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What! Am I the FIRST to put a comment in? Okay...This "Tulsa Films" special about the 1961 Indy 500 is very good! Good camera quality and angles with the men who did the overall production back nearly 60 years ago. (as the saying goes: "They don't make 'em like that any more." ) This famous race had two good drivers who showed their best: Foyt & Sachs. And, as I've said in many other old Indy racing films - I wish that the late Eddie Sachs had won the Indianapolis 500 even one time...let alone be a U.S.A.C. National Champion in the good years of the early 1960's.
Driving in that era and since the beginning of motor racing was dangerous. Many a good driver met his fate in the speed sport series of all kinds. The up and coming driver like Bobby Marshman that hailed from a small town in Pennsylvania was one. The loss of the great veteran Tony Bettenhausen was another. Then there's Don Branson. He was a demon on the dirt track racing scenes. You know...the is only a few of those guys left as of this date (10-23-2020): A.J. Foyt & Parnelli Jones...and those guys are well into their 80's now. Foyt has been one of my top five favorites ever since he started winning the car races. (Jimmy Clark is STILL my number 1 favorite...and he is one who died well before his time)
Well...I've put this show on pause. I'll continue on now to enjoy the 1961 Indy classic.
Nice video! I was there! My first 500!
ОтветитьThe real story of the 1961 Indianapolis "500" wasn't A.J. Foyt's first (of four) career wins at Indy but Jack Brabham, who drove a modified rear engine Formula 1 car.
Within a few years, front engine cars in Indianapolis-type race cars would become extinct.
This race was a changing of the guard:The rear-engined cars started making their presence known,and names like Four and Jones were becoming household names.
ОтветитьAwesome video,thank you for the sharing!
ОтветитьI was at this race.
ОтветитьI see they finally had roll bars installed for safety. In mid to late 50's they didn't have them and if you wound up in a crash that flips the car or does a rollover or two, the driver is more than likely dead or has serious injuries.
ОтветитьThanks Jack Frank Very Greatful To See These races
ОтветитьNot a word about brabham in the rear engined cooper.... a debut that would change indy forever!
ОтветитьThanks so much for this! Exceptional quality and I like the "behind the scenes" action in the garage.
ОтветитьCool. I was born in Jan 61. AJ is THE man
ОтветитьAh, the heroes {too many killed too young) and sponsors (Rislone, Bardahl, Perfect Circle, Raybestos, and Mobil) of a long, long ago youth. This 1961 race was the first I recall - my fifth-grade year. But I was a non-conformist and by grade eight it was Formula 1, Daytona, Sebring, and Le Mans for me. Apologies. :)
PS Boys' Life and Life magazines were my Indiannopolis reporting publications of choice. Well, actually they were the only ones my parents provided. And the only ones they could afford.
These are absolute gems. Thank you for posting them.
ОтветитьRace car drivers of this era of racing were so vulnerable to major injury and death. We've come a long way to protect drivers today.
ОтветитьNever made it to Indy. Dad did in 1963 when we lost Eddie Sachs and Dave McDonald. After that year front fuel tanks were banned.
ОтветитьThis is remarkable to see it in color, as back in the day if local TV stations would televise this, which they would do on weekend afternoons, it would be in black & white.
I say about televising films of auto races, as KPIX in San Francisco back in the early to mid-1960s would do that. It's where I got my introduction to F1 driver Jim Clark; as F1 racing films were televised on Sunday afternoons.
Those four-cylinder Offy engines were of a single block with no separate cylinder head. With that, there was no way a head gasket would blow, as there was no separate cylinder head for that engine. The design also allowed for very high cylinder compression ratios, important for generating horsepower.
ОтветитьThe front engined roadsters of that era had to be given a push by the pit crew members as those cars only had two-speed manual transmissions. First gear to get going, second gear for race speed. The Offy engine high-torque allowed for the two-speed tranny.
ОтветитьI just knew when that driver got out of his car and left it in the middle of the race track it was gonna be trouble , and did you see him just causally walk off the track ..as he was stepping over the guardrail a car flew by,,,just seems like I would be in a hurry to get my butt out of harms way…..🤪🤪🤪🤪
ОтветитьThis is one of the best films I’ve seen from that era, great clarity and color…👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
ОтветитьI, my brother & sister, were at that race at the invite of Earl Schmidt, who was on the 500 mile race board. Have a wonderful picture of A. J. Foyt as he took his winning run around the track. Remember a wreck happening in front of the Grandstand. Eddie Sachs was our favorite driver! What an exciting day it was!
ОтветитьFoyt won two of his four like that being in the right place at the right time l hadn't heard some of those great names in years. I think it was a few years later that Eddie Sachs got killed another great racer .
ОтветитьJ.F.P.......................thank you for this transfer, HQ indeed !!!!!!! .........thumbs up also
ОтветитьWow Jim Rathman 3 2nd's and a win very impressive!
ОтветитьI bet that rear engine Cooper looked crazy to people back then.
Ответить1mn 07 : Jack Brabham Cooper Climax. Sponsor Kleenex. Kimberly special
ОтветитьHurtubise was another one of those drivers that didn't know how to take care of his car, and make it last. Ran it as hard as possible, all the time. He was always fast. But could of won a lot more races if he had more race savvy.
ОтветитьThis was truly the golden age of Indy , I wish we had real drivers like Foyt, Sachs, and Ward today they were the best of the best!
Ответить"There they are 33 of the world's best drivers in over a million dollars in cars" LOL.. Nowadays ONE car cost over a million..
ОтветитьI had an uncle named Jack Frank. Great guy. Thanks for the cool films on racing in the golden era. Drivers were very brave considering the lack of safety equipment.
ОтветитьI read A.J. Foyt's autobiography. I remember him telling his mother he was going to win that gold Thunderbird for her.
ОтветитьI was there.
Brabham finished 9th.
History was made.
No cookie-cutter cars back then. Also 'qualifying' actually meant something - as something like 60+ cars attempted to qualify. Back then you could build your own car in your barn or garage and attempt to qualify. The rear-engined car made its first appearance with 'Black' Jack Brabham and his F1 Cooper.
ОтветитьRace starts at 11.oo
ОтветитьJack Brabham and the 1st rear-engine car to run at Indy. They didn't like the idea so not much mention was made of it.
ОтветитьFantastic movie, I subscribed your channel, greetings from Italy, Fabrizio
ОтветитьWe have come a long way since 1961 haven't we. It's almost comical watching all the stuff that would not be allowed today. But it was the state of the art in that era, and everyone was amazed and excited at the "speed" and race technology. The front engine "specials" were soon to be put out to pasture. It's interesting that 60 years later Foyt is still involved in the Indy 500.
ОтветитьRIP Lucy
ОтветитьFoyt wasn't sporting his familiar number 14 then.
ОтветитьAnd to have known car builder Floyd Trevis and his son Ron, it should give some recognition to him in the Youngstown, Ohio area, but few seem to care, sadly. I lettered a few sprints in that tiny little shop on Loveland Ave.
ОтветитьI wonder if that Foyt kid ever amounted to anything after this...
Ответить1961. So beautiful cars, so beautiful year!!! The year I was born! ❤️🇺🇸❤️🇺🇸
ОтветитьIn my opinion A.J. was the greatest driver ever. He could drive anything that had wheels on it. He won Indy, Daytona 500 and 24 hours of Lemans. What other driver did it?
ОтветитьJune 24, Sir Jack Brabham was a pioneer midget driver in Australia, the conquered formula One in a car he designed and built himself and pioneered the rear engine car at Indy and to think I used to live around the corner from the house he grew up in in Sydney
A true legend