How can we forget the Flexible flying "NANOOK" Another view looks like something broken by the right front wheel !!
Picture of my Dad I think this is at the San Fernando track. . If y'all could help me is there a website where I can go to and find out where vintage car races or modern Fuel Altered races are Tx especially central Tx . Sent from my SM-G900P using H.A.M.B. mobile app
They race a fuel altered circuit that runs at Denton and Kennedale quite a bit. Looks like no Kennedale this year. http://www.outlawfuelaltereds.com/
Thank you . I know where they race NHRA here in Tx I'm going with my son at the end of April to Houston but have no idea where the other races are at . Thanks for the help and I know my Dad went to some races a couple times in San Antonio they only lived in Tx for 7 yrs before he passed so that must of been a Outlaw race Sent from my SM-G900P using H.A.M.B. mobile app
Guys I know we all love altereds of all types but we need to keep this to the era that the HAMB was made for please no photos of modern cars sorry.
Got a bunch more today been suffering from after action let down and have to keep my mind busy. Some of you Veterans will know what I mean. The Pipins & Green AA/FA was the first fuel altered for a man who made his name in fuel altereds, Don Green. The little Ford T Bucket was driven by partner Butch Pipins in the very tough So-Cal wars of the late sixties. The team was one of the first altereds to run a front end spoiler, taking a different approach than Mousie Marcellus and Wild Willie Borschs application of a huge rear wing on their machine. In 1968, Pipins ran a known best of 8.29 at 189.86. This was before the advent of the slider clutch, which enabled times to drop into the sevens overnight and catapulted speeds over the 200 MPH barrier. The Pipins & Green AA/FA was reborn as The Trip in 1969 when Don Green built his first Rat Trap Bantam. The Bad News fuel altered had a sporadic history in the So-Cal fuel altered wars in the sixties. This was the final edition of the famed Fiat Topolino, caught in 1968 at Irwindale. The car dates back to at least 1960, when a very short version of the car (under 90 inches of wheelbase) made its debut with Bob Sidebotham doing the driving. The steel bodied car raced off and on through out the sixties with various drivers such as Sidebotham, Troy Delmar, Lyle Webster, and Gary Southern all taking rides. Gary Southern ran the machines known best with a run of 8.17 at 178.92 in 1969. Bowers, Paris & Reeds "Mother-In-Law" might have been just one of the many fuel altereds that raced in the So-Cal area in the late sixties and early seventies, but it was one of the first to run 200 MPH. The little Bantam roadster was driven to success by team member Red Paris. According to drag racing historian Bill Duke, the basic car debuted in 1964 as a steel bodied, blown fuel altered Fiat. The chassis and motor were retained for years, with refinements being made year to year. A fiberglass Bantam body eventually replaced the heavy all steel Fiat body. The car ran competitive 7.60s at 200 MPH but got little recognition. Gil Hayward's "Monkey Motion" AA/FA "15 Oz" coupe from the vintage photo thread today Bradford family fiat "Gretchko Bros" bantam "Hillbilies" fiat
These things must have grown on trees back in the day I keep finding more and more photos. "The Bandido" altered was not raced for very long but it was a beauty. The Bill Finnacle Bandido Bantam was originally the Beebe Bros and Sixt car. The "Burkholder Bros" Fuel Fiat blazes the hides. The "DiMatteo Brothers" had the best looking Fuel Altered. And it had enough power to do the twist LOL. The Scrounger was another great So-Cal altered. Run by Stan Lucas and Tom Koulan, the cars name was derived from Lucas having to scrounge parts just to run the Bantam altered. The low buck racers ran the altered with moderate success despite having little money. Stan later drove the Beaver Hunter for Nolan Pritchard and teamed with Rod Lucas to help the class survive the early eighties with an AA/FA run under many names. Tom Koulan moved to Missouri in '74 and teamed with Steve Picou on the Koulan & Picou '23 T pickup AA/FA followed by the Gateway Shaker Mustang II BB/FC, the Koulan & Picou AA/DA and the National Parts Peddler-sponsored TF car. "WARLORD" going for the sky Walker and Hurst bantam with "T" bucket push car. At Mickey Thompson's fontana Unknown coupe C/A LOL looks like a hippie invasion.
Two of the more famous altereds. First up "Mondello & Matsubara" Fiat different paint Next up the man who needs no intro yet more of "Wild Willie" in the "Winged Express In this one it looks like his arm is still there. I forgot to add I'm no expert and if anyone feels any captions are incorrect please feel free to jump in with what you think is correct or can identify any of the unknowns. The power of the HAMB it's MEMBERS.
Well look who we get in our altereds page today. Can you believe it's The NASCAR king himself Richard Petty. NASCAR’s loss became drag racing’s gain when Chrysler pulled its banned Hemi cars from the premier Grand National circuit. At Bristol’s inaugural Springnationals, Richard Petty’s “Outlawed” Barracuda topped B/Altered trophy at 10.62/131, then went two more rounds in Competition Eliminator.
Bowers on the Mother In Law car . I wonder If that is Larry Bowers from Bowers Blowers he was a good friend of my Dads for many years I use to go to his house a lot until my parents moved to Northern California The monkey car do you know if that is Gil in the picture driving the car ? Why I ask because my Dad always wore a purple helmet with a Yogi Bear on it all the time I don't know how popular purple helmets were back then .
This so great to see all the cars in color a lot of the photo's I have of my Dad are black and white . Do you know who is driving the Mondello car ?
Yea for sure, there was a newspaper account of the crash but I figured everybody knew the story and left it out.
@AHotRod These look like they may be the same car, am I guessing right? Doesn't matter how popular purple helmets were back then you absolutely could not miss the Yogi Bear helmet either in the pits or staging.
One that passed through my hands many years ago, supposedly a class winner at OKC Nationals. It was a center steer car.
The 15oz coupe and this one have always been my favorite altereds. I have never seen a pic of the crate staging but I did get to sit in it once at a car show.