These were the best of days!
I was at this race, so I remember!!My son in law is a geared. Followed Nascar, Jeff Gordon in particular. He knows his way around engines {Cat mechanic by trade} Him and a buddy have a Nova drag car they play with. Was talking Indy car style racing one day. I mentioned Offenhouser engines , got a blank look.
How many remember Andy Granatelli {STP} and his turbine engines race cars ? Always wished he could have won a Indy 500.
I wonder how many guys on here,bought STP and Thrush mufflers just to get the decals for their rear window? And yes I did. JeffI was at this race, so I remember!!
https://www.racing-reference.info/race/1968_Rocky_Mountain_150/UO
Used to race 1/4 mile in Mid 80's.
I was a Rubber engineer for Goodyear in the late 80's early 90's for Newman Haas racing in Chicago.
Lost my hand on a Yamaha 750 turbo Seca in 86.We were tuning waste gates for more boost on an already fast bike.. Since then I don't race. climb, or anything exciting. Except shoot and fish...
Eldora Sprint Cars
Can you imagine how many cars they could sell if they actually looked like what was on the showroom floor? Take care of any aerodynamic or engine performance advantages between manufacturers by adding weight.NASCAR needs to go back to the old rule of having to sell 500 cars to the public before you could race that model. No more cookie cutter cars and engines. You know, kinda like STOCK car racing.
Drag strip, cars, then bikes.
I came home August of '70 from a year in RVN. Home 30 days on leave, then back for a second tour. My Father and I went car shopping. He was a Ford guy from Day One. None of the Ford dealerships had any big blocks, Mustang or Torino for sale by then, new 1971's were about six weeks out. We drive by the Plymouth dealers on the way back home, and Woo-Hoo!!!. In the front row on the used car lot was a Blood Red 1968 Road Runner coupe. We stop, and the salesman comes out. I am still in uniform. He tells my Father that I probably do not want that car, it has a huge motor, and the gas mileage is terrible. He tells us it has been sitting there for two months, no takers. We do take it for a test drive. Jump to the Interstate, and in about 30 seconds (seemed like) I got the speedometer pegged. Woo-Hoo! Part II. We get back alive, and I pop the hood. My Oh My, there's a 426 Hemi under the hood. $1650 plus tax, and I am on the road.
I think I got nine speeding, burnouts from a stop light/sign citations in that thirty days. About six weeks after I get back to Chu Lai, I get a letter from the Illinois DMV forwarded from my Father. My Drivers License is suspended. I have 72 hours to turn it in to the DMV in town or they will issue a warrant for my arrest. Ha! I send the nice man a letter letting him know I am in Chu Lai, along with detailed instructions on how to get to our AO next to the Rappelling Tower on the beach once you turn off Hwy 1.
See you all in four months, if I make it back.
The guy did have a sense of humor, two or three weeks later I get another letter. Comes to the Ranger Company. He just tells he to come to the DMV if I make it back, DO NOT DRIVE; and reapply for a license. Got back, got my license back, and thirty days later, went back for my third and final tour. I behaved, just got one ticket.
Were the early 1970's as crazy for any of the rest of you?
So which two are you referring to?
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Let's not forget Miss Hurst Golden Shifter
Two of my fondest memories from drag racing.
Use to love drag racing. Not anymore it got too commercialized. The 60's and the 70's were the best times for the sport. I was lucky to be a gopher on Jim Wemett's nitro Mustang II and his later Corvette funny car in the summer of 76 and a few races in 77. That's when they use to have match races all the time and 32 funny car shows. There were something like 571 licensed nitro funny car drivers in the 70's and there were a ton of guy's mostly weekend warrior's who use to work all week at their regular job to get money to run their funny cars during the weekend or sometimes match races usually on a Wednesday night. All that is long gone. Some of these guy's were my hero's and here I am seeing them all the time like TV Tommy Ivo, Pee Wee Wallace, and Bruce Larson. We raced against Jungle Jim Liberman and his girlfriend Jungle Pam Hardy all the time and Jim was a wild man and such a great guy. Pam well she was HOT. Those halter tops and those hot pants and cut off jean shorts and sometimes those lace up high boots were a site to behold and she was 22 years old and I was 19 in 76. It was really sad when I heard that Jim got killed when his street Corvette plowed into a city bus in his hometown of West Chester, PA. in September of 77. Another driver that I was close too was the late Paul "Dodger" Glenn who drove the Frantic Ford Mustang II. He got killed in 78 when the car went off the end of the track at Maple Grove Raceway in PA and he crashed into some trees. I mean some of these guy's were nuts. Ivo especially when he was racing. I remember one time him and his crew members went inside of Al Segrini's trailer and took the body off his funny car and put it in the pool at the Hotel. OMG that was too funny. Al didn't think so. I found a few pictures of my Funny Car summer. First and 2nd pictures shows me on the left torqueing the right head at New England Dragway in Epping, NH in 76. 3rd picture is me seated in his Vette bodied car at Lebanon Valley Dragway in NY in 77 waiting to have the motor started to check it for leaks and to seat the clutch. Last picture is his Vette and my name at the bottom of the car which I thought was cool at the time. I'll tell you what. It was hard work, not what I expected, but I got to meet a lot of famous drag racers and it was worth it. View attachment 1172982 View attachment 1172982View attachment 1172982Southland Dragstrip opened in Houma, La. New Ramada Inn close to our neighborhood. Parking lot the night before the big races had all the greats there. All our Hot Wheels cars real live in person. Mongoose, Snake, Gene Snow, i cant remember all of them.
Hey kid, help us push this one back up on the trailer, yes sir!
68? 69? 70?
Paul Candies Leonard Hughes car was local. Garaged near a friends house. We would go peek at the car thru the shop windows.
Never got to see a race.
Good ole days!

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