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The Midwest's premier vintage race sanctioning body, the Vintage Sports Car Driver's Association (VSCDA), chose Volvo to be the featured marque at their prestigious Fall Festival held September 18-20 at that Most Enchanting Road Course In The Country, Elkhart Lake's Road America -- four miles of world-class blacktop rolling through Wisconsin's Kettle Moraine countryside between the shores of Lakes Michigan and Winnebago, with three high speed sections where even a modest, self-effacing and properly safe Swedish family sedan or Grand Touring car can begin to more-than-dream of seeing 130 MPH.
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Concurrent with the festival, the Volvo Sports America (VSA) club held their East Coast National meet, with concours judging in the Road America paddock, tech sessions and We came in a day early, both to meet the Pilot Transport Big Bad Black & Beautiful Car Hauler, ably helmed by Norm Hopkins, and to take Jim Haynes up on his invitation to pore through the Road America archives in the hope of adding data to Art's historical file -- entries, car numbers, results sheets, lap charts; that sort of thing. Jim is an old friend of Art's from way back: a former SCCA National Champion in Formula Junior and past owner of Lime Rock Park (that quintessential Connecticut circuit), before going on to an SCCA Vice Presidency and now, Manager of Road America. He Runs The Joint. Jim was a force behind "Formula S" in the sixties -- three-cylinder SAAB-engined open wheelers -- and thus has a heart for things Swedish and down a jug! He told me he is retired from driving now, and has allowed his always ample frame to relax a bit beyond Monoposto. His Media Director, Roger Jaynes, was most helpful, and the data bank is resultingly more complete.
The club members who did show seemed to keep to themselves even though we were in adjacent paddocks, and it is unfortunate that President Bob Berglund never seemed to have the time to introduce himself to the racers, most of whom are members. It would have been nice for the club to have created a Race Car class for the judging -- there were twenty-five of us! -- but that was not The Plan. We drivers did get invited to the banquet as guests -- the food was great! -- and we thank the club for that consideration. ipd sent a lot of freebies for all in attendance, and Mitch Duncan gave a very informative talk (with slides taken on his recent trip to Sweden) on the nature of the Genuine Classic Parts connection: who they are, and where they are going to keep our old Volvos alive. Mitch was there as a competitor, also, bringing the "Holman & Moody" P1800 out behind a very pretty black 850 wagon tow rig. Mitch was Very Quick for the retired gentleman that he is; fortunately, for us younger types, suffering a mechanical malady (hope it wasn't a Classic Part!) that kept him from starting Sunday's Volvo Feature. We left-coasters, with help from our ever-faithful friends at ipd, brought seven cars and our California weather with us -- shirtsleeves all three days, beautiful sun, no rain. The course, naturally, was fabulous -- got to drive both Carol (34th anniversary that Saturday) and son Rick (who flew in from the San Francisco Bay area) around during the touring sessions, and they were both impressed by the beauty and the diversity of Road America. Staying below 0.8G in the corners and under the "ton" on the straights earned me a "Well, if you don't go too much faster than that in a race, I guess it's all right..." from Carol. Fine woman. Think I'll keep her.
Tech inspection was, therefore, a breeze. Because of the time-machine nature of the car and, particularly, the reproduced, unique 1965 Road America Tech Sticker on the nose (where Chicago Region SCCA always slapped them) and the splash of 1965-season tech stickers on the roll bar, the inspectors almost leaped back from the car in amazement: "Whoa! Where did this car come from!" It is a rare pleasure to throw a Tech Inspector off balance.
There were no serious mishaps all weekend, though I had a transport problem: nose-down on the top shelf of the seven-car semitrailer, a stuck SU carb float in concert with 3/4 tank of race gas caused tank siphoning through the forward carb into engine, literally filling up the block and pouring out through the breather unto the cars below! This was not realized until running the engine for offloading the trailer: pumping the slurry out the breather, zero oil pressure (since Most of the Volvo racers also entered the "normal" VSCDA Group 2 or 8 races on Sunday, and that thinned the ranks some for the Volvo Feature Race just after lunch (Famous Road America Bratwurst, of course!). Twenty-three starters took the green, with John Parker of Syracuse fastest (sometimes on only two wheels!) and on the pole. John won the Volvo Feature handily with his hard and consistent driving (Topi Hynynen said, "He is only guy braking at "2" marker for turn five!), but much was going on behind his flying silver-grey P1800.
"Dusty" Dave Rauch, voted "Driver of the Meet" by the rest of us, picked up the "Dusty" moniker by trying to put a banzai pass on Gary Jebson for second on the last lap. I had a front row seat: going into Canada Corner, Dave was a hoot in qualifying, steaming up through us more historically correct (read: "slower") guys with his headlights blazing -- just like Steve McQueen in LeMans. Another Dave, surnamed Winters, with his pretty and Verrrry FAST 1800 from Seattle, moved up to grab third slot.
We had a nice dice with Ken Rodenbush in his new/old yellow P1800 after jumping him at the start (with the help of writer-racer Bert Levy vacating a grid slot ahead on the pace lap); then Ken stuck his nose up alongside Art's door going down to the 100+ MPH single-file "Kink:" in my sedan, I would have started to turn in (and Ken later told me that he was "just about to back out of it..."), but not wanting to risk Art's door (at those speeds, really we are talking about whole cars, whole lives -- this isn't short track racing; ain't no dirt bull ring), gave Ken the corner with a shout of frustration and a pound of a balled fist (don't hurt the dashpad!).
Ken went on to challenge his son Josh in the familiar red "family" P1800 for fifth; Josh won (it must be in the genes!). Event organizer and all-around Nice Guy, VSCDA Director Ray Freiwald followed in 7th. We also had a fine time in the company of David Hueppchen ("Hipken," he pronounces it) and his newly-acquired 122S (with such diverse technical specifications as a quickchange rear end located by a sophisticated three-link suspension and Jacob's ladder, vs. the donated, used B20 street shortblock engine fed by not-quite-dialed-in Webers).
David lives two miles from the track and instructs there -- knows it like the back of his hand. He was all over me in the corners: in the 180-degree high-speed He later apologized for "Giving [me] only an inch; two at the most." and added, "You know, I think you were, maybe, driving that [priceless?] car a little harder than you should have been for a couple laps there..."
![]() Fun. Lots of fun! We swapped places seven times, I think -- VSA Director Jeff Babcock's beige 122 gaining all the time -- with Art's overdrive (which he never used in a race) helping the 4.88 "Laguna Seca" rear breeze by on the top end, and David's superior cornering ability getting him by in the slower stuff. High oil temps (290 degrees F!) and plugs breaking up ("These temperatures were not in our contract!") signalled a prudent backing down -- and the need to add an oil cooler -- while David went on to a very creditable 9th placing; Crew Chief Ms. Robin Campbell and Grandson Hunter Hueppchen earning their keep once again!
Best lap for me in Art's car was 3:12 and change, which was what the Road America archives showed Art doing all day long during the 1964 Racing Time Machines are wonderful things, and when you bring them back to timeless venues like Road America, in the company of great people and great cars (with the savor of Bratwurst thrown in for good measure)... It just don't get any better!
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Photos:
John Parker (silver #77), Ken Rodenbush (yellow #48), both single shots of Rick Hayden (black #49), rear view of three 1800s = ©1998 Edmund Lacis
Schmoozing over 1800s, Irv Gordon = ©1998 Bill Hodson
Duane Matejka (red #96), Dave Rauch (dark green #118), Hueppchen / Hayden duel sequence = ©1998 Michael Schultz
Jim Shaw (orange #16), scenic overview, broken axle = ©1998 Mark Hershoren
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