sorry but nothing with 26hp is a sports car. it won because it was spotted a 150 laps. now me? ill argue the hudson hornet. drove right off the showroom floor to a nascar track and kicked ass. id like to see one off those little wind up cars hang on a hornets bumper. that hudson put out 8 times the hp. heck a flat head v8 model A almost 3 times as much. the first corvette with an anemic blue flame 6 4 times as much. i guess if you spot a turtle enough laps it will beat a cheetah
Not surprisingly, Victor Sharp, the owner of that little Hot Shot, did drive it to the track at Sebring, the day he won the whole thing.
He ran against Ferraris, Jaguars, Cadillac Allard, The Cunningham cars, which featured new Cadillac V8 engines.
Flat head V8 Model "A"... I thought the Ford V* was introduced in the 1932 model Ford, which replaced the model "A"..
So far as spotting a turtle.. engineers figured out the formula..# of laps, vs time, vs distance.. Rather like the handicap in Golf or any other sport.
We wouldn't expect a 105 pound wrestler to be directly pitted against a 305 pound wrestler, but that 105 pounder can still be top wrestler in a meet !
Guess I am just one who tends to "root for the underdog" and sometoimes likes to see the mighty...upset
Sure, that engine was tiny, but it was remarkable..at least in the cast iron block model. At a time when the usual V8 at the time, reaching 4,000
RPM was a feat, the little Crosley, regularly ran in the 6000 to 7000 range
Do some tuning, and 11,000 to 12,000 was not unheard of..according to Crosley Club members. Much due to the overhead cam and 5 mains, I
suppose.
When I was in high school, an English teacher, Mr Williams, had a Crosley... a station wagon, which he drove for all the time while I was in high
school. Sure, they were stripped models for the most part, but that is part of their charm.
Consider putting that engine in Harley...it may perform very well. Then consider that the Hot Shot only weighed in at 1100 pounds.
The designer, Powell Crosley, was an industrialist... As I recall, it was rare to see a small radio in any home, that was not a Crosley..
Then came household appliances, especially Crosley reffrigerators. Crosley's refrigerator introduced an excellent feature. Called the "Crosley Shelvador", it was the first refrigerator to put shelves on the refrigerator door, a feature now used by almost all refrigerators.
Rooting for the underdog.... Enjoy this 30 second video !
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hOPx5N-hwzw