
24 West Street, Building # 4 - Middlefield, Connecticut 06455 - 860-349-4570
Classic & Muscle Car Repair, Service, and Show Quality Restoration
Ray R. Nichels
Nichels Engineering
In 1938, at the age of 15, Ray Nichels, went on the road as a midget car crew
chief, racing at tracks across America. From 1938-1948, the drivers of the Ray
Nichels prepared midgets (campaigned by his father Rudy Nichels) were Ted
Duncan, Tony Bettenhausen, Johnnie Parsons, Paul Russo, Mike O'Halloran, and Ray
Richards (All members of the Midget Racing Hall of Fame.)
Following his time midget racing, Nichels moved on to Indy cars and eventually
participated in 12 Indianapolis 500 races, as a chief mechanic and crew chief.
In those twelve 500's, Ray Nichels won one Pole (1957 w/Pat O'Connor), garnered
two top-five finishes (a 3rd and a 5th w/Paul Goldsmith), and five top-ten
finishes. Most notable of his top-ten finishes was the 9th place showing in the
1950 Indianapolis 500 of the Russo-Nichels Special. Paul Russo and Ray Nichels
constructed this car in the basement of Russo's Hammond, Indiana home during the
winter of 1949-1950. Qualifying in the 7th row, the Russo-Nichels Special
captured the imagination of the American racing public by running with the
leaders for much of the day, before the rain-shortened race ended at 345 miles.
The Russo-Nichels Special soon became affectionately known as “Basement Bessie”
as it was campaigned on the AAA Championship Trail during the 1950 season. In
December, Nichels with Johnnie Parsons behind the wheel, won the first ever Indy
car race at the newly built Darlington Raceway. On the season, Ray Nichels and
Paul Russo and their hand-built "basement" creation missed the chance to win the
National Championship only after a season-ending injury to Russo in the November
AAA Indy car race in Phoenix.
Nichels then toiled as chief mechanic for Johnnie Parsons’ entries in the 1953
and 1954 Indy 500 races. In June of 1954, Ray Nichels joined the Firestone Tire
and Rubber Company as its chief mechanic for all race tire testing. In their
first test together, he and driver Sam Hanks teamed up to set a new world's
closed-course speed record of 182.554 mph at Chrysler Corporation's newly built
Chelsea, Michigan proving grounds in a Nichels prepared Chrysler Hemi-powered
Kurtis-Kraft roadster. It would be the first of many world speed records that
Nichels and his cars would set over the next 20 years.
In 1957, Ray Nichels and Indiana-based Nichels Engineering won the pole (w/Banjo
Matthews) and won the race (w/Cotton Owens) at the NASCAR Grand National Beach
Race at Daytona. Two months later, Nichels traveled to Monza, Italy on behalf of
Firestone, and set a series of world speed records on the world's highest-banked
oval with driver Pat O'Connor behind the wheel of the Chrysler Hemi-powered
Kurtis-Kraft roadster. Nichels and O'Connor then returned to the United States
where they won the Pole position for the world's most important race, the
Indianapolis 500. It is believed Ray Nichels remains to be the only mechanic to
ever win the pole at both Daytona and Indianapolis in the same year.
With his 1957 Daytona win, Nichels expanded his stock car racing business
becoming the "house" racecar builder for Pontiac from 1956-1963. Working
directly for Pontiac Gen. Mgr. Semon "Bunkie" Knudsen, Nichels managed Pontiac's
involvement in stock car racing from his operations in Highland, Indiana. By
1961, under Nichels’ guidance, Pontiac dominated American stock car racing.
Nichels Engineering driver, Paul Goldsmith captured the USAC National
Championship with 10 wins, 7 poles and 16 top-five finishes in 19 races. Overall
Pontiac performance in USAC was 14 wins, 10 poles and 38 top-five finishes in 22
races. In NASCAR, overall Pontiac performance was 30 wins in 52 races. In 1962,
Pontiac's dominance under Nichels became even further evident as Nichels and
Goldsmith won their 2nd consecutive USAC National Championship with 8 wins, 6
poles and 15 top-five finishes in 20 races. Overall Pontiac performance in USAC
was 10 wins, 10 poles and 34 top-five finishes in 22 races. Four Nichels
Engineering drivers (Goldsmith, A.J. Foyt, Rodger Ward, and Len Sutton) finished
in the seasons Top Ten. In NASCAR, overall Pontiac performance was 22 wins in 53
races, with Joe Weatherly winning the National Championship driving a Nichels
Engineering built, Bud Moore prepped Pontiac.
In 1961, Nichels Engineering prepared and ran two 1962 Pontiac Catalinas,
setting one lap, 500 mile and 24 hour world stock car speed and endurance
records at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and Darlington Raceway. The Nichels
Engineering driving team consisted of Rodger Ward, Paul Goldsmith, Len Sutton,
Fireball Roberts, Joe Weatherly and Marvin Panch. Nichels mechanics for these
historic speed and endurance runs were Ray Nichels, Dale “Tiny” Worley, Bud
Moore, Cotton Owens and Smokey Yunick.
In 1963, Nichels and driver Paul Goldsmith delivered one of the most lopsided
victories in Daytona Speed Weeks history, in the Challenge Cup 250, when
Goldsmith piloted the Nichels Engineering #50 Super Duty 421 Pontiac LeMans to
victory, beating 2nd place finisher A.J. Foyt by over 5 miles.
Later in 1963, Ray Nichels and Nichels Engineering became the "house" racecar
builder for all of Chrysler Corporation. Nichels role with Chrysler was
identical to his with Pontiac. Working for Ronney Householder, Nichels was
commissioned to build the fastest and safest stock cars in the business,
disseminate racing knowledge and design technology to all Chrysler teams in
support of their collective racing efforts. Working with legendary stock car
racers Cotton Owens, Ray Fox, Harry Hyde, Norm Nelson, and Petty Enterprises,
Nichels Engineering did just that. It is no coincidence that the most prolific
period in Chrysler stock car racing history was 1964-1970. Nichels
Engineering-built stock cars won national stock car championships in USAC,
NASCAR, ARCA and IMCA, several years running, setting speed records at tracks
across America.
Ray Nichels and Nichels Engineering won three (3) National Stock Car
Championships in USAC. Paul Goldsmith and Ray Nichels combined to win titles in
1961 and 1962. Then in 1967, Nichels and all-time winningest USAC Stock car
driver Don White teamed-up for the USAC national championship.
In 13 years of NASCAR competition, Nichels Engineering campaigned cars raced 223
times, garnering 89 top-ten finishes, 62 top-five finishes, 12 Poles and 11
victories. Nichels Engineering was a winner at tracks such as Daytona, Bristol,
Rockingham, Michigan, and Talladega. Nichels also won NASCAR pole positions at
Daytona, Talladega, Charlotte, Rockingham, Darlington, Michigan, and Riverside.
Nichels Engineering was a seven (7) time NASCAR winner at Daytona from
1957-1970. Winning drivers were Cotton Owens, Bobby Isaac, Paul Goldsmith (2),
AJ Foyt, Sam McQuagg and Charlie Glotzbach.
The list of drivers who piloted cars built by and/or campaigned by Ray Nichels
and Nichels Engineering is synonymous with American racing excellence ... they
are Bobby Isaac, A.J. Foyt, David Pearson, Bobby Unser, Al Unser, Roger Penske,
Paul Goldsmith, Rodger Ward, Don White, Tony Bettenhausen, Richard Petty, Dan
Gurney, Junior Johnson, Buddy Baker, Bobby Allison, Gordon Johncock, Pat
O'Connor, Paul Russo, Mario Andretti, LeeRoy Yarbrough, Jim Hurtubise, Fred
Lorenzen, Charlie Glotzbach, Glenn “Fireball” Roberts, Joe Weatherly, Marvin
Panch, Cotton Owens, Banjo Matthews, Sam McQuagg, Joe Leonard, Len Sutton, Darel
Dieringer, Troy Ruttman, Dave Marcis, Richard Brickhouse, Ramo Stott, Ernie
Derr, Jimmy Pardue, James Hylton, Butch Hartman, Roger McCluskey, Bobby Johns,
Ray Elder, Norm Nelson, Lloyd Ruby, Arnie Beswick and Ronnie Sox.
On April 25th, 1996, Ray Nichels was inducted into Mechanics Hall of Fame within
the International Motorsports Hall of Fame located in Talladega, Alabama. On the
same day, Indiana Governor, Evan Bayh, awarded Ray Nichels the “Sagamore of the
Wabash,” the highest distinguished service honor bestowed upon an Indiana
citizen by its governor.
Copyright© 2005 -- Wm. LaDow / LaDow Publishing –
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