I was attending races at Watkins Glen from 1964-68, I was a kid, not old-enough to drive when I started. My dad knew I was into the auto-racing scene, any performance cars, really, street or track. He had a friend from work who also liked racing, and we traveled to Watkins Glen many times for both the F1 races and the sports car races. All I had at the time was an Instamatic using 126 roll film, cartridges, but I still have the pics from those times. One of my brothers worked at Kodak in Rochester NY in color processing while he was putting himself through the University of Rochester, so I got my developing for free. I was very 'sparse' with my shots though, I tried to make every one count.
The Chaparral series was one of my favorite manufacturers, and I knew about them from Car and Driver and R&T before I saw them race. As a kid in the early 1960's I had a couple of Chaparral slot cars in HO gauge, Aurora Model Motoring sets before they went to the chassis magnets. The 'sucker car' was a Chaparral, and it used two two-stroke engines and skirts that actually went down to the road to provide the lower-pressure area under the car. That and the rear deck wings were developments of Jim Hall. Hot Rod magazine has been running some great stories about the sports-racing days of the 1960's and they did an article on Rattlesnake Raceway in Midland TX, which was Chaparral's testing facility. One of the interesting developments was a chassis that Hall got from his 'back-door resource' at GM, it was a chassis that was drilled with many mounting point holes which were numbered, so that Hall could check-out the results of changing the setups for the components installed in the chassis, kind-of a primitive 'data-acquisition' procedure, but one that bore ripe fruit for Hall's cars. A recent article revealed some secrets of the transmission Hall ran, which allowed him to concentrate on driving instead of shifting.
I've often read that 'tin-beating' ruins your hands, elbows, and shoulders. I think that was in-reference to the pneumatic hand-held air hammers used in the metal shaping, but if the OP is still doing this into his 80's, he must have some coping mechanisms.
I have pics at Watkins Glen of the filming of the Cinerama-format movie, Grand Prix, where they used a Ford GT with the front nose removed, and a big platform mounted to the front deck of the car, for the camera to be mounted. If you've seen the movie, you know that there are shots from most of the season in F1 that year, but evidently there was a problem of purchasing the rights to the footage they shot at Watkins Glen, and all their racing footage ended up on the cutting-room floor. James Garner, as the lead in the story, 'won' the race at Watkins Glen, but we never see the racing footage. There is just a shot of the loving-cup trophy going onto a shelf for his win, after the race.
I just can't get-enough of the information about that era of racing, just a very cool time in motorsports, the 1960's.
If no one had posted the information about the cab-over transporter, I was going to provide some input, as I had read a couple articles about it, but I see it's been addressed.
I sure would like to see anything the OP has that he would care to post, or links to his material elsewhere, thanks.
Thanks for the walk down Memory Lane.
From 64 through 67 many of my hours of time were spent as one of the track electricians at Watkins Glen a/k/a Yates' pasture. My compensation was my all track pass along with a similar pass for my then female companion and a collection of teeshirts and jackets. I believe it was 64 when that car or one of its twins sort of made a wrong turn along with another gentleman in his car and found themselves in the Village. Oddly, both cars came back up the hill accompanied by red & white cars with rotating red lights and sirens. Might have been something about license plates, or it might have been an arranged publicity stunt.
You are quite correct about the joys of Hall getting into that ride, and some generous member of the crew had slightly reshaped a grain scoop and painted HallHorn on it which tended to wind up hanging from the pit roof at appropriate moments. I don't recall if Maryann got her picture taken in the Chaperral, but I do have recollection of her sitting in a Cobra informing Carole Shelby it was a completely impractical ride for to and from work as well as bringing home groceries.
Better times in a much better world for sure, when we were ignorant of what was to come and many happy memories. Now I'm sitting here remembering the car with 4 chainsaw motors driving fans to **** it down in the corners, and I can't remember who built it or drove it. Unofficially it was the vacuum cleaner, and many suggestions were made it should go clean the track up.
How and why we all lived through it still amazes me.
Regarding the O/A welding, when that car was built Heliarc (TIG) was still in more labs than shops getting figured out, and MIG was at least 15 years in the future. It was O/A, stick or carbon arc Everdure.