Smokey Yunick story

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Fire-medic

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One of the most-famous mechanics of NASCAR fame, owner of "the best damn garage in town," if you happen to be in Daytona Beach FL. Smokey Yunick.


Sometime around 1994 I had a Plymouth Duster, 340 car. I built a 360 for it. I was @ Los Angeles County Raceway in Littlerock, Ca. LACR is now closed BTW. I was having tuning problems. I could not get that car into the 14's no matter what I did.

Some old guy came over and asked me what I was doing. He had a white jacket and hat. I had a few plugs out. He picked one up and looked at it. I told him that I could not get that car into the 14's.Then he reached into my tool box and grabbed my side cutters and cut the ground electrode off my plug!

So instead of the electrode hanging over the end of the plug it just went up and was about 1/8 inch gap from the center to the side electrode.

He told me to do that to the rest of the plugs and see how it runs. He also told me that I would be buying new plug wires due to this mod he showed me. So I cut them all like he had.

My next pass was a 14.77! I never saw him after that.

A few years later I was at a hot rod shop and a book caught my eye. It was "Power secrets by Smokey Yunick" And on the cover was the guy that cut my sparkplug electrode off.

I had no idea who he was at the time.


There are many great stories about Smokey, going back to his time as a B-17 pilot in WW II. He wrenched on all-sorts of racers, one of the most-notorious was his 1960's NASCAR 7/8-scale body, a complete smaller-scale model of the cars others were campaigning, but with better aerodynamic efficiency because it was smaller! He had a 'back-door' at GM where he got stuff before anyone else. That included the famous 'porcupine head' 396 cubic inch engine, of 427 cubic inches in racing trim, with valve stems arranged like no one else's. His racing philosophy was that if the rules didn't specifically say you couldn't, then you could. Until told otherwise by the racing bodies, which he often was. But, not before he ran better than everyone else...
 
Cool story. Smokey is my all-time favorite racing guru.
My Dad has subscribed to Popular Mechanics and Popular Science since the late 50's and Smokey wrote a regular column in P.S. for many years. I used to love reading them as a kid.
 
When I started going to Daytona for Bike Week, Smokey's garage was still there. Not a big place. I never stopped-by, I think I may have a pic I snapped of it driving by, and that sign.

His autobiography is a big seller among gearheads, and it may still be available from his widow. http://www.smokeyyunick.com/autobiography.php

http://shop.carbonpressonline.com/

One of his Indy 500 entries, supposedly based upon a WW II German fighter that chased his B-17. Looks like an Offenhauser inline-4 from the fuel-injection intake and the DOHC camshaft covers.
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My friend's father owned an Indy car team from the early 1950's to the 1970's, an expensive proposition. In 1958, his driver sat on the pole, Dick Rathmann, in an Offenhauser w/a Watson chassis (McNamara Motor Express, car #97, one of two cars the team owner qualified that year) and next year, 1959, Smokey's car won the pole, and in 1961, & 1962, also.

If you want a comprehensive overview of the ingenuity of Smokey Yunick, this is a good place to start:


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(1923-2001)
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A sly mechanical genius whose reputation as one of the premier mechanics in NASCAR hasn't diminished over the years, Smokey Yunick was the "Best Damn Race Car Mechanic" who worked out of the "Best Damn Garage In Town," in Daytona Beach, Fla.
His expertise helped shape the careers of several drivers, among them champion Herb Thomas, who won the Winston Cup title in 1951 and again in 1953 and the great "Fireball Roberts."
Yunick was born on May 25, 1923, "somewhere around" Maryville, Tenn. When he was 16, he tried his hand at motorcycle racing. The affair was short-lived but he did earn his nickname from it by piloting a cycle that had a habit of pouring out engine smoke. A fellow competitor who had trouble remembering Yunick's given name of Henry simply called him "Smokey."
Yunick became a member of the Army Air Corps during World War II and once, while in the air, he admired the view of Daytona Beach and decided to live there. He moved to the city in 1946.
He opened his garage in 1947, the same year he began working on race cars. He worked with Marshall Teague, who assigned Yunick the responsibility of preparing a Hudson Hornet for Thomas for the second Southern 500 at Darlington (S.C.) Raceway. Thomas won the race and went on to enjoy several successful seasons with Yunick, who soon became the car owner.
Yunick raced Chevrolets for a couple of seasons (1955-56) and then hooked up with veteran Paul Goldsmith and Ford in 1957-58. Together, they switched to Pontiac and stayed with the car through 1962, taking on Roberts and Marvin Panch as drivers, among others. Yunick's cars won four of the first eight major stock car races at Daytona International Speedway, starting in 1959. Roberts won three of them. In 1963, Roberts won the pole in a Yunick Pontiac, but lost the race to teammate Panch when the engine blew with 13 laps to go.
Afterward, Yunick continued to field stock cars from 1963-68, with the likes of such greats as Banjo Matthews, Bobby Isaac, Darel Dieringer and others driving for him. From 1958 through 1975, Yunick made 10 trips to the Indianapolis 500, with Jerry Karl his driver in his last effort.
Yunick's ability as a mechanic not only produced winning cars and drivers, it helped bring innovation to technology. Stories about his "sleight of hand" in car preparation abound, but he maintains their telling over the years has embellished them significantly.
The fact remains, however, the man from "The Best Damn Garage In Town" knew racing. And he gave to it far more than he took.

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Replica of the 57 Chevy That Paul Goldsmith Drove for Smokey
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Who Was Smokey?


Highlights

Grew up on a farm in Neshaminy, Pennsylvania
Flew B-17s for the Army Air Force in WWII
Flew for the Flying Tigers
Driver, mechanic, crew chief for stock cars in 1950s and 1960s
Won two Grand National (Winston Cup today) Championships
Won Indy in 1960
Worked in Ecuador for 30 years in oil drilling and gold mining
Wrote for Popular Science and Circle Track magazines



Accreditations

Founding Member and Director of Embry-Riddle University
Honorary Doctorate in Aeronautical Engineering, Embry-Riddle Engineering
Professor Emeritus, Daytona Beach Community College
S.C.O.R.E Judge, for three years, one of ten judges picked to
examine annual alternate energy expo submissions from American
colleges and universities, related to alternate energy
Member of Society of Automotive Engineers


Patents & Inventions
Variable Ratio Power Steering
Hot Vapor Engine
Silent Tire
Smoketron Engine Testing Device
Movable Race Track Crash Barrier
Oil filling through oil filter
Extended Tip Spark Plug
Power brakes from residual power steering pressure
Water bypass system for “V” engines
Reverse cooling system
Centrifuge Type Oil Refinery (Ecuador)



Awards

Two Time NASCAR Mechanic of the Year
Mechanical Achievements Awards – Indianapolis Motor Speedway &
Ontario Motor Speedway
Engineering Award – Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Inventor of the Year – 1983
Presents the Annual Smokey Yunick Lifetime Achievement Award
at Charlotte Motor Speedway



Hall of Fame Inductions

National Racing Hall of Fame
International MotorSports Hall of Fame
Legends of Auto Racing Hall of Fame
Stock Car Racing, Daytona Hall of Fame
Darlington Motor Speedway Hall of Fame
Legends of Performance – Chevrolet Hall of Fame
TRW Mechanic Hall of Fame
Living Legends of Auto Racing – 1997
Stock Car Racing Magazine Hall of Fame
Michigan Motorsports Hall of Fame
Voted #7 on list of Top 10 athletes of the Century by Winston Salem Journal, Oct. 1999
University of Central Florida, President’s Medallion Society
Rotary Club of Oceanside – Daytona Beach


Race Record

1951-1954 – 39 Grand National Wins after 1954
won Raleigh - August 20, 1955
won Darlington - 1955
won Palm Beach - December 11, 1955
won Wilson, N.C. - March 18, 1956
won Langhorne - September 23, 1956
won Greensboro - April 28, 1957
won Lancaster S.C. - June 1, 1957
won Raleigh - July 4, 1957
won Daytona Beach - February, 1958
won Atlanta - July 4, 1959
won Daytona Beach - February 12, 1960
won Atlanta - July 31, 1960
won Daytona Beach - February 24, 1961
won Daytona Beach - February 26, 1961
won Daytona Beach - February 10, 1962
won Daytona Beach - February 16, 1962
won Daytona Beach - February 18, 1962
won Daytona Beach - February 22, 1963
39 + 18 = 57 Stock Car/Grand National races
one Indy race win - 1960

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From Hot Rod Magazine, long article, but worth the reading
The History of...

Smokey Yunick The Unique
Remembering Racing’s Legendary Iconoclast

By C.J. Baker, Gray Baskerville


Editor’s Note: When I learned that leukemia had claimed the life of Henry “Smokey” Yunick earlier this year, it was as if his death had taken a former HRM staffer. Smokey—the guy dressed in “whites,” augmented by his trademark hat, glasses, pipe, or cigar—had been a part of HRM’s editorial family since the ’50s when his various roundy-pounders began to appear in our Daytona Beach and Indy 500 coverage. Between the years of 1955 and 1985, Smokey became an integral part of HRM’s editorial package and befriended former staffers such as Wally Parks, Ray Brock, Jim McFarland, C.J. Baker, and a host of other HRM editors, including me. Moreover, his various ghost-written stories helped the gravitas of its editorial content with some of the magazine’s most insightful copy. When C.J. left Hot Rod in the early ’80s to become Circle Track ’s first editor, Smokey became its Dr. Laura, giving technical advice to the race-worn. So it is our intention to limit our reminisces of Smokey to the 30 years (1955 to 1985) when this “schizofrenetic,” multifaceted driver, car-builder, inventor, party animal, flier, and crew chief was both an HRM subject and contributor.—Gray Baskerville

Henry Yunick started life 76 years ago as a “po’ country boy,” as rod patron George Poteet described his own humble Mississippi beginnings. Yunick remembered that in his early Pennsylvanian childhood, after his father died, he had no time for books—although it was the subsequent information he gleaned from physical science books coupled with his own natural mechanical bent that made Smokey the wily legend he became. At the age of 12 he built his own tractor scrounged from parts he found in a junked car, and he started racing motorcycles at age 15. That ol’ bike smoked so much—set up as loose as possible because Yunick had an intrinsic feel for clearances and internal dynamics—that it caused a track-side announcer to call him Smokey. He should have named him Lucky.

One of Smokey’s major contributions to circle track racing was his deep appreciation for and use of aerodynamics. Smokey’s familiarity with how air affected objects in motion didn’t just happen. Yunick spent the better part of WWII flying heavy bombers over both friendly and unfriendly territory. He survived more than 50 missions in the Balkan theater including 20-plus round-trippers to Ploiesti to blast the Germans’ oil-refining capabilities in Romania. He also did training and checkout missions over peaceful territory—including a mission over friendly Florida checking out Daytona Beach. Yunick’s new post-war digs weren’t exactly random. Historically, Daytona has been the speed racer’s hauly grail since 1902 when Ransom E. Olds and Alexander Winton staged a racing duel on Ormond Beach in the northern section. This confrontation between two pioneer car-builders heralded the beginning of Daytona’s 32-year involvement with land speed racing. Among those sand-stormers were Stanley-Steaming Fred Marriott (127 mph in 1906), Blitzen Benzing Barney Oldfield (131 mph in 1910), Doozie Tommy Milton (156 in 1920), and Frank Lockhart, a 1926 Indy winner who died the next year in a spectacular crash while driving his supercharged, Miller-powered Blackhawk Spl. A native of Glendale, California, he tested his car at Muroc before taking it to Daytona. His example led to our involvement with the dry lakes that continues to this very day.

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Aside from the racetrack and its beach, the complex on the corner of Second and Riverside was Daytona’s most famous landmark. The buildings on the left housed the race shops.
By the early ’30s, Daytona’s ever-shifting sands and course-altering tides caused the Americans and Brits to shift their LSR attempts to the Bonneville Salt Flats, but that didn’t end Daytona’s beach-racing. In 1936, the city fathers promoted a vacuum-filling stock car race by developing a circle track south of town comprised of both the beach and a parallel access road. Two years later (1938), Bill France and Charlie Reese took over the beach/road races and ran them until the war broke out.
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The beach/road course’s free-form crowd control and changing beach conditions are the reasons the circuit was eventually moved to France’s Taj Mahal in 1959.
With the end of hostilities, France resumed promoting Daytona’s unique beach-road race in 1946. One year later, two events occurred that would forever change the face of circle track racing. First, Smokey came to Daytona to open a truck repair shop because, he said, it looked so good from the air. Meanwhile, Bill France saw that stock car racing—for all of its good-ol’-boy, booze-running roots—was fast becoming a popular spectator sport. France determined that, with a little organization, promoting southern-style stockers could prove to be a lucrative undertaking. So he took the initiative and founded the National Association of Stock Car Automobile Racing: NASCAR. The guy who survived all those air missions over Eastern Europe and the Pacific was quickly caught up in this other form of survival soon after he opened his Best Damn Garage In Town and began a second life that still defies description. You might say that Smokey’s career began the instant after a kindred soul by the name of Marshall Teague walked into his garage. Teague, a well-known stock car driver and car owner, happened to be a Daytona Beach resident, too. He took Smokey’s slogan seriously and invited him to join his team even though Yunick told him he knew nothing about stock car racing. However, the eclectic garage owner knew where to gain an insight. He began studying the chemistry and physics books that he had collected during the war to find out how Mother Nature worked. The information he gleaned from his collection helped him discover the easiest way to make a car go through the air or how long a racing engine would run before it, in his words, “blowed.”
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In 1959, Glenn “Fireball” Roberts, driving Yunick’s ’59 Poncho, came from back in the pack to lead the inaugural 500-mile race before dropping with a “blowed” engine
But the book that Yunick studied most was the one containing NASCAR’s new rules. In a piece entitled “Inside Smokey’s Bag of Tricks,” C.J. Baker quoted Smoke thusly: “You have to understand that when I got into this thing back in ’47, they didn’t have near as many rules as they do now. You could run whatever you thought you could get away under what NASCAR would call ‘being within the spirit of competition.’” This happened during what Smokey would later call his drinking days. Baker remembers Smokey telling him that people would come by the race shop for a few drinks, and the next thing he knew his competition was sniveling to France. “If you did something they (NASCAR) didn’t like, which was pretty much up to Bill France, they would fine you or throw you out of the race as ‘being outside the spirit of competition,’ even though there was no specific rule against the supposed infraction.”
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Smokey did his own fabricating, machine work, assembly, and dyno testing. Nothing was left to chance. If an engine blew, it was because he instructed his drivers to never lift.


Teague’s cars of choice were the new step-down Hudson Hornets—based on inverted-bathtub styling powered by an inline flathead six. The Hornet’s low center of gravity and dual carburetion and other special 7-X “export” items made it fast for its era. And with Smokey at the wrench, the combo rendered Teague hard to beat. Yunick was either a crafty, devious, underhanded, rule-bending, no-good, cheating SOB (one view), or a master of ability, hard work, careful preparation, common sense, and the scientific approach (the other). Smokey’s M.O. was simple: If the rulebook didn’t specifically outlaw this or that, then it was OK to do this or that. No porting or polishing was allowed, so he would paint the ports with hard lacquer and sand them to a mirror finish. Or he would pump an abrasive slurry through the intake manifold runners to remove the lumps and bumps. NASCAR said no boring or stroking, but there was no rule against offset cranks. There was a rule against using lightweight flywheels, but there wasn’t a rule that prohibited removing the ring gear, laterally drilling lightening holes in the flywheel, then reinstalling the ring gear. “All those other guys were cheatin’ ten times worse than us,” remembered Yunick, “so it was just self-defense.”
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Smokey and Curtis Turner drove the factories nuts during the mid-’60s, as their Chevelles were consistent pole-sitters. Turner was leading in ’67 when the engine blew
During the early to mid ’50s, Hot Rod ’s editorial package took on a wider scope. Our traditional lakes, dirt track, and salt-flats racing was now being augmented by professional circle track coverage. By 1955, Wally Parks, Tom Medley, Ray Brock, Bob D’Olivo, and Eric Rickman began to attend, photograph, and cover circle track’s two major events: the Indy 500 and Daytona Speed Week. And with them came Smokey.
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After winning three poles, Roberts continued the Fireball/Smokey strategy: lead from the start, run balls out, and hope it lives. It did in ’62, beating Richard Petty’s Plymouth
Yunick’s parallel lives began in 1955 when Teague and Chevrolet’s Ed Cole—the father of the small-block Chevy V-8—pulled him in two different directions. First, Cole hired him to beef up Chevy’s factory racing program. During his three years under Cole, he helped develop the Black Widow, sorted out its Rochester fuel injection, and hired Paul Goldsmith (a champion motorcycle racer) to drive both his stock cars and his first Indy roadster. A couple of months after Cole signed him up for Chevy duty, Teague invited “El Smoko” to hang with him while he drove a car at Indy. Indy’s thin rulebook and white paper car construction enchanted him. He “hung out” for three years before making his first move. In the meantime, Smokey quit Chevrolet after the ’57 Daytona race when his deal with Ed Cole soured, and he quickly entered a brief but warm affair with Ford and team captain Pete DePaolo. Ford got out of stock car racing in 1958, and Smokey’s close relationship with his mentor Bunkie Knudsen and John DeLorean quickly led to a Pontiac program with pole-winning results (1959 to 1962).
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Perhaps the most unusual car ever to compete at Indy, Smokey teamed up with George Hurst to field the Hurst Floor Shift Spl. featuring an outboard driver capsule
For the record, qualifying 40-plus years ago at Daytona was totally unlike what is done today. In keeping with its land-speed heritage, every car had to make a timed, Bonneville-style, top-speed run down Daytona’s famous beach. The fastest got the pole. During a top-speed test session prior to the running of the Daytona Beach race in 1957, Smokey discovered air was building up under the hood, causing the pressure-sensitive Rochester injector to go dead rich. There are two versions of how Smokey cured this problem. Either Goldsmith opened the heater door during the race to vent off the air, or Smoke installed a couple of pressure-relieving ducts in the Bel Air’s toe board. Whatever. Goldy was able to pick up 20 mph and may have won the race if he hadn’t burned a piston with only six laps to go.

Smokey’s switch to Pontiacs didn’t sit too well for the NASCAR establishment after he won the pole at the new Daytona speedway in 1959, 1961, and 1962. Yunick—never one to go along to get along—P.O.’d the Ford and Chrysler factory teams with his pole-sitting privateers. The factories sniveled to France, who was afraid of losing their support, so he had his inspectors give Smokey’s cars the ultimate thrice over. This nitpicking eventually led to Smokey’s lifelong feuds with both the Senior and Junior France.

Although motorsports history has treated Yunick and stock car racing as fraternal twins, he considered the Indy 500 to be his greatest challenge. After a three-year learning curve (1955 to 1957), he had stepped up in 1958 with his own car driven by Goldsmith, who he considered to be his greatest driver. Although they made the 33-car field, Goldy was involved in a multi-car crash and out of the race with 199 laps to go. Yunick returned in 1959 with what he called Smokey’s Reverse Torque Special, driven to a Seventh-Place finish by Indy great Duane Carter. In 1960, Yunick hit a home run. He and Chicky Hiroshima teamed up with driver (and team manager) Jim Rathmann to win it all in the Ken-Paul Special. Of interest is that Rathmann needed more pit help so he hired Bruce Crower and his team after Crower’s Chevy-powered roadster failed to qualify. Smokey would field two more Rathmann-owned and -managed cars and one of his own before he stood the Brickyard on its collective ear.
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Yunick’s parallel involvement with Indy began in 1955 and reached a high point when Jim Rathmann won the ’60 race driving the Chicky/Smokey- prepared Ken-Paul Spl
In 1964, Yunick showed up at the track with one of the most radical cars ever to enter the 500-mile race. Called the Hurst Floor Shift Special, it featured a catamaran-like layout with the driver placed in a pod adjacent to a second pod containing the engine, front and rear suspension, fuel tank, and radiator. Unfortunately, his driver Bobby Johns—the guy who almost won the Daytona 500 with Smokey’s Pontiac in 1960—had trouble adjusting to the car’s handling characteristics and eventually backed it into the wall during the last day of qualifying.

Yunick took a couple of years off from Indy to go gold prospecting in Ecuador. However, he continued his NASCAR involvement, having made the switch from Pontiac to Chevrolet in 1963 when Knudsen moved to head up that division of GM. Smokey was immediately invited to take a look at the new engine that their engineers were working on—a 427ci big-block designed to replace the obsolete 409. A number of the porcupine-head “mystery motors” were produced and raced at the ’63 Daytona 500, though Chevrolet pulled out of stock car racing a month later in March of 1963. Yunick continued as an independent on the sly, building, racing, and winning with a series of imaginative Chevelles, including his Curtis Turner–driven ’66 pole-sitter. This game lasted as long as Knudsen was at Chevrolet, but when he switched to Ford in 1969 after a losing bid for the GM chairmanship, Yunick went with the boss.

After a two-year hiatus, Yunick returned to the ’67 Indy 500. The boys at Goodyear made him an offer he eventually couldn’t refuse. Goodyear would give him money to buy the car and hire Formula 1 champ Dennis Hulme to drive it, and he drove it to a Fourth Place finish. Goodyear borrowed the car and a spare engine after the race but never returned them.

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Smokey’s slippery bent was never more apparent than while qualifying for the ’67 race. Note the Moon wheel discs, flush backing plates, faired suspension, and partially covered headers
Smokey’s ongoing troubles with NASCAR over his getting competitive reached its zenith in 1968. Yunick blamed both Ford and Chrysler for putting so much pressure on France that he had his tech inspectors overscrutinize his super- slippery Chevelles. Legend has it that when Smokey’s ’68 Chevelle picked up its sixteenth violation, he got in the car and drove it back to his garage in Daytona with the fuel tank still sitting in the inspection area. His parting shot was, “make it 17.” Two years later, Smokey said adios to NASCAR and was out of stock car racing.

After Knudsen joined Ford, he asked Smokey to begin developing a stock-block pushrod engine for the Indy 500. There was no time to sort out the new powerplants, so he obtained a Gurney Eagle and armed it with a DOHC turbo Ford (of course) and had Joe Leonard drive it. While running Second to eventual winner Mario Andretti, Leonard had a stray hose clamp puncture his radiator. It took Smokey and his crew 13 minutes to install a replacement. Still, he finished a respectable Seventh. Knudsen left Ford in 1969, and Smokey switched to a series of 207ci, turbocharged Chevrolet stock blocks which he ran until 1975 when United States Auto Club’s Dick King declared pushrod engines had no future at Indy.

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Pony car racing (Camaros, Mustangs, Javelins) was big in 1967 when Smokey showed up at Riverside with a Yunickized Camaro. But was his slippery sender legal?


For the next 10 years, Hot Rod and Smokey enjoyed a close working relationship thanks to C.J. Baker and Buick’s Herb Fishel, who loved Winston Cup racing and also had an interest in high-performance street rodding. During the late ’70s, he saw a chance to make the Buick V-6 the ’80s alternative engine to the Mouse motor and hired Smokey to further refine the engine. Baker and Yunick then combined forces to produce a series of articles entitled “Turn of the Century” which chronicled the development of the Buick V-6 using as many heavy-duty OEM parts as possible. The result was a 355-horse V-6 streeter that found itself in a ’78 Roadmaster, which was ultimately taken to Riverside International Raceway and testdriven by NASCAR-champ Cale Yarborough.
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Buick’s Herb Fishel commissioned Smokey to build a hot street motor that C.J. Baker put in HRM’s project Roadmaster. Cale Yarborough gave it a test spin at Riverside



In 1979, Baker and Yunick teamed up for two other projects. One was a supercharged V-6 that was installed in a Deuce highboy roadster built for former HRM editor Lee Kelley by Total Performance and driven by Baker and you-know-who from Memphis to California. The other project was a 355ci “what-if” alky-burning, Hilborn-injected small-block. The boys at Indy were contemplating a return to normally aspirated engines, and Smokey couldn’t resist building a prototype V-8 using parts for his enormous pile of former racing inventory. The engine produced an easy 675 horses, but USAC’s return to a normally aspirated stock-block formula never materialized. Smokey wrote it off as another “green card” fiasco and went back to working on his controversial hot air engine.

Smokey Yunick would spend the rest of his life (1985 to 2001) immersed in projects that ranged from exploring numerous alternative energy sources (wind, geothermal, wave action, solar panels—everything but nuclear because waste disposal troubled him) to writing a “Dear Smokey” tech advice column for Circle Track magazine. When he developed leukemia last year, he did the Smokey things—first by becoming a body dyno for experimental cancer treatments while at the same time finishing his three-part autobiography, reviewed by Jeff Koch below.

During my one-week stay at Daytona in 1984 to cover the 500, I spent Thursday afternoon with Smokey on the beach taking photos of his hot-air-engine–powered Fiero. He couldn’t believe that I would deliberately miss the two, 125-mile Winston Cup qualifiers to be with him. That still amazes me. One hour with Smokey was worth a day watching taxicabs crash. In fact, if it hadn’t been for the guy wearing whites, a greasy hat, a pair of horn-rim glasses and smoking a pipe—and who, by the way, ran the Best Damn Garage In Town—there wouldn’t be a Daytona 500, let alone a NASCAR.

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By Don Mallinson, Editor SHO National Owners Group
It was a 7/8 scale Chevelle (I incorrectly called it a Monte Carlo in the original version of this article) created by Smokey that led NASCAR to create the infamous patterns they use on all cars today. Here is an excerpt from an article by Karen Van Allen on SpeedFX.com about that car: (thanks to Bill Staib for alerting me to this information)
"'Cheating,' as it were, has been around since the inception of
stock car racing. The year 1966 produced two of the most notorious violations
of rules quite possibly witnessed in the sport of NASCAR racing - and believe
it, or not, both cars passed technical inspection prior to the Dixie 500 at
Atlanta. Junior Johnson's "Yellow Banana" Ford Galaxy and Henry "Smokey"
Yunick's "little" #13 1967 Chevy Chevelle, complete with an offset chassis,
raised floor, roof spoiler, balloon in gas tank and a host of other brilliant
rules book interpretations. NASCAR finally disqualified Yunick's creation in
1968 when it was found to be some 200 pounds underweight."
Smokey Yunick was a real thorn in NASCAR's side. He was more inventive and just plain good about cheating or "bending" the rules than anyone ever was or will be.
 
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