The Bear Is Back
The winning-est Bearcat in air racing steps up once more to the starting gate.
- By Preston Lerner
- Air & Space magazine, November 2009
Like a runner waiting for the starting gun, the famous Grumman F8F-2 (without wingtips) looks ready.
Tyson V. Rininger
(Page 5 of 5)
The good news is that Penney won’t need much time to get up to speed. He’s already flown the Bear to four Golds, and he’s intimately familiar with the airplane’s idiosyncrasies: the brain-scrambling noise, the Bear’s reduced stability at racing speeds, the effort required to manipulate the stick while arcing around the Reno pylons. “It’s hard, physical work,” he says. “The Bear is a fairly docile, well-mannered, nice-handling airplane in the benign flight regime. But at racing speed, it gets kind of hostile. Every time I climb into it, I treat it as a first flight in terms of how focused I am and how much attention I pay to every little detail.”
Rare Bear’s principal competition at Reno promises to be last year’s winner, Strega; this year the P-51 will be raced for the first time by 22-year-old Steve Hinton Jr. Next in the pecking order is the Sanders brothers’ Dreadnought, a Sea Fury that has won two Golds at Reno. For gamblers looking for a dark horse, there’s Czech Mate, a Yak-11. Six-time winner Dago Red won’t be racing this year. Ditto for 2006 champ September Fury. So the airplane to beat looks to be Race 77, as the Bear is known in Reno parlance.
“It’ll be Number One, no question,” says Pete Law. “With Dave Cornell back on board, it should be head and shoulders above anything that’s ever raced at Reno.”
The team’s goal for 2009 is Gold number 11. “We want to win soundly,” says Redick. Next, the three-kilometer record beckons; Cornell thinks 550 mph is a plausible number. And after that? “Everybody involved in this airplane, from the race team to the crew chief to the pilot to the owner, is doing it for the love of it,” says Rod Lewis. “So my goal is to continue to do it as long as it’s fun.”
Sounds like the Bear could be in business for another 40 years.
Preston Lerner wrote about U.S. Navy E-2 Hawkeyes in the June/July 2008 issue.
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Comments (8)
How well I remember when the USN Reserves were still flying the F8F Bearcat
out of Navy Memphis in the early 50's. It was a great old airplane, the last of
the famous single engine Grumman Navy fighters.
Thanks for the photos.
Posted by Ken Gold on September 18,2009 | 11:01 PM
I've been a Rare Bear fan for a few years and I always will be. Not only is she gorgeous but the sound she makes in the air will absolutely drop your pants. Excellent article. It's about time we saw Reno Racers get some ink. We need more. Thanks Air & Space.
Posted by Rich Reuter on October 1,2009 | 07:35 PM
Fascinating article!
I noticed that Alby Redick's father was mentioned a couple times. His dad, Al Redick, got me my first job. Al was much more than, as the article stated, "a mechanic". He had an inborn ability to "connect" with aircraft like the Bearcat. I was a 15 year old kid when my father took me and my mom to Chino Airport on a Sunday afternoon outing. My dad struck up a conversation with Al. Redick was working for an outfit called "Fighter Imports," which brought F-86s and T-33s down from Canada, fixed them up, and resold them to rich people who wanted something "different" to fly.
Next thing I knew I was hired to "clean up" the hangar on Saturdays. I rode my 3-speed 15 miles to get there Saturday mornings. It was a dream-come-true for a 15-year-old airplane nut. I fondly hang on to my memories of working there and of the time I spent with Al.
Posted by Bruce Clemens on October 5,2009 | 11:16 PM
Been a big fan of the Bear and hope they get it back in racing soon. Nobody can beat it when it's properly running as in the old days when Greg Shaw was Crew Chief.
Posted by Chuck Edwards on October 10,2009 | 12:36 AM
I have always loved airplanes and aviation. It started when I was 9 or so when I hung out at the local grass strip about a quater mile from my house in what is now Fremont, CA. I'd ride my bike there and then hang around and do whatever needed done; wash airplanes; push them around, etc.
In the 90's after 24 years in the Navy as an Air Traffic Controller I was working in the Bay Area and being close to Reno could make the Air Races. I was there in 1991 and got to see the race mentioned in the article. I'll never forget it.
I also own a limited number edition litho by Rick Ruhman done in 1993 titled "Duel of the Titans". It depicts all the Unlimited racers at that time and is signed by such as; Darryl Greenamyer, Conquest 1; Skip Holme, Tsunami and of corse Lyle Shelton Rare Bear. There are other well known names and planes on the litho.
Posted by Ernest Blacow on October 19,2009 | 02:41 PM
I have been following the BEAR since it first started its racing career. It king of grows on you -- the meanest Bear at any race!
Posted by TED WYSKIDA on October 21,2009 | 03:28 PM
I was a Plane Captian in the early 50's as a Naval Air Reserve's, at the Naval Air Station in Anacostia D.C.. (Engine Mechanic.) I love that Bear!
Posted by Roger F. Milihram on October 23,2009 | 07:39 PM
Does anyone remember a picture of Greenemyer's F8F on the RAMP at Reno with like a Dozen Hot, scantily clad, Girls cleaning it ? I'd love to get a Copy of that pic .. I caught my attention when I was a teenager ! LOL like 1968 ish ..
Posted by JAY M on July 26,2010 | 12:15 PM