Prompted by a high optical state in September 2007, the Whole Earth Blazar
Telescope (WEBT) consortium organized an intensive optical, near-IR (JHK) and
radio observing campaign on the intermediate BL Lac object 3C 66A throughout
the fall and winter of 2007 -- 2008. The source remained in a high optical
state throughout the observing period and exhibited several bright flares on
time scales of ~ 10 days. This included an exceptional outburst around
September 15 - 20, 2007, reaching a peak brightness at R ~ 13.4. Our campaign
revealed microvariability with flux changes up to |dR/dt| ~ 0.02 mag/hr. Our
observations do not reveal evidence for systematic spectral variability or
spectral lags. We infer a value of the magnetic field in the emission region of
B ~ 19 e_B^{2/7} \tau_h^{-6/7} D_1^{13/7} G. From the lack of systematic
spectral variability, we can derive an upper limit on the Doppler factor, D <=
28 \tau_h^{-1/8} e_B^{3/16}. This is in agreement with superluminal motion
measurements of \beta_{app} \le 27 and argues against models with very high
Lorentz factors of \Gamma > 50, required for a one-zone SSC interpretation of
some high-frequency-peaked BL Lac objects detected at TeV gamma-ray energies.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa