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All American Racers

American motor racing team and constructor


American motor racing team and constructor

FieldValue
nameAll American Racers
debut1979 Arizona Republic / Jimmy Bryan 150 (Phoenix)
final1999 Marlboro 500 (Fontana)
races134
drivers_champ0
indy_wins0
wins1
poles1

| Long_name All American Racers is an American-licensed auto racing team and constructor based in Santa Ana, California. Founded by Dan Gurney and Carroll Shelby in 1964, All American Racers initially participated in American sports car and Champ Car races as well as international Formula One events with cars named Eagle. The Formula One team, based in the United Kingdom and using British-built Weslake engines was named Anglo American Racers. Under team manager Bill Dunne they set up shop in Rye, East Sussex. The team were adjacent to Harry Weslake's engine development plant and half a mile from Elva cars. They participated in 25 Grands Prix, entering a total of 34 cars.

The first Eagles were created after AAR entered a Goodyear-backed Lotus 38 in the 1965 Indianapolis 500 and Gurney hired former Lotus designer Len Terry to develop their own car for 1966. The resulting Ford-powered Eagle T2G was codeveloped with the Eagle T1G for Formula 1. After exiting Formula One in 1968 and concentrating on Champ Car, Eagle turned to sports car racing in the 1980s, partnering with Toyota to develop the Celica and later sports prototypes for the IMSA GT Championship.

The company built the Ben Bowlby-designed DeltaWing that was run by Highcroft Racing at the 2012 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Formula 1

In order to run the Formula 1 operations, Gurney established the Anglo American Racers team, based in Rye, East Sussex, UK, though the cars were built in Santa Ana, California, USA by the All American Racers team. The Eagle T1G car, powered by an obsolete Coventry Climax engine, debuted at the 1966 Belgian Grand Prix and scored its first points with a fifth place three weeks later at the French Grand Prix. For the season Richie Ginther was signed as a second driver. The Climax engine was replaced by a new 3-liter Weslake V12 engine designed by Aubrey Woods and built in Great Britain by Weslake.

At the 1967 Belgian Grand Prix Gurney achieved the first "all-American" victory in a Grand Prix since Jimmy Murphy´s triumph with Duesenberg at the 1921 French Grand Prix. Excluding the Indianapolis 500, this is the only win for a USA-built car as well as one of only two wins of an American-licensed constructor (along with the triumph of Penske at the 1976 Austrian Grand Prix) in Formula One.

The Eagle-Weslake was a beautiful and efficient car, one example of which was constructed in titanium and exotic alloys. More than this, the Eagle was designed to make the tall Gurney fit comfortably at the wheel. Their efforts produced a V12 that was smooth and powerful. At Monza, an insight into the future of engine design was seen for the first time. The engine had four valves per cylinder at a narrow included angle (thirty degrees) that allowed a single cover to enclose both the close-spaced camshafts on each bank. The sixty-degree-vee layout had a larger bore than stroke (72.8 X 60mm). Gurney's program ran out of money in 1968 and by the end of the year he returned to the United States to concentrate his efforts on the more successful Indycar program, in which Bobby Unser had won the Indianapolis 500 and the 1968 Indycar Championship. A non-works version briefly appeared with privateer Al Pease in the 1969 Canadian Grand Prix, but Pease became noticed for all the wrong reasons and made history as the only F1 driver ever disqualified for being too slow.

USAC & CART Champ Car

During the USAC years, the Eagle chassis was very successful in the late 1960s and 1970s. Eagles won 51 Champ Car races, including the 1968 and 1975 Indy 500's won by Bobby Unser and the 1973 race won by Gordon Johncock. During this two-decade period, Bobby Unser, who drove Eagle cars for most of his teams, joined AAR as the sole driver, winning the 1975 Indianapolis 500. Unser also claimed 22 wins and 52 podiums with Eagle cars. After Unser's departure from the team for Team Penske, All American Racers started to lose their edge in IndyCar competition. Mike Mosley won a few races for the team before being dismissed at the end of 1982. By 1984, AAR merged with Mike Curb's team to form Curb-All American Racers. After a two-year partnership with Curb, Gurney and Curb parted ways, and this marked the beginning of the end of AAR's time in IndyCar.

The All American Racers team was inactive in single-seaters from 1987 to 1995 and returned in 1996 again building their own chassis and using new Toyota engines. However, this new effort, a combination of new and untested equipment, did not prove to be successful, never winning a race and collecting only occasional top-tens. The team ceased active racing after the 1999 CART season.

File:Eagle Rislone Special front Honda Collection Hall.jpg|1968 Indianapolis 500-winning chassis, driven by Bobby Unser, Offenhauser turbo File:JoeLeonardEagle.jpg|The Eagle 68, powered by a turbocharged Ford Indy V8 engine, driven to 6th place in the 1969 Indianapolis 500 by Joe Leonard File:1972 Mark Donohue Indycar Gurney Eagle.jpg|1972 Gurney-Eagle Indycar chassis driven by Mark Donohue File:Robby Gordon 1998 Gurney Eagle.jpg|The Eagle 997 was the final CART car designed by AAR.

CART/USAC drivers

  • Alex Barron (1998–1999)
  • Raul Boesel (1999)
  • Geoff Brabham (1981)
  • Mike Chandler (1982, 1984)
  • Kevin Cogan (1984–1985)
  • Juan Manuel Fangio II (1996–1997)
  • Pete Halsmer (1984)
  • P. J. Jones (1996–1998)
  • Jan Lammers (1986)
  • Bobby Unser (1972–1978, USAC)
  • Andrea Montermini (1999)
  • Rocky Moran (1981)
  • Mike Mosley (1979–1981)
  • Ed Pimm (1984–1985)
  • Gualter Salles (1999)
  • Tom Sneva (1985)
  • Vincenzo Sospiri (1998)

Eagle MK-V

The Eagle MK-V was the third to last Eagle CART, and the first original chassis following post-1986 inactivity. It was entered exclusively by Eagle and only for the 1996 season, because it was unsuccessful, even though it had 2 races in which it scored points, and a further 2 other races where it finished 1 place down from points. The drivers were Juan Manuel Fangio II and P. J. Jones. The Mk-V would be the first CART chassis developed by Eagle after being inactive after the 1986 CART Series. This new car, called the Mk-V would be a unique chassis, but would be structurally similar to the Reynard 94I. The CART would be almost completely untested before the season, and during the season would prove to be extremely bad in the corners.

Eagle 987

The Eagle 987 was the second to last chassis built by All American Racers. The car was raced only by Eagle, and was driven by Vincenzo Sospiri and Alex Barron. The car was entirely unsuccessful, and would be replaced by the Eagle 997 for the 1999 CART Championship.

IMSA GT

Gurney's team was contracted by Toyota in 1983 to enter the IMSA GT Championship with specially-modified Toyota Celicas.

In 1988, the team moved up to the GTP category with two chassis – a modified Toyota 88C Group C car and a team-designed Eagle HF89 purpose-built for IMSA competition.

AAR experienced its greatest success in GTP competition with the Eagle MkIII, introduced in 1991. Powered by a turbocharged 2.1-liter Toyota inline-4 developing up to 800 horsepower and generating 10,000 pounds of downforce at 200 mph, the MkIII won 21 of the 27 races in which it was entered – a record so dominant that it has been blamed for the collapse of the GTP series.

Trans-Am

1970 Trans-Am AAR 'Cuda

AAR created a special Trans-Am Series version of the Plymouth Barracuda, running in the 1970 season with drivers Dan Gurney and Swede Savage. A homologation special production edition was offered in 1970.

Racing results

Complete Formula One World Championship results

Anglo American Racers

(key)

YearChassisEngine(s)TyresDrivers123456789101112PointsWCC47th137th0*12th
Eagle T1GClimax S4
Weslake V12MONBELFRAGBRNEDGERITAUSAMEX
USA Dan GurneyRet5RetRet7RetRet5
USA Phil HillDNQ
USA Bob BondurantDSQRet
Eagle T1GWeslake V12RSAMONNEDBELFRAGBRGERCANITAUSAMEX
USA Dan GurneyRetRetRetRetRet3RetRetRet
USA Richie GintherDNQ
NZ Bruce McLarenRetRetRet
Italy Ludovico ScarfiottiRet
RSAESPMONBELNEDFRAGBRGERITACANUSAMEX
Eagle T1GWeslake V12USA Dan GurneyRetRetRetRet9Ret
McLaren M7AFord V8Ret4RetResults scored in a McLaren-Ford did not count towards Eagle-Weslake's points total.}}

Non-works entries

(key)

YearEntrantChassisEngineTyresDrivers123456789101112
Castrol Oils Ltd.Eagle T1GClimax S4RSAMONNEDBELFRAGBRGERCANITAUSAMEX
CAN Al PeaseNC
Castrol Oils Ltd.Eagle T1GClimax S4RSAESPMONBELNEDFRAGBRGERITACANUSAMEX
CAN Al PeaseDNS
John MaryonEagle T1GClimax S4RSAESPMONNEDFRAGBRGERITACANUSAMEX
CAN Al PeaseDSQ

Complete Formula One Non-Championship results

(key)

YearChassisEngineDriver1234561967
Eagle T1GWeslake V12ROCSPCINTSYROULESP
USA Dan Gurney1
USA Richie Ginther10

Complete CART PPG Indy Car World Series results

(key) (results in bold indicate pole position)

YearChassisEngineTyresDriversNo.123456789101112131415161718192019791980198119831984198519861996199719981999
PHXATLINDYTRTMCHWGLTRTONTMCHATLPHX
Eagle 79Cosworth DFX V8 tUS Mike Mosley3661717313DNS2201214341410
ONTINDYMILPOCMDOMCHWGLMILONTMCHMXCPHX
Eagle 80Cosworth DFX V8 tUS Mike Mosley4819
Chevrolet V8322317
PHXMILATLMCHRIVMILMCHWGLMXCPHX
Eagle 81Chevrolet V8US Mike Mosley481*DNS18DNS2624
AUS Geoff Brabham199
US Rocky Moran6
ATLINDYMILCLEMCHROAPOCRIVMDOMCHCPLLAGPHX
Eagle 83Chevrolet V8US Jeff Wood98228
LBHPHXINDYMILPORMEACLEMCHROAPOCMDOSANMCHPHXLAGCPL
Eagle 84SBPontiac V8US Mike Chandler8816DNQ
US Kevin Cogan8
98209182022
US Pete Halsmer14
US Ed Pimm2613222219101219
LBHINDYMILPORMEACLEMCHROAPOCMDOSANMCHLAGPHXMIA
Eagle 85GCCosworth DFX V8 tUS Tom Sneva28202611321815521
Lola T9002471919
US Tony Bettenhausen Jr.9729
US Ed Pimm9821
Eagle 85GC12919DNS5112098314912
PHXLBHINDYMILPORMEACLETORMCHPOCMDOSANMCHROALAGPHXMIA
Eagle 86GCCosworth DFX V8 tThe Netherlands Jan Lammers98914DNQ
MIARIOSFRLBHNAZ500MILDETPORCLETORMCHMDOROAVANLAG
Eagle MK-VToyota RV8A V8 tARG Juan Manuel Fangio II362117152525221918141328142081928
US P. J. Jones98Wth2492423201625181327
MIASFRLBHNAZRIOGATMILDETPORCLETORMCHMDOROAVANLAGFON
Reynard 96iToyota RV8A V8 tARG Juan Manuel Fangio II3620202615
Reynard 97iToyota RV8B V8 t20232110222119112510121527
Reynard 96iToyota RV8A V8 tUS P. J. Jones9828261621
Reynard 97iToyota RV8B V8 t16211414202521281714251710
MIAMOTLBHNAZRIOGATMILDETPORCLETORMCHMDOROAVANLAGHOUSFRFON
Reynard 97i
Reynard 98i
Eagle 987Toyota RV8C V8 t
Toyota RV8D V8 tUS Alex Barron36182414DNS1214DNS201415281516241920121913
US P. J. Jones98203011191312142516211924202221
Italy Vincenzo Sospiri22151523
MIAMOTLBHNAZRIOGATMILPORCLEROATORMCHDETMDOCHIVANLAGHOUSRFFON
Eagle 997Toyota RV8D V8 tUS Alex Barron361517239231614
BRA Gualter Salles27132025151118
BRA Raul Boesel1217
Italy Andrea Montermini11242315

Notes

References

References

  1. "Case History". Corktree.tripod.com.
  2. "Eagle". StatsF1.
  3. "Saga of Audacity: Eagle F1".
  4. ''Competition Press & Autoweek'', March 26, 1966, Page 3.
  5. ''Competition Press & Autoweek'', April 23, 1966, Page 6.
  6. [[Team Penske. Penske]] achieved a victory at the [[1976 Austrian Grand Prix]] having raced with an American licence, but the car was built at the British base in [[Poole]]. Though American-owned, the British-based [[Shadow Racing Cars. Shadow]] achieved a victory at the [[1977 Austrian Grand Prix]] having raced with a British licence.
  7. (August 27, 2021). "REWIND: Miller on Dan Gurney's Indy-winning Eagles".
  8. (May 26, 2022). "RETRO: The wild tale of 1982's Eagle Aviation Flyer IndyCar".
  9. "1969 Eagle Weslake Ford 'Santa Ana' Indy Car | S167 | Indy 2022".
  10. "1968 Eagle Indy Car".
  11. "1982 AAR Eagle Indy Car".
  12. "1972 AAR Eagle 7200 Indycar".
  13. (September 24, 2022). "Eagle 1969 Indy car-by-car histories".
  14. (February 5, 2023). "Eagle 1966 Indy car-by-car histories".
  15. (January 27, 2023). "Eagle 1972 Indy car-by-car histories".
  16. "Eagle 987 Champ Car | Dan Gurney's All American Racers".
  17. "1996 Dan Gurney AAR Eagle Indy Car {{!}} The Woodland Auto Display".
  18. (2022-09-01). "1996 AAR Eagle Mk V Champ Car Roller".
  19. "Eagle 987 Champ Car {{!}} Dan Gurney's All American Racers".
  20. [http://www.mulsannescorner.com/ToyotaEagleMkIII.html Toyota Eagle MkIII] {{Webarchive. link. (July 25, 2013 , Mulsanne's Corner)
  21. [http://allamericanracers.com/aar-eagle-mkiii-gtp/ Eagle MkIII GTP] {{Webarchive. link. (February 18, 2013 , quoted from [[Racer (magazine)). RACER]] magazine
  22. (February 2009). "Trans Am - The Early Years of American Sedan Racing". Car Craft.
  23. (January 27, 2011). "AAR 'Cuda". Mopar Muscle Cars.
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