More Can-Am action: www.goodwood.com/grr/event-coverage/members-meeting/2024/3/the-10-best-can-am-moments-at-goodwood/
@Sajuuk6 ай бұрын
I couldn't hear the engines over the non-stop prattle of the two commentators 🤷
@davidtaylor24296 ай бұрын
@@Sajuuk👍👍👍
@CTP11117 ай бұрын
props to those who keep these amazing machines running!
@lamarw99017 ай бұрын
The staggered trumpets on the injection stack are actually to equalize intake runner length. Big Block Chevrolets have 2 long intake runners and 2 short intake runners per head.
@jasmijnariel5 ай бұрын
Some in old F1 had all different lengths
@maranick7 ай бұрын
Saw Mark Donahue in the Porsche at Mid-Ohio in 1973. The sounds of this race are indescribable, the memory moreso.
@barath45455 ай бұрын
So jealous, you saw PEAK CanAm, IN PERSON! I would give a lot to have seen a qualifying session in 1973 to see the full 1580 hp on display. I did see Formula 1 in 2004 in Hockenheim with Schumacher winning in a screaming Ferrari V10 at 18k rpm though, so I guess that is my story for the next generations.
@richardtodorov7 ай бұрын
How all of that torque didn’t spin the planet is beyond me
@daledavies23347 ай бұрын
During the hay days the engines were all about 494 cubic inches. With the short wheel base they all had and the torque available then they were a handfull. Now with another 3 liters od displacement they must be a real handfull. The first year of the turbocharged Porsche 917 30K cars I was a corner marshal on turn 1 at the Edmonton International Speedway. Team Penske and Donohue had the 5.4l engines first. Jody Scheckter practiced Friday and Saturday using a 5.0l engine. Saturday evening the Porsche mechanics were switching out engines for the race. Spoke in German but swore in English. Sunday morning they came out for practice and warmup and Jody had a bit of trouble keeping it straight exiting Corner 1. With the increased displacement and the extra torque, he had to feel out where he could get into the throttle. If I remember right he ended up in the wheat field for a bit. About all you could see was the roll bar and wheat getting tossed into the air.
@rcpmac7 ай бұрын
That is why the race course is a loop!
@mcjdubpower7 ай бұрын
The cars remained stationary, the earth moved instead.
@GoodwoodRR7 ай бұрын
We have to keep them going to make sure the Earth keeps turning!
@lightfoot.20007 ай бұрын
Humans are Fünny Creatures! 👽 🛸 is way better! Lets race! 🏁
@GrowthCurveMarketing7 ай бұрын
The closest thing to “no rules” racing we ever had. It spurred incredible innovation and laid the groundwork for many technologies later made common in F1 and many other categories.
@BubbaSmurft7 ай бұрын
While the sound is terrific it's the guttural roar that you FEEL that makes these puppies stand out. You have to feel them in person.
@JK-g626 ай бұрын
They really do pound the ground
@twocupstwodrams75357 ай бұрын
F1 and Can Am were my motor racing favorites and the Indy 500 a distant third. Mark Donahue, Peter Revson, McLaren and Porsche and the upstart Shadow effort were amazing. Thanks for sharing.
@JK-g626 ай бұрын
I am a big Jim Hall/Chaparral fan....those guys were engineering geniuses
@twocupstwodrams75356 ай бұрын
@@JK-g62 Jim Hall, Carroll Shelby and Smokey Yunick made racing interesting.
@Acceleronics7 ай бұрын
I grew up in the 60s with American V8 musclecars. The scream of a 19000 rpm F1 car from their glory years is pretty cool, but nothing sounds better to my old ears than a big block Chevy V8 in a CanAm car.
@drewpierce22737 ай бұрын
Right on brother! 😁
@topsecret18377 ай бұрын
You should hear the V12s and BRM V8s from the 1960s F1 cars. Wonderful sounds
@alexjenner11087 ай бұрын
I remember the sound of the supercharged Lancia 037 and turbocharged Audi Quattro Sport in the forest in the early 1980s. Each has it's own appeal.
@patpeterson26717 ай бұрын
Ford and Dodge were no different for sound and power .... Remember Ford is international in the racing world .... Chevy and Dodge stayed in their own backyards..............
@puebespuebes85897 ай бұрын
F1 of the front engine era where really cool, especially those from the late 1930s, the Mercedes w125 had a 6 liter supercharged engine
@tonydiridoni58297 ай бұрын
My Dad took an 11 yr. Old me to Laguna Seca to see these things raced in anger. 71'or 72.
@AndrewBlacker-t1d7 ай бұрын
Ah... "Addiction Day." Mine was May 16, 1966 at Indianapolis.
@Howrider657 ай бұрын
I was there than I was a Junor in high school in 72 and I just got my driver license. Those were the days I wish I could relive those times again.
@Americathebeautiful497 ай бұрын
I drove my friends Moms station wagon full of my two brothers and a few others to Riverside. First in 67 and then again in 68. I was just 16 the first go. Thank you Mrs. Barett for trusting me with your car. If she only knew what we got up to. I would have loved to have seen them at Laguna Seca which is one of my favorite tracks in America.
@billenright27885 ай бұрын
can-am was insane. one of greatest series ever.
@michaelheath98896 ай бұрын
Great cars, great sounds. Would be really nice to see the infamous Chaparral 2J "sucker" car. Jim Hall was an innovative genius.
@JK-g626 ай бұрын
Absolutely!!!! You cant speak of CanAm without talking about Jim
@Gardner0871public6 ай бұрын
Bring back CanAm and I’ll start watching racing again
@travkatz6 ай бұрын
Ditto
@thethirdman2256 ай бұрын
What do you call this? An egg and spoon race?
@Gardner0871public6 ай бұрын
@@thethirdman225 parading around Goodwood isn’t a race is it, smartass? Take your egg and your spoon and GTFO 👉🏻
@Gardner0871public6 ай бұрын
@@thethirdman225 I call it a parade, not a race. And these are 50 year old cars. Imagine what modern day CanAm-like race cars could be. 🤗
@thethirdman2256 ай бұрын
@@Gardner0871public I think if you saw what modern technology had to offer you may not like it.
@PHDarren7 ай бұрын
Shame the commentary doesn't match the video. We're getting Tom Kristensen in a black and orange Shadow commentary whilst seeing the number 0 Vaillant Porsche 917k/10k
@Ficon7 ай бұрын
Two people who obviously know nothing about the cars blabbering on.
@mark4lev7 ай бұрын
They obviously wheeled on some female airhead to fulfill their dei fulfilments. You need expert commentary for vintage motorsport.
@DrVaticinator7 ай бұрын
They sound like idiots, to not recognize the Porsche is unbelievable and don’t they have a producer in their ear.
@Ficon7 ай бұрын
@@DrVaticinator Instead of their salaries, hire a talented sound guy. Goodwood sound recordings are generally awful quality.
@djgtuk20127 ай бұрын
One of the usual commentators Marcus Pye was driving the DN1 and another unfortunately was in hospital
@fraserhenderson78397 ай бұрын
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada was a Can Am stop. We could hear these cars from several miles away. The field was completely mixed. Awesome Mclarens sharing the track with Mustangs and Camaros, Alfas and MGs. It was a noisy, joyful chaotic kind of racing, gone forever.
@happycanayjian15827 ай бұрын
Where (in or out of the city) would they race? Is the track long gone? Genuinely curious.
@cogboy3027 ай бұрын
I recall being at the FOS in either 2003, or 2005, and seeing a Cam Am car place very high in the timed shootout. As I recall, it had a 9.7 litre Chevy V8 with Hilborn mechanical fuel injection & the crossing over intake trumpets. I think it was around 900bhp.
@Pietervdv7 ай бұрын
The greatest wall of sound I've ever experienced was in the 80s at the Zolder track with a standing start of these cars and the sound bouncing of the grandstand I was on.
@johnbutera58056 ай бұрын
Gene Crowe built a 1000 turbo big block... in a McLaren, I believe. I met him at Lime Rock. Actually, I was introduced to him by Paul Newman, who was racing Bob Sharp's Z car!!! My GF and I spent the rest of the day watching the races atop Bob Sharp's motorhome along with Bob and his wife, Paul and Gene!! Great memories!!! 😃
@tonerotonero13756 ай бұрын
Golden era. When the lack of rules puts the engineering to an unlimited level. Love these body lines, so sexy.
@thethirdman2256 ай бұрын
By the time these Shadows were running the series was not unlimited. In fact it hadn't been unlimited for several seasons.
@aggieroadracer7 ай бұрын
The 50th anniversary of Can-Am celebration at Road America a few years back where they had FIFTY of these very monsters piling down into T5 at RA during the Sunday race was amazing. The sound pounded you in the chest and filled your skull with sound of "Merica!!!!
@JK-g626 ай бұрын
Road Atlanta is my home track...im sure the CanAm cars did not disappoint
@matthewmoilanen7876 ай бұрын
Do you realize what Can-Am stands for? It's short for Canadian American. Which is funny because Canada is in North America as well. Anyway, just a reminder as to what car was the fastest. It was a air cooled Porsche 917 not a Chev based aftermarket block and head and crank ect Murican car.
@stevenbiddlecom6 ай бұрын
Wow, watching these cars on this track takes me back! I'm from Southern California, USA. When I was a kid there used to be a racetrack in SoCal called Riverside Raceway, and I got to go see the Can Am's racing one year back in the 60's. I used to watch car racing from Riverside Raceway on television aired by Wide World of Sports in the United States. That racetrack and television show are no longer around, but this video takes me back, thank you.
@keithsanders65546 ай бұрын
I remember seeing them at Silverstone. Two 5.3 litre turbo charged, 1,000 BHP Porsches in the hands of Leo Kinnunen and Willie Kauhsen won the two heats. The rear tyres were 2 feet wide and the diff was welded solid so they had to use knobbly tyres in the paddock to get them to turn. I seem to remember the speed at the end oh Hangar Straight was 220mph and they were within a whisker of the F1 lap record. Happy days. The 8 litre McLarens were the loudest.
@anthonyrowland90723 ай бұрын
They turbocharged the big blocks to 2,000hp in testing in response to the 1,500hp Porsche in qualifying. They realized they were basically summoning a demon and stopped.
@FearlessFinlay2 ай бұрын
I saw them too and they were the first turbo charged racing cars I ever saw and heard. Compared to the McLarens they sounded like vacuum cleaners!
@keithsanders65542 ай бұрын
@@FearlessFinlay They were excetionally quiet apart from the "Boom" from the waste gate as they changed gear.
@markthibault85797 ай бұрын
The reason for the dollar signs mentioned at 3:06 is not accurate. The dollar signs orginally appeared on the Mk1 that was actually produced for the season, the orange car passing in front at 3:05. The $ signs are a joke that was in reference to when Trevor Harris originally designed the Mk1 car and ended up being over-budget. Internally at Shadown, the Mk1 became known as the "dollar car" after they were painted.
@alrecks6197 ай бұрын
Truly a no-holds barred experience, salute to the folks who preserved and being able to drive them considering the amount of power in such a lightweight chassis from the 60-70s.
@lucasblanchard477 ай бұрын
The designs of these cars are absolutely insane! Basically just massive engines with a wedge shaped shell around it and a massive wing. SO COOL!
@Subpac_ww26 ай бұрын
Imagine how wild CAN-AM would be with modern developments and powerplants? Wild.
@derekfaeberwick6 ай бұрын
Not the point at all.
@xqqqme7 ай бұрын
Re: your thumbnail. I'm not aware of an 11-liter engine that ran in the Can-Am series. The largest displacement engine I ever heard of was 8.0 and 8.3 liter (488 and 506 cubic inches, respectively) engines that McLaren ultimately ran in an attempt to keep pace with the turbocharged Porsches.
@Vamppas7 ай бұрын
Same here. I was like: "whaat?? which car had engine like that?" Went on googleing, found nothing.
@mcrichton467 ай бұрын
March ran a bigger engine in a 717. It was 540 cubic inches, or 8.8 liters. Biggest engine I’ve ever seen on an entry list was the Corvette GTP that ran with a 10.2 liter V8 at Le Mans in 1985 or 1986 (can’t remember exactly) with Jacques Villeneuve, Sr. as one of the drivers. But that’s still not close to 11 liters
@xqqqme7 ай бұрын
@@mcrichton46 But a GTP car that ran at Le Mans wouldn't belong in a field described here as "Can-Am monsters." Otherwise, why not say cars like these include the Beast of Turin?😆
@raceyrache84637 ай бұрын
This would imply cylinders of 1.375 litres each 😂😂😂😂
@Vamppas7 ай бұрын
@@raceyrache8463 well, Beast of Turin has over 7 litres per cylinder :D
@JimmyMakingitwork15 күн бұрын
It's amazing how far racing can go when there are less rules. Incredible cars!
@maximilianburger16363 ай бұрын
I never heard about the CanAm racing series, but this weekend I was at the nürburgring, where these cars took part in a race and I was shoked what I saw and heared. I had no ear protection with me and I was standing around ten meters away of a straight line where they went full throttle, I had to change my position, it was so loud, but I really fell in love with these cars. A shame, that we have nothing like this today
@kyle3810007 ай бұрын
I was at the 1973 Mosport Can-Am season opener. Penske showed up with the 917-30 driven by Donohue, and Vasek Polak showed up with a 917-10 driven by Scheckter. There were about 5-6 other privately entered 917-10s driven by well known drivers, but Donohue and Scheckter were the class of the field and were on the front row. At the start, Donohue and Scheckter just up and disappeared. It was fantastic to watch. Unfortunately, they were so much faster than everyone else that they caught a backmarker during the 4th lap (of a 2.5 mile course). There was a collision and Donohue got the worst of it, but still made it back to the pits and then continue on. It was among my favourite memories despite my beloved McLarens not being there anymore.
@mikemoore59297 ай бұрын
The shame was , Porsche ending the Can Am era . Not blaming them , they just followed the rules , which were almost non existent . If only turbo had been banned , the rest of it coud have gone on for a long time . The sound of thunderous atmo V8s was a glory to behold .
@mikemoore59297 ай бұрын
amen
@JK-g626 ай бұрын
Donahue could be considered the best driver to have ever lived
@kyle3810006 ай бұрын
@@JK-g62 Donohue was a great driver, but he didn't have the record of Andretti or Graham Hill.
@JK-g626 ай бұрын
@@kyle381000 idc if he didnt have the records of Hill or Andretti...he was an engineer....extremely smart...and not only could outdrive nearly everyone...but had the skillsets to engineer/set up the cars to his style. I cant think of other drivers who were on that level...and as quick as he.
@BigEightiesNewWave7 ай бұрын
I saw them all, including the 917-30s at Riverside Raceway as a teen.
@peterf17 ай бұрын
Beautiful turnout. Love seeing all those Shadows. You can't talk about CanAm without talking about how McLaren really showed how to go about building a racing car to dominate a series. Having said that you can't talk about the open design freedom and aerodynamics without talking about Chaparral.
@BlueMoonday197 ай бұрын
Indeed, I get the impression CanAm was a dream for McLaren and a natural evolution for someone seemingly born at the right time to succeed when car racing was not so exclusive.
@JK-g626 ай бұрын
Long live Jim Hall
@thethirdman2256 ай бұрын
@@BlueMoonday19 CanAm was the reason Bruce McLaren became a major constructor. He not only built cars for his own tam but he sold plenty of cars to customers too.
@ericrawson290917 күн бұрын
A flashback to the glorious days of my youth. Can't beat the sound of a crossplane V8.
@mkay19572 ай бұрын
As a kid, I saw many of those cars race at Laguna Seca and Riverside. It is great to see them back on track! 👍
@Me-ri2ke7 ай бұрын
I know very little about can -am racing , but I know enough from this video that I like it 👌
@daliborzak24857 ай бұрын
Look at that gargantuan understeer on that #16 car at 6:17. Driving these monsters needs big balls even today with all the modern safety equipment.
@MrAdopado7 ай бұрын
Because it was a display run he just wasn't going fast enough to get the car "working" ... the car would only start to balance out that understeer when given some power!
@garymcaleer61127 ай бұрын
Those were my fondest days of racing.
@georgembaker27993 ай бұрын
The Thunder Era. Awesome Cars, Drivers and Race Competition. 😎
@Howrider657 ай бұрын
I would rather hear the cars and not hear these two talk nonstop.
@DuckNorris697 ай бұрын
Exactly they doing too much
@GeorgePerez-vm2fw6 ай бұрын
Lol
@Hustler9g6 ай бұрын
8:35
@eins20016 ай бұрын
Then go down there
@grancho43526 ай бұрын
It's a common youtube-disease by the name of logo-diarrhea!
@justinjohnbroughton34717 ай бұрын
Looks like DEI has finally reached the field of commentating
@tonydiridoni58297 ай бұрын
And you have to remember just how small these cars were
@djgtuk20127 ай бұрын
The March, M8d and the 917/30 among the largest built!
@Turbo-Drew7 ай бұрын
eh??
@ShiroArctic6 ай бұрын
The active aero that some of these cars had is still incredible, even by today's standards. Can-Am really was so far ahead of its time.
@lesflynn44554 ай бұрын
Eleven litre V8s!! I knew these cars were cool, but I didn't know the motors were that big. Ye gods. That is epic. No wonder they sound earth shattering. I'm glad there is some preservation of these beasts.
@oldwobble9167 ай бұрын
"The sound is amazing", unfortunately the commentators keep babbling on relentlessly over the sound of the cars.
@johnh10013 ай бұрын
This is very funny ! Many funny announcers think that they are the famous F1 driver from Scotland , "Jackie Stuart" . He became an American Nascar race announcer . When I was younger I remember teenagers having fun trying to imitate Jackie Stuart as they pretended to be a racing announcer . L O L
@cameronjohnston57487 ай бұрын
You need a commentator who can talk about each car and its history, just over air head talk.
@nomis7777 ай бұрын
that nasally guy just stating the obvious-big car...trumpets...noise....outlandish
@adamdiaz84427 ай бұрын
They must be that old they don’t no what they are 😂
@bryandickerson53657 ай бұрын
Contrary to the announcer’s claims, Can-Am was NOT replaced by F-5000. F-5000 were open wheeled cars and had been already competing for years before the end of Can-Am.
@thethirdman2256 ай бұрын
CanAm _was_ replaced by F5000. But it was F5000 with enclosed bodywork. Most were converted Lola T332s, redesigned T333. The spec was otherwise basically identical.
@jeffp1282 ай бұрын
I still remember being a young 12or13 and having my ears blown out and long it
@duchenne_md67367 ай бұрын
If you have ever seen shadows on track, they are BY FAR the most unusual race cars you will ever seen! The videos on KZbin will never do the shadows design any justice!
@johnbutera58056 ай бұрын
It's a British thing. Same way at any FEI equestrian event!! Drives you NUTS!!!! 😮
@philmanson2991Ай бұрын
I remember the Can-Am races at Road Atlanta in the early '70s. I saw Mark Donahue win the first race at Road Atlanta in an older 908 against the all-conquering McLarens and the Shadows.
@klauskaracho27127 ай бұрын
Thats the real sound a racecar must have
@steveballmersbaldspot2.0957 ай бұрын
It'd be cool to have another racing series like this today.
@paulanderson96507 ай бұрын
The Mclarens had big block Chevys, not a Ford. And most of the Lolas were Chevy powered. Dan Gurney is the only person the get a win in can am using ford power.
@JK-g626 ай бұрын
Well he did make Ford famous with the Westlake
@thethirdman2256 ай бұрын
@@JK-g62 *Weslake
@bradmaas68757 ай бұрын
I remember watching these at SIR with my stepdad, fond memories indeed. Can-Am, Trans-Am,
@shoominati237 ай бұрын
The uneven trumpets on the Chevy Big Block powered Can Am cars is due to the way that the exhaust ports are arranged and how they are grouped together with one port length being longer than the other, so the trumpets for the longer port are shorter to retain equal length intake tracts
@grahamtricker41037 ай бұрын
First time I have heard someone calling a Porsche, a Shadow... Come on commentators do some research. That Shadow is in fact a Porsche 917/30
@xqqqme7 ай бұрын
It (car #0) is actually a 917/10. The 917/30 was car #6...but your point is well taken. One of the commentators even said that "most of the cars did run the Chevrolet engines...Ford, y'know, was in the back of the Lola and McLarens."
@tangerinedream72117 ай бұрын
Yes the #0 Vaillant car is I'm pretty sure the prototype 917/30. It's running in short wheelbase form as for development and testing Porsche added a spacer to lengthen the wheelbase, the longer wheelbase was chosen for the subsequent 917/30 cars . You can also identify it as a 917/30 by the nose having rounded corners at its lowest point. Some folks called this a 917/20 as it's the link between the 917/10 and 917/30, but that's incorrect as I understand that the 917/20 was the snub nose car that ran at Le Mans in 1971 dubbed the pink pig, this crashed during the race due to brake failure when Reinhold Joest was driving it .
@barbeerian6 ай бұрын
The contrast between the Porsche and the Shadow #16 is just amazing.
@mk1cortinatony3957 ай бұрын
Pity the engine noise was drowned out by the commentary
@scottdoleac56513 ай бұрын
This is so freaking awesome
@floobadoo7 ай бұрын
Wooo! Need to see that DN4 one more time
@thomasheuer19167 ай бұрын
These things are totally fantastic!
@danb.33977 ай бұрын
And they LAPPED faster than Formula 1 cars of that era
@B__L7 ай бұрын
The cars with almost no regulations were faster than the cars with regulations? Crazy!
@danb.33977 ай бұрын
@@B__L At half the cost
@B__L7 ай бұрын
@@danb.3397 Well yeah... It costs a lot of money to make a car fast while fitting regulations. Compared to no regs where you can do whatever you want. There's hillclimb cars in 2024 making more downforce than modern F1 at a tenth of the cost because they aren't spending millions on simulations trying to make the best parts within regulations.
@BlueMoonday197 ай бұрын
@@B__L ...simple right. Just look at the torque and 0 to whatever times of a certain brand of EV vs the most iconic brands of ICE Supercars costing two, five or even ten times the cost. Rules will always reduce the rate of performance while increasing cost.
@rondog5407 ай бұрын
@@danb.3397 In the late 60s and early 70s you could still get a spot on the F1 grid without bankrupting a small country. It was cheaper to go racing in Can-Am, but not hugely so, unless you're comparing it in real terms to present day F1, in which case "half the cost" becomes "100th of the cost"
@crusherbmx7 ай бұрын
This takes me back to my A/FX slot car phase, 1981-1985. The cars were all from the 70's, F1 cars, Muscle cars and my favourite, Can Am cars.
@richard14727 ай бұрын
Can-Am bodies were used a lot in model car racing, both slot car racing and radio control. They just handled better.
@realMaverickBuckley7 ай бұрын
672 ci SBCs They raced against Porsches and McLarens that put our 1,600hp in qualy trim and 1120 -1180 in race trim.
@jockojockoson99957 ай бұрын
672ci would have to be big block surely?
@neilvaughan54256 ай бұрын
@@jockojockoson9995 They got the engine size wrong in their excitement. Maybe 1100hp from the Porsche in qualifying tune. 1973
@paulhogan72706 ай бұрын
The Can-Am series was an awesome series that died too early. Went to a Can-Am race at Riverside International Raceway. Penske Porsche's won. 1,000 hp was what their engines pumped out. It was a great time.
@thethirdman2256 ай бұрын
Fast cars. Not much racing.
@Thorsten_Kueppers7 ай бұрын
Fascinating machines 🤩🤩🤩
@kevinnathanson68767 ай бұрын
There were no '11 liter' engines (671 ci in American money...) The largest big block Chevrolets were 494ci (overbored and overstroked 427ci/454ci). The commentators' lack of knowledge is well covered in many other comments here; somewhat embarrassing really.
@williambarry80157 ай бұрын
There's probably a couple of those cars that got a 670 cu in. In them now.
@daveduff25044 ай бұрын
If that lady says the word “incredible” one more time, it’ll complete my Low Vocabulary Bingo card! Incredibly incredible!
@charlesdanenberger95846 ай бұрын
looks like Summit Point-lets go man
@garyives12186 ай бұрын
......and they make for some incredible slot-car replicas :)
@fb38247 ай бұрын
annoying commentators talking all over the car sounds
@thethirdman2256 ай бұрын
Annoying posters who keep moaning all the time. 8:35 on the timeline for all you moaning, whingeing V8 tragics. Did you even watch the whole video?
@frijoli95797 ай бұрын
Shame we couldn't hear the cars over the talking...
@oliveringram30567 ай бұрын
Proper Motorsport, minimum regs, pure entertainment.
@rogbrown14587 ай бұрын
No Substitute for Cubic Inches.Rog.
@AndrewBlacker-t1d7 ай бұрын
Twin turbo Porsches defeated that fallacy.
@multa7657 ай бұрын
At 4:20 we're told by the lady that Ford engines powered the Lolas and McLarens. Wrong, downright wrong. A little research goes a long way.
@scottvadon20956 ай бұрын
Got to see McLaren M8C 70-03 on track at Raceway Park of the Midlands in Pacific Junction, Iowa yesterday.
@chrisvalleqatsi7 ай бұрын
I saw Brian Redman wring out the Porsche 917 at Elkhart Lake in 1974 as a little boy, and I suspect it's the loudest sound I've ever heard.
@hippo4g936 ай бұрын
What’s her fascination with 3 radiators
@petermuller1617 ай бұрын
I love these insane creations
@marktaylor59287 ай бұрын
Bruce McLaren and Denny Hulme. Kiwi legends.
@jasmijnariel5 ай бұрын
We need this back😢😢
@NobodyQuiteLikeMe7 ай бұрын
Jrp and the half scale can am cars were fun to drive. Oklahoma.
@greatestone4eva7 ай бұрын
please upload the raw video footage without any commentary. i love the cars absolutely detest the commentary.v
@90FF17 ай бұрын
Great stuff. Would be even greater with trackside audio.
@americanadventureoutdoors42136 ай бұрын
If only they would stop yapping for a few minutes so we could actually hear the cars a little !
@ellgwapo.17546 ай бұрын
Some Car! Looks Like on giant Match - Box with 11 litr'e danger meby.
@snivelinj7612Ай бұрын
Why didn't they let the cars really race?? The Shadows were doing little more than idling around the course. Full throttle and racing with intent is when the thrills and chills run through your body from these cars. I've seen the CanAms race and I still remember them as the best engine sounds ever in racing.
@ijustwannabeadrummer6 ай бұрын
Amazing looking cars 🤩
@ricktrent2756 ай бұрын
Excessive chatter.
@janemf4 ай бұрын
where can i learn more about that #16 car? i’m a little confused looking at the powerplant.
@williamtynan64847 ай бұрын
Too much Commentary, let these cars speak for themselves
@butkusfan237 ай бұрын
Some of these look like your first attempt at drawing a “race car” when you’re 5
@Turbo-Drew7 ай бұрын
would have been nice to hear more of the cars instead of the constant Commentary, But what an Awesome event. Edit... Just tried Google for the 11 litre Doesn't exist ??
@patpeterson26717 ай бұрын
Elite Lemans and Can Am ... the greatest racing car in auto racing history ............
@03mar3337 ай бұрын
What a line up👍
@joelafives2 ай бұрын
Chaparral - First Wing, sucker car, auto transmission etc. The Best
@dpagain21677 ай бұрын
Back in 1968 inspired by Can-Am cars my mate Pete put a wing on his old Ford Pop. It made quite an impression on people and absolutely no difference to the performance of the Ford Pop.
@stevenproost50857 ай бұрын
This was actually a test: which Shadow will be the last one to fail
@kyle3810007 ай бұрын
Given that the Can-Am had very few rules, I was always surprised that Colin Chapman never built a car for the series. Chapman was all about radical innovations, so I would have thought it could have had a field day with new things.