Kas Kastner
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Robert W. Kastner (30 August 1928 – 11 April 2021), commonly known as R.W. Kastner or Kas Kastner, was a builder and tuner of racing cars, a racing driver, and an author. He also raced sailing boats competitively. At different times he was Director of Motorsports in the United States for both the
Triumph Motor Company The Triumph Motor Company was a British car and motor manufacturing company in the 19th and 20th centuries. The marque had its origins in 1885 when Siegfried Bettmann of Nuremberg formed S. Bettmann & Co. and started importing bicycles from Eu ...
and
Nissan , trade name, trading as Nissan Motor Corporation and often shortened to Nissan, is a Japanese multinational corporation, multinational Automotive industry, automobile manufacturer headquartered in Nishi-ku, Yokohama, Japan. The company sells ...
. Kastner has been called one of the most influential Americans in the history of Triumph cars. He coined the maxim "Never be beaten by equipment."


Early years

Kastner was born in
Batavia, New York Batavia is a city in and the county seat of Genesee County, New York, United States. It is near the center of the county, surrounded by the Town of Batavia, which is a separate municipality. Batavia's population as of the 2020 census was 15,6 ...
. He graduated High School in 1945, then enlisted in the US Army for a two-year stint, during which he was stationed at Fort Carlson in Colorado. After his discharge he returned to Batavia briefly, where he taught himself to drive in a 1934 Plymouth. He soon returned to Colorado where he earned a living in a variety of jobs, including managing the pool-hall portion of a large bar, where he earned some extra money hustling pool. His next stop was working as a mechanic at a Chevrolet dealership in Delta, Colorado. In 1951 he bought his first sports car, a Crosley Super Sport, on the basis of a road test by
Tom McCahill Thomas Jay McCahill III (1907–1975) was an automotive journalist, born the grandson of a wealthy attorney in Larchmont, New York. McCahill graduated from Yale University with a degree in fine arts. (McCahill's father had been a football all-A ...
in ''
Mechanix Illustrated ''Mechanix Illustrated'' was an American printed magazine that was originally published by Fawcett Publications. Its title was founded in 1928 to compete against the older ''Popular Science'' and ''Popular Mechanics''. Billed as "The How-To-Do Ma ...
''. Kastner then moved to
Salt Lake City, Utah Salt Lake City (often shortened to Salt Lake and abbreviated as SLC) is the Capital (political), capital and List of cities and towns in Utah, most populous city of Utah, United States. It is the county seat, seat of Salt Lake County, Utah, Sal ...
, where he bought an
MG TD The MG T-Type is a series of body-on-frame open two-seater sports cars that were produced by MG from 1936 to 1955. The series included the MG TA, MG TB, MG TC, MG TD, and MG TF Midget models. The last of these models, the TF, was replaced by t ...
in 1952. He acquired a copy of the factory tuning manual for the TD, and with it taught himself how to repair and modify the car. To earn a living he worked as a plater of baby shoes, a credit manager for a Chevrolet dealer and a railroad telegrapher for Union Pacific. He continued to acquire manuals for imported cars and ordered English standard tools from overseas, over time becoming the local expert on foreign cars. After working as the manager of an MG/Jaguar distributor, in 1953 he opened his own automotive repair shop. Seeing
Ken Miles Kenneth Henry Jarvis Miles (1 November 1918 – 17 August 1966) was a British-American sports car racing engineer and driver best known for his motorsport career in the US and with American teams on the international scene. He is an inducte ...
race his R1 MG Special at
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in 1953 inspired Kastner to build his own special. He built his car with an engine and chassis from an MG and bodywork of thick aluminum paneling that was screwed in place to a framework made of welded electrical conduit. This car was eventually followed by another home-built MG Special. His first race was on the streets of
Aspen, Colorado Aspen is a home rule municipality that is the county seat and the most populous municipality of Pitkin County, Colorado, United States. The city population was 7,004 at the 2020 United States Census. Aspen is in a remote area of the Rocky Mounta ...
, where he placed second and won his class. From there he went on to compete in several hill climbs and other events. He first raced a Triumph in 1954 at
Steamboat Springs, Colorado The City of Steamboat Springs is a home rule municipality that is the county seat and the most populous municipality of Routt County, Colorado, United States. Steamboat Springs is the principal city of the Steamboat Springs, CO Micropolitan Sta ...
.


Triumph

In 1956 Kastner moved with his wife and two children to California, where he went to work for Williamson Motors in Los Angeles as a mechanic. Less than 3 months later Kastner was their service manager. While still racing his MG-powered Special, Kastner went to work for Cal Sales, the Triumph distributor for the Western United States, in Gardenia, California as a mechanic. By June 1958 he had risen to the position of service and parts supervisor, where he managed a staff of 70. Kastner continued to race, winning the 1959 Class E Championship with the California Sports Car Club and the SCCA national title. He also served as chief instructor for the California Sports Car Club at Riverside Raceway and as the National Licensing Chairman for the SCCA, as well as winning the SCCA's annual award for Best Technical Article (1963). Kastner developed a reputation for getting more power out of the Triumph engine than anyone else, the factory included. He used well-known methods like porting and polishing ports and milling the heads to increase the compression ratio to as much as 12.6:1. Kastner and
Dean Moon Dean Moon (May 1, 1927 – June 4, 1987) was an American automobile designer. He grew up in Norwalk, California. Moon was around cars and racing from his youth. His father owned "Moon Cafe" and had a go-kart track he called "Moonza", a pun on M ...
collaborated to develop a camshaft profile able to provide with the factory SU carbs. When the Triumph factory questioned Kastner's claimed outputs, he shipped an engine to England, where it developed on Triumph's own dynamometer. The Cal Sales distributorship was purchased by the Triumph parent company in October 1960. Company policy barred any company executive from racing, including Kastner. He stopped racing, but continued building performance parts in his own garage, which he then sold to Cal Sales. He began to write manuals on how to tune and prepare Triumph cars for racing. He also instituted a driver assistance program, providing financial support for successful club racers. In 1963 Kastner took three factory stock TR4s, prepared them, and took them to the
12 Hours of Sebring The 12 Hours of Sebring is an annual motorsport endurance race for sports cars held at Sebring International Raceway, on the site of the former Hendricks Army Airfield World War II air base in Sebring, Florida, US. The event is the second round ...
, where they finished first, second, and fourth in the 2.5 GT class. When Kastner asked to be compensated for the work he did preparing the Sebring cars, the president of Triumph refused. Kastner called
Carroll Shelby Carroll Hall Shelby (January 11, 1923 – May 10, 2012) was an American automotive designer, racing driver, and entrepreneur. Shelby is best known for his involvement with the AC Cobra and Mustang for Ford Motor Company, which he modified duri ...
, who offered him a position and a large increase in pay. Triumph countered Shelby by offering to match the salary if Kastner would stay to establish and run a new US competition department. Kastner opted to stay.
Bob Tullius Robert Charles "Bob" Tullius was born 7 December 1930 in Rochester, New York. He is best known as a race car driver and racing team owner. Early years Tullius considered a career in teaching after graduating from high school. He served a term in ...
was his principal driver. They won the SCCA E-Production title, and after being pushed up to D-Production, won that class twice. Kastner's next project was preparing three TR4s for the 1964 Shell 4000 Rally from Vancouver to Montreal in Canada. The Triumph team won the GT Team prize for the five-day race. Kastner fielded three Spitfires at Sebring in 1965, where they placed 29th and 30th overall with one DNF. The Macau Spitfire was a special lightweight model built by the factory specifically to race in the 1965
Macau Grand Prix The Macau Grand Prix ( pt, Grande Prémio de Macau; ) is a motorsport road race for automobiles and motorcycles held annually in Macau. It is the only street circuit racing event in which both cars and motorcycles participate, and one of onl ...
. The car had an all-aluminum tub, a single seat with a cover over the passenger's area, a head-fairing behind the driver and a Le Mans nose. The original engine was a Le Mans 70X displacing and producing . Power went to the rear through a GT6 transmission. The car finished third in the Grand Prix, after which it was shipped back to Coventry. In 1966 the car was sent to California, where Kastner substituted a 2 L inline six and a TR4 transmission, added a larger radiator and fuel tank and modified the hood with a scoop to clear the longer engine. After racing the car briefly it was sold. Kastner sent four TR4As to Sebring again in 1966, where they placed first, second and third in the 2.5 GT class. In 1966 the SCCA would not homologate the new TR4A. As a concession they would allow it to race in the more competitive D-modified class. Kastner prepared a special "Super Stock" TR4A with fiberglass body panels and alloy wheels that helped reduce total weight to , and added a engine. Special attention was paid to the new independent rear-suspension. The car won the 1966 D-modified National Championship. The year after the team's 1-2-3 finish at Sebring, Kastner took a specially prepared TR4A to the
Bonneville Salt Flats The Bonneville Salt Flats are a densely packed salt pan in Tooele County in northwestern Utah. A remnant of the Pleistocene Lake Bonneville, it is the largest of many salt flats west of the Great Salt Lake. It is public land managed by the Bur ...
. This car received a full-width roll-bar, heavy duty springs, shock absorbers and axles, and a locked differential. The engine was bored out to to increase displacement to , and was brought to the same level of tune as the Sebring cars, producing just over . At the Bonneville Nationals that year the car beat the previous record, but was in turn bettered by a tuned Daimler. The car then appeared at various drag strips in Southern California where it set several track records. Kastner went to Triumph headquarters in Coventry to pitch a project for a new aerodynamic race car to run at Sebring. Reportedly all Kastner took with him was his reputation, a promise of a magazine cover page, and a single rough drawing done by
Pete Brock Peter Brock (born November 1936) is an American automotive and trailer designer, author and photojournalist, who is best known for his work on the Shelby Daytona Cobra Coupe and Corvette Sting Ray. Early life and education Peter Elbert Brock ...
, designer of the
Shelby Daytona The Shelby Daytona Coupe (also referred to as the Shelby Daytona Cobra Coupe) is an American sports-coupé. It is related to the Shelby Cobra roadster, loosely based on its chassis and drive-train developed and built as an advanced evolution. I ...
coupe. Kastner and Brock had been talking about this project for several years prior to Kastner's trip to England. Triumph approved the project, and provided a budget of $25,000. The car, christened the TR-250K, was based on a standard Triumph independent rear suspension chassis, but with a tubular structure added to support the alloy bodywork. Kastner moved the 2.5 L six-cylinder engine back in the chassis. The car used the fuel-injected engine from the TR5 as a base rather than the carburetted TR250 engine. Kastner also mentioned the
Rover V8 The Rover V8 engine is a compact V8 internal combustion engine with aluminium cylinder block and cylinder heads, originally designed by General Motors and later re-designed and produced by Rover in the United Kingdom. It has been used in a wide ...
engine as a possible future power-plant. Other changes were brakes from Airheart and a Corvette aluminum radiator. The aluminum bodywork, just thick, was strikingly sleek, and included a movable rear spoiler to control down-force. The finished car weighted just . Targeted at SCCA C-Production class, the TR-250K was raced at Sebring in 1968 but retired when a rear wheel, which had come from a
Chaparral Chaparral ( ) is a shrubland plant community and geographical feature found primarily in the U.S. state of California, in southern Oregon, and in the northern portion of the Baja California Peninsula in Mexico. It is shaped by a Mediterranean c ...
and had been machined to fit the Triumph hubs, broke and damaged the suspension. Kastner left Triumph in 1970.


After Triumph

Following his departure from Triumph, Kastner formed Kastner-Brophy Inc., and Kastner Brophy Racing with Los Angeles advertising executive and media personality John Brophy. The partners would both race their own cars and prepare cars and consult for other teams. Kastner-Brophy fielded a
Triumph Vitesse The Triumph Vitesse is a compact six-cylinder car built by Standard-Triumph from May 1962 - July 1971. The car was styled by Giovanni Michelotti, and was available in saloon and convertible variants. The Vitesse name was first used by Austin ...
in the Trans-Am series. Nicknamed the "Candybox" by Kastner's then-girlfriend for its bright, garish paint scheme, Kastner added Carillo rods, a lightened crankshaft, a Cline head and Weber carburetors to the 2.0 L
straight-six engine The straight-six engine (also referred to as an inline-six engine; abbreviated I6 or L6) is a piston engine with six cylinders arranged in a straight line along the crankshaft. A straight-six engine has perfect primary and secondary engine bala ...
. Power output was . The car debuted at
Road America Road America is a motorsport road course located near Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin, United States on Wisconsin Highway 67. It has hosted races since the 1950s and currently hosts races in the NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series, WeatherTech SportsCar Champ ...
,
Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin Elkhart Lake is a village in Sheboygan County, Wisconsin, United States, located within the northwestern part of the county within the Town of Rhine. The population was 967 at the 2010 census. It is included in the Sheboygan, Wisconsin Metropolit ...
on 17 July 1971, where it finished in eleventh place and earned a single championship point. Engine failures and tire problems plagued it for the rest of the season. Triumph stopped production of the Vitesse in 1971, and Kastner sold the car in 1973. The Kastner-Brophy stable also included two Triumph TR6s, a Spitfire and a GT6. They also bought a
Lola Lola may refer to: Places * Lolá, a or subdistrict of Panama * Lola Township, Cherokee County, Kansas, United States * Lola Prefecture, Guinea * Lola, Guinea, a town in Lola Prefecture * Lola Island, in the Solomon Islands People * Lola (fo ...
T192, which was first loaned to George Bignotti for the 1971 Questor Grand Prix, where it was driven by
Al Unser Alfred Unser (May 29, 1939 – December 9, 2021) was an American automobile racing driver, the younger brother of fellow racing drivers Jerry and Bobby Unser, and father of Al Unser Jr. He was the second of four men ( A. J. Foyt, himself, Rick ...
. Kastner-Brophy then raced the Lola in the SCCA
Formula Continental Formula Continental is a single seater, open wheel racing class in motorsport. It replaced Formula C as an SCCA racing class. Most Formula Continental's are Formula Ford 2000 (FF2000) models, which is a flat bottomed, steel tube frame open ...
series, with driver Jim Dittemore. Their highest finish was first in the "Seafair 200" at
Pacific Raceways Pacific Raceways is a mixed-use road racing and drag racing facility near Kent, Washington. The race track was constructed in 1959 and opened in 1960. The track was originally named Pacific Raceways, then became known as Seattle International Race ...
in 1971. Kastner merged with Roy Woods Racing in 1973, becoming vice president and general manager. With sponsorship from Carling Black Label beer, Kastner led the team's efforts in Can-Am, Formula 5000 as well as three Indy 500 races. Around this time Kastner took up sailboat racing, winning a National Championship title for 13-foot Cyclone boats and another in the 30-foot keel boats class, in addition to several Fleet and District Championships. Attempts to turn his interest in sailing into viable businesses were unsuccessful. Discussions with friend and early turbocharging expert Hugh MacInnes led Kastner to establish Arkay Incorporated in Hawthorne California. Arkay developed complete kits for aftermarket turbocharger installations for a wide variety of cars and engines. Arkay were also involved in general development and suspension work. NASA used Arkay-supplied parts in their evaluation of turbocharged rotary engines for aircraft use. Through Arkay Kastner was involved in a plan to sell a modified version of the
AC 3000ME The AC 3000ME is a mid-engined sports car originally sold by AC Cars. The two-door coupé debuted at the 1973 London Motor Show. Sales did not begin until 1979 and lasted until 1984. Rights to the 3000ME and tooling were transferred to a second ...
in the United States. One 3000ME chassis was shipped to the Arkay shops, where possible drivetrains, including a Chevrolet V6 and Ford inline-four, were evaluated. Eventually a Buick V6 was installed, but Buick pulled out of the project shortly after. Shelby employee Ray Geddes saw the car in Kastner's shop and got Shelby involved. At the time Shelby was working with Chrysler, for whom Kastner had already done a turbocharged 2.2 L engine. The project was renamed the Shelby ME 2.2 Turbo, but did not reach production. Kastner sold Arkay Incorporated in 1985.


Nissan

In 1986 Kastner was offered the position of National Motorsports Manager for Nissan by Nissan Marketing Director John Borgen. This put him in charge of the off-road truck programs, the amateur racing program, the showroom stock racing programs, and the GTP program. At the time some of Nissan's upper management wanted to terminate the GTP program, which was operated by the Electramotive Team. Kastner hired Ashley Page as team manager and Trevor Harris as team engineer. Kastner and his new GTP staff started making changes. The chassis was redesigned. A different gearbox was selected. Problems with tire supplies were resolved when Goodyear agreed to supply the team. A new all-aluminum engine block was developed by Electramotive. At Kastner's direction Electramotive was bought outright by Nissan, and a new group, Nissan Performance Technology Incorporated (NPTI), was established in Vista California with Kastner as Vice President of Operations. At NPTI Kastner had a team of over 225 working for him. Economic problems later forced Nissan to focus exclusively on their IMSA production efforts. All plans for the subsequent GTP season and all drivers contracts were cancelled. The team was disbanded, and Kastner formally retired from racing. During Kastner's tenure the Team Nissan GTP car won the drivers championship four years in a row, and the Manufacturers Championship three years in a row. In 1988 they won 8 consecutive GTP events.


Personal life

Kastner's first wife died in 1997. He married long-time friend Peggy DeMerritt in November 2000. It was Peggy who encouraged him to get involved in vintage racing. Kastner served as grand marshal at several vintage racing events, including the Kastner Cup, which is awarded to one Triumph competitor each year. In 2016 Kastner received the Harry Webster award for his contributions to the Standard Triumph movement. Kastner was inducted into the British Sports Car Hall of Fame in 2017. Kastner died 11 April 2021, aged 92.


References


Further reading

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External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Kastner, Kas People from Batavia, New York Military personnel from New York (state) Racing drivers from New York (state) 1928 births 2021 deaths