by Tom Carnegie
Perhaps one of the most contentious issues of the Montana 500 is teardowns. I talked to Ray Habel who came in second in 1961, which was when the first run was held. He says that they tore his car down and also the first place car of Evan Lingle. At that time there was significant prize money given, so teardowns were considered essential. Throughout the years teardowns were continued even as the prize money diminished. Rick Carnegie was present in 1971 when they tore down Norm Eberhardt's car. Rick tells the story of the teardown taking place on a sandlot baseball diamond. Apparently they tore Norm's rearend apart right in the sand on home plate. My first experience with a teardown was in 1977. The top three cars drove to someone's place with a big garage. The three top cars were then torn down by the owners of said cars. The inspectors, of which there were five, checked the motors, including removed pistons, manifolds and valves. They also checked the flywheel with mirrors and the rearend ratio by cranking the car by hand in gear. After a meeting the three cars were declared legal and the owners reassembled them with gaskets supplied by the club. At that time the five inspectors had the final say on whether a car was disqualified or not. There were times though when the inspectors would turn the vote over to the drivers. In is not clear by reading the rules of the times how the inspectors were chosen. As a driver I don't remember ever voting for inspectors, so they must have been picked by someone. In 1986 the teardown became optional. Ray Habel won that year and was not torn down. To Ray it was ironic that he was torn down several times when he came in second but not when he won.