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The Legacy Of Duffy Livingstone

Racing By His Own Rules
By Dick Martin
Photography by Dick Martin, Duffy Livingstone Collection, Steve Shaw
Duffy Livingstone Examiner Grand Prix
That's Dan Gurney driving... 
   
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Duffy Livingstone Examiner Grand Prix
That's Dan Gurney driving Frank Arciero's 4.9L V-12 Ferrari behind Duffy at the Examiner Grand Prix Pomona February 1, 1959.
Duffy Livingstone The Gang
That's Duffy (front and center)... 
   
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Duffy Livingstone The Gang
That's Duffy (front and center) at the Pasadena Rose Bowl in 1938. Gordon Babb (R) owned Ace Model Shop in Pasadena where the first tether cars were created and Duffy worked. Popular Science Magazine shot this photo for a story on the gasoline-powered model cars. Babb began making special tires for the racers because the model airplane tires would rip to shreds.
Duffy Livingstone Wooden Model
This beautiful 9-inch wooden... 
   
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Duffy Livingstone Wooden Model
This beautiful 9-inch wooden model was built by Duffy in 1938. The hood was aluminum and the Offenhauser engine was made from a tin can. Note the nose and grille that Duffy crafted long before the Kurtis midget noses were fashioned after the War. In 1944, Frank Kurtis designed a pedal car for his 11-year-old son with a grille almost identical to the one Duffy had created in '38. "It was pretty scale," says Duff. "I made seventy-five cents a week working at the model shop while going to school."
Duffy Livingstone 32 Roadster
"I bought the `32 in 1945... 
   
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Duffy Livingstone 32 Roadster
"I bought the `32 in 1945 for $400 from Dave Mitchell," says Duffy. "It had a Ford Flathead V8 in it when I got it that got at least 25 miles to a gallon. I filled the tank, drove it to San Diego, and drove it back home to Pasadena and later when I checked the tank it had at least two inches of fuel left in it. I pulled the Flathead Ford engine and put a box-stock Merc engine in it that I got out of the crate. Then I put a Cad in it."
Duffy Livingstone Engine
Duffy stuffed a 346 cubic... 
   
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Duffy Livingstone Engine
Duffy stuffed a 346 cubic inch `37 Cad engine and transmission in his Deuce. It had two big four-barrel Stromberg carburetors. What are the odds that at the same meet, S.C.T.A. President Ak Miller was also running a 1937 Cadillac V-8 with a speed listed at 120.16. You Ol' Yeller fans may be surprised to learn that Max Balchowsky, another road racer, also had a `32 Ford roadster with a flathead Cadillac before he went Buick Nailhead power in his Deuce. There obviously was something about the engine.
Duffy Livingstone Channel Body
"I channeled it... Z'ed the... 
   
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Duffy Livingstone Channel Body
"I channeled it... Z'ed the frame," commented Duffy on his `32 with the Packard taillights. "I did some things to that car I'd never seen before or since. When you channel a body, you drop it down to the bottom of the frame; there is a gap on the top between the body and the framerail. I widened the top framerail to come out and touch the body and I boxed it all in. I built a set of hang-down pedals for the `32 from scratch. This was before anyone ever thought of doing something like that."
Duffy Livingstone Constant Flow Carburetion
Before the Chevy was dropped... 
   
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Duffy Livingstone Constant Flow Carburetion
Before the Chevy was dropped in, the Eliminator ran a Flathead: "I was running out of fuel on the top end. It ran beautifully going straight, but when I turned right the force would overcome the flow of fuel coming out of the carburetors and they would load up. Going left it ran fine so I tried building my own constant flow carburetion."Duffy took the float bowls and floats out, put an outlet on the other side of the carb and ran four lines to carry the overflow to the catch tank on the framerail. Duff installed an electric pump hooked to the catch tank, pumping the fuel back to the gas tank. "I didn't know what I was doing anyway," he admits.

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