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Ed "Steady Eddie" Flemke was active as an American race car driver and builder from 1948 until his death in 1984. Although best known as a driver, he also built many race cars for himself and others, was a technical innovator, and was renowned as a mentor to his competitors.
Legends car based on Ford coupé 1934 U.S. Legends 2016 Dirt Nationals at 141 Speedway Racing on Beaver Dam Raceway dirt track. Legends car racing is a style of auto racing designed primarily to promote exciting racing and to keep costs down (as of 2022, a brand-new Legends car could be purchased in the USA for $17,500 USD [1]).
Bandolero cars were introduced by US Legends Cars (formerly 600 Racing, Inc.), the makers of legends cars, in 1997 to be a series of entry-level cars. [1] The Bandolero car is a turnkey, spec-series racer designed for drivers as young as eight years old. [2] The term bandolero is Spanish for 'bandit', 'outlaw', or 'thief'.
US Legend spec racers look like they drove out of the Cars franchise, but they’re real race cars that put the emphasis on the driver.
For 1993 a Legends racing series on road courses was introduced in the United Kingdom. For 1998 a new car was introduced, the Bandolero model. The car was fitted with a 570cc Briggs & Stratton Vanguard Model 35 engine. In 2011 a new car was launched, the Dirt Modified. The car is similar to a regular Legends racing car. However a slightly ...
Before racing in the Grand National series, he raced modified stock cars in the northeast. He was one of the first to transition from the modified series to the early Grand National Series. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] He was the NASCAR National Late Model Sportsman champion (later Xfinity Series ) for three consecutive years from 1969 to 1971.
"Fireball" Roberts' 1957 NASCAR Ford Roberts' 1962 Daytona 500 winning car. He attended the University of Florida and raced on dirt tracks on weekends. In 1947, at the age of 18, he raced on the Daytona Beach Road Course at Daytona, for the first time.
In all, his drivers won 132 races, which is fifth to Petty Enterprises, Hendrick Motorsports, Joe Gibbs Racing and Roush Fenway Racing on the all-time list. His drivers won six Winston Cup Championships — three with Yarborough (1976–1978) and Waltrip (1981–82, 1985). Junior Johnson, Darrell Waltrip, Car No. 11, Nashville 420, July 16, 1983