| Denny
Stevison's Scoville 510 Denny's 1969 510 was built by Jack Scoville, a
Nissan dealer in Oregon (and 1969 SCCA National Champ in a 2.0 liter Datsun roadster). The
intent was to race in the 2.5 Trans Am series in the early '70's.
The Trans Am series was dropped before the car was ready. The car was raced for a
number of years by both Jack and son Jeff in SCCA's B sedan class (top photo). When Jeff
got a 200SX from Nissan it was sold to Sterling Kelly in Columbia, MO. Kelly raced
the car for 3 or 4 seasons (second photo from top) then sold it to a group of 510 racers
in St Louis, MO.
The car was one car of a five 510 stable. Eventually it became a donor to a tube frame
510, when it surrendered all of the fiber glass panels and most of the high quality drive
train parts.
Denny picked up the car as a total basket case in 1990 and began a total restoration.
The car was media blasted inside, outside, and underside. It was then sent to the frame
shop to get the front unibody pulled back to square. The left front corner of the frame
was pushed back .75" and up nearly an inch. When the frame guy was done it came out
within 2mm of specs. It had a new radiator support installed during this work.
The rear sheet metal was totally trashed. It took a couple of months to find a left
rear quarter and a rear tail panel. The right quarter was not available anywhere, so Denny
combined pieces from a four-door and a two door to create the panel.
The restored beauty now lives in Eau Claire, WI. Denny plans to race it in Midwestern
Coucnil and SCCA Central Division events.
Eric Peterson's Canadian 510
Like Denny's car, Eric's 1969 510 has spent its entire life as a road racer -- neither
was ever licensed for the street.
Eric's car was bult in Canada and carries a Canadian racing association registration
number. Details about its early years are a little sketchy, but Thunder bay, Ontario,
racer Scotty Bell ran it for over a decade until he retired from racing at the age of 70 a
couple of years ago.
Eric bought the car from Scotty and has conducted an extensive chassis, engine and
transmission rehab. He will campaign it this summer in Council and SCCA events with his
current 1800 cc motor. An FIA two liter is in the works. |