Some may not know, but the Reno Air Race are no more (started in 1964). The Reno Airport Authority voted to stop the races/show. The last show was last week, ending Sunday. It is very much Grassroots, considering how it started ("hey, old warplanes are cheap, they are fast, lets do stuff!")
The real story behind the decision is not entirely clear at this point. The unofficial is too much housing close to the course/airport, the suspicious is that someone wants to make a LOT of money in real estate.
I attended as a volunteer all week, with another GRM'er (my sister helps with timing logistics, specifically the Unlimited) as a Docent walking around answering questions (I know a good bit about the air races, air racing, and vintage aircraft).
To get to the "news" first. As I told my wife, the races are never in the news unless something bad happens. Unfortunately it was in the news, as the last T6 race on Sunday resulted in a landing accident, killing two pilots, the wreckage landing off airport in a back yard (there are big yards there). To be clear, this had essentially NOTHING TO DO WITH THE RACING. This was two pilots, landing at the same airport AFTER the race. There will be an investigation, and as I tend to note on almost any accident, the primary cause will be pilot related. It really almost always is. Ultimately, the pilot is always responsible for acting safely. It would be similar to two cars, that had previously been racing on a track, crashing and killing the drivers while driving their cars off the race course property on city streets.
I won't get into supposition of likely causes. I, very fortunately, did not see the crash (it was off the approach end of the runway), but was walking through the T6 pits just after it happened and unfortunately had to hear some of the crews trying to figure things out (they announced nothing until hours after). The T6's just lined up on the ramp after the race, and two where clearly missing (the affected crews WERE clearly notified and Ford Econoboxed out before this). The two planes that crashed finished first and second, which made the awards ceremony a bit hard to experience.
The races were eventually canceled after the crash, which resulted in not running the final races in Sport (hopped up general aviation homebuilts mostly), Jets, and Unlimiteds. The Unlimited race was a forgone conclusion, but the Sport could have been interesting (they can push to far and break, and there was a LOT of boost going on in the front!)
So, on to the more "good" stuff, some story and pics:
Of note is many of these pics are mine, but I am also using some of my sisters husband brothers pics (he has a very large lense, very nice camera, and access to the pylons!). To give credit, this is his website (Reno 2023 portion) if you want to see more of his work: https://mskirkpatrickphoto.com/reno-air-races-2023
(I am going to break this up to make it easier to read / view)