Inspired by the Porsche 356 which was created by Ferry Porsche, and some spyder prototypes built and raced by Walter Glöckler starting in 1951, the factory decided to build a car designed for use in auto racing.[1] The model Porsche 550 Spyder was introduced at the 1953 Paris Auto Show.[2] The 550 was very low to the ground, in order to be efficient for racing. In fact, former German Formula One racer Hans Herrmann drove it under closed railroad crossing gates during the 1954 Mille Miglia
.
Racing history
The first three hand
built prototypes came in a coupé with a removable hardtop. The first
(550-03) raced as a roadster at the Nurburgring Eifel Race in May
1953 winning its first race. Over the next couple of years, the Werks
Porsche team evolved and raced the 550 with outstanding success and
was recognized wherever it appeared. The Werks cars were provided
with differently painted tail fins to aid recognition from the pits.
Hans Herrmann’s particularly famous ‘red-tail’ car No 41 went
from victory to victory. Porsche was the first car manufacturer to
get race sponsorship which was through Fletcher Aviation, who Porsche
was working with to design a light aircraft engine and then later
adding Telefunken and Castrol.
For such a limited
number of 90 prototype and customer builds, the 550 Spyder was always
in a winning position, usually finishing in the top three results in
its class. The beauty of the 550 was that it could be driven to the
track, raced and then driven home, which showed the flexibility of
being both a road and track car. Each Spyder was individually
designed and customised to be raced and although from the pits it was
difficult to identify the sometimes six 550s in the race, the aid of
colouring tail spears along the rear wheel fenders, enabled the teams
to see their cars. The racing Spyders were predominantly silver in
colour, similar to the factory colour of the Mercedes, but there were
other splashes of blue, red, yellow and green in the tail spears
making up the Porsche palette on the circuit.
Each Spyder was
assigned a number for the race and had gumballs positioned on doors,
front and rear, to be seen from any angle. On some 550s owned by
privateers, a crude hand written number scrawled in house paint
usually served the purpose. Cars with high numbers assigned such as
351, raced in the 1000 mile Mille Miglia, where the number
represented the start time of 3.51am. On most occasions, numbers on
each Spyder would change for each race entered, which today helps
identify each 550 by chassis number and driver in period black and
white photos.
The later 1956
evolution version of the model, the 550A, which had a lighter and
more rigid spaceframe chassis, gave Porsche its first overall win in
a major sports car racing event, the 1956 Targa Florio.
Its successor from
1957 onwards, the Porsche 718, commonly known as the RSK was even
more successful. The Spyder variations continued through the early
1960s, the RS 60 and RS 61. A descendant of the Porsche 550 is
generally considered to be the Porsche Boxster S 550 Spyder; the
Spyder name was effectively resurrected with the RS Spyder Le Mans
Prototype.
James Dean's "Little
Bastard"
Perhaps the most
famous of the first 90 Porsche 550's built was James Dean's "Little
Bastard", numbered 130 (VIN 550-0055), which Dean fatally
crashed into Donald Turnupseed's 1950 Ford Custom at the CA Rte.
46/41 Cholame Junction on September 30, 1955.
As Dean was
finishing up Giant’s filming in September, 1955, he suddenly traded
in his 356 Porsche Super Speedster at Competition Motors, for a new
1955 Porsche 550 Spyder on September 21st, and immediately entered
the upcoming Salinas Road Race event scheduled for October 1 and 2.
According to Lee
Raskin, Porsche historian and author of James Dean At Speed, Dean
asked custom car painter and pin striper Dean Jeffries to paint
"Little Bastard" on the car:
"Dean Jeffries,
who had a paint shop next to Barris did the customizing work which
consisted of: painting '130' in black non-permanent paint on the
front hood, doors and rear deck lid. He also painted 'Little Bastard'
in script across the rear cowling. The red leather bucket seats and
red tail stripes were original. The tail stripes were painted by the
Stuttgart factory, which was customary on the Spyders for long
distance endurance racing identification."
Purportedly, James
Dean had been nicknamed "Little Bastard" by Bill Hickman, a
Warner Bros. stunt driver who became friendly with him. (Previous
references to Hickman say he was Dean's dialogue coach on Giant,
though Bob Hinkle, a Texan, was actually Dean's Giant dialogue
coach.) Hickman was part of Dean's group driving to the Salinas Road
Races on September 30, 1955. Hickman says he called Dean, "Little
Bastard", and Dean called Hickman, "Big Bastard."
Another origin story
of the "Little Bastard" monicker has been corroborated by
two of Dean's close friends, Lew Bracker and photographer Phil Stern.
They believe Jack L. Warner of Warner Bros. had once referred to Dean
as a "little bastard" after Dean refused to vacate his
temporary East of Eden trailer on the studio's lot, and Dean wanted
to get "even" with Warner by naming his race car "Little
Bastard" and to show Warner that despite his sports car racing
ban during all filming, Dean was going to be racing the "Little
Bastard" in between making movies for Warner Bros.
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