notice the writing on the photo, especially that on the upper left hand corner
Haugdahl had built the car to prove to the USAC that he was a great race car driver and that he could outpace anyone. The heart of the Special was an enormous 836 cubic-inch 6 cylinder Wisconsin airplane engine, 13.7 liters, connected directly to the rear axle. The width of the car measuring a mere 20 inches was basically the width of the engine.
Notice that the publicity photo has no discs streamlining the back wheels, but when photographed on the course, the discs are in place
April 7, 1922, Sig Haugdahl drove the Wisconsin Special over 180mph on a one-way run at the Daytona Beach racing oval
very rare to have wire wheels in 1922, they go back to 1908 at least, but very uncommon
He ran it on Daytona beach, and beat the previous record by 24 mph. The previous might have been that of the Mephistople, or the Blitzen Benz.
found on http://silodrome.com/sig-haugdahl-wisconsin-special/
http://www.conceptcarz.com/vehicle/z15201/Wisconsin-Special.aspx
Haugdahl had built the car to prove to the USAC that he was a great race car driver and that he could outpace anyone. The heart of the Special was an enormous 836 cubic-inch 6 cylinder Wisconsin airplane engine, 13.7 liters, connected directly to the rear axle. The width of the car measuring a mere 20 inches was basically the width of the engine.
Notice that the publicity photo has no discs streamlining the back wheels, but when photographed on the course, the discs are in place
April 7, 1922, Sig Haugdahl drove the Wisconsin Special over 180mph on a one-way run at the Daytona Beach racing oval
very rare to have wire wheels in 1922, they go back to 1908 at least, but very uncommon
He ran it on Daytona beach, and beat the previous record by 24 mph. The previous might have been that of the Mephistople, or the Blitzen Benz.
found on http://silodrome.com/sig-haugdahl-wisconsin-special/
http://www.conceptcarz.com/vehicle/z15201/Wisconsin-Special.aspx
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