1962 In 1962, Thompson entered three
John Crosthwaite-designed cars in the
Indianapolis 500. They used a stock V8 Buick engine, and it was in the rear unlike the front-engined, race-tuned, Offenhauser-powered cars used by most competitors. It was the first stock engine to be raced at Indy since 1946. Thompson's crew, led by Fritz Voigt, was young, smart, and hard working. Working 12- to 14-hour days, the car was designed and built in 120 days. For the race, the engine (enlarged to 4.2-L capacity, the maximum allowed by the regulations for "stock block" engines) had to be detuned because they were concerned it would not last the distance. Despite being more than 70 bhp down on the other cars,
Dan Gurney qualified eighth and was in ninth place until a leaking oil seal seized the gearbox and ended his race on lap 94. He was placed 20th out of 33. The team won the Mechanical Achievement Award for original design, construction, and accomplishment.
1963 Thompson's promotional skills pleased the sponsors with the publicity generated that year. For the
1963 Indianapolis 500, Crosthwaite designed the innovative Harvey Aluminium Special "roller skate car" with the then-pioneering diameter wheels with smaller-profile racing tires, wide at the front and rear. Thompson took five cars to Indianapolis - two of the previous year's design with Chevrolet V8 engines and three roller skate cars. One of the new cars, the Harvey Titanium Special, featured a lightweight titanium chassis.
Al Miller raced one of the modified 1962 cars to ninth place despite only qualifying in 31st position.
Duane Carter qualified one of the roller skate cars 15th, but was only placed 23rd after an engine failure on the 100th lap. The small tire sizes and low car weights caused complaints among the old hands and owners, so for future races, cars were restricted to minimum tire sizes and minimum car weights.
Formula One World Champion
Graham Hill tested one of the roller skate cars at Indianapolis in 1963, but refused to race it, citing its poor handling. The recent ruling required 15-in wheels, but the chassis was designed around smaller wheels. Thompson commented: "The car wouldn't handle", adding, "There was too much body roll due to the high center of gravity." In 1963, Thompson traveled to England, where, along with Dante Duce, he demonstrated his Ford-powered Harvey Aluminum Special dragster at the
Brighton Speed Trials. It was then displayed at the Racing Car Show in London in January 1964.
1964 Thompson brought three modified 12-inch-tired cars to the
1964 Indianapolis 500, but new rules required him to use 15-in tires. The
Allstate sponsored team used Allstate tires and Ford engines. The chassis had to be altered to accommodate the larger Ford engines. Two of them qualified for the race. The car No. 84 began the month with
Masten Gregory as the driver, but
Eddie Johnson in car No. 84 qualified 24th and finished 26th.
Dave MacDonald in
car No. 83 qualified 14th and died in a
fiery crash on the second lap.
1965–1968 Thompson went back to Indy in 1965, but failed to qualify for the
1965 Indianapolis 500 in an attempt with a front-engined roadster. He skipped the
1966 Indianapolis 500, but tried again in
1967 and
1968, but failed to qualify either year. The 1967 attempt used a unique
all-wheel drive rear-engined design that steered both front and rear wheels, but
Gary Congdon was unable to qualify any of the three cars. ==Post Indy==