1962 Jim Rathmann's Simoniz Vista Special Watson Roadster via Smokey Yunick (pilot in WW2 among other things)
Notice the perspex end plates.
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“We also [tried] a wing over [the] driver. Yup. I had the first winged car at Indy,” Yunick wrote. “Bruce Crower’s from San Diego and he’s got some buddies from consolidated in airplane manufacturing who built the wing for us. The wing has way too much camber in it; straightaway and turn speed is identical, but [the] engine is laboring all the way around and driver don’t want to play with it. ’Course when we put wing on, all the media runs over and attacks it in their contributions daily to racing fans.”
It would take until 1968 for Formula 1 to allow its constructors to follow Yunick’s lead by adopting front- and rear-mounted wings, and as tempted as he might have been to return in 1963 with more wing designs to try, the option was removed.
“The wing had potential,” he wrote. “Why didn’t I try in subsequent years? It was banned shortly after.”
By 1969, USAC changed its stance on wings, allowing polesitter A.J. Foyt and the entire front row for the 53rd Indy 500 to harness the power of air to improve cornering speeds. From Parnelli Jones’s wingless pole speed of 150.6 mph in 1962, to Foyt’s wing-aided 170.6 mph in 1969, to Scott Dixon’s 226.760 mph pole last year using Chevy’s aero kit, the evolution of wings at the Brickyard has an unlikely author.