’62 PLYMOUTH 413 MAX WEDGE MUSCLECAR

Whatever the ’62 PLYMOUTH 413 MAX WEDGE MUSCLECAR lacked in style, it more than made up for with Super/Stock performance!

’62 PLYMOUTH 413 MAX WEDGE MUSCLECARIn 1957, the Automobile Manufacturers Association’s ban on member auto racing participation and promotion was about as effective as the United Nations! Chrysler, Ford, and General Motors signed on, but never actually stopped developing and producing high-performance engines and “supporting” racers. Many of the high-performance brake, chassis, and suspension packages were initially hidden in Police & Taxi and Export vehicle order books.

It was business as usual in Motown until June 11, 1962, when Ford’s board chairman, Henry Ford II, let the trade association know that Ford was no longer honoring its ineffective ban. Initially, Chrysler and General Motors remained committed to the agreement, yet continued participation in the horsepower wars with impressive big-block Musclecars, like the ’62 PLYMOUTH 413 MAX WEDGE MUSCLECAR, to combat Ford’s 406 Galaxie. Racing budgets were often disguised to avoid corporate detection and, unlike Ford, racing activities were transacted through convoluted “backdoor” relationships.

Not long after Ford pulled out of the 1957 AMA “agreement”, Chrysler followed suit. But Chrysler did not have Chevrolet and Ford’s racing heritage, nor their budgets and “supported” brand-name racers. They also didn’t have the right image cars to compete with GM and Ford styling. Chrysler slightly downsized and restyled its 1962 Plymouth (and Dodge) B-body car lines, resulting in cars that lacked youth market appeal. Fortunately, whatever they lacked in style, they more than made up for in performance with 413-inch Max Wedge musclecars.

Much of the Mopar racing technology of the time was developed by a group of young Chrysler engineers who had formed the Ramchargers Racing Club. Tom Hoover, below, right, was Chrysler’s racing engines project coordinator, Dick Maxwell directed racing programs, and club president, Jim Thornton distinguished himself as a class-winning and record-setting driver. They raced Dodges while another in-house “club”, the Golden Commandos, concentrated on the Plymouth brand.

’62 PLYMOUTH 413 MAX WEDGE MUSCLECAR

Displacing 413 cubic inches and fitted with short tuned-ram intake manifolds with dual four-barrels and tuned upswept cast iron exhaust manifolds, “Max Wedge” engines were not available at the new model introduction time. They appeared in the Spring of 1962, and there has always been some confusion over horsepower ratings. The 413-inch Wedge engine was available in the Chrysler 300-H and rated at 380 and 405 horsepower. When the 413 was made available in Dodge & Plymouth models, other than station wagons, it was more highly tuned with a 15-inch short ram intake manifold, new heads with large 2.08-inch intake valves, and upswept, tuned cast-iron exhaust manifolds. The compression ratio was 11-to-1, and it was rated at 410 horsepower. A second 413 engine, with 13.5-to-1 compression and rated at 420 horsepower, found its way into some cars, including the ’62 PLYMOUTH 413 MAX WEDGE MUSCLECAR

Available with B-W T-85 three-speed manual transmission and the superb A-727 three-speed TorqueFlite automatic, 413-inch Super/Stock Mopars could run in the mid-12s. In 1962, they recorded four class wins at major NHRA events. At the NHRA Nationals, HOT ROD’s Ray Brock and Leroi “Tex” Smith campaigned a 413-inch Plymouth and set the low ET record at 12.37 seconds. In the final round for Stock Eliminator, Jim Thornton, in the Ramcharger’s Dodge, fell prey to Hayden Proffitt driving his 409 Chevy. He later switched to a Super/Stock ’62 Dodge, below! When installed in Plymouths, 413 engines were branded SUPER STOCK; Dodges carried RAMCHARGER logos.

’62 PLYMOUTH 413 MAX WEDGE MUSCLECAREven with impressive horsepower/torque engines and record-setting drag strip performance, the public rejected Dodge and Plymouth styling, and 1962 model sales suffered dramatically.

For complete details about the ’62 PLYMOUTH 413 MAX WEDGE MUSCLECAR and the full Plymouth model range with spec sheets, links to period tests, etc., please visit OVER-DRIVE magazine @ https://over-drive-magazine.com/2023/10/06/1962-plymouth-mid-size-cars-fact-sheet/

’64 FORD 427 GALAXIE

Ford continues its Win On Sunday, Sell on Monday marketing mantra, with a packed performance portfolio including an updated ’64 FORD 427 GALAXIE.

’64 FORD 427 GALAXIE

In 1964, Ford carried over its winning ways with new engines, race-only cars available for purchase, a game-changing Mustang, and aggressive dealer marketing and advertising programs.

“It is the full intent of the Ford Division to continue its total commitment to open competition during the 1964 model year. For only under the conditions existent in competitive events can we assure ourselves that we bring to you and the public a product of durability and reliability, totally tested … a total performance Ford,” said Ford Special Vehicles Manager, Frank E. Zimmerman Jr., to dealers. He added, “Let your total dealership reflect total performance!”

Zimmerman’s mission was to make the public more aware of Ford’s performance activities and show dealers how to – in his words – “Capitalize on this fast-growing, profitable youth market!”

For 1964, Ford and Mercury offered a full line of high-performance models ranging from 260 V-8 Falcon Sprints and 289/271 Comets, Mustangs, and Fairlanes, and 427 (410 and 425 horsepower) Galaxies and Marauders. All supported racing activities, but as far as appealing to street performance enthusiasts, the Falcon, Comet, and Fairlane lacked raw horsepower and sexy styling. The all-new ’64 ½ Mustang, available with the 289/271 engine, was in a class by itself, and first-year Mustang sales skyrocketed.

’64 FORD 427 GALAXIE

As much as I enjoyed driving the high-performance compacts and new Mustang Ponycar, I found the sculpted and face-lifted ’64 FORD 427 GALAXIE hardtop with dual-quad 427/425 power and four-speed to have the most appeal. Galaxies could also be ordered with a single-four-barrel version of the 427, rated at 410 horsepower. Even with its manual steering, lack of factory limited-slip rear option, and voracious appetite for Sunoco 260, I loved cruising in an R-Code Galaxie that we tested for CARS magazine!

My introduction to the ’64 FORD 427 GALAXIE was in the summer of 1963 at the 1964 Ford Technical Press Conference at Riverside Raceway. I had the opportunity to drive a prototype 500XLR-Code Galaxie – 425 horsepower engine, B-W T-10 four-speed, and “small” rear with 3.50 gears and skinny 6.70×15-inch tires. Spanning 210 inches and weighing in at close to 4,000 pounds, I didn’t expect it to handle well on the Riverside track, and it did not disappoint. It was a solid feeling and, even with its standard heavy-duty suspension and brakes, was not at home on a twisty sports car track. We did manage to run some 0 to 60 mph sprints, with most runs in the high sevens.

Essentially carryover for 1964, the R-Code 427/425 engine was equipped with dual Holley quads on a low-rise manifold, .500-inch lift, 306-degree duration camshaft, forged 11.5-to-1 pistons, steel crank, improved big-valve heads, dual-point ignition, and free-flow long-branch exhaust manifolds. You could order rear gears from 3.00 to 4.11-to-1, but, until mid-1964 production, you could not get the big nine-inch rear

with 31-spline axles. The only way you could get a limited-slip differential was to buy a Detroit Locker and have it installed at a speed shop ora Ford dealer. In mid-1964, Ford replaced the T-10 four-speed in 427 Galaxies with its own, beefier Toploader four-speed.

In addition to driving a ’64 FORD 427 GALAXIE on the high-speed oval at the Dearborn Proving Ground in the spring, I also spent a week with a Wimbledon White 427 R-Code Galaxie 500 in New York. During my experience on the Dearborn track with John Zimmerman riding shotgun, I asked if I could get one to test and take to the track back home. A few weeks later, I got a call from Ford’s New York City office regarding a 427 Galaxie in their garage that had my name on it! Zimmerman had come through.

The ’64 FORD 427 GALAXIE, top photo, had New Jersey DTM Manufacturer’s license plates, not unusual for a media road test car, but it also had paperwork in the glove compartment indicating that the car had been shipped to New York from Charlotte, NC, home of Holman & Moody. It also didn’t look stock. There was a tach mounted on top of the dash, whitewall tires on bare Kelsey Hayes 15×15.5-inch steel wheels, and side-exit exhaust outlets. Designed like classic custom car “lakes pipes” with caps that could be removed with a wrench, these looked like scaled-down and capped NASCAR Galaxie exhausts. In 1963 ½, Ford listed an optional dealer-installed Exhaust Cutout option, but this was the first I had ever seen. Needless to say, they remained open for the week!

One of three 427/425 R-Code four-speed ’64 convertibles built, Wesley Allison photo

’64 FORD 427 GALAXIE

After running the Galaxie in A/Stock at Westhampton Drag Strip on Long Island, my best time was 95 mph in 15.4 seconds – not good enough to win anything. On the way home, we stopped at a shopping mall that was pretty much empty to clock some 0-to-60-mph times, left. The best we could do was 7.4 seconds. It didn’t have the right tires. But it sure sounded great with those straight exhausts. From all indications, its engine had been heavily breathed on by the folks at H&M before we got it!

In February 1964, Ford Division sent its District offices a Distribution Bulletin outlining the limited availability of a 427 Galaxie two-door hardtop, powered by the updated 427 High-Riser engine, lightened and engineered specifically for NHRA A and B/Stock competition.

Galaxie Lightweights were originally built for NHRA A/Stock and A/SA, but due to rules changes, engine modifications, tire choices (seven or ten-inch wide), and weight, Galaxie Lightweights ended up in AA/Stock, AA/SA, B/FX, and C/FX. There was also a Galaxie Lightweight powered by the R-Code 427/425, designed to run in NHRA B/Stock.

Ford also built 50 lightweight drag racing 427 Galaxies with fiberglass body panels, Thunderbolt hood scoops, and 500 horsepower high-rise 427s. To be legal in NHRA Stock classes, Ford built 25 stick and 25 automatic Lightweight drag cars at select assembly plants.

Galaxie Lightweights made a great showing at tracks around the country. In June 1964, at the Hot Rod Magazine Championships at Riverside Raceway, Larry Dacini ran 113.44 mph in 12.60 seconds to win B/FX, and Jesse Mendez took the C/FX win with a 94.83 mph, 15.06-second run. Mike Schmitt, driving the Desert Motors AA/SA Lightweight, won class honors (111.80 mph in 12.18 seconds) at the 1964 NHRA Indy Nationals and went on to win the NHRA Little Stock Eliminator World Championship.

Ford won the NHRA Manufacturer’s Cup in 1964. This award was presented for supremacy in more than 50 NHRA Championship Points drag racing events with Fairlanes, Falcons, and Galaxies. Even though thwarted by Hemi-powered Dodges and Plymouths and Bill France’s refusal to accept Ford’s 427 SOHC engine, Ford still won NASCAR’s 1964 Manufacturer’s Award Of Excellence. It was awarded to Ford because of the 30 wins in the Grand National Division – more than twice that of its nearest rival. Bill Stroppe-prepared Mercury stockers won five Grand National races in 1964.

In 1964, Ford did a lot of winning on Sunday; Ford dealers did a lot of selling on Monday!

 For complete details on the ’64 FORD 427 GALAXIE and big-block road tests, tech data, please visit OVER-DRIVE magazine @ https://over-drive-magazine.com/2023/12/19/1964-ford-full-size-cars-fact-sheet/

PACERS’ TASMANIAN DEVIL

The original 1960s PACERS’ TASMANIAN DEVIL has been found and restored by a team led by Scott Snizek, son of the driver – George Snizek – of the NHRA national-record-holding, Hemi-powered AA/Altered.

PACERS’ TASMANIAN DEVIL

My relationship with Pacers Auto, Charlie Dodge, George Snizek, and TAZ – the PACERS’ TASMANIAN DEVIL AA/A – dates back to 1963 and 1964 when I was covering the NHRA Indy Nationals for CUSTOM RODDER and CARS magazines. That’s when and where I first met Charlie & George. Late in 1964, we moved from Forest Hills in NYC to East Rockaway in Nassau County, LI, between Hewlett Harbor and Oceanside. In Oceanside, Pacers Auto was a full-service speed shop with a great reputation for engine building, metal fab, racecar prep, and working with superchargers and fuel injection. In 1965, I photographed TAZ at Island Dragway, Great Meadows, NJ, and someone photographed me taking the shot that ended up gracing the cover of the October issue of CARS!

In July 1966, George Snizek piloted the Tasmanian Devil to record times in AA/FA – 164 mph in 9.32 seconds – during Anniversary Day celebrations at Island Dragway. Over the next couple of years, I worked with Charlie & George on magazine project cars, tuning road test vehicles, and created the CARS Magazine Racing Team. The first cars to display our team livery were the TASMANIAN DEVIL Altered and AA/Fuel Dragster, powered by blown and injected Chrysler Hemis, built and campaigned by Pacers Auto. Both cars – tuned by Charlie Dodge and driven by George Snizek – set NHRA National Records in AA/A, CC/FD & AA/FD!

Decades later I reconnected with George and his son, Scott, on Facebook. Charlie had passed away, and the Snizeks were the last connections to my original relationship with Pacers Auto, and many of the great competition cars they built over the years, including unique racing trucks, popular with New York fire departments participating in motorized drill team competitions.

I continue to maintain a relationship with the Snizeks as well as contact with artists Howie Nisgor and Gary Kupfer, who have been involved with the team restoring TAZ. Interestingly, I first met Howie in 1960 when he was a 17-year-old high schooler pinstriping hot rods and customs at a show at Rupp Chevrolet, Lynbrook, NY. I was covering the show for CUSTOM RODDER magazine. Gary and I first met in the mid-1960s when he was doing paint and custom work for Motion Performance. He went on to be involved with most of the important 1960s-1970s Motion and Baldwin-Motion road and track cars.

 Scott Snizek writes about the Tasmanian Devil Tribute, Pacers Auto, his dad, and locating, restoring, and show-prepping the original TAZ. And, all the people involved in bringing this iconic racecar back to life. Martyn L. Schorr

In October 1967, Charlie Dodge and George Snizek retired TAZ, the legendary PACERS’ TASMANIAN DEVIL racecar, selling it to Bob Petrucelli, a talented architect and longtime fan. He purchased it hoping to continue its winning heritage by racing it like my Dad and Charlie did for years. They sold Bob the car for $5,000 under the condition that the Pacers’ name would be kept on the car, otherwise the price would have been $6,000!

Having competed since 1962, TAZ was taken apart to restore it to its former glory, a commitment that lasted some four years. It was repainted and re-lettered in 1969, and rules required a roll cage and fire suppression system, added in 1971. Everything else remained original, including the Pacers name. It was shown at numerous shows over the years with several wins but the motor was never fired up! After a divorce and health issues, Bob stored the Altered roadster along with its original enclosed trailer.

In July 2018, Bob’s daughter, Laura, contacted me through the Pacers Auto website, letting me know that she had the original PACERS’ TASMANIAN DEVIL. They had talked about donating the car to the NHRA Museum in CA and wanted to know if I was interested in purchasing it. I was incredibly excited to learn that I could bring it back to our family. It is a common custom in drag racing to see if original owners were interested in getting their car back before offering it for sale or donating it to a museum.

PACERS’ TASMANIAN DEVILA legendary, record-holding racecar, she offered it to me for $100,000, the typical cost today of a modern high-performance car. While we were thousands of miles apart in price, I spoke to my friend Artie Schilling to bounce ideas off and keep my drafted offer quiet. I had to politely educate Laura that the price she put on the car was based on the accolades of my dad and Charlie Dodge, and that her dad didn’t continue to add any history to the car. He also repainted it and added a roll cage, taking away from its originality.

Technically, that negates it from being called “original.” Yes, it once was iconic, but with the changes, it became a new version, and the Pacers’ provenance was severed. Pacers is a registered trademark, and I had to protect the IP and history of the company which I had just accomplished with a recreation (Tribute) when that project had gone south. We also had been racing the Pacers Tribute which had just been repaired following a crash at Lebanon Valley, so I knew the current prices of parts and labor for literally the same car. I drafted an offer that I first ran by Artie Schilling to see if it conveyed all the nuances and showed what the true value is. Much like the seller education portion of an episode of Pawn Stars, I sent the offer out and heard nothing back for years!

 Fast forward to August 2021. Laura contacted me again to see if I was still interested in buying the original PACERS’ TASMANIAN DEVIL. We spoke and I set a date to meet her at the storage unit in Highland, NY. I didn’t ask for a price this time or mention anything about it. I hadn’t seen the car up close in about ten years, but knew it had to show considerable signs of aging. Laura confirmed that when we spoke. I met her in September while my Dad was at the Deadman’s Curve Hot Rod & Custom Show in Mahwah, NJ. The car was being kept inside a storage facility on its trailer, along with spare parts and boxes that Laura had moved from her father’s house. TAZ had been neglected and subject to the harsh upstate New York winters and temperature swings. Despite being inside, all the metal was corroded or rusted. The aluminum and magnesium parts that had been chromed had pieces of plating flaking off. The paint was cracked everywhere and looked like a dry lakebed!

 While its patina was cool, it had Petrucelli’s name on it, and the gold leaf and lettering looked awful. I felt that there was way too much to do and I couldn’t justify the expense. EVERYTHING had to be redone. And, I didn’t know how the engine internals looked so I would be taking a chance. As Laura and I were talking and looking at the car, I filled in the blanks of the stories that her dad told her. She understood and could see that I knew the entire history of the car and the people involved with building, racing, and supporting TAZ.

She told me that as part of her divorce agreement, the small apartment that she was in with her new husband, two kids, and dad, had to be sold and everyone had to go. So did the storage unit. While I was figuring out the numbers in my head, I made her an offer and she accepted. I also offered to pay the storage unit fees for September, October, and November since I probably couldn’t get back up until Thanksgiving. We put the unit in my name for those months and I was given a key and the code. I completed the deal on September 11th, 2021 to tie in the date with our friend Jerry Joaquin’s original reason for wanting to build the Tasmanian Devil recreation (Tribute): To honor first responders lost in the WTC attacks, and to memorialize a racecar of his childhood racing heroes – Charlie Dodge & George Snizek.

It was a dream come true! Still keeping it a secret from my Dad, I called Artie Shilling and shared the good news. He suggested contacting Joe Quitoni at Joe Que’s Autobody, Poughkeepsie, NY, just three miles away. Joe agreed to pick up the trailer and car in October. The only thing that I took home with me that day was the surfer-style intake scoop that was on the car when it ran fuel in 1966-1967.

I went over to a family friend, Pacers fan, and Joe’s uncle, Dennis Quitoni’s house to tell him the news. He saw the scoop and said, “Oh that’s cool, where did you find that?” I said it came with the motor that I bought. He said, “What kind of motor?” I said a 1958 supercharged Hemi.  I said it came with the whole car. He said, “What kind of car was it in?” I said an Altered from the 1960s and then just shut up. He threw one guess out and said, “You bought your father’s car?” I said yup! He said, “Does he know?” Nope! And, that was the start of planning how we were going to get the project done secretly to surprise my dad. We started with Joe Que’s Autobody. Dad always said the car had something magical about it, and the magic had kicked in. Joe flat-bedded the original PACERS’ TASMANIAN DEVIL to his shop in October 2021 – exactly 54 years after it had been sold to Bob Petrucelli!

PACERS’ TASMANIAN DEVILOnce the car was at Joe Que’s, I went back up with Dennis for a reunion and to take the Hemi to Dennis’ shop, Performance Services, West Hempstead, NY, for disassembly and rebuilding. Joe recommended that artist Howie Nisgor do all the gold leaf and lettering at his shop. Howie was an old-school artist who ironically attended Valley Stream Central like my father, only much later. Artie Shilling offered his services and I also wanted Gary Kupfer, better known as “The Local Brush,” to be involved. He was my direct connection to Wendel John Paolo who originally lettered the Pacers’ racecars with the CARS Magazine logos. Wendel, who unfortunately had passed away many years ago, had been taught by Gary.

The livery restoration team wound up being Howie Nisgor and Gary Kupfer, while Artie Shilling and Joe Quitoni would do the bodywork. Next, Dennis Quitoni and I focused on the motor. It took a bunch of phone calls to trusted friends to make sure that I wasn’t hurting the value of the car by restoring it to its original condition and changing the cowl to Snizek and Dodge. It was where the CARS Magazine lettering was, and I wanted to keep that connection as well. I decided to put it on the belly pan below the Pacers Auto gold-leaf logo. I figured that any side shot of the car would always show the importance of the relationship that Marty Schorr and CARS had with my Dad, Charlie, and Pacers Auto.

I also wanted Performance Services on the car. Dennis had been part of the Tribute, above, as my crew chief, mentor, project coordinator, and a key part of the restoration as he was the replacement for “Uncle Charlie” Dodge’s engine expertise. Dennis was the person who kept the project going while I was in the hospital and rehab for four months, the result of an auto accident. To Dad and I, he will always be one of the Pacers. The project was kept super quiet by giving all of Dad’s friends, including Marty Schorr, a heads-up so that word wouldn’t leak out and I’d be able to surprise him. Thankfully, everybody respectfully honored our secret!

When we started the restoration, I would go to work each day and then go over to Dennis’s shop to put in another two to three hours a night working on the motor. On December 6th, I was in a work-related accident when our van was cut off, hit a tree, and flipped. I broke my right ankle and my left foot and was not able to put weight on my feet for four months. I ran the project with Dennis from my laptop while in Elmhurst Hospital!

I sourced a replacement surplus 6-71 blower from an equipment yard in Massachusetts and had it shipped to Dennis, who disassembled it and had it boiled clean. Next, I had NBP Polishing, Staten Island, NY make it look like fine jewelry. Then, Hank Wilko rebuilt it using original Delta parts. I sent out all the aluminum pieces to be stripped at New England Chrome Plating, and then polished by Justin at Central Connecticut Coatings. Located in East Hartford, CT, both companies had previously done the chrome work on our TAZ Tribute.

During the months that I was in the hospital, I could sense that Dad was depressed. My Mom had been in the hospital with Covid and was sent to a Coney Island hospital where she spent five months. She got out in the spring but now I was in the hospital. I called Dennis and asked if we could surprise Dad without the car being done. It’s only a surprise once. It would be great to have him involved in the restoration and get his mind off things. Dennis thought it was a great idea. Once I got out of the hospital in March and was walking with canes, Dennis called Dad and said, “Can you take a ride with me to get a car?” I joined them and the three of us made the trip. On the way up Dad asked what kind of car we were picking up. All Dennis said was “an Altered” and never elaborated.

When we got to the shop, Dad and I walked around and spotted a bare rolling chassis. His first comment was, “Look, it has the same friction shocks that I had on my racecar.” Dennis asked him if anything else looked familiar.  “It also has the same 12-spoke American Racing front wheels.” After Dennis said, “Everything should look familiar, it’s YOUR car, it all started to come together.” The surprise party had started!

That’s when Dad discovered that I had found and bought back the original TASMANIAN DEVIL before being involved in an accident and that the team had been restoring it. In a corner were a fresh white fiberglass body, grille surround, and scoop. And next to it was the sign that Bob had used when he showed it. My dad was speechless. Joe Que’s wife and I recorded the whole thing. We took the chassis back with us, left the body to be lettered, brought the chassis to Performance Services, and reinstalled the motor.

That was when it started taking shape. TAZ was back and looking as good as new. We took it home and I brought the belly pan to Gary Kupfer for lettering and I sent the scoop to Artie Shilling in South Carolina. The magneto was rebuilt by Spud Miller, Fuel Injection Ent., Philomath, OR, and Bill Klein flow tested the fuel system at C&C Auto Performance, Manassas, VA. The headers were Cerakoted by Bonehead Performance, Feasterville-Trevose, PA, and the guys from A&B Upholstery, Baldwin, NY came to Dennis’ shop to make a template for the tonneau cover. I had “Kevin the Polisher” glass bead the white fuzz from the magnesium rims and “Lenny the Painter” Cerakote a few pieces. I located an original Eelco fuel tank and after using every grit of sandpaper to smooth out the corrosion on the tank, Kevin made it shine like new!

We debuted TAZ in January 2024 at Drag Fest, Lebanon, PA, the indoor racecar show produced by Andy Goodman, Motorama Productions. Our good friend and Top Fuel driver “Nitro Joe” Morrison did the introduction during the reveal, and it truly was a big hit. We fired up TAZ at the Syracuse Nationals to lead off Al Liebman’s raucous Nitro Row Thunderfest. It was the first time that the Hemi had been run since 1967. It sounded as mean as ever and threw flames five feet out of the zoomies, unfortunately burning the front corners of the tonneau cover and body. It was spectacular to see and hear TAZ when it roared to life. With the help of friends Jim Gloyd and Troy Liebl, we took some fuel and air out and it ran and sounded exactly the way it did before being silenced for 57 years. Next, when Dad & I took the TASMANIAN DEVIL and (Tribute) trailer to the Tobay Beach Car Show in the Town of Oyster Bay for its Long Island, NY homecoming!

There’s always more to do with a racecar. Down the road, my father and I are looking forward to showing fans and friends the original and Tribute TAZ, side by side. Only the Tribute will continue to be raced, while the original will be for shows and cacklefests. As Ed Eaton Sr., New York National Speedway owner who invented drag racing’s Christmas Tree, said to me before passing away. “This car, (pointing to the Tribute I race) doesn’t have to ever go fast, because the original was the fastest in multiple classes back in the day.”

The original PACERS’ TASMANIAN DEVIL continues to take people down memory lane, recalling a time – 1963-1966 – when its ground-shaking runs won trophies and set NHRA National Records. And, turned local Long Island hot rodders and drag racers Charlie Dodge and George Snizek, right, into national heroes!

For more about the heritage of the PACERS’ TASMANIAN DEVIL, please visit https://pacersauto.com/

The reveal of the restored original PACERS’ TASMANIAN DEVIL video, @ https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1111483850211446

FLATHEADS FOREVER: HISTORY OF HOT RODDING

Henry Ford’s Flathead V-8, introduced in 1932, gave power to the people. It was more than just a bigger engine: FLATHEADS FOREVER: HISTORY OF HOT RODDING, and the rodders & racers responsible for making it happen.

FLATHEADS FOREVER: HISTORY OF HOT RODDING

Until the advent of modern OHV V-8 engines in 1949, Ford’s Flathead V-8 was the enthusiast’s engine of choice. It still is for traditional ‘old-school’ hot rodders, and competitors in Pre-War class road racing. It’s truly an “evergreen” story: FLATHEADS FOREVER: HISTORY OF HOT RODDING.

As early as the 1930s, Ford was capitalizing on what would become known in the 1960s as “Win on Sunday, Sell on Monday” marketing. It all started with the ‘32 Ford side-valve Flathead V-8, the first engine of its kind to be mass produced and available in popular-price vehicles. The 221-inch V-8 was rated at 65 horsepower at 3,400 rpm and, in 1933 and 1934, output increased to 75 and 85 horsepower, respectively.

A major win at the 1933 National Road Race in Elgin, IL established Ford as a feared competitor in road racing. Savvy dealers wasted no time bragging about Ford’ is win in the Nationals in local advertising. This drove customer traffic and V-8 model sales. Almost instantly new V-8 Ford roadsters could be found, less mufflers and fenders, tearing up racetracks. The 1932 Swedish Winter Grand Prix was won by two mechanics driving a Ford V-8 Special.

While modified Model T and A Fords gave birth to hot rodding in the 1920s, it was the Flathead V-8 that took it to the next level in the 1930s. Displacing 221 cubic inches and weighing just 585 pounds, the first V-8 was just 20-percent larger than the Model A Four, yet produced 62-percent more power. It didn’t take long for stripped-down Fords with modified V-8s to become the cars to beat at Southern California’s “dry lakes.” Then came World War II and the military took over many of the high-desert dry lakes.Racing engineer, Henry Miller and partner, Preston Tucker of Miller and Tucker, Inc. had been trying for years to get Henry Ford’s son, Edsel, to commit to racing programs.  They finally succeeded in the early-1930s. Edsel signed off on building a team for the 1935 Indy 500. Miller and Tucker built ten front-wheel-drive Miller-Ford Specials, powered by Flatheads for the 1935 race. They were the first front-drive four-wheel independent suspension cars seen at Indy. Unfortunately, it was not a successful venture; none of the cars finished. Years later, Preston Tucker would develop and build in 1948 the highly advanced and controversial Tucker 48 sedan.FLATHEADS FOREVER: HISTORY OF HOT RODDINGAfter World War II, hot-rodding, racing and the speed equipment industry experienced incredible growth. As the dry lakes became less and less available for racing, the popularity of quarter-mile drags surged. One of the pioneers of hot-rodding Flatheads was Vic Edelbrock. Bobby Meeks, left, and Fran Hernandez, above, prepare a Flathead racing engine for dyno-tuning at Edelbrock.

It would not be until 1950 that the first organized track, Santa Ana Drag Strip, would open on a Southern California airfield. In 1951 Wally Parks, then Editor of HOT ROD and founder of the National Hot Rod Association, produced the first official NHRA race at the Los Angeles Fairgrounds in Pomona, California. The Flathead also distinguished itself in NASCAR competition. Jim Roper, driving a Lincoln, won the first NASCAR race on June 19, 1949 at Charlotte Speedway.

For more about FLATHEADS FOREVER: HISTORY OF HOT RODDING, read Preston Lerner’s article, ‘Ford’s Flathead V-8 Gave Power to the People’ which originally appeared in the September/October 2024 issue of Hagerty Drivers Club magazine @ https://www.hagerty.com/media/automotive-history/fords-flathead-v-8-gave-power-to-the-people/?hashed_email=e323c71347790f699ba35a9dc01d49ac3f938885a7df6321087c8c9b4c0dd333&dtm_em=e323c71347790f699ba35a9dc01d49ac3f938885a7df6321087c8c9b4c0dd333

MOTION MINICAR VW THUNDERBUG

After setting records for two years in Baldwin-Motion’s A/MP Camaro, in 1970 Bill Mitchell shrinks the Supercar and continues his winning ways driving the MOTION MINICAR VW THUNDERBUG.

New model introductions for 1970 reinforced Detroit’s accelerating love affair with performance.  It was a new decade and carmakers continued seducing buyers with the most powerful Ponycars and Supercars yet.  It was a boom year for Motown Muscle.  And it was a record year for Baldwin-Motion and Motion Performance.

However, Joel Rosen had serious doubts about how long the horsepower wars would continue.  By 1970 he had already established lines of communication with engineers at Chevrolet and Oldsmobile and he was getting mixed messages regarding the future of industry involvement with performance.  While some engineers were optimistic about higher-output engines and racing packages, others forecasted a dim future.  Some predicted that environmental and safety issues would sound the death knell for performance cars.  They ended up being the true visionaries!

Concerned about the future, Rosen evaluated alternatives, eventually focusing on specialty vehicles powered by hot-rodded VW engines.“I felt strongly that we could apply our proven Motion branding and marketing philosophy to more affordable VW-powered vehicles,” said Rosen. It was a significant leap of faith for the man who believed that there really was no substitute for cubic inches.  He would learn that less could actually be more!

MOTION MINICAR VW THUNDERBUGRosen partnered with Bill Mitchell and me in 1970, opening Motion Minicar adjacent to Motion Performance.  It would remain an integral part of the Motion complex until 1975 when business slowed and Mitchell left to spend more time racing.

Following the successful Motion business model, Mitchell installed an engine dyno and built high-performance street VWs, dune buggies, and record-shattering racecars. I worked with Mitchell and Rosen to create the Thunderbug and Motion Minicar brands and the programs to market them.  Mitchell developed a potent line of Phase III VW engines – from an 85-horsepower, 1.4-Liter daily driver to a 150-horsepower, 2.2-Liter Street Eliminator with 48-mm Webers.

Between Mitchell’s unstoppable MOTION MINICAR VW THUNDERBUG and Porsche-bodied racecars that dominated H/Gas competition from 1971 to 1973 and customized high-performance dune buggies, Motion Minicar became a major player in the emerging hot VW field. In late 1971 Motion Minicar dune buggies and a Phase III VW Thunderbug were featured on New York’s WNEW TV-5 Evening News.  Popular TV sportscaster Lee Leonard put Minicar’s hottest vehicles to the test on Brooklyn’s Brighton Beach.

That TV spot led to the prestigious placement of Minicar dune buggies in the Owens-Corning Fiberglas Showroom on Fifth Avenue and 56th Street in New York City.  The exhibit showcased creative applications of fiberglass-reinforced plastics.  A diplomat from Haiti’s embassy happened to photograph the Minicar display.  This started a chain of events that eventually lead to the building a dune buggy for Haiti’s notorious Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier.  Papa Doc ordered it as a surprise birthday present for his son, Jean-Claude, better known as “Baby Doc.”

“When completed, I put the Metalflake buggy on our racecar trailer and delivered it to the Gramercy Park Hotel in New York City where Baby Doc was celebrating his birthday.  We gift-wrapped it with huge ribbons in front of the hotel and gave the keys to Haitian security officers.   After the party it was crated and put on a freighter bound for Haiti,” said Mitchell.

It was the radically chopped, record-setting, VW-bodied MOTION MINICAR VW THUNDERBUG that catapulted Motion Minicar into the national limelight in 1972.  A fiberglass-bodied, tube-frame H/Gas racecar, it replaced Minicar’s earlier 1970 Thunderbug that had a stock-height body.  Sitting just 47 inches off the ground, the new Thunderbug’s body was secured to tubular steel rails with Dzus fasteners and could be completely removed in minutes. Its nose and primary body assembly tilted for suspension and engine access.

Power for the Gasser came from a 245 horsepower (at 7,300 rpm), Mitchell-built 2,180-cc motor. The 13.7-to-l “hand grenade” motor was fitted with Scat 82-mm forged steel crank, 92-mm forged aluminum pistons on Porsche rods, .500-inch-lift Thunderbug cam, ported and polished dual-port Thunderbug heads with 42-mm intake and 35.5-mm exhaust valves, a pair of 48 IDA Webers and a Vertex magneto. A close-ratio four-speed Porsche transaxle with 4.44 gears and ZF “locker” completed the powertrain. It was available as a crate engine for customers.

Mitchell started setting records with the chopped yellow MOTION MINICAR VW THUNDERBUG almost immediately after sorting it out.  On April 29, 1972, he ran 116.88 mph in 11.09 seconds against an 11.51 record at the NHRA Division 2 Points Meet at Suffolk Raceway in Virginia.  During the Eliminations, Mitchell posted unbelievable 11.04s-11.06s.  During that weekend in Virginia, Bill Mitchell nailed a total of 16 IHRA and NHRA National Records!   He set four ET and four MPH records, running in G, I, J and K/Gas at the IHRA Nationals on Saturday at Colonial Beach. The next day at the NHRA meet at Suffolk Raceway, Mitchell collected eight more records!

MOTION MINICAR VW THUNDERBUGAt the NHRA Points Meet at Suffolk, Motion ruled the day. Mitchell took the H/Gas win in the Thunderbug and Dennis Ferrara, driving the Baldwin-Motion big-block Camaro, won A/Modified Production. Both cars set records and ended up running against each other for Eliminator. Cubic inches ruled and the Camaro took the gold.

Bill Mitchell continued his winning ways, “owning” the NHRA H/Gas record in 1972 and 1973. In late 1973 Mitchell built a chopped 911 Porsche to replace the yellow Thunderbug. The Porsche, fitted with a fiberglass body and carryover Thunderbug race engine, sat on a Richie Sullivan chassis. The folks at NHRA were not happy when Mitchell started running the new car.  It obliterated existing records, running consistent 10.20s.  It was too quick, prompting NHRA to change the rules.  Mitchell didn’t want to play NHRA’s game and retired the “slammed” Porsche.

MOTION MINICAR VW THUNDERBUGBy 1975 the hot VW business had run its course and Mitchell wanted to spend more time racing. In the spring of 1975, we closed Minicar’s doors. Mitchell continued to drive racecars for five years and then moved on to launch Bill Mitchell HARDCORE Racing Products and World Products.

For the full story on the MOTION MINICAR VW THUNDERBUG, Motion and Baldwin-Motion, check out https://www.amazon.com/Motion-Performance-Tales-Muscle-Builder/dp/0760355606/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1493151743&sr=1-1&keywords=MOTION Performance, Tales of a muscle car builder