MMR Blog

Final Touches to Recent Stories

Posted on Monday, June 17, 2013 at 9:00 AM. Comments (0)

Three weeks ago in a story we wrote about The WASRED 308 lighting system, we mentioned 1978 Lotus driver Ronnie Peterson’s ability to drive any car quickly, no matter the set-up. We also mentioned that he wasn’t perceptibly slower than Mario Andretti who was an acknowledged set-up master.

Lotus

In the June issue of Motor Sport, Editor-in-Chief Nigel Roebuck, addresses the subject of team orders and the incident at the Malaysian GP when Vettel passed teammate Webber in the closing laps to take the win. In 1978 Lotus stated to Peterson when he was hired that they wanted Andretti to win…

Nigel Snowden – Pacem

Posted on Friday, June 14, 2013 at 10:25 AM. Comments (0)

Steve McQueen

Our lead image is probably the most recognized image of a racing driver in the world. It is the picture of Porsche driver Michael Delaney indicating to his Ferrari nemesis that, like the longbow man on the winning side centuries ago, his two fingers remain intact. Odd that this image, known universally as the two finger salute so representative of racing, is of a fictional race driver in a fictional race.

The image is, of course, of Steve McQueen, talented actor and driver, and the movie is Le Mans. We share the image today because the man who took it, Nigel Snowden, recently died.

As often happens, the…

Sandy on Assignment: Heading Off to Judging School

Posted on Tuesday, June 11, 2013 at 8:39 AM. Comments (1)

Sandy Cotterman, Motorsports Enthusiast

Finally, an official assignment! I’m about to hop a flight to Boston when the email comes through. Peter has asked me to write about the JCNA (Jaguar Clubs of North America) judges’ certification course I am off to take. Jeez, I’m thinking, why on earth would anyone want to read about that?

Under the bonnet at Boca.

Under the bonnet at Boca.

It seems like only yesterday I was happily tootling off to my very first JCNA-sanctioned concours, in scenic Sturbridge, Massachusetts. As the cliché reads, that was the first day of the rest of my life ...…

A Wolf’s Tale

Posted on Thursday, June 06, 2013 at 10:27 AM. Comments (0)

Annett Wolf is a remarkable lady with a remarkable story. In her youth she dined with Fangio in Portugal, Von Trips kissed her hand at Le Mans and she became a lifelong devotee of motor racing. While enjoying a successful career in the arts, Ms. Wolf is primarily a communicator and an international award winning director of film and television.

Annett Wolf

Today, from her home in Halifax, Nova Scotia, she operates her production company Wise Wolf Productions and a foundation that raises awareness of the perils faced by the wildlife of the Canadian Arctic. Now, the lady wishes to combine her passion for motor sports in a feature film to be entitled So…

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Sandy on Assignment: Formula 1 in Monaco

Posted on Thursday, May 30, 2013 at 8:43 PM. Comments (7)

…Looking Through the Spyglass

By Sandy Cotterman, Motorsports Enthusiast

So what is it about Formula 1 in Monaco that makes it so special? Unlike all the other races I’ve attended, which I can still count on two hands, Monaco is about being right there... 60 feet above the first turn out of the start. At first I was shattered that I wouldn’t be seeing the pits or mingling with the drivers. But to be hovering above the cars was spectacular.

Perched above the streets of Monaco.

Perched above the streets of Monaco.

Upgrading a 1978 Ferrari 308 GTS: Ignition

Posted on Thursday, May 30, 2013 at 2:33 PM. Comments (0)

In 1995 I bought a 1978 308 GTS Euro spec Ferrari with a rebuilt engine and 13K miles on the long non-functioning odometer. It had had a serious accident on the right front corner. This is the fifteenth in a series of short articles about how we repaired and updated it.

Leaving Well Enough Alone… Almost

Ignition

According to my 1978 Ferrari 308 Instruction Book (Owner’s Manual) 308s came with either a standard point set ignition system or ignition with magnetic impulses. Both by Magneti Marelli.

Fortunately for me, we have the single distributor electronic system and it has been flawless. As mentioned elsewhere, I’m sure, I bought the car in the dark in Chicago and drove it home to Boston. When I first brought the car to John Tirell at

Upgrading a 1978 Ferrari 308 GTS: Lights

Posted on Thursday, May 23, 2013 at 5:56 PM. Comments (2)

In 1995 I bought a 1978 308 GTS Euro spec Ferrari with a rebuilt engine and 13K miles on the long non-functioning odometer. It had had a serious accident on the right front corner. This is the fourteenth in a series of short articles about how we repaired and updated it.

Let there be lights!

While driving in F1 for Lotus, Ronnie Peterson was famous for being able to take a car straight off the trailer and go fast. Upon returning to the pits the engineers would ask what they needed to do to make the car faster. He would reply: nothing, it’s fine the way it is. His teammate Mario Andretti was the opposite, his background in dirt cars and ovals made him a master at tuning suspension systems to get the most out of his cars. And he did. But he was not perceptibly quicker…

He’s Fast, He’s Funny & He’s Almost Fifty!

Posted on Thursday, May 23, 2013 at 3:05 PM. Comments (4)

SRT Car

#93 in the program, #1 in our hearts.

On May 8th we wrote the following to Tommy (TK) Kendall, the 46 year old American driver who will be part of the SRT Viper Team at Le Mans:

Hi Tommy, 

MMRsite.com is a Goods and Services Directory and a weekly MMR Newsletter which has 4000 subscribers. We are mostly men and women of a certain age and we follow current sports car, F1, and Moto GP racing. 

Your participation at Le Mans this year, with your permission, will provide us with someone for whom to cheer. We chose you because you are…

308 Upgrade: A Cautionary Tale

Posted on Thursday, May 16, 2013 at 5:25 AM. Comments (3)

This week’s story is not so much about an upgrade, as it is a cautionary tale.

Early in the very late stages of the past century, my wife and I drove the WASRED 308 to Cavallino, an annual Ferrari fest held every January in West Palm Beach, Florida. We used the front tire well and rear trunk for luggage and even took along a set of golf clubs.

We stayed at the Colony Hotel in downtown West Palm Beach. “West Palm” is what we habitués call it. The Colony was, and probably still is, a well kept monument to the glory days of West Palm and nearby, still swishy, Worth Avenue. A number of its occupants are permanent residents whose presence reminds other patrons, and possibly themselves, of grander days.

Other than an ice storm in northern Virginia that forced us…

Sandy on Assignment: Concours for a Cause

Posted on Wednesday, May 15, 2013 at 1:19 PM. Comments (2)

By Sandy Cotterman, Motorsports Enthusiast

I feel like I’ve come to a screeching halt! The Florida Concours season has basically ended, and the next onslaught of motorsports events hasn’t quite kicked into gear.

Before jumping into this summer’s adventures, I wanted to reflect on an event that has evolved into a top notch Concours and also raises a ton of money for charity. In only its seventh year, the Boca Raton Concours d’Elegance is a shining example of how to do it right. Many, if not all, Concours and even smaller car shows these days have a charity they support. The Boca event is the crown jewel of Concours for a Cause.

What makes this Concours stand out? Six million dollars and over 12,000 at-risk boys and girls. All-volunteer-driven,…