Another Can- Am Story

Neil

Supporter
The Can-Am Adventure Continues





The previous year, 1972, had been my introduction to world- class racing and it was exciting! The 1973 Can- Am season was probably the high point and effectively the end of this Series, although no one knew it at the time. The Porsche 917/30 of Roger Penske, driven by Mark Donohue, was so dominant that interest began to wane and the final 1974 season became a pitiful last gasp of a once- great racing series.

We had the usual crew members back supporting Bob Peckham and his McLaren M8C. I was not able to travel back East for the races at Mid-Ohio and others but two races in California still remained to finish the 1973 racing season- Laguna Seca and Riverside. We all set off for Laguna Seca, a nice race track located between the farming community of Salinas and the lovely seaside town of Monterrey. I again rode with Dave Eggleston in his Chevy van on the long drive but without the drama of the previous year.

We arrived at the track, unloaded the car, and started preparing it. There are lots of little things that must be checked and each one is important- tire pressure, engine oil & coolant level, take the car to the fuel truck, etc. Bob liked to add sodium dichromate to his coolant as a corrosion inhibitor so we added a handful of the orange crystals to the radiator and started the engine to warm it up and mix the coolant solution. New tires were purchased from the Goodyear truck and expertly mounted and balanced by their technicians. That morning, Saturday, there was a practice session scheduled for Can-Am Cars and we needed to take advantage of it.

Early morning was cool and pleasant but the weather predictions for this weekend were for hot weather. This was going to be hard on both the cars and drivers. Bob suited up, put on his helmet and we belted him tight in the McLaren's cockpit. A short push and the car rolled out on the pit row and with a gloved finger on the starter button, the 8 liter Chevrolet burst to life. These were special aluminum-block engines cast by Chevrolet for racing; originally a 427 cubic inch option in Corvettes but now enlarged and popular with other racers. Bob had two, built by the noted George Bolthoff in his Engine Systems Development shop in Irvine, CA. One engine developed 666 horsepower on the dynamometer, the other, a spare, recorded 665 horsepower. George valued reliability over peak power. “You can't win if you don't finish.”

Waved on by a flagman, Bob eased out on to the track and accelerated away. After the new tires were scrubbed in and up to temperature- about 290F for peak performance- Bob started pushing the car hard. Things looked good, times were improving and no problems cropped up. A visitor came over to our pit and introduced himself- it was George Bolthoff. He had been watching Bob and listening to the sound of his engine (George was deaf as a post but he could hear engines!) and he thought it needed a slight tweak to its fuel injection system. He was certainly the expert so I signaled Bob to pull into the pit on his next lap.

In the pit, Bolthoff took a small screwdriver from his shirt pocket and turned a screw in the Lucas timed injection pump. This British fuel injection system was a mystery to us, a definitely “Do Not Touch” but George had built this engine so there was no one more qualified to make adjustments. I waved Bob back out for a few laps and George was pleased- now it sounded right. However, “Pride goeth before the fall” it says in The Book of Proverbs in the Bible...


Just before we thought we would wind up our practice session, out on the track there was a bang from the engine and then quiet. Never a good sign in a race car. A wrecker was dispatched and brought the car into the paddock, ignominiously hanging from its roll bar. Back on the ground, we quickly saw that something had damaged the engine internally so continuing with it was not possible and our spare engine was back in Tucson. Bolthoff was still with us and he offered to tear down the engine back in his shop but that was down in Irvine, in the LA area, 6 1/2 hours away! Without any other choice, we set about removing the engine from the chassis and unbolting the Hewland LG600 transaxle. Time was ticking away...

While we used a hoist to lift the engine out of the car, Dave backed his van up to the paddock door and cleared a space in the back for the engine. George left in his car and would meet us there at his shop in Irvine. I jumped in with Dave and we left Bob and the others there to wait. Since it was now early afternoon on Saturday the traffic was not too bad and we made it to Irvine in about what we had estimated -6 1/2 hours or so. George met us at his shop, not far off the freeway, and we unloaded the hurt engine. Under his guidance Dave and I helped tear down the engine. We could quickly see what had caused the problem- the timing chain had broken.

Since a timing chain connects the crankshaft to the camshaft, a break allows things to get seriously out of sync- pistons come up and hit valves that are still open, driving them closed and bending pushrods and breaking rocker arms. One pushrod was even driven up through the end of a rocker arm. Fortunately the engine had stopped abruptly so there was not as much debris in the engine as there might have been. Nevertheless everything had to be disassembled, cleaned, and inspected. A new timing chain assembly was found in George Bolthoff's spare parts bin as well as a few pushrods. All pushrods were rolled across a piece of glass to find the straight ones.

It was now late at night so no speed shops were open at this hour or even ordinary auto parts shops. In George's stock we found enough roller rocker arms to rebuild the valve train, with the exception of two. We crossed our fingers, hoping to find two more somewhere. Pistons, rings, rods, crank, bearings, everything was inspected and re-installed or replaced. The TRW forged aluminum pistons passed Georges eagle-eyed inspection so they were re-used. With everything re-assembled and re-timed and re-adjusted, the engine was hoisted back into Dave's van and we left on the freeway to go North, back to Laguna Seca. The sun was breaking into a clear late October sky as we left Irvine.

The drive back was boring but we needed to not waste any time if we had any chance at all of getting everything back together in time for the race. We were dog tired but we pushed on. Finally arriving back in Laguna Seca, we showed our passes to the track officials and were permitted to drive to the paddock. The crew met us and we all wrestled the rebuilt engine out of the van and onto a hoist to re-install it in the car. While The crew dropped the engine back in, I cruised up and down the paddock garage, asking other race teams if they might have a couple of spare Chevy roller rocker arms that we could buy.

The guys on the UOP Shadow team were kind enough to lend us just what we needed, an act of true sportsmanship on their part. After all, we were competitors. The engine was back in the chassis and we hurriedly bolted the clutch back on the flywheel and bolted the transaxle to the block. The axle CV joints were re-installed as were the cooling system hoses, fuel and oil lines and electrical connections. We had collected quite a crowd of onlookers by now, curious as to what was going on as other cars were now taking their places on the starting grid. By now Bob had changed into his fire suit and had his helmet on, ready to jump in as the last pieces were re-installed. By now the race was scheduled to start and we were still in our paddock. The good Lord must be a fan of the underdog- the organizers held up the start of the race for a couple of minutes- just enough time for Bob to get in and fire up the engine for the first time since yesterday.
 

Neil

Supporter
Part Two

Bob quickly drove out onto the short road to the grid but the way was blocked by spectators. My entreaties to clear the way fell on deaf ears; nobody moved until Bob dumped the clutch and spun the rear tires in a cloud of blue smoke. They scattered like quail. With the way clear, we pushed the car out on the grid in front of 65,000 fans, waiting for us to get our act together. Even though a timing chain in the engine had broken in practice, Bob had recorded some good lap times so we had a pretty good spot on the grid. As we pushed the car along, Bob's wife- his crew chief- suddenly spoke up “This can't be right! Donohue is back there!”. It was right, we were ahead of Mark Donohue... but only because he had missed qualifying on Saturday.

The grid was finally ready and the start signal was given. The ground shook from thousands of horsepower and the sound literally vibrated your chest. It was an unbelievable spectacle.

The race developed as many had predicted, Donohue in the 917/30 turbo Porsche ran away from the rest of the field once again but we had a good opportunity to observe the Porsche/McLaren duel closely. It was interesting- Bob could out-brake and out-corner the Porsche but exiting a corner, Donohue simply hit the throttle, there was a big BANG and flash from the waste gate on his KKK turbocharger and 1000+ horsepower let him walk away.

Finally the end of the race...the afternoon temperature had risen to 96F degrees and all of the temperature gauges in the McLaren were pegged. Cars came in off the track and some drivers stumbled out of their cars and lay prostrate on the ground while their crew doused them with cold water. Some drivers, particularly the Europeans, were not used to this heat and they almost suffered heat stroke. We- Bob & crew- were from Tucson, AZ so we were used to the desert climate and we were not as effected.

The race results were posted and we found that we had finished in 7th position, excellent for a bunch of unsponsored nobodies from AZ. Unfortunately, our friends in the UOP Shadow did not fare as well. They scored a “DNF” (did not finish) so in effect, we had beaten them with the rocker arms they had lent us.

We drove back to Tucson, tired but pleased with what we had accomplished. Now there was only one more race to go, at Riverside International Raceway later that month.
 

Randy V

Moderator-Admin
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Love your stories Neil…. You’re a good storyteller!
I am curious about the 290°F tires. Maybe 190°F?
 

Neil

Supporter
Back in the mid- sixties, I had a conversation with Goodyear's chief compounder- I can't remember his name now- and I learned quite a bit about rubber used for race tire tread. The 290F temperature came from him. That was back then; maybe it is different for present day compounds. I remember that you would burn your hands if you grabbed a tire on a car that just came into the pit. Rubber scrubbed off the tread in big rolls, almost like an eraser.
 

Randy V

Moderator-Admin
Staff member
Admin
Lifetime Supporter
Back in the mid- sixties, I had a conversation with Goodyear's chief compounder- I can't remember his name now- and I learned quite a bit about rubber used for race tire tread. The 290F temperature came from him. That was back then; maybe it is different for present day compounds. I remember that you would burn your hands if you grabbed a tire on a car that just came into the pit. Rubber scrubbed off the tread in big rolls, almost like an eraser.
The tire engineers I worked with from BFG, when I was a contract driver for them, told me that their tires compounds were set to go off between 180° and 220°. Which is where I came up with 190°. I do know that the Hoosier tires we used in Late Model Stock Cars would blister at 240°. A 190° tire would be too hot to handle without good gloves…
 

Neil

Supporter
The tire engineers I worked with from BFG, when I was a contract driver for them, told me that their tires compounds were set to go off between 180° and 220°. Which is where I came up with 190°. I do know that the Hoosier tires we used in Late Model Stock Cars would blister at 240°. A 190° tire would be too hot to handle without good gloves…
You might be right, a 100 F difference is hard to believe.
 
Neil always great stories to hear from. My brother and I had no idea as we would have stayed at your house and picked your brain of stories all day would have been amazing
 

Neil

Supporter
Neil always great stories to hear from. My brother and I had no idea as we would have stayed at your house and picked your brain of stories all day would have been amazing
That would have been fun. Lately I have been writing short stories like that Can- Am tale for "posterity". It has been interesting, reflecting on small incidents that have happened to me in my lifetime. I thought maybe I should leave a few memoirs behind me. :)
 
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