Andy Granatelli: Motorsport Legend

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  • Опубликовано: 29 дек 2024

Комментарии • 393

  • @schadjam
    @schadjam 3 года назад +47

    I was honored to meet Andy at the 2011 Indy 500. I passed a pick-up truck and recognized him sitting alone in the truck. I turned around and walked up to the truck. He had his window rolled down and so I asked him if he was Andy Granatelli. He surprised me and jumped out of the pick-up truck and shook my hand. I was thrilled. I told him that I had seen his turbine cars raced at Indy when I was very young and that I thanked him for what he had done. I will never forget that day.

  • @paulbrasier372
    @paulbrasier372 3 года назад +61

    As a kid of the 60s there was nothing better then getting an STP sticker at the gas station with dad and the putting it on my bike.

    • @gus473
      @gus473 3 года назад +8

      That, and a Union 76 antenna ball, made your bike a racer!😉🤣✌🏼

    • @davidpeters9897
      @davidpeters9897 3 года назад +2

      I remember them giving away packets of 10 or12 stickers at car shows, so there was one everywhere they would stick.

    • @kylemartin2594
      @kylemartin2594 3 года назад +1

      Hey..me to!!

    • @jamiebowles4588
      @jamiebowles4588 2 года назад +2

      Automatically made any Stingray 5mph faster.

    • @barrykochverts4149
      @barrykochverts4149 Год назад

      My east coast family took a west coast vacation in 1966, and I fondly recall the Union 76 balls everywhere we went.

  • @stevedietrich8936
    @stevedietrich8936 3 года назад +33

    Oh man, I remember that commercial with Marciano trying to grip the STP coated screwdriver. Flashback Friday!!!

  • @philking6444
    @philking6444 Год назад +1

    I have been an indy 500 fan since 1963. I once begged to stay home from school because the race was rained out. I grew up on the front engine roadsters and a through the development of the rear engines and ground effects. We had to find the radio station because we only listened to it once a year. I have also read the book "They Call Me MISTER 500". Sorry to hear he passed away but he was always a showman.

  • @whatsgoingon1011
    @whatsgoingon1011 Год назад +2

    I used to work for Andy from 1987-91. Literally thee best boss I have ever had.

  • @guitarenigma
    @guitarenigma 3 года назад +3

    Putting STP stickers on our bicycles as kids was a big thing back in the 60s-70s! 'The racer's edge'!!!

  • @lostbear53
    @lostbear53 3 года назад +13

    In '83 thru '84 I was working as a Mr Goodwrench at Henna Chevy in Austin,Tx when Andy walked up to the service counter and wanted to see me!! After greeting the other 60 + techs he asked if I was the super tuner everyone said I was... he offered me a job working on a Nascar crew as the engine guy!!! I declined the offer and after explaining why Andy asked if I would be interested in working at Tune-up Masters. Declined again. It sure was a great honor to be asked by a legend like him despite the other techs booing me when I turned Andy's offer down. Truth is, it defined my career... I was that good at my work

    • @jamespfitz
      @jamespfitz Год назад +1

      What's your rate and when can I drop my car off?

    • @lostbear53
      @lostbear53 Год назад +1

      @@jamespfitz Sorry Jim I retired in 95 at 42 yrs old. my hands are clean and all the calluses are gone...

    • @Houndini
      @Houndini 7 месяцев назад +1

      I think you made the correct decision. Unless you wanted to never see your family hardly & that something your kids & wife never forgets!! I had chance too hit NASCAR circus yes Circus I help them sometimes in weekdays nights & I saw the hours & their wife & kids show up in the late evenings just to ask Dad important to them questions. I saw if I was single care less about a family then join that circus. Nope not for myself.

  • @josephstevens9888
    @josephstevens9888 3 года назад +77

    I remember Andy Granatelli was owner of a chain of car repair shops out west in the 80's called Tune-up Masters. After your first visit, they would give you a decal with "TM" to post in your back window. The purpose of the decal was if your car was disabled along the road, and any Tune -up Master employee saw it, they were obligated to stop and assist you.

    • @lvscouter7705
      @lvscouter7705 3 года назад +2

      Tune em up, VROOM!!!

    • @naughtiusmaximus1811
      @naughtiusmaximus1811 3 года назад +6

      There's still a TM sign in my town in the Bay Area. The building has housed several shops since then, but left the sign, maybe out of respect?
      Remember my mom taking her '79 Malibu wagon down there back in the day 🙂

    • @josephstevens9888
      @josephstevens9888 3 года назад +3

      @@naughtiusmaximus1811 I remember that they used the pit-crew concept at Tune-up Masters. I was stationed at the Air Force base outside Las Vegas at the time.

    • @Oldbmwr100rs
      @Oldbmwr100rs 3 года назад +3

      I remember that chain, when I was in auto school they had ads looking for mechanics. They had a lot of grooming rules, like you needed an air force mustache.

    • @johnscott6083
      @johnscott6083 3 года назад +1

      I remember his Tune-up Masters ads from when I was a kid. Now I know the rest of the story.

  • @1WillyK
    @1WillyK 3 года назад +1

    As a kid I always loved Andy Granatelli. Now you need to do an episode of his most famous driver. Mario Andretti. Possibly the greatest race car driver of all time.

  • @williamford9564
    @williamford9564 3 года назад +19

    10:44: When the Granatelli turbine of Joe Leonard died while leading with 9 laps to go in 1968, the winner of the race was Bobby Unser who in 1963 ran for Granatelli in Unser's first Indy 500 ( 7:47:)
    12:04: The STP sponsorship of Richard Petty's car was a groundbreaker in NASCAR history. It was the first major company to sponsor a NASCAR team year round. It put major dollars into an already leading team in the series and shortly after that other teams and companies followed suit. A few years later, NASCAR took off in the racing world.

  • @AmericanConstellation
    @AmericanConstellation 2 года назад +1

    I worked with his CFO, Al Vitale. He gave me so many STP things from those days. Cuff links, Indy 500 pit passes that are metal badges and the coolest thing he gave me was an STP transistor radio that's still mint, never been opened or used. It's still in a box, in a box. And of course, he gave me a ton of STP stickers.

  • @Tmrfe0962
    @Tmrfe0962 3 года назад +39

    Thank you, thank you, thank you. These are all names and events from my youth…and I had STP stickers all over anything I could stick one on. What a nice trip down memory lane.

    • @ajg617
      @ajg617 3 года назад +6

      Yep. On the rear window of everyone of my cars - even snuck one on the back of my dad's Rambler wagon. The racer's edge, Hooker headers, Edelbrock - all wonderful memories of Wednesday night Grudge runs and Sundays at Raceway Park in Englishtown, NJ. Good gosh the quarter mile was fun.

    • @zelphx
      @zelphx 3 года назад +1

      Can still hear the ad: "STP, is the racer's edge!".

  • @haeuptlingaberja4927
    @haeuptlingaberja4927 3 года назад +85

    Wow. I used to know most of Granatelli's story, but I guess I just forgot, not having thought about it much in the past 40 years. And you're certainly right about those STP stickers--they were absolutely everywhere in the 60s and 70s...

    • @johnstevenson9956
      @johnstevenson9956 3 года назад +6

      They were everywhere. Even I had a few before I ever had a car.

    • @grecco_buckliano
      @grecco_buckliano 3 года назад +5

      I used one to patch a rip in my banana seat on my Schwinn Stingray.

    • @marklittle8805
      @marklittle8805 3 года назад +3

      Andy was a master marketer and he really pushed a new era in racing on the business side

    • @mopardoctor9966
      @mopardoctor9966 3 года назад +4

      I had a 1964 Studebaker Daytona Hardtop that had a rust hole in the right rocker panel. I put a STP sticker over the hole and it stayed there for over 15 years.

    • @thomasb1889
      @thomasb1889 3 года назад +3

      Yeah, I need to read his book again. I have been getting back into racing lately by watching Goodwood Revival videos.

  • @ronalddevine9587
    @ronalddevine9587 3 года назад +13

    Never knew about Studebaker's connection to STP. What a shame Studebaker was such a small company. The Avanti was the first pony car, and I believe the most beautiful.

  • @PlanetEarth3141
    @PlanetEarth3141 3 года назад +18

    That video brings back a lot of sweet memories. I don't watch Nascar anymore. It lost the charm of the old days and like most things became more about greed than the colorful people who built it before they were kicked out.

  • @danareynolds1786
    @danareynolds1786 3 года назад +19

    Another interesting figure in motorsports is/was Mickey Thompson. Many of us recall when he and his wife were gunned down while riding their bicycles around their neighborhood. He spent more time in drag racing, but became more known after getting into off-road racing, along with his still existant line of automotive tires.
    Great coverage - as usual - of Andy Granatelli! Thank you!

    • @francisrampen9099
      @francisrampen9099 3 года назад +3

      Mickey Thompson's story is worth telling - for a long time it was thought by many to be a mafia hit. He had created indoor drag racing where the car was slowed by a huge bungee cord. The seats at the end of the track were the prized ones. During one event the bungee broke and killed the spectators at the end. It was thought that they were mob related and brought on the murder. It later turned out that it was a disgruntle business parters. Mickey was truly a genius.

  • @ddawe31635
    @ddawe31635 3 года назад +6

    Golden Age of racing. Legendary time in racing! Grew up knowing those names. THANK YOU! ❤

  • @Ammo08
    @Ammo08 3 года назад +19

    I was so lucky to get stationed in Southern California in the early 70s. I spent my money on beer, pretty ladies, and cars..the rest I just wasted. I got to meet Mr. Granatelli, Don Prudhomme, "Big Daddy" Don Garlits...Tom McEwen, and so many others..what a ride. I bet every weekend there was an auto race of some kind, somewhere in SoCal. I never got to meet Mario Andretti...drats...

  • @johnhege6502
    @johnhege6502 3 года назад +6

    Everyone who has followed racing has heard Granatelli stories. My favorite took place at Bonniville when he invited three journalists to ride with him in his personal stock-appearing Chevrolet Caprice. They thought they were going to lunch, but Granatelli drove to the acceleration lane and picked up speed, eventually passing the timer at over 200 MPH with three passengers in the car and the air conditioning on.

  • @richarderion4611
    @richarderion4611 3 года назад +5

    In 1969 I was in the 8th grade. I had a red nylon windbreaker. With a cloth patch of the STP turbine Indy car sewn on the front. The jacket is long gone. But I still have that patch.

  • @pamelamays4186
    @pamelamays4186 3 года назад +13

    I had no idea that Granatelli had done so much for the sport of race car driving. The STP jingle was one of my favorites when I was a kid.🏎️🏎️🏎️🏎️

  • @grecco_buckliano
    @grecco_buckliano 3 года назад +9

    What a GRABBER of a post. By leaps and bounds my most favorite segment of racing history. I am a firm believer that if USAC had failed to legislate away the turbine powerplant, that today's consumer automotive market would be a very, very different place. Granatelli was poised to change the world in big ways, but petty concerns and jealousies got in the way. After all, a Chinook APU turbine is the size of a bread-box. You could literally carry it under one arm, and it packs a whopping 300 horsepower. Imagine THAT under the hood of your Ford Pinto!

    • @singleproppilot
      @singleproppilot 2 года назад +1

      Turbines are impractical as automobile powerplants for a lot of reasons, not the least of which is cost. The Pratt and Whitney Canada PT6 engine that Granatelli used in his Indy cars is still made today, and if you want to buy one yourself, you’ll have to cough up around $350,000. For that price you’ll get an engine that responds slowly to demands for more power, is prone to overheating if mishandled, and burns twice as much fuel as a piston engine at equivalent power output. Granatelli’s genius was figuring out that all of those downsides were not that much of a problem for an Indy car that simply has to circle a track 200 times to win. That engine will put out 850 horsepower all day long without breaking a sweat as long as you keep feeding it. As I understand it, the bearing that failed and put the car out of the race was one of the parts added by the Granatelli race team to adapt the turbine to an automotive transmission, so it wasn’t the engine’s fault.

    • @grecco_buckliano
      @grecco_buckliano 2 года назад

      @@singleproppilot Interesting! The Chinook APU that I saw was powering a kit helicopter in San Carlos. And he had it detuned to about 150 HP so nothing would break.

    • @singleproppilot
      @singleproppilot 2 года назад

      @@grecco_buckliano Experimental homebuilt aircraft have a huge variety of powerplants, including Volkswagen, Subaru, and Corvair boxer engines, experimental diesels, Mazda Wankel engines, and repurposed turbine APUs. A lot of these are long on cool factor but short on practicality. But when it comes building a homemade aircraft, it’s a labor of love and it’s up to the builder to decide if making it cool and interesting is more important than making it reliable, efficient, and cost effective.

  • @jeffzang6047
    @jeffzang6047 3 года назад +49

    “I was born super charged.”
    This made me smile.

  • @davestarr7112
    @davestarr7112 3 года назад +13

    This was a really great story, I never knew a 10th of the info you researched on the Granatellis. For a future subject, you might like Henry "Smokey" Yunick, a long-time car builder who was known for many extensive and clever ways he "bent" the rules and thus developed many advances in racing. A very neat guy indeed.

  • @goldcountryruss7035
    @goldcountryruss7035 3 года назад +1

    I worked at a local speed shop and had the pleasure of making the exhaust systems for the fleet of Studebakers that set the Bonneville speed records, drove the twin Paxton blown Avanti on the streets of Santa Monica, and installed a small block Ford V8 in the small Mercedes Indy pit bus. Fun times, and Andy was a great tipper too!

  • @joeyager8479
    @joeyager8479 3 года назад +2

    I was a freshman in HS in 1967. Memorial Day was still on May 30 - no school! But the race was red flagged for rain shortly after it started. So it was run on May 31 - a school day. I had a portable radio with an earbud. I listened to most of the race undetected, but got busted with about 10 laps to go. I didn't know who won until I got home from school.

  • @corkycobon1481
    @corkycobon1481 3 года назад +8

    Mr. Granatelli is simply LEGEND! What he was able to do and how he did the numerous things in his life are astounding. I love the 500 and loved to watch just to see Mr. Granatelli whooping it up in the infield or on Pit Row. He gave the 500 flash and flare and some much needed laughter at times. His impact on the 500 and racing in general is incalculable. RIP Andy Granatelli. A true GIANT of the racing world!

  • @claycountybrian5645
    @claycountybrian5645 3 года назад +28

    Greetings from Clay County, Missouri !
    Being a fan of the " Greatest Spectacle of Racing", this is NOT forgotten history with me, but THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU !
    I can remember when I got my first STP sticker ( WELL before I got my first car ) It went on my 3-ring binder in Grade School.
    TA, Lance ! 25 thumbs UP Super Tough Petroleum ! or Granatelli Goop SHOW ME the History, Guy ! PEACE
    Speaking of the 500 ... Floyd Clymer ???

    • @Ferroes
      @Ferroes 3 года назад +3

      He's Minecraft enchantment table

    • @justvisiten
      @justvisiten 3 года назад +4

      In Benton County, Mo my STP sticker also went on my 3-ring binder in the mid 60's.

    • @swampdonkey1567
      @swampdonkey1567 3 года назад +1

      Don't have sticker but from Davises county MO , visited the indy 500 speed way for FFA recently, and kissed the bricks....and the pool of rainwater.

  • @JeffDeWitt
    @JeffDeWitt 3 года назад +2

    Excellent as usual. Most of what I knew about Granatelli was from his Studebaker connection. He set a bunch of records at Bonneville driving Studebakers, and if you ordered a Stude with the high performance (and rare) R3 or R4 engine the engine was shipped from Studebaker to Granatelli's shop where they built it.
    The Avanti pictured was not a Studebaker Avanti, it's an Avanti II, made by the Avanti Motor Corporation after Studebaker closed their South Bend plants.
    The Avanti has quite a story of its own, and is also history that deserves to be remembered.

    • @scottsmith4612
      @scottsmith4612 3 года назад

      I've had two Avantis. Had my '77 Avanti II since '82, and it was restored in 2015. It's fun to park it, walk away, and watch people react when they see it. Older folks get very animated, look inside, talk about it, explain it to friends. This generation has no clue. They tend to walk around it, looking very puzzled, not saying much, and move on.

  • @jpmojo
    @jpmojo 3 года назад +1

    To anyone going to the Indy 500 museum also make time to do the track tour. Truly fun experience … my son and I visited in 2015…we kissed the bricks. Great video (as always ) History Guy !

  • @stevedietrich8936
    @stevedietrich8936 3 года назад +3

    Good Morning and Happy Friday THG

  • @smitty7592
    @smitty7592 3 года назад +7

    Perhaps it is beyond the scope of this story, but many remember Andy Granatelli's Tuneup Masters, which according to Wikipedia, he bought for $300k and sold 10 years later for $60M. Who can forget those commercials? He did have an untouchable charisma. Nice to know his history beyond that. I was not aware of much of it. Thanks.

  • @stevedietrich8936
    @stevedietrich8936 3 года назад +4

    I have to go to that Speedway museum at some point. That would be cool to see some of the old cars and components.

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  3 года назад +1

      It is a fantastic museum run by legit good people. We have loved working with IMS.

  • @constipatedinsincity4424
    @constipatedinsincity4424 3 года назад +11

    Hey History Guy 👋, I had a dream about you. You invited me over for Thanksgiving dinner and you said that you were bringing back the Whig party 🥳!So I left and returned with an Eva Gabor wig .Her Lisa Douglas holiday wig . The gravy and stuffing was scrumptious!

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  3 года назад +2

      LOL

    • @PlanetEarth3141
      @PlanetEarth3141 3 года назад +3

      That's a great comment. The fact THG thinks so proves it. I do comments like that sometimes and they aren't that easy to create.

    • @constipatedinsincity4424
      @constipatedinsincity4424 3 года назад +1

      @@PlanetEarth3141 Because I really did have that dream! 🤞

    • @PlanetEarth3141
      @PlanetEarth3141 3 года назад

      @@constipatedinsincity4424 next time you dream about having diner with THG bring me along. I hear he makes a great cake and ice cream dessert. 🍪

  • @tap0019
    @tap0019 3 года назад

    Racers today owe so much to pioneers like Andy Granatelli! RIP!

  • @cliffordmoquin3305
    @cliffordmoquin3305 3 года назад +9

    I've got a small STP sticker on my Matchbox carry case from 1968 on display, and I'm looking at it now. Thanks THG. And yes, Matchbox not Hot Wheels!

    • @craigbosko2229
      @craigbosko2229 3 года назад

      What's wrong with HOT WHEEL'S, I still have my original hot wheels from the 1960's along with a original case,and none of them are made in china.One of my true collection cars is the, SCHOOL BUS,THE RABBIT (from the show,Hot Wheels that would show every Saturday morning) DEXTER DEMONS, THE VW BUS with 2 SURF BOARDS AND MANY MORE.ALL OF THEM HAVE RED STRIP'S ON THE TIRE'S.

  • @AveryMilieu
    @AveryMilieu 3 года назад +1

    Moved to Southwestern Michigan from Canton, Ohio in 1959. My father liked cars and driving them. He joined a Rally group that would give directions from point A to point B and set the timer... The rally would run over back roads and the directions were not "Turn left on Whatsit Lane" but rather, "Third lane west of the white roofed barn, turn away from the house..." I rode in the back seat looking at the scenery and listening to my parents discuss the directions. I don't remember that we ever got lost. As a kid I toured the Ford Factory in Detroit, visited the Ford Rotunda, Greenfield Village and Henry Ford Museum.
    I went to to stock car races in Detroit, on occasion. The name Andy Granatelli and other racers were common.
    Thanks for the memories.
    Ah. You want suggestions? Colleen Moore's Dollhouse at the Museum of Science and Industry. Was in the basement, not far from the submarine exhibit entrance (German U boat?) and the coal mine walk through entrance. I always walked by those displays. The Doll House always drew me like a magnet. It has a History, was taken on tour to raise money for charity during the depression.

  • @geezer4962
    @geezer4962 10 месяцев назад +1

    I do not remember seeing this in the 2 tears since, just want to say thanks for showing it, awesome racing history.

  • @geoffreytudor5674
    @geoffreytudor5674 3 года назад +1

    Well done. A very nice tribute to "Mr. 500".

  • @tejastiger61
    @tejastiger61 Год назад

    Dear Uncle Lance, One million thank you's for this long awaited episode of one of my personal heroes, the GREAT Andy Granatelli ... Mr 500 & Mr STP. A 100% true American made hero, inventor, showman.
    Mr 500 made growing up in the 1960's marvelous ... I had a friend who's family owned AUTO supply emporiums, and that kept me supplied with all kinds of STP stickers and advertising memorabilia.
    I would like to recommend to everyone who is interested in the incredible US history in regards to auto racing read the book Mr 500, Holy Smokes what a life this self made man lived, simply fascinating.
    Thanks again for one more fantastic episode. Andy Granatelli life and incredible accomplishments is without a doubt, HISTORY that Deserves to be REMEMBERED ...
    Best wishes and kindest regards, C.D.

  • @janschetters7720
    @janschetters7720 3 года назад +3

    luckily, I found, your great site.

  • @dbphillips1978
    @dbphillips1978 3 года назад +2

    I live 5 miles west of the Indianapolis motor speedway. I have enjoyed attending races since I was a kid. Probably been to more than 20 races. Me and my wife now attend every year for the last 5. It's a magical place that gives me goose bumps during the opening ceremonies. I miss Jim Neighbors singing, back home again.

  • @zenjoe5226
    @zenjoe5226 3 года назад +1

    His book was a good read from my early days. Thank you.

  • @davidparker8221
    @davidparker8221 3 года назад +1

    Another special item about the '69 Indy 500 race is that the right rear tire nut jammed and had to last the entire race in order for that car to win. In general, I've loved every THG video I've watched. If I may suggest another motor sports legend to cover, Daniel Sexton Gurney.

    • @mmack647
      @mmack647 3 года назад +1

      Agreed on Dan Gurney. A driver who won in:
      - Formula One
      - Indy Car
      - NASCAR
      - Sports Cars (He was AJ Foyt's teammate when they won the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1967, the year after the race depicted in "Ford vs. Ferrari")
      - He got Ford Motor Company and Colin Chapman together to revolutionize Indy Car racing by building the first winning rear-engined Indy Cars
      - Founded All American Racers and built and raced his own cars in Indy Car and F1
      - Won an F1 race in a car he helped design and build
      - As noted, tying two threads together, his first Indy 500 win was as a car builder. In 1968 Bobby Unser drove an AAR Eagle to victory over the STP Turbines
      - His second Indy 500 win was as a car builder. In 1973 Gordon Johncock won the race in an AAR Eagle sponsored by . . . . Andy Granatelli and STP
      - In 1973 his cars were so good 2/3rds of the Indy 500 starting field were AAR Eagles
      - His third Indy 500 win was his only as a car owner and builder. Bobby Unser was his driver in the rain shortened 1975 race
      - Built a stock-block Chevrolet V8 powered Eagle Indy Car that sat on the front row of the 1981 Indy 500, went last to first for AARs last IndyCar win at Milwaukee later that year, almost won at Watkins Glen, and was so good it was almost banned.
      - Brought Toyota into IMSA and IndyCar racing

  • @hoosierplowboy5299
    @hoosierplowboy5299 3 года назад +1

    Oh, HG, the memories kept flooding back...I was familiar with AG, but learned a ton more about him from your presentation. He was the PT Barnum of motor racing... thank you!!!

  • @johnnyreno7200
    @johnnyreno7200 3 года назад +2

    Awesome...fulfilling a childhood dream...at 55 I finally went to the 2016 Indy 500...it was great fun...Mario Andretti will always be my favorite driver of all time...his autographed photo hangs on my wall...Go Andy!

    • @ronfullerton3162
      @ronfullerton3162 3 года назад +1

      Mario was an excellent spokesman for motorsports. I think he could appeal to almost anyone.

  • @Tool-Meister
    @Tool-Meister 3 года назад +1

    I only attended the Indie 500 once. As a guest of one of the Scandia racing team it far exceeded “Memorable”! Andy was there and I shook his hand. My first experience with STP was at age 12, at the STP booth at the Western Stock Show. The STP guys were demonstrating the screw driver stunt. I watch everyone, including my father and uncle fail. They both had grips of steel one being a truck driver before power steering was popular in large diesel semis and the other a life-long farmer. I noticed the harder people squeezed, the quicker they failed. Also I noticed the additive was somewhat tacky. I picked up the screwdriver as gentler as possible and it held. Everyone one was amazed. As requested, I repeated the demo. I related this story to Andy. He immediately asked if I wanted to go to work for him. After a long conversation, we decided he couldn’t afford me, my being a successful computer salesperson. However, the offer was MIGHTY seductive!

  • @N-Scale
    @N-Scale 3 года назад +4

    Thank You for showcasing Andy. He was a true hero to those of us who grew up with cars in our heads in the 60's and 70's

  • @craigsmith8217
    @craigsmith8217 3 года назад +11

    If you haven't read his book, you've missed a lot of laughs and insights. Even my wife loved it.

  • @dryfesands1367
    @dryfesands1367 3 года назад +22

    Fantastic video regarding a much overlooked figure.
    I'd love to see you cover Jimmy Clark and Tazio Nuvolari's careers in one your videos. Those guys were immense.

  • @markgivens3225
    @markgivens3225 3 года назад +1

    Fortunate enough to attend qualification weekends in early 1970’s. Got a Granatelli autograph and photo as treasured memory

  • @deaconblue949
    @deaconblue949 3 года назад +1

    I know that it's short notice but the music venue gambling house in Montreux Switzerland burned fifty years ago on December 4 1971 and was the subject of the huge Deep Purple song Smoke on the Water. Very interesting story to tell there...

  • @larrybomber83
    @larrybomber83 3 года назад

    Andy was a good man. He was tough, but he was fair. Thank You.

  • @orbyfan
    @orbyfan 3 года назад +3

    This is a good companion piece to your previous items on the Indianapolis Speedway.

  • @phillipflannigan4021
    @phillipflannigan4021 3 года назад +1

    You did a wonderful tribute to Andy!👍

  • @tgmccoy1556
    @tgmccoy1556 3 года назад +2

    Andy Granatelli was one of my favorites Used STP in my VW Bugs. Both went to over 120,000 on the original engines.
    (except for #3cylinders. New Oilcooler towers helped..)

  • @buttercupandnorrie
    @buttercupandnorrie 6 месяцев назад +1

    Really a fantastic report about the Granatelli empire. Well done

  • @mudduck754
    @mudduck754 3 года назад +5

    The STP sticker is the only thing that keeps my old '75 Chevy C-20 running.

  • @UrMomsChauffer
    @UrMomsChauffer 3 года назад +1

    Not sure how I missed this one when it released. I especially love when you do videos on cars or racing related things. Andy was the man. I had STP stickers on everything growing up, and his cars were the inspiration for my Pinewood Derby car.

  • @themanthemyththebanger
    @themanthemyththebanger 3 года назад +32

    I had the sometime pleasure of working at a small weekly newspaper where the sportswriter, semi-retired from a life of full-time work at midsize dailies in the Carolinas, often regaled us with stories of covering NASCAR in its '70s and '80s heyday.
    He got to know a few of the drivers and still called a few once or twice a year to check on them. He was particularly close with Cale Yarborough.
    He once told us he overheard someone ask a Petty team member, "What does STP stand for, anyway?"
    The answer: "Shit, That's Profit."
    This story shared with my apologies. And laughs! 😄

    • @thomasb1889
      @thomasb1889 3 года назад +1

      My opinion for what it is worth is that NASCAR going to tube framed cars that all have identical bodywork is where they jumped the shark. I loved watching the pre-tube framed cars doing 190 MPH drifts on the high banks.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 3 года назад +1

      When I was a kid in the 70's the joke was that STP stood for "Shitty Toilet Paper.

    • @Turbodog1000
      @Turbodog1000 3 года назад +1

      @@dukecraig2402 My father was a mechanic, he always joked that STP stood for "Stop That Pounding". He always added it to his own cars, and many customers cars too.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 3 года назад +1

      @@Turbodog1000
      That's great, I'm gonna have to remember that one.

  • @f03105590
    @f03105590 3 года назад +1

    You need to keep on the motorsport stuff. Your motorsport stuff is always so special

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  3 года назад

      The difficulty is in media in the Public Domain. We have been able to do so much with the Indy 500 because we have enjoyed the support of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway museum.

    • @f03105590
      @f03105590 3 года назад

      @@TheHistoryGuyChannel wow, thanks for the reply. I’m the mod for r/LeMans and can point you at some incredible stories in that sphere if it helps?

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  3 года назад +1

      @@f03105590 stories are not as much a problem as photographs. But we are always happy to receive episode suggestions. Suggestions@thehistoryguy.net

  • @douglasb9105
    @douglasb9105 3 года назад +5

    Soldier Field...NOT Soldiers Field. "Deserves to be remembered" .
    Great story about a great man!

  • @robbchastain3036
    @robbchastain3036 3 года назад

    Thanks for this look at Andy Granatelli, History Guy, and wow, his promoting an auto race in a football stadium with nearly 90,000 fans in attendance was truly epic. And it is hard to see in my little thumbnail, but I am wearing red pants with STP Oil Treatment over a white stripe on either side. They were Petty team-issue pants from the '73 season, I think it was, and my Dad, who had been involved full-time in auto racing in '69 and '70, worked with the Pettys when they ran Riverside and Ontario in Southern California for a few seasons in the early '70s. And on a chilly winter day in Frankfurt, West Germany in early '75--we had just moved from California because of my father's construction work--my Dad snapped that photo as I was doing my Evel Knievel thing on my Sting-Ray. And those red pants were the closest I could get to something flashy like Evel. And it was STP so it was cool. And later that year, I won a bicycle road race in Frankfurt, sponsored by the USO and 7-Up for American teens. And for sure, I wore an STP T-shirt.

  • @davevan8864
    @davevan8864 3 года назад

    Good video! Dad was racing director for Valvoline 1960-70 and knew Andy. And as they did not compete, oil vs additive, they became friends. Dad even bought a Studebaker from Andy. The smartest move Andy made, IMHO, was the deal with Petty. WAY more exposure than his Indy ventures. Part of the Petty deal grew out of a 'friendly competition' Andy had with Dad and Valvoline. Thanks

  • @billybodacious2337
    @billybodacious2337 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for this. Hearing the names of these once giants of racing kept a smile on my face. He lived an amazing life and never settled.

  • @rickyusa1000
    @rickyusa1000 3 года назад +1

    Stickers on cars was a big thing in the late '60's and early '70's. STP was the king sticker. Some of the other popular ones were Isky, Edelbrock, Holley, Crane, Crower and, my personal favorite, the heart shaped "I love my HOOKER headers".

  • @hughjass1044
    @hughjass1044 3 года назад

    I actually met Granatelli as a kid in Florida in 1972. I was a big racing fan even then and had heard of him but as a 10 year old, didn't realize how significant he was in the sport.
    It wasn't until years later that I came to understand what a gregarious, larger than life guy he was but also down to earth and unpretentious. On the day I met him, he actually came out of his way to see me because he'd heard I was a race fan but the surprising thing was that the people we were visiting were only vaguely familiar with him through mutual friends.
    I've never forgotten our meeting. I only wish I'd been older at the time and more able to understand how significant it was for a man of his stature to come out of his way to meet some random kid from up north.

  • @johntaylor-lo8qx
    @johntaylor-lo8qx 3 года назад

    I've never heard this name. I love racing, love to learn about everything. Thank you History Guy and Wife 🙏.

  • @kevinbrady6075
    @kevinbrady6075 3 года назад +1

    Wonderful!

  • @hmmmiseeisee
    @hmmmiseeisee 2 года назад

    Thanks!

  • @CwL-1984
    @CwL-1984 3 года назад +1

    Splendid 👍👍

  • @marymoor935
    @marymoor935 3 года назад

    Thank you, in England the Indy 500,was a legendary race track, and if it was ever broadcasting in England, the lounge was full. Such a great man. Give my love to history cat, and thank you for filling in the gaps to my knowledge ❤️❤️🇬🇧

  • @njpaddler
    @njpaddler 3 года назад +3

    Thanks for this, what a brilliant and personable man he was. I am smiling ear-to-ear.

  • @williamevans5782
    @williamevans5782 3 года назад +1

    Another Indy 500 story! Thanks very much. I too had an STP sticker on my grade school binders! I still have a few in my racing momentos. Great Story!

  • @FastSports-ScaleCarGarage
    @FastSports-ScaleCarGarage 3 года назад +3

    Thanks so much, Mr. Granatelli sponsored my hero, Jim Clark's last ride at Indy in 1967. Jim Clark was the reason I wanted to drive a racing car.

    • @Miklos82
      @Miklos82 3 года назад

      Me too. In 1962, I was a 'paper boy' for the Indianapolis Star. My manager said he would take us the the Indy 500 time trials. I had a ball! Paid 3 dollars to have my picture taken with Eddie Sachs. I came home bubbling with excitement and my dad took the family to the 1063 time trials. I walked into the pits and saw the BRG-British Racing Green and yellow Lotus 29 of Jim Clark and knew he had the right stuff or so a 13 year old kid knows. The day Jim Clark was killed in a Formula Two race @ the Hochenhiem Ring was one of the saddest days of my life.

  • @richardfowler3254
    @richardfowler3254 2 года назад

    I remember Andy Granatelli from when I was a kid but I did not know half of what you shared here, Thank You !!!

  • @scotthaskin1509
    @scotthaskin1509 3 года назад +1

    The speedway museum ran a special Granatelli exhibit last fall to this spring showcasing many of his cars and memorabilia. It was great!

  • @davo2003hd
    @davo2003hd 3 года назад

    STP was invented in St. Joseph Mo. in 1953 on a $3000.00. I worked for one of the founders Robert De Hart at "The Wooden Nickel" restaurant he owned in the South end of St. Joe. Always a nice guy. Great Video as always THG!

  • @toddrouch7526
    @toddrouch7526 3 года назад +2

    Awesome video!! My older brother goes to The Indy 500, every year that he can, even takes his daughter, who is also a huge fan. Thank you for another badass lesson in American history. I always wondered what STP stood for.

  • @jerrynewberry2823
    @jerrynewberry2823 3 года назад +4

    I remember the race in 67 with the Turbine Car and it motivated me to go to the USN gas Turbine school. I thought it would be the car of the future since it would run on anything flammable you could put thru a fuel line. Gasoline to powdered coal to soybean oil. Unfortunately, the engine would be a tad expensive, and would outlast the body by 4-5 times. I figured they would just sell you another body. Those were great days!

  • @loqutus8
    @loqutus8 3 года назад +1

    I am from Indianapolis. One of my sisters still lives in Speedway. My Grandfather ran a radiator repair shop back when the Indy cars still used them and a few in the Speedway museum have been handled by him. Thank you for this story of a very important man my Grandfather never told me about. I continue to learn from you with each and every new video.

    • @ramblerdave1339
      @ramblerdave1339 3 года назад

      Indy cars still use radiators, they're just not out front, but in the side pods.

  • @bloqk16
    @bloqk16 5 месяцев назад +1

    STP was a phenomenal oil additive back in the 1960s, as engine lubricants back then weren't at a quality level to be found today.
    I used it for many years with a 1967 VW Beetle I had, as those air-cooled flat-four engines ran hot, which had a tendency to thin-out the engine oil.
    Between the regular oil changes I made and using STP Oil Treatment, that engine ran fine, with no oil burning, for over 100K miles.
    Finally had to scrap the vehicle due to mounting issues with a rusted chassis.

  • @GeographRick
    @GeographRick Год назад

    I have lived near the Speedway for 40 years. There are so many interesting personalities associated with the race.

  • @andyharman3022
    @andyharman3022 2 года назад +1

    I read Granatelli's autobiography twice when I was young.
    I was going to mention the land speed record run at Bonneville in the 1980's, but History Guy got that into the video. I still have that issue of AutoWeek magazine.

  • @fredderf3152
    @fredderf3152 3 года назад

    I grew up in Indianapolis and now live 20 miles north. Andy Granatelli was a household word and many were so disappointed that the turbine car failed. Funny that the turbine engine dominated racing boats which originated from Madison, Indiana (Thunder on the Ohio)but never evolved into the four wheel rubber to the road racing. I recommend to everyone to visit the Indianapolis 500 race track anytime during the year and enjoy the wonderful museum which is extremely awesome.

  • @philmanson2991
    @philmanson2991 3 года назад

    I saw the STP turbines in '67 and '68. My dad and I used to go over for the time trials, and you could walk right through the garages up and down Gasoline Alley; Clark, Hill, Foyt, Ruby, Hurtubise, Andretti, Parnelli, Unsers...magic era!

  • @AlbuquerqueImaging
    @AlbuquerqueImaging 3 года назад +1

    ford 289!! a significant contribution to my life!

  • @vincegiaccone4411
    @vincegiaccone4411 3 года назад

    Thank You Mr. Granatelli for your efforts in racing. Rest in Peace Sir.

  • @equipmentmanagementservice2310
    @equipmentmanagementservice2310 3 года назад

    Very good one. I've been a Granatelli fan for many years. This is one of stories I wish would've ran 30 minutes or an hour.

  • @gr5535
    @gr5535 3 года назад

    Thanks for the memories 🏁

  • @guywerry6614
    @guywerry6614 3 года назад +1

    I read his book years ago and found it just wonderful.

  • @constipatedinsincity4424
    @constipatedinsincity4424 3 года назад +6

    My mother and father used to say slow down Parnelli Jones! My Misspent Youth!

  • @otpyrcralphpierre1742
    @otpyrcralphpierre1742 3 года назад +1

    My Dad worked for Copolymer Rubber and Chemical Corporation in Addis, Louisiana. They made the base product for STP. I miss my Dad.

  • @co1950
    @co1950 3 года назад

    I remember going into the local gas station and getting stickers for my school books. Think I might still have some stashed away somewhere. Good memories. Thanks

  • @briantaylor9285
    @briantaylor9285 3 года назад

    Nice. RIP Andy Granatelli.

  • @greggwoods7173
    @greggwoods7173 3 года назад +1

    Great episode! Oh boy that STP sticker. Brings back memories of the old jobber parts stores back in the day!

  • @vandercecil9449
    @vandercecil9449 2 года назад

    Thanks, Mr Geiger! Never understoood until watchin this why thw Indianapolia race was such a big deal...

  • @Spacecarboy
    @Spacecarboy 3 года назад

    Outstanding Biography!

  • @mobucks555
    @mobucks555 3 года назад

    What a fantastic episode.

  • @catjudo1
    @catjudo1 3 года назад +1

    An interesting side note to STP is that when a band once called Mighty Joe Young were forced to change their name (as there was another band already using that name), the band members drew inspiration from the ubiquitous STP stickers that adorned their things in their youths. They tried words that fit the letters STP and ultimately ended up with Stone Temple Pilots.
    Great episode there. The Petty STP paint schemes in NASCAR were absolutely iconic. I still think the Petty car looks funny in other colors. Wasn't there a Petty fielded Indy car that also used those iconic colors or am I remembering some automotive fever dream?