

The Horn Offenhauser Sprint car, named “Baby,” from Andretti’s first Sprint car race.A 1994 Lola T9400 from his “Arrivederci Mario” farewell season.1967 Dean Van Lines Brawner Hawk II Indy 500 pole-winner.The 1974 Vel’s Parnelli Jones team Formula One car.The John Player Special Lotus Type 79-4, from the 1978 Formula One World Championship run.A sampling of this can’t-miss exhibit includes: The featured exhibits of “Mario Andretti: ICON,” are a full representation of the Nazareth, Pennsylvania, resident’s diverse career. “Mario Andretti: ICON,” presented by Shell V-Power NiTRO+, will bring together many of the most significant cars in Andretti’s career at the IMS Museum – cars which also represent significant milestones in motorsports history given Andretti’s accomplishments. Andretti led 116 laps and delivered a popular, long-awaited victory for colorful car owner Andy Granatelli, despite having to race in a backup car, battling race-long engine overheating issues and being forced to run all 500 miles on the same right-rear Firestone tire. The exhibit is part of a comprehensive 50th anniversary celebration of Andretti’s victory at the Indianapolis 500. Watch the new adventure travel series - Beyond the UsualThe Indianapolis Motor Speedway Museum will honor 1969 Indianapolis 500 winner Mario Andretti and his illustrious racing career with the exhibit, “Mario Andretti: ICON,” presented by Shell V-Power NiTRO+, opening to the public Wednesday, May 1.

Please "like", subscribe and comment below. We had the rare experience of doing the Ind圜ar racing experience at Indianapolis Motor Speedway with Mario Andretti, the fastest driver on the planet, taking us 140 mph!Īll of this right before the 100th running of the Indy 500. If you're on mobile, just move your phone around and the video will react you can also use your finger to move the scene.įor Virtual Reality users using a Google Cardboard, Freefly, or similar device, simply click the Cardboard icon on the YouTube app before putting your phone in the viewer. Simply mouse-click and drag within the video to look around the world. Video quality settings can be adjusted clicking the settings button (gear icon) on the video player and then selecting "quality" and then 1080s. ***Important, please read first! 360° video is best viewed at a minimum of 1080p resolution, so please adjust your YouTube video quality settings prior to viewing.
