Peter Bryant tells the story quite well in his book, "Can-Am Contender". Peter was always a straight shooter.
When he arrived at Indy with the task of engineering these three new cars, derived from the previous year's "rollerskate" chassis, the cars had a fully-enveloping body that caused massive lift and terminal understeer that ended in snap oversteer. By the time race day came, the cars had been slowly and step by step made not only drivable but actually competitive, their top speed being in the three highest recorded, and their cornering speed as good as anyone's. Transition straight to corner was still not the best, but once pushed, the cars were now stable.
Legends flew about the car being a "fuel tank bomb", "dangerous", etc. Truth is, Dave MacDonald simply wanted to lead the opening lap and pushed the car too hard in his dirt-car driving style, losing control and causing the dreadful accident. The car was no more at fault that any other such assembly of hot rod bits at the time, especially the front-engine roadsters that offered their drivers absolutely zero control once askew.
Fairness to all is necessary here, and especially fairness to mickey Thompson, John Crosthwaite, and Peter Bryant.
To bad Indy cars aren't legal in IRRA...
But, they are legal in D3... ![:blink:](http://slotblog.net/public/style_emoticons/default/blink.gif)
I do not see them in the D3 listing at this time, the only Indy car I see there being the Lotus 56.
Larry, as far as four-wheel steering, my memory is a blank but if there was such a thing, it probably was not voluntary...
The Thompson cars were derived from the design of the 1961 Cooper-Climax, that really opened the eyes of Indy specialist engineers. The late Quincy Epperly told me, while repairing and welding the engine block from that very car for me, that when he saw the car for the fist time in the Indy garage, he said to himself that that damn Briton was going to put them all (Trevis, Watson, etc.) out of business...
John Crosthwaite was a former Cooper designer who was hired by Jim Kimberly and Mickey to design the 1962 Indy cars, and stayed on until the 1964 drama. If you look at the cars, they are basically "squashed" Coopers... not a bad thing really, but with a clear lack of understanding of aero and downforce. That will come later.