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Hot Rods What's wrong with a channeled hot rod?

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by JimSibley, Sep 9, 2017.

  1. JimSibley
    Joined: Jan 21, 2004
    Posts: 3,940

    JimSibley
    Member

    i have been seeing a lot of posts about ruined cars due to channeling. Channeling is as period correct as it gets, I get that it's not for everyone's taste, but it looks good on some cars especially in a sea of cookie cutter hot rods. It's no more ruining than a chopped top or a sectioned body. Why all of the hate?
     
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  2. To quote an old line, "haters gonna hate ".


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  3. Rusty O'Toole
    Joined: Sep 17, 2006
    Posts: 9,717

    Rusty O'Toole
    Member

    Channeled fenderless coupes and roadsters were popular in the east and midwest for the low sports car look. In California they were practically unknown. I believe this was because racing rules for the dry lakes and Bonneville called for a stock body "unaltered in height width and contour". Major mods like chopped top or channeled body put you in the streamlined class.

    So, channeling was out if you wanted to run at the lakes, or look like you did, or let on that you were going to. It's possible a lot of guys just knew a channeled car was uncool without knowing exactly why.

    There were a few channeled customs but that is a different thing. No need to worry about racing rules if you aren't going racing.
     
  4. JimSibley
    Joined: Jan 21, 2004
    Posts: 3,940

    JimSibley
    Member

    That's all fine, but it does not explain the love of a chopped car with the hatred for the same car having a channel job. I have been building hot rods and customs for a long time and I have always admired a car with a lot of mods done tastefully, it takes a lot of work to channel a car and to some people it blasphemy.
     
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  5. Torana68
    Joined: Jan 28, 2008
    Posts: 1,434

    Torana68
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Australia

    couple of things, I like a channeled car but in a lot of cases it wasn't done, safely, neatly or with regard to long life. So sometimes all the floor and subframes are roughly cut out and body dropped over the frame and all sorts of bodges done to keep it there. Hence "ruined cars due to channeling" is a body hacked so as to make it very hard to un channel.......................... instead of seeing an opportunity to save a channeld hot rod the fashion conscious see a damaged body that will be hard to put back on the rails to suit their idea of a traditional Hot Rod .
     
  6. JimSibley
    Joined: Jan 21, 2004
    Posts: 3,940

    JimSibley
    Member

    I guess that's my point, "thier idea of a traditional hot rod" I have hundreds of magazines and books from the 50s and 60s. Mthese are the books I read, and I have noticed that a huge amount of the feature cars were channeled. I'm currently reading the history of spokane hotrodding, and there are a lot of pics of old channeled cars in it. That's a long way from The east' coast.
     
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  7. Torana68
    Joined: Jan 28, 2008
    Posts: 1,434

    Torana68
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Australia

    well a Hot Rod IS a personal thing, what I like you may not.......... perhaps right now channeled isn't the fashion , huge chops seem to be the go , which I don't like :) fashion and traditional probably don't mix well, I don't follow fashion....
     
  8. Jim, I'm channeling my 32 Pickup, I think it looks rad and also not very common in these parts. Nothing wrong with a chopped and channeled hot rod.


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  9. el Scotto
    Joined: Mar 3, 2004
    Posts: 4,720

    el Scotto
    Member
    from Tracy, CA

    I dig channeled cars.


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  10. robracer1
    Joined: Aug 3, 2015
    Posts: 514

    robracer1
    Member

    They look cool, but for me 6'2" 235 pounds they don't look very comfortable to drive?
     
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  11. JimSibley
    Joined: Jan 21, 2004
    Posts: 3,940

    JimSibley
    Member

    The reason I thought this up stems from a post on selling a 32 three window project. The guy is railed on about every post because the car is channeled. First off, if you don't like it, buy it and unchannel it! Secondly, it just got me thinking about the hatred that seems unjustified. I'm building a 32 three window right now that I am channeling 2 inches just to make the frame less of an eye catcher. I guess I'm stupid but I think it helps this car.
     

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  12. southcross2631
    Joined: Jan 20, 2013
    Posts: 4,412

    southcross2631
    Member

    Having owned both. A channeled car is easier to see out of especially seeing traffic lights.
    I am not real tall 5 foot 10 so they never presented a room problem, but some of my taller friends bitched about how hard both were to get in and out of and see out. So I ended up with short friends.
    There are no rules in hot rods . That is why I stopped doing restorations. To each his own.
     
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  13. Well When I built my "T" Coupe I had the best of both, Chopped and Channeled.

    Channeled 4" and Chopped 6"

    How I regret selling this car now. :(

    You either love um or hate um, I'm a lover of both if they are done correctly


    _Coupe.jpg
     
  14. jetnow1
    Joined: Jan 30, 2008
    Posts: 2,177

    jetnow1
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from CT
    1. A-D Truckers

    You nailed the look, anyone who does not like this does not like hot rods!
     
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  15. The37Kid
    Joined: Apr 30, 2004
    Posts: 31,748

    The37Kid
    Member

    Sure it is personal idea of what looks good, to me wheel well to tire is what I see first. If the body is channeled to the point the tire sits above the wheel well it looks out of place. There is a '32 Roadster build here on the HAMB were the wheel wells and quarters were raised to solve this visual problem. That is a lot of work few people tried to do back in the day. Bob
     
  16. The37Kid
    Joined: Apr 30, 2004
    Posts: 31,748

    The37Kid
    Member

    DSCF9247.JPG DSCF9248.JPG DSCF9250.JPG DSCF9251.JPG Ray Kuns Automobile Racing 1947 had the earliest "How To" on channeling, very basic. Bob
     
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  17. flatheadpete
    Joined: Oct 29, 2003
    Posts: 10,553

    flatheadpete
    Member
    from Burton, MI

    There are a lot of channeled cars I like and a lot I don't. Your coupe is really bitchin'. I agree it really helps overall shape of not only the body but the frame, too. What I don't like are the cars hammered so hard that they look broken.
     
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  18. My last Model A Tudor I channeled 3" and moved the wheel openings up the same amount. Plan on doing the same on the current one. Guess it's a personal taste thing, but it's my car and money and I like it, and to me that's all that really matters.
     
  19. It all depends on the car in question. Nothing looks more hot rod than a channeled fenderless 32 Ford roadster. Some cars are over channeled and look like rat rods. I think it is all just a matter of personal taste. You need your proportions right. My opinion, which is worthless to anyone other than myself is that a fenderless pickup cab channeled looks like crap. Same with a sedan body, but coupes and roadsters, if done properly just scream Hot Rod.
    With hot rods, you do your own thing and let those who don't like it look elsewhere.
     
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  20. Growing up here in the South when I was in my teens there were not that many hot rods running around but the majority of the early ones seemed to be channeled and not chopped,I believe it was more of a east coast style.

    My friend Larry had a red channeled hi-boy Deuce that his dad and uncle built and another channeled 5 window chopped top hiboy sat at the local gas station,this was in 66 and I was the typical long and lanky teenager,the price was fair and I had already made up my mind I was going to buy the car and it drive it home.

    Then I crawled in and it was imminently apparent that my 6'4" Neanderthal body was not designed for the small confines of the coupe,the steering wheel was in a position that I was unable to get my leg high enough to press the clutch pedal and that's when reality sat in,I wasn't going to drive this car home.

    My only problem with the channeled cars is - I DON'T FIT! :( I certainly don't hate them. HRP
     
  21. stude54ht
    Joined: Dec 30, 2007
    Posts: 974

    stude54ht
    Member
    from Spokane WA

    EL Mirage circa 1950, channeled B modified roadster.
    [​IMG]
     
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  22. One of my favorites!

    Unchopped.jpg
     
  23. I want to see more of that article about "turning a bearing journal using a hand tool". :eek:
     
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  24. Tim
    Joined: Mar 2, 2001
    Posts: 18,331

    Tim
    Member
    from KCMO

    In short because a lot of restoration types seem to have invaded along with the rust is cool crowd.

    I see people bitching on a pretty regular basses about a chop is going to ruin that car, or how pulling the fenders is a terrible idea.

    So them being pissy at channeling a car doesn't seem that far out of line.

    Fuck em
     
  25. JimSibley
    Joined: Jan 21, 2004
    Posts: 3,940

    JimSibley
    Member

    It's nice to see that there are a fair amount of real deal hot rodders left on the hamb. I sometimes get a little disgruntled that we are reverting to the resto-rod era of the mid 70s. Long live the real hot rod!
     

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  26. ss34coupe
    Joined: May 13, 2007
    Posts: 4,252

    ss34coupe
    Member

    IMG_0811.jpg Some of us are still building them, here is my 33 coupe.
     
    Last edited: Sep 10, 2017
  27. JimSibley
    Joined: Jan 21, 2004
    Posts: 3,940

    JimSibley
    Member

    Just the other day I was invited to an old mans house to look at the car he had in his garage. It was a 1934 ford 5w, unchopped with a 6 inch channel and set up for an olds rocket. This guy bought his car when he was 13, and he is in his 70s today. His car sits just as it did when he got it. Now if that's not period correct, I don't know what is. Oh yea, and this car was done right here in Washington, pretty far west for an east coast thing.
     
  28. H380
    Joined: Sep 20, 2015
    Posts: 488

    H380
    Member
    from Louisiana

    That other thread was about the value of an old back yard built rod. Today an original body with the sills and floor intact is simply worth more than one than has been cut up. Good chops are also in the eyes of the beholder. It just gives the buyer more options when building his rod.
     
    dana barlow likes this.
  29. Nothing wrong with a channeled rod at all ! - Happy to have mine ! Like people say each to their own, but it works for me !
    20170902_100055.jpg
     
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  30. coilover
    Joined: Apr 19, 2007
    Posts: 697

    coilover
    Member
    from Texas

    I channeled my 34 Chevy 5" and two things I haven't worked out to my satisfaction are the steering column is now in the middle of the instrument cluster and where the front fenders tie together under the grill shell there is very little ground clearance. Will be worked out but is not a ride for anyone over 5'10".
     

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