Sports (Fanatasy & RL) > NASCAR & Other Racing
I loves me some racing... Hows about Y'all?
RosieC:
--- Quote from: papaduck on April 11, 2008, 10:52 AM ---I must admit that I enjoy the sport in most ways. Nascar, local short track (stock cars, sprints, midgets) and speedway motorcycle, but my roots are in Drag Racing. Not "modern NHRA style drag racing", which has turned into a circus, (or "Dragsneyland" as my old buddy likes to call it), but true vintage style with it's roots in the '50s and '60s.
My first race car was a 1953 Ford Gas Class car that three of us built in 1962 and ran for one short season. That was all it took to hook me. After that I ran most of the cars I had up into the late '60s, and then when I got out of the Army in '69 I rode a 250cc Suzuki drag bike an old friend built, and we had the E/modified class record at 112 MPH in 12.20 seconds for the quarter mile. That was lots of fun and I still have some of the timing slips and a trophy for the memories.
Currently my "street toy" is a '64 Dodge Polara with a 440 for power that should run in the same range or quicker than the old bike, and the project car is a purpose built vintage dragster we are building that is basically a recreation of the early '50s style of garage built cars that helped bring the sport to life.
Power for that one is true vintage.......a 1934 Dodge 6 cylinder engine going into a chassis built from Model T ford frame rails and 1 3/4 inch steel tube, not much more than a frame and engine and the whole car should weigh less than 1000 lbs. The class record for these cars is currently in the low 12 second range, just under 110 MPH.
As the construction progresses, I'll post some pictures, and results when we get it running.
--- End quote ---
:lolg: can you say that in english! :lolg:
papaduck:
--- Quote from: RosieC on April 11, 2008, 11:13 AM ---
--- Quote from: papaduck on April 11, 2008, 10:52 AM ---I must admit that I enjoy the sport in most ways. Nascar, local short track (stock cars, sprints, midgets) and speedway motorcycle, but my roots are in Drag Racing. Not "modern NHRA style drag racing", which has turned into a circus, (or "Dragsneyland" as my old buddy likes to call it), but true vintage style with it's roots in the '50s and '60s.
My first race car was a 1953 Ford Gas Class car that three of us built in 1962 and ran for one short season. That was all it took to hook me. After that I ran most of the cars I had up into the late '60s, and then when I got out of the Army in '69 I rode a 250cc Suzuki drag bike an old friend built, and we had the E/modified class record at 112 MPH in 12.20 seconds for the quarter mile. That was lots of fun and I still have some of the timing slips and a trophy for the memories.
Currently my "street toy" is a '64 Dodge Polara with a 440 for power that should run in the same range or quicker than the old bike, and the project car is a purpose built vintage dragster we are building that is basically a recreation of the early '50s style of garage built cars that helped bring the sport to life.
Power for that one is true vintage.......a 1934 Dodge 6 cylinder engine going into a chassis built from Model T ford frame rails and 1 3/4 inch steel tube, not much more than a frame and engine and the whole car should weigh less than 1000 lbs. The class record for these cars is currently in the low 12 second range, just under 110 MPH.
As the construction progresses, I'll post some pictures, and results when we get it running.
--- End quote ---
:lolg: can you say that in english! :lolg:
--- End quote ---
Sorry if I lost you there Rosie, it probably doesn't make any sense to the non Hot Rodders out there amongst us, but real racers have a language of their own and I really didn't get very technical. :lolg:
Basically what I said to sum it up is that my racing preferences involve going in a straight line over short distances as quickly as possible, in vehicles more than 40 years old, and in the case of the dragster that we are building, most of the parts being used are older than that. :thumbs:
I guess I just live in the past, but I can still diagnose problems in carburetors and the points and condenser distributors used in the early cars and the new cars don't have any of that stuff. I'm not a computer technician, but I like to build, (and race) cars, and have been tinkering with automobiles since somewhere around 1958 even though I was only 12 at that time and had to rebuild the engine on my first car, (a 1950 Studebaker that I bought for $25.00 in 1962) before I could drive it, so I tend to think people know stuff that comes "natural" to me. :rofl1:
Purpleduck:
--- Quote from: papaduck on April 11, 2008, 11:33 AM ---
--- Quote from: RosieC on April 11, 2008, 11:13 AM ---
--- Quote from: papaduck on April 11, 2008, 10:52 AM ---I must admit that I enjoy the sport in most ways. Nascar, local short track (stock cars, sprints, midgets) and speedway motorcycle, but my roots are in Drag Racing. Not "modern NHRA style drag racing", which has turned into a circus, (or "Dragsneyland" as my old buddy likes to call it), but true vintage style with it's roots in the '50s and '60s.
My first race car was a 1953 Ford Gas Class car that three of us built in 1962 and ran for one short season. That was all it took to hook me. After that I ran most of the cars I had up into the late '60s, and then when I got out of the Army in '69 I rode a 250cc Suzuki drag bike an old friend built, and we had the E/modified class record at 112 MPH in 12.20 seconds for the quarter mile. That was lots of fun and I still have some of the timing slips and a trophy for the memories.
Currently my "street toy" is a '64 Dodge Polara with a 440 for power that should run in the same range or quicker than the old bike, and the project car is a purpose built vintage dragster we are building that is basically a recreation of the early '50s style of garage built cars that helped bring the sport to life.
Power for that one is true vintage.......a 1934 Dodge 6 cylinder engine going into a chassis built from Model T ford frame rails and 1 3/4 inch steel tube, not much more than a frame and engine and the whole car should weigh less than 1000 lbs. The class record for these cars is currently in the low 12 second range, just under 110 MPH.
As the construction progresses, I'll post some pictures, and results when we get it running.
--- End quote ---
:lolg: can you say that in english! :lolg:
--- End quote ---
Sorry if I lost you there Rosie, it probably doesn't make any sense to the non Hot Rodders out there amongst us, but real racers have a language of their own and I really didn't get very technical. :lolg:
Basically what I said to sum it up is that my racing preferences involve going in a straight line over short distances as quickly as possible, in vehicles more than 40 years old, and in the case of the dragster that we are building, most of the parts being used are older than that. :thumbs:
I guess I just live in the past, but I can still diagnose problems in carburetors and the points and condenser distributors used in the early cars and the new cars don't have any of that stuff. I'm not a computer technician, but I like to build, (and race) cars, and have been tinkering with automobiles since somewhere around 1958 even though I was only 12 at that time and had to rebuild the engine on my first car, (a 1950 Studebaker that I bought for $25.00 in 1962) before I could drive it, so I tend to think people know stuff that comes "natural" to me. :rofl1:
--- End quote ---
Thank you girl friend for asking for English, and, thank you Papa for supplying it! :2thunbs:
papaduck:
--- Quote from: Purpleduck on April 11, 2008, 11:55 AM ---
--- Quote from: papaduck on April 11, 2008, 11:33 AM ---
--- Quote from: RosieC on April 11, 2008, 11:13 AM ---
--- Quote from: papaduck on April 11, 2008, 10:52 AM ---I must admit that I enjoy the sport in most ways. Nascar, local short track (stock cars, sprints, midgets) and speedway motorcycle, but my roots are in Drag Racing. Not "modern NHRA style drag racing", which has turned into a circus, (or "Dragsneyland" as my old buddy likes to call it), but true vintage style with it's roots in the '50s and '60s.
My first race car was a 1953 Ford Gas Class car that three of us built in 1962 and ran for one short season. That was all it took to hook me. After that I ran most of the cars I had up into the late '60s, and then when I got out of the Army in '69 I rode a 250cc Suzuki drag bike an old friend built, and we had the E/modified class record at 112 MPH in 12.20 seconds for the quarter mile. That was lots of fun and I still have some of the timing slips and a trophy for the memories.
Currently my "street toy" is a '64 Dodge Polara with a 440 for power that should run in the same range or quicker than the old bike, and the project car is a purpose built vintage dragster we are building that is basically a recreation of the early '50s style of garage built cars that helped bring the sport to life.
Power for that one is true vintage.......a 1934 Dodge 6 cylinder engine going into a chassis built from Model T ford frame rails and 1 3/4 inch steel tube, not much more than a frame and engine and the whole car should weigh less than 1000 lbs. The class record for these cars is currently in the low 12 second range, just under 110 MPH.
As the construction progresses, I'll post some pictures, and results when we get it running.
--- End quote ---
:lolg: can you say that in english! :lolg:
--- End quote ---
Sorry if I lost you there Rosie, it probably doesn't make any sense to the non Hot Rodders out there amongst us, but real racers have a language of their own and I really didn't get very technical. :lolg:
Basically what I said to sum it up is that my racing preferences involve going in a straight line over short distances as quickly as possible, in vehicles more than 40 years old, and in the case of the dragster that we are building, most of the parts being used are older than that. :thumbs:
I guess I just live in the past, but I can still diagnose problems in carburetors and the points and condenser distributors used in the early cars and the new cars don't have any of that stuff. I'm not a computer technician, but I like to build, (and race) cars, and have been tinkering with automobiles since somewhere around 1958 even though I was only 12 at that time and had to rebuild the engine on my first car, (a 1950 Studebaker that I bought for $25.00 in 1962) before I could drive it, so I tend to think people know stuff that comes "natural" to me. :rofl1:
--- End quote ---
Thank you girl friend for asking for English, and, thank you Papa for supplying it! :2thunbs:
--- End quote ---
Just another "senor moment". :rofl1:
Purpleduck:
--- Quote from: papaduck on April 11, 2008, 12:28 PM ---
--- Quote from: Purpleduck on April 11, 2008, 11:55 AM ---
--- Quote from: papaduck on April 11, 2008, 11:33 AM ---
--- Quote from: RosieC on April 11, 2008, 11:13 AM ---
--- Quote from: papaduck on April 11, 2008, 10:52 AM ---I must admit that I enjoy the sport in most ways. Nascar, local short track (stock cars, sprints, midgets) and speedway motorcycle, but my roots are in Drag Racing. Not "modern NHRA style drag racing", which has turned into a circus, (or "Dragsneyland" as my old buddy likes to call it), but true vintage style with it's roots in the '50s and '60s.
My first race car was a 1953 Ford Gas Class car that three of us built in 1962 and ran for one short season. That was all it took to hook me. After that I ran most of the cars I had up into the late '60s, and then when I got out of the Army in '69 I rode a 250cc Suzuki drag bike an old friend built, and we had the E/modified class record at 112 MPH in 12.20 seconds for the quarter mile. That was lots of fun and I still have some of the timing slips and a trophy for the memories.
Currently my "street toy" is a '64 Dodge Polara with a 440 for power that should run in the same range or quicker than the old bike, and the project car is a purpose built vintage dragster we are building that is basically a recreation of the early '50s style of garage built cars that helped bring the sport to life.
Power for that one is true vintage.......a 1934 Dodge 6 cylinder engine going into a chassis built from Model T ford frame rails and 1 3/4 inch steel tube, not much more than a frame and engine and the whole car should weigh less than 1000 lbs. The class record for these cars is currently in the low 12 second range, just under 110 MPH.
As the construction progresses, I'll post some pictures, and results when we get it running.
--- End quote ---
:lolg: can you say that in english! :lolg:
--- End quote ---
Sorry if I lost you there Rosie, it probably doesn't make any sense to the non Hot Rodders out there amongst us, but real racers have a language of their own and I really didn't get very technical. :lolg:
Basically what I said to sum it up is that my racing preferences involve going in a straight line over short distances as quickly as possible, in vehicles more than 40 years old, and in the case of the dragster that we are building, most of the parts being used are older than that. :thumbs:
I guess I just live in the past, but I can still diagnose problems in carburetors and the points and condenser distributors used in the early cars and the new cars don't have any of that stuff. I'm not a computer technician, but I like to build, (and race) cars, and have been tinkering with automobiles since somewhere around 1958 even though I was only 12 at that time and had to rebuild the engine on my first car, (a 1950 Studebaker that I bought for $25.00 in 1962) before I could drive it, so I tend to think people know stuff that comes "natural" to me. :rofl1:
--- End quote ---
Thank you girl friend for asking for English, and, thank you Papa for supplying it! :2thunbs:
--- End quote ---
Just another "senor moment". :rofl1:
--- End quote ---
Hmm.. a "senior" senor moment? :lolg:
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