hotrodray6802
      @hotrodray6802 Před 3 lety +1

      Howdy Sir.
      Hope you had a great life.

    • @williamdeans101
      @williamdeans101 Před 3 lety +6

      to violettjett.
      ramo scott whos credited with gluing lug nuts to the rim, paid crew chief john green / for ray fox $100.00 for the concept.
      fox had threatened to fire green for spending 5 days on trying to make a lug nut 5 finger holder, / i was body and fender for fox at that time. i came up with the idea of just putting the lugs on the wheel first / the first attempt was i had david fox magnetize the lug nuts on a magna-hyla machine. this worked but not perfect. then between myself and green we got 3m trim glue to work . we knew we could take the rockingham pit race that was coming up. but then fox did not have a sponsor so he canceled going to rockingham.
      thats when green sold the idea to ramo. i would be more then happy to take a lie detector test on this,
      you may have invented the wheel violettjett but i invented putting the fucking lugs to the wheel.

    • @dannylowery7000
      @dannylowery7000 Před 3 lety +4

      @@williamdeans101 awesome man! I used to love NASCAR and I know it's been said a bajillion times, but when Earnhardt died, so did NASCAR. It was already getting sick, but that just killed it. It's so freaking boring now.

    • @williamdeans101
      @williamdeans101 Před 3 lety +1

      @@dannylowery7000 thanks. nascar died when gary nelson, a high grade cheater himself was appointed head tech for nascar, he basically made up rules which in theory allowed lap racers to run up front with the big dogs. / in my day out running the guy behind you won the checkered flag

    • @dannylowery7000
      @dannylowery7000 Před 3 lety

      @@williamdeans101 NASCAR got so boring, I started watching drag racing, pro mods specifically. Don't know why, but I love that class. I like the fuel cars too, don't get me wrong. Tricky Ricky has taken Earnhardt's place so far as my favorite driver, him and Stevie Fast Jackson. I got hooked on drag racing when I went to Charlotte and saw 4 wide! 40,000 horses unleashed at the same time is WICKED!

  • @theopinionatedbystander
    @theopinionatedbystander Před měsícem +1

    When I first moved to America, I ended up living in Daytona. One of the old time race drivers became a friend.. he was a well known winner of his day, and his fave cheat was making his roll bar his “NOS TANK”. It was stripped down by nascar many times when a loosing driver called fowl. He was never caught.. ever.

  • @craigpennington1251
    @craigpennington1251 Před rokem +1

    I had a 1970 Mark Donahue Javelin and it was a rocket that handled the corners.

  • @saf2127
    @saf2127 Před 3 lety +58

    This is absolutely fascinating! I can’t get over dipping an entire car in acid. The chemist/engineer in me is cringing so hard at the safety ramifications but, like, the chemist/engineer in me also really wants to see this happen in real life. 🤣

    • @hotrodray6802
      @hotrodray6802 Před 3 lety +3

      Mopar drag cars in 64-5 did it.

    • @rondempsey875
      @rondempsey875 Před 3 lety +7

      I'm surprised that he didn't mention that later Penske Camaro's had a vinyl roof. Why? Not for style (this was 1969, after all), but because they wanted to hide the acid-dipped roof visibly sucking down at speed, and the black vinyl made it harder to detect.

    • @jesseincognito.
      @jesseincognito. Před 3 lety

      I was also thinking about the refueling tank one

    • @2lotusman851
      @2lotusman851 Před 3 lety +2

      Pretty common with aluminum airplane skins.
      Called Chem Milling. Can mask off areas you dont want to be etched out.
      Ends up looking like a terraced field.

    • @bryanfranks1378
      @bryanfranks1378 Před 2 lety

      Happened on more than one occasion also check out the drag racers who did it all the time too, check out the light weights I also remember when they used to fill the tube front axels with bird shot to keep the front ends down was really big with the rails and I heard that one axel broke during from a hard landing and spilled the contents all over the entire track and it took over an hour to clean it all up.

  • @kevinmoore4887
    @kevinmoore4887 Před 3 lety +46

    Innovation, new ideas.
    Cheating, breaking rules.
    Some great Innovation stories.

  • @paulstubbs7678
    @paulstubbs7678 Před rokem +4

    When you said about the large fuel tank on a stand for refuelling, I was kind of expecting you to say that they then hooked an air line to it, to pressurise it, rather than pushing it 20ft into the air

  • @sk8boardingsite
    @sk8boardingsite Před rokem +1

    Great stories, it was amazing listening to it. Cheers!

  • @saywhatyeah3076
    @saywhatyeah3076 Před 3 lety +27

    I think Smokey’s best work was his gen2 Camaro he took to California. He blew away Penskes camaros, set new track records and told his driver to never park it next to another camaro because it was three inches wider. He then loaded it up took it back to Florida and never raced it. The man also built great engines!

  • @jorgeposadas1192
    @jorgeposadas1192 Před 2 lety +18

    I remember my auto shop teacher back in the 80's, he was an older man that used to drag race back 60's and tell us about how they used to cheat, cutting up a chassis and removing metal here and there and moving stuff around and adding metal where it counted, oh! the memories.

  • @majorwayne9866
    @majorwayne9866 Před 2 měsíci

    A co-worker that runs drag cars on the weekends is all about racing & we were offshore & had a book that had a bunch of Smokey’s stories. I enjoyed the read & I enjoyed the way you told them. Nice work!

  • @kefwals8722
    @kefwals8722 Před rokem +1

    These stories remind me of old tall tales we red about in grade School. Some true a lot embellished. I don't know the names of the racers from that era. But I remember a story told by one that when the weighed the car he had filled the roll cage or some area of the car with large ballbearings. Then when he made it through he pulled a cable that opened up a slot and dumped all the ball bearings out. Around the corner during the pace lap so they all rolled down the hill and disappear from sight. I also saw another guy showing how they rigged up brake lines to a contraption that would move the spoilers up and down for whatever reason. Out more down force in the rear when cornering. All sounds feasible.

  • @sethreid436
    @sethreid436 Před 3 lety +185

    Just to add to the story of Smokey and the fuel line, he ran it through the roll cage to hide it. So I’ve been told.

    • @justaname1862
      @justaname1862 Před 2 lety +14

      I just asked the same question...ive heard about the fuel in the hollow tubes of the Roll Cage...i dont think its to of an over the top idea...sounds more likely than the basketball idea

    • @davenettlesmusic2954
      @davenettlesmusic2954 Před 2 lety +5

      Along with the Nitrous Oxide.

    • @pkuudsk9927
      @pkuudsk9927 Před 2 lety +3

      Some say that was the nitro methane tank for the final lap

    • @fireball1322
      @fireball1322 Před 2 lety +23

      he didn't mention when Smokey discovered if he sprayed the bell hsg full of spray insulation, then let the fly wheel cut itself a path through it, tapped the bell hsg, installed a pressure gauge and found 10 psi boost. He ducted it to the engine.Suddenly Smokey's NASCAR Chevelle had boost. Another time he had a bottle of NOS under the seat. Also an airplane alternator. Was behind the grille and it's own propeller turn the alt, freeing the engine from having to donate 5-10 hp to turn it.

    • @e-curb
      @e-curb Před 2 lety +7

      @@fireball1322 The propeller on the alternator was real, but it doesn't give you 5-10 hp. The advantage is less than one hp.

  • @TheCannonball79
    @TheCannonball79 Před 3 lety +8

    I was a kid of 13 (1968) when I started helping at the shop of my neighbor who was a factory Plymouth Super Stock and later Pro Stock racer. And the most important thing I learned was creative rule book interpretation. Back then if you didn’t cheat you would be back on the trailer in very short order. It was fun because everyone could eventually figure out what you were doing but nobody would speak up for fear of also being caught in the act. It was Mopar vs Chevy vs everyone else and you either played along or you risked loosing your factory support. It was a fun time to be around and watch the legends play.

  • @SilentKnight43
    @SilentKnight43 Před rokem +1

    Dude sure knows how to tell captivating stories. Loved this!

  • @GleNRG
    @GleNRG Před 4 měsíci

    I reckon I've watched this video 10 times over the years, I reckon I could watch it another 10. The beauty of motorsport is finding that "edge" over your competitors. Motorsport brings out the creativity in these endeavor's.

  • @16Willmanutd
    @16Willmanutd Před 3 lety +99

    To me the so called "greatest Interpreter of the rules" was Lancia group B rally team.

    • @jameswood1935
      @jameswood1935 Před 3 lety +7

      yeh one of the all time best.... and that yank Porsche that had nitros in the side skirts haha

    • @marc87supra
      @marc87supra Před 3 lety +4

      Don’t forget the Lotus 79 with its ground effects as well.

    • @darylcook3304
      @darylcook3304 Před 3 lety

      @@jameswood1935 bb

    • @nutstank23
      @nutstank23 Před 3 lety +2

      It’s funny because that lotus car was used on so many different forms of racing after that.

    • @GrumpyIan
      @GrumpyIan Před 3 lety +7

      Also Team Toyota in the 90s with how they bypassed the restrictor plate on the turbo.

  • @dukecraig2402
    @dukecraig2402 Před 3 lety +107

    The story about Smokey and the large fuel line has gotten a little distorted over the years, part of the pit area at a racetrack is called the team's "garage", that's where they tune and adjust during the test days before the actual race, that's the "garage" that Smokey drove the car to after he started it up without a fuel tank in it after the famous "better make it 11" line of his after being disqualified from them finding 10 violations, the story has gotten distorted because when people heard he "drove back to his garage" they assumed that it was his shop in Daytona not understanding that "garage" is a term for where the team's work on their cars at the track.

    • @first_namelast_name5139
      @first_namelast_name5139 Před rokem +1

      That’s what I was thinking

    • @Nobody-ld7mk
      @Nobody-ld7mk Před rokem +6

      Good Stories always end up amplified.

    • @Tommy_Mac
      @Tommy_Mac Před rokem +5

      The story in his book that he told was that he drove the car on the street back to his shop in Ormond, while running all of the traffic lights on the way, because he was so pissed. I'm not debating your take on it, but that's what's in the book.

    • @phildavenport4150
      @phildavenport4150 Před rokem +3

      Ever heard of punctuation?

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před rokem +1

      @@Tommy_Mac
      Do really think that a NASCAR race car that consumes fuel at the rate they do would have made it back there on one gallon?
      And how would he have gotten it out of the venue without it being on a trailer and everything? I don't think the France family is real hype on allowing a car to just drive out of that area and onto the streets of Daytona Florida with the way they've always been about NASCAR's image, I'd lay odds while that function is going on there's gates that are closed that have to be opened and other such things if for no other reason the sake of keeping some idiot from on the streets driving into the venue and to that area or onto the track itself, just can't see that happening for a whole bunch of common sense reasons including while he'd be going through Daytona the town would already be swarming with cops on duty because of everyone in town for the race that'd most likely take exception to him doing that.
      Sure you don't have a couple of stories of his from the book intertwined with each other?

  • @incargeek
    @incargeek Před 10 měsíci +1

    The 11 foot by 2 inch fuel line gets me every time

  • @42lookc
    @42lookc Před rokem +1

    Now, _that_ is entertainment! I could listen to stories like that all day! 🙂

  • @CountryHombre
    @CountryHombre Před 3 lety +34

    The brake pad set up was amazing.

  • @williamtricarico6684
    @williamtricarico6684 Před 3 lety +22

    My favorite era in automobiles and racing. The real geniuses before the rules killed everything. Smokey Yunick, was one of my favorites. The pinnacle of that unfettered era was Can Am. No rules, no holds barred, straight genius pushing the automotive envelope, just moments in history before the greatest suppression of automotive technology in the 70s. I've said it before. Had Zora Argus Duntov been allowed to do what he wanted, fuel injection systems which came in the late 80s early 90s to "rescue" the automobiles and put them to today, would have been accomplished in the 70s thereby negating much of the smog and mpg problems which plagued American cars especially. We would've had a mid-engined C-3 Corvette powered by a version of a fuel injected ZL-1or LT-1 or probably both. An interview with Carroll Shelby where he reiterated similar beliefs, in which he said "If GM would've let Zora do what he wanted, there would've been no reason for us to ever build a Cobra".

    • @jsquared1013
      @jsquared1013 Před 11 měsíci

      Pretty much only American cars switched to fuel injection in the "late 80s", most of the European and Japanese marques had made the switch in the early 70's.

  • @talinpeacy7222
    @talinpeacy7222 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Sounds like the next plan to make the fueling faster would be to have sealing valves and caps and then pressurize the tank with an air compressor.

  • @msigurko
    @msigurko Před rokem

    Loved the elevated fuel tank filling. Great stuff.

  • @robertmiro4688
    @robertmiro4688 Před 2 lety +7

    In my younger days I lived near the best damn garage in town, we would go ask him questions about problems with our street rods he would help us out. He was a great guy. Never hesetated to help.

  • @jennifersman7990
    @jennifersman7990 Před 2 lety +16

    Richard Petty said it best; “If you’re getting caught, you ain’t doin’ it right”

  • @Brauma54
    @Brauma54 Před rokem +1

    That’s a 66 Chevelle. Great story. He was super creative

  • @DARIVSARCHITECTVS
    @DARIVSARCHITECTVS Před rokem +1

    The FULL story is always the most interesting!

  • @Leatherface123.
    @Leatherface123. Před rokem +31

    Smokey was a genius
    An absolute legend

  • @frederickwise5238
    @frederickwise5238 Před 3 lety +22

    Interpreter of the rules. THANK YOU FOR MAKING THAT CLEAR! Smokey didnt cheat, he sought out and took advantage of the loopholes - til NASCAR closed 'em. !
    Important question: How many technological advances were made by "engineers" who looked for better faster ways of doing things??

  • @trackpackgt877
    @trackpackgt877 Před 2 měsíci

    My uncle was a semi famous drag racer in California in the 60s and 70s and Smokey Yunick was his Idol and true to form he exploited those gray areas in the rules of drag racing on multiple occasions i have some great stories from him.

  • @stan1027
    @stan1027 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I didn't hear you mention the holes in the headers, That's probably the only thing I actually remembered about him.