Or
for race car builders, engine assemblers and tuners and anyone else associated
with the then-fledgling sport of NASCAR stock car racing.
The
sport’s pioneers – in a way – made it up as they went along, some better than
others.
And
one who did it among the best is Stuart, Va.’s Leonard Wood, who is among the
2013 class of five set for induction into the NASCAR Hall of Fame on Friday,
Feb. 8. Wood, 78, will be enshrined in ceremonies to be held at the Charlotte
(N.C.) Convention Center Crown Ballroom which is connected to the NASCAR Hall
of Fame.
Wood
joins his older brother Glen Wood, the fabled Wood Brothers No. 21 racing
team’s original driver and owner, as a NASCAR Hall of Fame member. His fellow
inductees in the Hall’s fourth class are NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champions
Buck Baker, Herb Thomas and Rusty Wallace and car owner/builder/driver/crew
chief Cotton Owens.
“He’s
the most dedicated, talented all-around mechanic NASCAR has ever seen,” said
Wood’s nephew, Len, co-owner of the current Wood Brothers team with his brother
Eddie and sister Kim Hall. “He fit the term ‘chief mechanic.’ He could do
anything with the car.”
The
facts are these: Leonard Wood, in 990 races as a crew chief for the No. 21 Ford
and Mercury cars, won 96 times. His cars also won 117 poles. After Glen stepped
out of the cockpit, Leonard worked with some of the sport’s greatest drivers
including NASCAR Hall of Famers David Pearson and Cale Yarborough; A.J. Foyt,
Dan Gurney and Parnelli Jones.
In
a recent interview, Dale Jarrett, former Wood Brothers driver and current ESPN
analyst, called Leonard Wood “one of the smartest people to come through this
sport, especially early on. They had so many ideas from the pit crew to other
things that people don’t even know about, under the hood so to speak, that
Leonard Wood was kind of in charge of making it happen.”
None
of it came from a professor’s lecture, a text book or a blueprint. Wood learned
by watching, thinking through the problem and then doing. And most assuredly
innovating.
He
sat by as his father, Walter, tore down the engine from the team’s first race
car. Later, when the time had come to freshen it again, Wood – then in high
school – volunteered for the task, which was done to perfection.
“It
kind of blows your mind that somebody that young could do that,” said Glen
Wood, noting that in the early days the chief mechanic was exactly that – a
jack of all trades from fabricator to shock and spring specialist to engine
builder. “He just learned by himself and he did it really well – anything he
did. I could always depend on him. If the car wasn’t working right, I’d go off
somewhere and sit while he worked on it. When I came back, it would be in
winning shape.
“He’s
one of the best who ever came down the pike. I felt maybe he should have gone
in (the NASCAR Hall of Fame) before me.”
Pit
stops weren’t a big part of NASCAR’s early years during which many races were
held on 1/2-mile dirt tracks at distances of 200 and 250 laps. But the advent
of longer races on superspeedways – Darlington Raceway followed by Daytona,
Charlotte and Atlanta – significantly broadened the sport’s boundaries. With
multiple stops necessary to add fuel, change tires and make adjustments, the
Woods quickly recognized that less time spent on pit road meant fewer rivals to
pass on the race track.
Leonard
Wood became the architect of what became the signature Wood Brothers Pit Stop,
the key to which was modernizing the equipment used on pit road.
In
the early years, floor jacks weighing 70 to 80 pounds were used to lift the
race cars. They also required a strong man to pump the handle – up to 10 pumps
for tire clearance. Wood took apart the jack, inserted larger pistons and –
presto – his brother Delano Wood could get the car off the asphalt by pumping
two or three times.
He
ported and polished the mechanisms in the team’s air guns, allowing lug nuts to
be removed and replaced more quickly. Finally, Wood modified the inside of the
team’s dump cans so that gasoline flowed faster.
Hired
by the Ford Motor Co. to pit Jim Clark’s Lotus at the Indianapolis 500, the
Woods stunned the racing world as Clark spent 41.9 seconds on pit road en route
to Victory Lane – thanks to “tweaking” of the gravity-fed refueling rig.
“We
turned that thing on and it put in 58 gallons in 15 seconds,” said Wood. It
just sucked the fuel out of there. We knew we were going to be under 20 seconds
on the pit stops.
“We
got the most publicity in the least amount of time we ever got in our lives,”
he added. “We hit a home run for sure.”
Len Wood continues to marvel at his uncle’s fabrication
skills. The team is completing a replica of the Ford Galaxie in which Tiny Lund
won the 1963 Daytona 500. The car will be on display at the NASCAR Hall of Fame
during NASCAR Acceleration Weekend, along with a 1/8-scale, gasoline-powered
car fashioned from scraps of aluminum and the soles of shoes that Wood built
decades ago. He tethered it to a pole, a kind of forerunner to today’s radio
controlled cars.
“His fabrication skills; it’s all in his head; no
blueprints,” said the younger Wood, recalling that they were going to use
aluminum pieces to fasten the windshield to the Galaxie. “Leonard said, ‘No, I
think we used steel back then. I’ll make steel ones.’
“If you can describe it, he can fix it or make it.”
Induction
ceremonies will take place at 7:30 p.m. ET in the Crown Ball Room at the
Charlotte Convention Center which is directly connected to the NASCAR Hall of
Fame. The event is the first half of NASCAR Acceleration Weekend followed on
Saturday, Feb. 9 by the NASCAR Preview 2013. Tickets for the ceremonies start
at $45 (available at www.nascaracceleration.com) and the NASCAR Hall of Fame box
office. In addition, a $20 ticket will gain fans all-day access into NASCAR
Preview 2013 and the NASCAR Hall of Fame on Fame on Saturday, Feb. 9.
racing needs more like him
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