Nice. It's exactly what I think of when I imagine a race car. I would love to see a race series where all the cars look like Lotus 49's or Gurney Weslake Eagles: no wings, no downforce, and the drivers had to finesse the corners rather than trust the ground effect.
Now you’re speaking my language Casey! Over here in Aus historic racing this car would be group m&o, which is 60’s pre aero car. It’s one of my favourite groups because they are very beautiful and pure racing machines. I can’t wait to buy myself one someday.
Yes but in reality, zero point zero zero zero zero zero zero 1 percent of the Australian population has a car like this. They might get to use it on 1 day for the whole year. Which is an invite to the Australian GP weekend. So apart from V8 super car, there's zero racing in Australia. Sandown race track is soon to be housing. YOU lost to the property developers. Will, you'd better stop talking and protest against the race tracks being sold off.
It can't be awesome in 2022. Pure racing is a racist. Its a long way from purist. Its impossible for casey to drive at the moment. The car must be cut in half and extended so casey can fit in. So he'll be going backwards in life for a while.
I remember this car running for years at Mosport in Ontario Canada when it was blue with a white stripe. Good looking car driven by Dave Scarlett who was a heck of a wheelman. Good times, indeed.
Hi Casey, I did the original restoration, and raced this car for a few years. Actually very little has changed since I sold it around 1990, it was then blue with the same white stripe. The grey chassis paint is a mix of Tremclad grey painted with a brush. (I would not recommend powder coat BTW) The original transaxel was a HD5 that I sold to Australia. The first thing I thought when I saw this video was that you would never fit! I’d imagine the engine has been freshened some as originally built be Britain West Motorsport here in Ontario. It will do 1:34’s at Mosport all day long with me, I’m sure faster with you. (if you fit) Have fun, Dave
You made an old man’s heart race again. I raced an FB Brabham Bt18 in the early 70s and a Lotus 18 before. Yes your right about everything you said about how it was. Formula B racing was exiting and we had a really good time. Thanks for the memories.
The rear suspension on these era race cars is what sold me to going full throttle into automobile design and building and enjoyment... Which is why the Tamiya Avanti off road buggy from the mid 1980's and on, and even had a few re-releases productions for the collectors... Just a clever system, deceptively strong too. All the while would break away to absorb impact, even before the idea was fully understood of crumple zone technology and the life saving nature of that tech.
Sir, you nailed it! at minute 6:45 thru 7:45 of your video. Today's racers are mainly skilled passengers living out car designers and engineers computer aided dreams. The closest us mere mortals will ever get to what real racing is is all about is to watch the 1960s movie. "Gran Prix"......Drama aside, it was about 'Man and machine'. I'm 74 years old. To me, Indy racing died when the front engine cars gave way to the rear engine cars, motorcycles died when Harley rubber mounted their engines and Stock Cars died when they were no longer modified 'stock' cars, but instead were fully contrived NASCAR formula go-karts. Whether you realize it or not, you, and a few others like Jay Leno for example, are preservers of history. Thank you for that. rocket
I love the cars of that time period too. Jack Brabham is a man I find admirable and I think there might be a good bit in common between the two of you.
WOW! I share your joy! That's basically a Lotus 59 you got! My favorite is the Lotus 49 and I feel the same, these are the last "pure" race cars, having only to do with car technology. Then we got involved with some plane related technology for aerodynamics and now computer technology. This is ok, just evolution. But this end of the 60s gave us the purest racing cars ever. Those grooved tires! Those race cars looked like cars, now they look like planes and the driving wheel looks like a full video game system. Have good time with this beauty! (Those tires!)
It would be awesome to see you racing at Nelson Ledges. It's close to my heart because I watched Formula Atlantic's there in the 70s and was blown away by skill it took to keep those things on the road.
A nice smaller track in Northern Illinois/Southern Wisconsin is Blackhawk Farms Raceway. I used to do track-days there back when I could still ride a Motorcycle.
Thanks for sharing your collection with us. The only thing i have that is kinda fast is my old 2000 Suzuki TL1000s. It's plenty scary for me. Thanks for sharing your wealth of knowledge. You are blessed with some sweet rides there. Have a good night.
you are living my dream with this car and your words sound like they just came out of my mouth :) I love it and I will follow this of course. Greetings from Germany
A friend races a Formula B...a Brabham BT18...those are very fast...say 160mph. Lots of fun to drive. The tachometer is called a chronometric tach. Lots of parts/ratios etc available for the Hewland..I think you have Mk5 Hewland. The spindles would be Triumph Spitfire/GT6 based. 180-200 hp is typical...the more hp you make, the more expensive maintenance you need. The car would be great at Watkins Glen...my favorite course to race. Grattan is like a smaller version...lots of fun too.
Many race car drivers of the day were small in stature which served several purposes, such as reducing the weight and cross sectional area of the vehicle thus increasing power to weight ratio and reducing aerodynamic coefficient.
This is also my favorite era of car. Before aero became that thing. One point, Lotus was a very early adopter of monocote construction, so their mid-60's cars were already aluminum tub chassis. Formula Ford is still very much designed and built as this car was. The engine is limited to about 125 hp the last I knew and only a four speed transmission, but much of the rest of the design of those cars is similar to this one.
So cool. Classic race car drivers of the past were so much more skilled, people like Fangio and Moss. Stirling Moss did the Milli Miglia, an 1100 mile race in 10 hours! It’s unreal. Grand Prix is my favorite car movie ever. And probably the greatest. I still watch modern F1 though, they’re incredible cars and make an amazing sound. Still a very exciting sport.
(04:45) _“Not only will you be squished [and] decapitated, when the [water] tubes break you will also be burned from all the hot water.“_ That is the cauterization you will need to stay alive. _Three more minutes._
Loved watching all the body work come off. That is one of the reasons that should I reach the point where I do wheel to wheel racing I will purchase a purpose built race car, not a converted street car. Thinking maybe a FV if I go vintage, or SRF if I go modern. It is just nice to be able to get to everything and work on it.
That is really cool. Do you have the full history of it? I would love to have a go in one. I agree that motor racing has become more sterile with technology. Across the board I think.
Interesting car. I raced FB from 1969 to 1972 in SCCA National Racing (So Cal) and the Continental FB series in US, Canada, Mexico and Columbia. I raced a Lotus 41, Chevron B15b and a Brabham BT29 and later on a few races in a Brabham BT 40. I never came across a Chinook. A couple of points. Fire system was a small hand held fire extinguisher mounted on the gear box, no rain light, no removable steering wheel and mostly no fuel cells, 5 point belts and of course no sequential or paddle shifters. The FB cars usually had a Hewland FT200 gearbox and not the VW case models. Data acquisition was your ass and the stop watch. Cronometric Tach, oil pressure and oil/water temp gages were about it. Tires were harder. Dunlop gave me a set of tires early in the 70 season that looked exactly like yours and I ran them all the rest of the year. In 2011 I raced a Vandiemen FF Honda and I was using 6 tires a weekend. There is now a spec tire in FF and it lasts maybe two weekends. Continental races were around 100 miles with lots of practice. Fields in the Continental were 40+. Some tracks had half buried tires at the apex. Tracks like Road America and Mosport had no armco so if, for instance, at Road America you missed the kink or had some agony going towards Canada corner you were in the trees. No one was bumping into each other or running off of the track, even in 50 car fields, because runoff was usually a ditch or a tree. You had to race within your skill level. No sand traps etc. Racing now I get hit all of the time as it is very safe and a lot of drivers think they are Ayrton Senna. The only danger is on your wallet. I think you really understand what was going on. Thanks and good luck with your car.
I caught air in a Formula car a few years ago. FM, at Texas World Speedway where the infield course crossed the oval to the outside "Boot" of the road course.
So glad to hear someone involved in racing to articulate the issues with the obsession of safety in most modern racing. No matter how you slice it, you’re strapping into a 1000hp car going 200mph with others on the track…it’s not safe to start with. It’s like F1 trying to reduce fuel consumption by a small percentage…again, they are race cars, it’s burning fuel in cars for entertainment. Reducing the emissions from 30 cars for 2 hours once a week is like pissing on a forest fire if you really believe it’s causing the earth to burn up. Modern racing is emotionless and boring now compared to racing in the past.
If I'm not mistaken Jay Leno has his own little blue Formula B car. You should race him! Also in GT7 a bunch of the vintage cars have the same tach and I thought it was the coolest thing when I first noticed it in the Aston Martin DB3S.
LOL ! Casey. When I worked for Budweiser years ago. I got to drive the Al Holbert Busch Lola thru the pits at Road Atlanta. Being pushed of coarse . I'm 6'3" and I looked like Mr. Potato Head in a tiny go cart..
I'd love to build something like that with a 305 V8 as a "F5000 track day car". I'd recommend moving that coolant pipe to OUTSIDE the car--saw a guy named Jim Dunkel racing at Road America many years ago. That pipe (inside the cockpit) burst and burned him badly. When you say "lightweight"--how much does it weigh?
If I remember correctly (probably not), the axillary gauges (temp, oil pressure, etc...) were clocked so at their proper reading the needles were vertical, for a quick status check.
That's amazing it looks cool and it's really intresting for me since I don't know much about them but i'm really intrested in them and the moulds should come in handy if anyone wants to recreate this car
Single skin aluminum monocoques used to loosen up necessitating aftermarket tubs for even year old F1 cars used in the British Aurora series making narrow thin vintage formula car monocoques extremely suspect. Absolutely agree with your choice of tube frame Formula B even if that Lotus twin cam will be expensive.
As a fellow Formula B guy, I would like to let you know that we are currently in the early stages of planning a Formula B double header event for 2025 in colorado/missouri. Would love to be in contact so that we can get more cars out. Currently in Colorado we have 10 that should be ready by then, plus multiple from out of state that have raced with us before.
The only racing that I enjoy (nowadays) is the 24 Hour races with different Classes all running at the same time, though the Track does tend to get congested at times. I miss being able to watch all the Racing Scene (except Drag) from the Late 1970's and Early to mid 1980's! Also including NASCAR from the 1960's! even. The Announcers/Commentators where also Very Enjoyable to listen to! (Forgot his name, but he was Impersonated in the movie "Better off Dead" in the Red Light Races...
Are your feet beyond the axis of the front wheels? If so, and i do not know the rules but are you allowed to take it on track? I should have waited when you removed the body i could see the pedal placement.
It is a stunning looking car, always liked the lotus 18 myself. Have to say watching modern F1 is like an elephant dart to the face. Vintage formula ford, formula vee etc is definitely more fun to watch...
The only way I'd be able to drive these kinds of cars safely is through a computer lol I'd never pull of fast times like Fangio or Nuvolari, they had their steel balls acting as ballasts every time they drive metal coffins.
Casey do a Metric conversion if you can for all of us European viewers, and please consider mounting the wings if you ever go to a trackday. It'll be very interesting to see how much they could improve laptimes. Thanks for showing us this epic car
I think you would like to watch some of the the Goodwood festival of speed videos. Watch a 1906 Pre-war ( first war) Darracque etc race by extremely brave men 🏁
To casey, an instrument gauge is just an instrument gauge. He gave us zero talk about what happens to the driver when looking at those gauges. He only spoke about their mechanism. What's the choice for chrome outer rings? Why white paint on the numbers and needle? Why black out the dial? Why tilt the speedo? The stepped motor gives the driver a reading. Sweeping motors never give the driver a confirmed measurement reading. The needle keeps moving around. Your brain can't relax to finish a task. So when YOU look at your gauge, the needle will be stopped on a measurement. YOU don't look at it for a long time. Now YOU have that gauge, you'll have to change all the gauges in your other cars to this type of gauge. YOU can't have a set of random cars. Its too much for your brain. Your cars must match for you to be truly happy.
Cool car. The front nose looks like the Gurney eagle Indy race car.
Nice. It's exactly what I think of when I imagine a race car. I would love to see a race series where all the cars look like Lotus 49's or Gurney Weslake Eagles: no wings, no downforce, and the drivers had to finesse the corners rather than trust the ground effect.
Goodwood
SVRA
Now sraff
Now you’re speaking my language Casey! Over here in Aus historic racing this car would be group m&o, which is 60’s pre aero car. It’s one of my favourite groups because they are very beautiful and pure racing machines.
I can’t wait to buy myself one someday.
Yes but in reality, zero point zero zero zero zero zero zero 1 percent of the Australian population has a car like this.
They might get to use it on 1 day for the whole year.
Which is an invite to the Australian GP weekend.
So apart from V8 super car, there's zero racing in Australia.
Sandown race track is soon to be housing.
YOU lost to the property developers.
Will, you'd better stop talking and protest against the race tracks being sold off.
"i DIDNT miss my braking point, i was just in the air..." i love that haha
Accurate
Awesome machine. Racing at its purist. Can't wait to see you putting it through its paces on a track! Keep moving forward!
It can't be awesome in 2022.
Pure racing is a racist.
Its a long way from purist.
Its impossible for casey to drive at the moment.
The car must be cut in half and extended so casey can fit in.
So he'll be going backwards in life for a while.
I remember this car running for years at Mosport in Ontario Canada when it was blue with a white stripe. Good looking car driven by Dave Scarlett who was a heck of a wheelman. Good times, indeed.
Yeah! I just saw his name in the records. You nailed it
Hi Casey, I did the original restoration, and raced this car for a few years. Actually very little has changed since I sold it around 1990, it was then blue with the same white stripe.
The grey chassis paint is a mix of Tremclad grey painted with a brush. (I would not recommend powder coat BTW) The original transaxel was a HD5 that I sold to Australia.
The first thing I thought when I saw this video was that you would never fit! I’d imagine the engine has been freshened some as originally built be Britain West Motorsport here in Ontario. It will do 1:34’s at Mosport all day long with me, I’m sure faster with you. (if you fit)
Have fun, Dave
Thank you kindly! Yeah, the guy was a little optimistic on the phone about me fitting.
Very helpful on the paint color!
I absolutely love these old Grand Prix monsters, they are just so visceral and intense! They are awesome!
I agree!
Its a small version of gaming.
Gaming is awesome in 2022, not 1960's cars.
1960's cars are well known and fully understood by now.
You made an old man’s heart race again. I raced an FB Brabham Bt18 in the early 70s and a Lotus 18 before. Yes your right about everything you said about how it was. Formula B racing was exiting and we had a really good time. Thanks for the memories.
The rear suspension on these era race cars is what sold me to going full throttle into automobile design and building and enjoyment... Which is why the Tamiya Avanti off road buggy from the mid 1980's and on, and even had a few re-releases productions for the collectors... Just a clever system, deceptively strong too. All the while would break away to absorb impact, even before the idea was fully understood of crumple zone technology and the life saving nature of that tech.
Sir, you nailed it! at minute 6:45 thru 7:45 of your video. Today's racers are mainly skilled passengers living out car designers and engineers computer aided dreams. The closest us mere mortals will ever get to what real racing is is all about is to watch the 1960s movie. "Gran Prix"......Drama aside, it was about 'Man and machine'.
I'm 74 years old. To me, Indy racing died when the front engine cars gave way to the rear engine cars, motorcycles died when Harley rubber mounted their engines and Stock Cars died when they were no longer modified 'stock' cars, but instead were fully contrived NASCAR formula go-karts.
Whether you realize it or not, you, and a few others like Jay Leno for example, are preservers of history. Thank you for that.
rocket
That car will be gorgeous. Excited for you.
Holy-- is that a Stratos Zero concept car? Yes what a beautifully simple period GP design. Love them both.
Yup. It is. I’m building it with a V12
@@CaseyPutsch You're on fire my man
@@CaseyPutsch you've not done much on it lately, it needs finishing.
Theres a series on that build worth seeing.
Your a legend Casey, what a cool little race car!
I love the cars of that time period too.
Jack Brabham is a man I find admirable and I think there might be a good bit in common between the two of you.
WOW! I share your joy! That's basically a Lotus 59 you got! My favorite is the Lotus 49 and I feel the same, these are the last "pure" race cars, having only to do with car technology. Then we got involved with some plane related technology for aerodynamics and now computer technology. This is ok, just evolution. But this end of the 60s gave us the purest racing cars ever. Those grooved tires! Those race cars looked like cars, now they look like planes and the driving wheel looks like a full video game system. Have good time with this beauty! (Those tires!)
Absolutely awesome Casey. This is my favourite era and look of racing car. Thanks so much for all your great content. Cheers from Australia.
Formula B was so much fun... Great sounding engines, light and nimble, and far better tires than allowed in Formula Ford.
It would be awesome to see you racing at Nelson Ledges. It's close to my heart because I watched Formula Atlantic's there in the 70s and was blown away by skill it took to keep those things on the road.
A nice smaller track in Northern Illinois/Southern Wisconsin is Blackhawk Farms Raceway. I used to do track-days there back when I could still ride a Motorcycle.
how far weve come. thank you for all this golden information Casey
0:18 Is that an actual Bertone Lancia Stratos HF Zero Concept? That is awesome. I still have a concept cars book from the 90s with an article on it.
I'm really excited about this car guys. What do you most like about it?
I love how raw and dangerous it is, would love it even more with a Cosworth V8 😃
Dude your going to be a rad dad my dude!
Thanks for sharing your collection with us. The only thing i have that is kinda fast is my old 2000 Suzuki TL1000s. It's plenty scary for me. Thanks for sharing your wealth of knowledge. You are blessed with some sweet rides there. Have a good night.
Now that is a proper open wheel race car. Love it!
I think it would look great in British Racing Green. Keep kicking butt, Casey.
you are living my dream with this car and your words sound like they just came out of my mouth :)
I love it and I will follow this of course. Greetings from Germany
Wow! Just wow! Amazing work of art and engineering right here!
A friend races a Formula B...a Brabham BT18...those are very fast...say 160mph. Lots of fun to drive. The tachometer is called a chronometric tach. Lots of parts/ratios etc available for the Hewland..I think you have Mk5 Hewland. The spindles would be Triumph Spitfire/GT6 based. 180-200 hp is typical...the more hp you make, the more expensive maintenance you need. The car would be great at Watkins Glen...my favorite course to race. Grattan is like a smaller version...lots of fun too.
For sure!
Many race car drivers of the day were small in stature which served several purposes, such as reducing the weight and cross sectional area of the vehicle thus increasing power to weight ratio and reducing aerodynamic coefficient.
This is also my favorite era of car. Before aero became that thing. One point, Lotus was a very early adopter of monocote construction, so their mid-60's cars were already aluminum tub chassis. Formula Ford is still very much designed and built as this car was. The engine is limited to about 125 hp the last I knew and only a four speed transmission, but much of the rest of the design of those cars is similar to this one.
Agreed. Lovely car. You have watch the Jack Brabham documentaries. Amazing time.
Oh man.. I watched this video 2 times.. And sent the link to my Uncle.. Fantastic! Thanks so much.. DMAX
So excited to see this project.
Wish I could get this experience
So cool. Classic race car drivers of the past were so much more skilled, people like Fangio and Moss. Stirling Moss did the Milli Miglia, an 1100 mile race in 10 hours! It’s unreal. Grand Prix is my favorite car movie ever. And probably the greatest. I still watch modern F1 though, they’re incredible cars and make an amazing sound. Still a very exciting sport.
(04:45) _“Not only will you be squished [and] decapitated, when the [water] tubes break you will also be burned from all the hot water.“_
That is the cauterization you will need to stay alive.
_Three more minutes._
Loved watching all the body work come off. That is one of the reasons that should I reach the point where I do wheel to wheel racing I will purchase a purpose built race car, not a converted street car. Thinking maybe a FV if I go vintage, or SRF if I go modern. It is just nice to be able to get to everything and work on it.
That is really cool. Do you have the full history of it?
I would love to have a go in one.
I agree that motor racing has become more sterile with technology. Across the board I think.
Interesting car. I raced FB from 1969 to 1972 in SCCA National Racing (So Cal) and the Continental FB series in US, Canada, Mexico and Columbia. I raced a Lotus 41, Chevron B15b and a Brabham BT29 and later on a few races in a Brabham BT 40. I never came across a Chinook. A couple of points. Fire system was a small hand held fire extinguisher mounted on the gear box, no rain light, no removable steering wheel and mostly no fuel cells, 5 point belts and of course no sequential or paddle shifters. The FB cars usually had a Hewland FT200 gearbox and not the VW case models. Data acquisition was your ass and the stop watch. Cronometric Tach, oil pressure and oil/water temp gages were about it. Tires were harder. Dunlop gave me a set of tires early in the 70 season that looked exactly like yours and I ran them all the rest of the year. In 2011 I raced a Vandiemen FF Honda and I was using 6 tires a weekend. There is now a spec tire in FF and it lasts maybe two weekends. Continental races were around 100 miles with lots of practice. Fields in the Continental were 40+. Some tracks had half buried tires at the apex. Tracks like Road America and Mosport had no armco so if, for instance, at Road America you missed the kink or had some agony going towards Canada corner you were in the trees. No one was bumping into each other or running off of the track, even in 50 car fields, because runoff was usually a ditch or a tree. You had to race within your skill level. No sand traps etc. Racing now I get hit all of the time as it is very safe and a lot of drivers think they are Ayrton Senna. The only danger is on your wallet. I think you really understand what was going on. Thanks and good luck with your car.
Thank you kindly. Got your email. I appreciate the share!
Those headers are beautiful!
I caught air in a Formula car a few years ago. FM, at Texas World Speedway where the infield course crossed the oval to the outside "Boot" of the road course.
So glad to hear someone involved in racing to articulate the issues with the obsession of safety in most modern racing. No matter how you slice it, you’re strapping into a 1000hp car going 200mph with others on the track…it’s not safe to start with. It’s like F1 trying to reduce fuel consumption by a small percentage…again, they are race cars, it’s burning fuel in cars for entertainment. Reducing the emissions from 30 cars for 2 hours once a week is like pissing on a forest fire if you really believe it’s causing the earth to burn up. Modern racing is emotionless and boring now compared to racing in the past.
Absolutely loved this. Let us know when the new merch drops
I would do Canadian racing colors in the honor of the car’s builders
Awesome piece of History hope you have fun with it and the kids too LOL
I would love to see this at blackhawk farms. A small, pretty, technical, local track with minimal run-off and lots of beautiful old growth trees!
...in a swamp. ;)
Love that Monaco on your wrist.
Beautiful ride.
If I'm not mistaken Jay Leno has his own little blue Formula B car. You should race him! Also in GT7 a bunch of the vintage cars have the same tach and I thought it was the coolest thing when I first noticed it in the Aston Martin DB3S.
LOL ! Casey. When I worked for Budweiser years ago. I got to drive the Al Holbert Busch Lola thru the pits at Road Atlanta. Being pushed of coarse . I'm 6'3" and I looked like Mr. Potato Head in a tiny go cart..
I'd love to build something like that with a 305 V8 as a "F5000 track day car". I'd recommend moving that coolant pipe to OUTSIDE the car--saw a guy named Jim Dunkel racing at Road America many years ago. That pipe (inside the cockpit) burst and burned him badly. When you say "lightweight"--how much does it weigh?
Great video. Good luck with it, Gold Leaf Colors 👍
Could you run some of that waterless coolant through the frame rails to prevent corrosion?
If I remember correctly (probably not), the axillary gauges (temp, oil pressure, etc...) were clocked so at their proper reading the needles were vertical, for a quick status check.
That should of been your mid life crisis go-cart. Wow that is freaking cool. Pure race car
That's amazing it looks cool and it's really intresting for me since I don't know much about them but i'm really intrested in them
and the moulds should come in handy if anyone wants to recreate this car
Single skin aluminum monocoques used to loosen up necessitating aftermarket tubs for even year old F1 cars used in the British Aurora series making narrow thin vintage formula car monocoques extremely suspect. Absolutely agree with your choice of tube frame Formula B even if that Lotus twin cam will be expensive.
As a fellow Formula B guy, I would like to let you know that we are currently in the early stages of planning a Formula B double header event for 2025 in colorado/missouri. Would love to be in contact so that we can get more cars out. Currently in Colorado we have 10 that should be ready by then, plus multiple from out of state that have raced with us before.
You can find my email on my website
That is a great looking car. Please bring it to Goodwood.
The only racing that I enjoy (nowadays) is the 24 Hour races with different Classes all running at the same time, though the Track does tend to get congested at times.
I miss being able to watch all the Racing Scene (except Drag) from the Late 1970's and Early to mid 1980's!
Also including NASCAR from the 1960's! even.
The Announcers/Commentators where also Very Enjoyable to listen to! (Forgot his name, but he was Impersonated in the movie "Better off Dead" in the Red Light Races...
very much like my Crossle 14F great video
Does Put in Bay have a open wheeler class?
is it a a Indy chassis with a hayanusa engine? Or a Lola Larrousse F1 from the 90s?
The Bertone Stratos Zero caught my eye. Who opens that? Do they make these replicas?
Are your feet beyond the axis of the front wheels? If so, and i do not know the rules but are you allowed to take it on track? I should have waited when you removed the body i could see the pedal placement.
It is a stunning looking car, always liked the lotus 18 myself. Have to say watching modern F1 is like an elephant dart to the face. Vintage formula ford, formula vee etc is definitely more fun to watch...
Do the paint in the Jim Clark lotus scheme
At least you don't have to go to the tractor supply store to get rubber for it. LoL very cool ride.
Excellent
When you envision a vintage racing poster, this style of race car would be on it.
Let us know if you go to Put-in-Bay I'd totally come to see you
That’s my plane
These are my favorite types of Casey videos.
if i had one bit of play money id go formula vee racing or track daying it, in my free time. thank you for the content man!
Casey, please lobby J. D. Vance on why you should be Secretary of Transportation. You got this.
I’ve got something up my sleeve soon.
I want to build a lotus 25 from 64' just to have, that happens to fit a guy that is 6'5 like myself but use a 2jz or 4g63 motor
ok, i'm going to go out on a limb here... have you been considering an 'ev/ev conversion' course section? it might not be a bad idea
The only way I'd be able to drive these kinds of cars safely is through a computer lol
I'd never pull of fast times like Fangio or Nuvolari, they had their steel balls acting as ballasts every time they drive metal coffins.
When will you continue work on the King Zero?
When the Lykan is go e
Reminds me of the adage: "How dangerous is a motorcycle? As dangerous as a loaded gun."
How about Indy Pro 2000 at Indianapolis - is it still on?
Sorry man, I’m testing another open wheel a few days before, but there are no legit sponsors for a series that no one is really watching.
beautiful
Would be awesome to see you at the pvgp
Quick reminder, the Lotus 49 and several other late 60s F1 cars had the cooling pipes outside of the monocoque.
Best toy ever!
Casey do a Metric conversion if you can for all of us European viewers, and please consider mounting the wings if you ever go to a trackday. It'll be very interesting to see how much they could improve laptimes. Thanks for showing us this epic car
Should be around 400kg if it’s the weight you were talking about.
@@willbeasy2898 Thanks Will
Cool channel Casey!
Thank you!
Thought my next race car was going to be a Formula B also but at 6'4" I don't think I can stuff myself in one.
Totally get what you're saying, Casey 😀
I think you would like to watch some of the the Goodwood festival of speed videos. Watch a 1906 Pre-war ( first war) Darracque etc race by extremely brave men 🏁
I LOVE Goodwood
You should be able to pour an expanding foam seat and cover it rather than cutting foam etc.
To casey, an instrument gauge is just an instrument gauge.
He gave us zero talk about what happens to the driver when looking at those gauges.
He only spoke about their mechanism.
What's the choice for chrome outer rings?
Why white paint on the numbers and needle?
Why black out the dial?
Why tilt the speedo?
The stepped motor gives the driver a reading.
Sweeping motors never give the driver a confirmed measurement reading.
The needle keeps moving around.
Your brain can't relax to finish a task.
So when YOU look at your gauge, the needle will be stopped on a measurement.
YOU don't look at it for a long time.
Now YOU have that gauge, you'll have to change all the gauges in your other cars to this type of gauge.
YOU can't have a set of random cars.
Its too much for your brain.
Your cars must match for you to be truly happy.
They always have been a coffin on wheels. My favorite type of car.
It would be a Great hill climb Car 🏁🏁🏁
i do fiberglass work id mold you some bodywork so i could use the molds for my own id build my own car
You will find those water tubes to be your friend the last race of the year but not so much in July
Are this type of car easy to make?
If that chassis is brazed, make sure there is zero braze left before you weld it (as you’d know), or else everyone will have a bad time.
Why no V8?
Maybe you need a Shelby GT40. Wet dream ride for me.