If you equate older automobiles with quiet, solitude and inactivity, you don’t know Revs Institute or the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance. While Revs Institute may be home to the 115-car Miles Collier Collections, it isn’t a static museum. No dusty derelicts. If there isn’t a car hauler out back to transport one automobile or six to another event, there will be soon.
In the same manner, the Pebble Beach Concours isn’t a staid classic car show, but a busy, bustling salute to fine automobiles. It starts at sunup with the early-rising Dawn Patrol crowd checking out cars as they roar onto the field. There are vehicles driving on and off the awards ramp all afternoon, which gives the crowds a chance to enjoy the machines on the move. And, as the event closes, many linger to watch the world’s most expensive traffic jam as the cars queue to depart the field.
This year, in addition to the pair of race cars competing at nearby WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, Revs Institute sent three cars from the Miles Collier Collections to the Pebble Beach Concours.
The Revs trio on the show field included three cars that saw competition. Lance Reventlow’s 1958 Scarab race cars were famed for their on-track success, scoring national championships in 1959 and 1960. Revs’ Scarab, which is finished with Meister Brauser branding that promoted Peter Hand Brewery’s Meister Brau beer, was one of three Scarabs at Pebble. Another class had 16 Italian OSCAs, the famous small racers built by the Maserati brothers. All were beautiful, and possibly the most famous is the Revs example that won overall in the 1954 12 Hours of Sebring, driven by Stirling Moss and Bill Lloyd.
Not necessarily looking like a race car was the 1920 Cunningham V3. Though Cunningham (of Rochester, NY, not to be confused with Brigg Cunningham’s eponymous company from the 1950s) was best known for its high-priced automobiles and hearses, this example was used by Ralph De Palma to set several world speed records.
Then there were the other 215 cars on the show field spread across 28 varied classes. First came 11 1948 Tuckers, those symbols of Preston Tucker’s failed attempt to outdo Detroit. Next up, in stark contrast, were 12 “Motor Cars of the Raj,” hugely (literally) impressive Rolls-Royce, Bentley, Lancaster and more, nine of them shipped from India. After them? Special bodied examples of the Citroën DS, as well as an SM convertible.
Weaving your way through the crowd you might come across a multi-colored 1930 Ruxton, a red 1958 Ferrari 250 Testa Rossa, or even, in what must be a first for Pebble Beach, a 1952 Studebaker Commander Starliner Coupe that was entered by Wayne Carini in the Postwar Preservation class. Spread out on the lawn behind The Lodge were automobiles from many U.S. states as well as Japan, the Netherlands, Canada, China, Switzerland, Germany, Hong Kong, Australia, Belgium, Israel, the UK and the Czech Republic. You almost needed a passport to walk the field.
The finale was, as always, the Best of Show award. Chosen from a trio of class winners, this year’s top prize went to Ginny and David Sydorick’s superb 1937 Alfa Romeo 8C 2900B Touring Berlinetta. And how could we not applaud that choice? One of the gems in Revs Collier collection is another Alfa 8C 2900B Touring Berlinetta.