In 1905, many male drivers, including
Barney Oldfield and
Ralph De Palma, drew crowds at local tracks when they attempted to set a new speed record for one, five, or even ten miles. Cuneo was often limited to exhibition runs because of her sex, but she gained fame by setting a number of speed records. Unlike
Dorothy Levitt, her British contemporary who drove factory prepared cars, Cuneo always drove her own personal cars, although they were stripped down to the bare essentials for racing. After women were banned from racing, several of her male competitors trusted her to drive their race cars in order to set yet another women's speed record. In 1906, Cuneo honed her racing skills at a variety of tracks, usually one-half to one mile flat dirt ovals more often used for horse racing. There were no purpose-built automobile race tracks until the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway was completed in 1909. She also competed in popular amateur automobile events called
gymkhanas. These were obstacle course events for cars instead of horses. Drivers had to drive around and over obstacles and inclines, sometimes in reverse. At the
Danbury Fair in 1906, Cuneo was driving full speed in a gymkhana with two women passengers when the car caught fire. The passengers bailed out the back of the car but she calmly shut off the engine and turned off the gas before jumping out. Although she suffered painful burns and singed hair, she shrugged off the event as nothing unusual. Cuneo had become an experienced driver who could muscle a car without
power steering and minimal suspension and brakes on the poor roads of the time as well as rough dirt tracks. In 1907, she finished third in a hundred-mile race, with a time of two hours and 23 minutes, driving a
Rainier. Many who interviewed her were surprised to meet a small woman with a steady gaze and low voice instead of a powerful Amazon. As Cuneo gained skill as a driver, she also became more involved in the care and maintenance of her cars. Cuneo believed that in the years since she had learned to drive, autos had improved mechanically, and the main problem now was blow-outs. The tires of that era had little resemblance to those of today; all had a tube as well as an outer casing and were time-consuming to change. It would take many years before tires caught up to mechanical improvements. Her 1908 Rainier car was equipped with Fisk bolted-on tires with removable rim, a new invention at the time. Instead of removing the whole tire frame, Cuneo could replace the rim in just a few minutes. She also wished for a self-starter. As she said, "It took both knack and strength and one can tell only by one's automobile sense whether more knack or more strength is needed at the precise moment." == Mardi Gras Races ==