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pete

Photo Gallery: Allen R. Kuhn, 1955-56

January 24, 2022 By pete

Paramount Ranch, November 18, 1956.

Story and photos by Allen R. Kuhn

The Editor has been so kind as to let me post a few images that are the most memorable, to me, from my early years as a photographer and sports car aficionado. Many have never been published before. We both agreed that the lead photo above exemplified what sports car racing in the 1950s was all about. Front row, is #59 Bob Oker, AC Ace Bristol, #2 Dan Gurney, Porsche 356 Speedster, and #131 Jim Parkinson (# not shown), Austin-Healey 100S. Oker won the race with Parkinson third and Gurney being a DNF with clutch problems.

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Tagged With: Allen R. Kuhn photography, Dan Gurney Porsche, Ken Miles Porsche, Ken Miles Special, Max Balchowski, Ol Yeller race car, Paramount Ranch races 1956, Pete Lovely Pooper, Torrey Pines races

F3 500cc: Unheralded Predecessors Part 1

January 24, 2022 By pete

1947 Monaco Norton

By Pete Vack
Color photography by Jonathan Sharp

They were laughable, incredibly noisy, devastatingly fast, often home built, and frequently ridiculed. But after 1950, 500 cc racing, better known as Formula 3, was one of the most significant classes ever to assemble on a grid. Born out of wartime dreams, these 500 pound, 500 cc race cars, with their independent suspensions, tubular chassis and motorcycle engines placed directly behind the driver, led directly to the Formula 1 and sports racing “rear engine revolution” of the 1960s. According to Count Gianni Lurani, “The success of F3 gave enormous impetus to the still immature British racing car industry. In time, the center of road racing and road racing manufacture was to shift across the English Channel, a possibility hardly imagined in the first post war years.”

That so much was achieved from so little was not expected then, nor is it remembered today. The one-make races, the motorcycle engines, and the scarcity of international competition discouraged the mainstream race fans with their various marque and national prejudices. The 500 cc cars were perceived as slow, troublesome and outside the realm of ‘real’ racing. F3 failed to catch the interest of more conventional race car builders, both on the Continent and in the U.S. Following the ultimate demise of the formula in 1959, the trend setting F3 cars were forgotten by all but a few die-hard enthusiasts in the United States and Great Britain.

However maligned, F3 was destined to change the face of the racing world. Cars like the Cooper Mk VIII, JBS, Mackson, and Erskine Staride set the pace for today’s modern F1 machines.

Unheralded Predecessors, indeed.

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Tagged With: 500 cc formula, bolster Bloody Mary, Buzzie Douglas, Cooper, Emeryson F3, F3 cars, FIII cars, Iota magazine, Monaco Norton, Norton

Cobra MK I Chassis History, Vol. 1 Reviewed

January 24, 2022 By pete

Review by Pete Vack

Shelby Cobras: CSX 2001 – CSX 2125
The Definitive Chassis-by-Chassis History of the Mark I Production Cars
by Robert D. Walker

Order Here

In 1963, 23-year-old jazz musician Herbie Hancock, flushed with money from his hit, “Watermelon Man” walked into Kriesler’s auto showroom in Manhattan, eyed the white and red sports car on the floor, and said, “I’d like to buy the Cobra.” It was Hancock’s first car. “I had only driven an old Dodge my father had bought me for college.” The price was $5,825 plus taxes and license. [Read more…] about Cobra MK I Chassis History, Vol. 1 Reviewed

Tagged With: Cobra CSX 2001, Cobra CSX 2006, dalton watson, Dalton Watson fine books, Herbie Hancock, Robert D. Walker, Shelby Cobra, The Definitive Chassis by Chassis History of the Mark I Production Cars

The Teo Zeccoli Story

January 24, 2022 By pete

Zeccoli flat out at Spa in the Alfa Romeo GTA (Photo credit Centro Documentazione Alfa Romeo, Arese, Zeccoli Archives)

Teo Zeccoli interview with Graham Gauld was first published in VeloceToday.com in January, 2013.

Story by Graham Gauld

In the alphabet of the world’s racing drivers, Teodoro Zeccoli comes somewhere near the end. He is a driver we have all heard about, due to his particular exploits with Alfa Romeo, but he is more than just a young Italian who grew up wanting to be a racing driver; Zeccoli was one of the favored test drivers of Carlo Chiti. Apart from being one of Chiti’s principals at Autodelta he was also the test driver for Chiti’s Formula 1 bad-egg, the ATS.

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Tagged With: abarth drivers, alfa gta, alfa t33, alfa team driver, alfa test driver zeccoli, ats test driver, Graham Gauld, racing alfas, teodoro zeccoli, zeccoli

A Photographer’s Life: Resurgence

January 17, 2022 By pete

After a generation had passed, Allen and Carole were suddenly selling the old prints from 1955 to 1965. Photo by Lisa K. Kuhn

Read Part 1 Though my shooting days of sports car racing were over I would keep the negatives; no photographer would ever get rid of his work. I secured an empty Kodak 250 sheet 8×10 Polycontrast III RC F Glossy Paper Box to store the negatives in. I hermetically sealed the box and put it in a secure dry-walled cabinet in my garage for storage. They did not see the glare of an enlarger bulb for the next 35 years.

Story by Allen R. Kuhn

It was on September 20, 1998, that Carole and I went to a vintage sports car race in Tustin, California. This was the first time we had seen sports cars turn their wheels in earnest. I took some 8×10 prints along just in case we saw some of the same cars again. Sure enough, we saw some. I actually (cough, cough) gave a few guys prints. (I always get choked up when I use the “G” word, GAVE). Gave is a NO, NO, Dan Gurney once told me. Carole saw someone who had a booth about a sports car magazine, Vintage Race Car Journal . She wanted me to go and show him my photos. That’s where I met Casey Annis.

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Tagged With: Allen R. Kuhn photography, bill warner, Bob Oker in a Maserati 150S, california racing photography, cars of jim clark, DanGurney, dario Franchitti, jim clark, Ken Mile's Sunbeam Tiger, mario andretti, Model photography, racing photography

Warbirds at Goodwood

January 17, 2022 By pete

Powered by Rolls-Royce

Story and Photos by Jonathan Sharp

The pandemic must have made the curation of the 2021 Freddy March Spirit of Aviation Trophy (held as part of the Goodwood Revival Meeting September 17–19, 2021) much harder, but as usual, the mix of aircraft on display was as eclectic as usual, from bi-planes to bombers, trainers to fighters, from wood and canvas to polished alloy fuselages. [Read more…] about Warbirds at Goodwood

Tagged With: 1941 Westland Lysander, 1951 Cessna Bird Dog, 1964 Westland Wasp, F4U-4 Corsair, Freddie March Aviation trophy, Jonathan Sharp, North American B25J Mitchell, North American Mustang P51D, Vickers Supermarine Spitfire MKIX

Alfa Romeo 33/2 Coupé Special Pininfarina

January 17, 2022 By pete

Roeberto Motta photo

From the VeloceToday Archives, March, 2018

Story by Roberto Motta

Alfa Romeo 33/2 Coupé special by Pininfarina

Looking at the 33/2 Coupé Special, take the time to savor the moment, and let your eyes explore the details of a very special car that has the flavor of an artistic creation, enhanced by the yellow color of the sensual lines of the body.

In the late sixties, Ferrari commissioned Pininfarina to do a study of new car with advanced aerodynamics. To design the car, Pininfarina chose Ing. Leonardo Fioravanti, because he was young, had ideas, and even more, had a mechanical engineering education at the Politecnico di Milano where his studies were focused on aerodynamics and car body design.

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Tagged With: 33/2 coupe speciale, alfa t33, Alfa T33 stradale, carlo chiti, enzo ferrari, Ferrari 250 P5, Fioravanti, Leonardo Fioravanti, Pininfarina T33, road going t33

A Photographer’s Life: Cars and Dolls

January 10, 2022 By pete

Allen Kuhn with his trusty Canon 35 mm with a 135mm telephoto lens. He also used a 2 ¼ Rolleicord that was mostly for Ektachrome color film. “Color film made up just 5 % of my total images (about 300 images). I used it mostly for pit shots. The Canon was the work horse.”

West Coast photographer Allen R. Kuhn spent his youth photographing models, buzzing around Southern California in an Abarth Zagato, became a noted race photographer, found a career at Hughes Aircraft, married the girl of his dreams…and that was just the beginning.

Story and photos by Allen R. Kuhn

Unlike many car enthusiasts, my interest in sports cars was not influenced by my parents. Their style in cars was a 1928 Ford that they drove to Yosemite National Park for their honeymoon. They did, however, support my photo interests by naming me the ‘Official Family Photographer.’ In 1954, when I was 16, I found a copy of Argosy magazine (a men’s magazine of the day) with an article about Sebring. It had a fantastic two-page spread on Juan Manuel Fangio driving a Lancia D24, taken at dusk. It was an extreme pan shot. You could almost feel the sensation of speed with the blurred background and sharp looking car. That’s the style I wanted to achieve. [Read more…] about A Photographer’s Life: Cars and Dolls

Tagged With: Allen R. Kuhn photography, Bob Oker in a Maserati 150S, california racing photography, Ken Mile's Sunbeam Tiger, Model photography, racing photography

An Aston Martin on the Gran Premio Nuvolari

January 10, 2022 By pete

Not Monterey. Joe Hurwich and Sterling Pratz in the Aston Martin on the shores of Lake Trasimeno, a lake in the province of Perugia, in the Umbria region of Italy on the border with Tuscany. GallucciPhoto

Story by Joe Hurwich
Photos by GallucciPhoto

In the November 8 edition of

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Tagged With: 1931 Aston Martin, 2021 Mille Miglia, Bertelli Aston Martins, Buying an Aston Martin, Driving an Aston Martin, Gran Premio Nuvolari, Italian Aston Martins, Joe Hurwich

Greatest American Grand Prix Drivers: Best of the Rest

January 10, 2022 By pete

Allen Kuhn captures a rare moment in the career of Jim Hall; driving a F1 Lotus 18 at the U.S. Grand Prix on November 20, 1960.

On December 20, Clyde Berryman listed the top ten U.S. Grand Prix drivers, based on his statical QPRS. But there was more. In this article, he lists the Best of the rest, in order. Argue on…

11. Jim HALL – QPRS: 233.2 Competitiveness Index of Years Raced: 60.0 All-Time Rating: 293.2
(1960-61, 1963)
GP Starts: 11
GP Points: 3
Jim Hall is a motorsport legend as the constructor of the Chaparral marque of racing cars which competed in the World Manufacturers Cup, the CAN-AM Challenge and Indianapolis series. Less known is that he had a brief career as a Grand Prix driver. He entered a few races between 1960-62 driving a Lotus but had more success in 1963 driving a BRP Lotus 24 with which he scored 3 points and finished 12th in the championship.

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Tagged With: Brett Lunger, Clyde Berryman, Danny Sullivan, George Follmer, Jim Hall F1, Michael Andretti, QPRS Berryman, Scott Speed, U.S. Grand Prix Drivers

Those Marvelous Merit Models

January 10, 2022 By pete

The whole range of the Merit 1:24-scale plastic kit assembled and painted in period: mid-Fifties. Front line: British F1 and the Jaguar D-Type. Mid row: Italian F1 and Grand Prix racers and the Lotus 11. Rear row: French racers, Mercedes W196, Cooper 500 MkIX and Aston Martin DB3S.

Text, photos and models by Aldo Zana

From the VeloceToday Archives, March, 2019

It was hard times in the second half of the Fifties for European kids in love with Formula One and longing to become part of its world by collecting and playing with model racers.

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Tagged With: merit brm, merit cooper, merit ferrari, merit grand prix cars, merit jaguar, merit kits, merit lotus, merit maserati, merit mercedes, merit models, merit plastic cars, merit sportscars, model cars merit, model Connaught, model Ferrari, model Jaguar

Graham Gauld: The Tourist Trophy at Ards

January 3, 2022 By pete

Ards, 1932. Freddie DIxon’s big off.

Story by Graham Gauld
Photos from the collection of Robert McCann

The RAC Tourist Trophy Race is one of the few races that has been in existence for over 100 years and in fact it is the longest running series, having started in 1905.

It was first held on the Isle of Man and the first winner was not only a Scot, John Napier, but he was even driving a Scottish car, an Arrol Johnston built in Glasgow.

One of the great periods in TT history came in the 1930s. As everyone appears to enjoy older photos, I thought that I would come up with a picture story covering some of those events held on the Ards circuit outside Belfast in Northern Ireland, where racing on the public roads was allowed, unlike on the U.K. mainland were open road racing was banned.

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Tagged With: Alfa Romeo at Ards, Ard circuit Ireland, Ard Tourist Tropy, Brian Lewis Talbot, Freddie Dixon, Graham Gauld, Malcolm Campbell Bugatti, Richard Seaman

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