
Can you name this car?
Continue reading “Car Photo of the Day: Speaking of Mongrels…”
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Briggs Cunningham’s 1950 Le Mans entries came up in a discussion on the Jag-Lovers forums yesterday. Since I have seen them first-hand and have photographs I promised the group there that I’d post them here today. Rather than re-tell the epic tale of the Cunningham/Collier 1950 Le Mans, it is best that I just link over to an excellent write-up on the Radio Le Mans site. It is full of humor, some French snobbery (refusing the “Fordillacs” but allowing all manner of other “mongrels”, and American resourcefulness… such as the brilliant suggestion by driver Miles Collier to make shovels part of the cargo. Go read it.
While we’re on the subject of Cunningham Le Mans cars I can’t NOT post a photo of one of his later C-series machines:

Cunningham built and sold his Vignale Coupes (one is visible at the right edge of the photo) at a loss specifically to meet the homologation requirements as an “automobile manufacturer” strictly to be able to race these C-series cars at Le Mans. That is dedication… or at the very least, insanity.

Seen on my evening commute last week on I-5 in north Seattle. In the carpool lane to boot!

This freshly restored Stude appeared at the BBQ lunch that was laid out for us on the GTTSR last year by the Libby Igniters car club in Libby, Montana. It is a beautiful car.


Saturday night I posted this photo taken at the local weekly “Cruise-In”…

The guesses about the rest of the car all turned on the obvious axis of “military vehicle”… however as you’ll see it is anything but:

Easily one of the more bizarre Studebakers still on the road!


…and bearings.