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Hot Rod terms that are no longer in common usage

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by adjustablejohnsons, Feb 15, 2011.

  1. My father (and others of his generation) here in GA always called an accelerator pedal a "foot feed." This was due to Model T's having a lever on the steering column for the throttle. When Model A's came out with a foot operated gas pedal, it got dubbed a "foot feed." To this day, I have never "depressed an accelerator." I have often "mashed the foot feed" when I wanted to go faster. No self-respecting southerner ever "pressed" a button or "depressed" a pedal. We mash 'em.
     
  2. AnimalAin
    Joined: Jul 20, 2002
    Posts: 3,416

    AnimalAin
    Member

    "Cross-country chingo." Damn, I miss Baskerville.
     
  3. The Whole Nine Yards" Giving it everthing your got left"

    This was usally the amount of Gun Belt ammo held in the wings of WW2 Fighter Planes Nine Yards of 50 Cal Some times
     
  4. Hnstray
    Joined: Aug 23, 2009
    Posts: 12,355

    Hnstray
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Quincy, IL

    "Racking the pipes", "racking 'em off" ............with glasspacks or equivalent, revving up in a lower gear, then letting off the 'foot feed' and hearing the exhaust note

    "peelin' out" "peelin' rubber"......spinning (usually squealing) the tires on initial acceleration

    "ridin' shotgun" .........the person on the outward passenger position on a bench seat with three abreast

    "cuttin' donuts"......from a standing start, with the front wheels cranked into a turn, peelin' rubber in a circular pattern leaving a "donut" shape of black marks on the pavement

    Ray
     
  5. stan292
    Joined: Dec 6, 2002
    Posts: 858

    stan292
    Member

    Fun thread!

    How about: Double-clutching
    Hot wrench, or Oklahoma speed wrench (cutting torch)
    Playing chicken (bad idea)
    Lakes plugs (long 'Lakewood' style exhaust pipes with a removable cap at the end)
    Georgia overdrive (coasting)
    Hog's head (clutch housing or removeable differential housing)
    Heater (flathead Ford)
    Wolf Whistle (stupid add-on noisemaker from J.C. Whitney)
    Exhaust cut-outs
    Lift kits (C-shaped devices to raise the front end - mostly used on tri-five Chevies)
    Titty Pink (very popular color in the late '50s, early '60s)
    Crinkle or wrinkle paint
    Cherry Bombs (glass-pack mufflers)
    Classic Car Wax (the best stuff ever - pure carnuba)
    Blue Coral Wax (second best, but most popular and less work)
    Diamond pleat upholstery (popular after everyone got tired of roll-and-pleat)
    Recapped tires (what most of us could afford)
    White wheel wells (hand painted every Saturday before the night's cruise)
    Spinner hubcaps (three or four bar)
    Racoon or Squirrel tails on your 'ariel' (TOTALLY uncool)
     
  6. GAL60
    Joined: Feb 8, 2011
    Posts: 47

    GAL60
    Member

    That guys a "couple quarts low" = not all there.
     
  7. Ned Ludd
    Joined: May 15, 2009
    Posts: 5,206

    Ned Ludd
    Member

    Persuasion Tool = hammer
    Heavy = hot, in the thermal sense, of nuts, bolts, and small parts: "just you try picking it up!"

    In my part of the world it was the little yellow lemon-shaped plastic bottles in which lemon juice was sold that went onto the aerial. Even uncooler. It went with the fake fur "lawn on the dash". My cousin had the idea of making little lawnmowers ...

    By the way, is a Studebaker called a "Study-baker" anywhere else in the world? As far as I can tell it's a "Stew-de-baker" everywhere except in South Africa.
     
  8. We used to call it "rappin' the pipes"... :cool:
     
  9. That would be the whole 27 feet. :D

    Heap, one of the fellas just wrote me about getting to work on my car so he could race me in my heap at MOKAN this year. I haven't heard one called a heap in ages.

    That would be heap as in heap of junk I suppose. But from the fella in question it was a compliment, I think. ;)
     
    Last edited: Feb 18, 2011
  10. Greezeball
    Joined: Mar 12, 2006
    Posts: 743

    Greezeball
    Member

    Ha ha ! My wife worked for onstar and used to love talkin' to southerners. She could do it perfect too " I mashed da button an' it just don't go!"
     
  11. falcongeorge
    Joined: Aug 26, 2010
    Posts: 18,339

    falcongeorge
    Member
    from BC

    I must be old, I use "nosed over" all the time, or "laid down". "laid down" more if it didnt pull off the shift point, "nosed over" more if it was within the last 300 feet.
     
  12. fastrnu
    Joined: Feb 26, 2009
    Posts: 739

    fastrnu
    Member
    from shelton,wa

    Rat motor (Can I say that on the HAMB)
    Mouse motor
    Bangin gears
    Blew the aft shaft
    Purple Hornies get the Chicks
    STP = spin tires on pavement
    Ricky Racer
    Gravel Burner
     
  13. Casey65
    Joined: Oct 20, 2010
    Posts: 2

    Casey65
    Member

    "power bangin' gears" shifting with the "foot feed" on the floor.

    "Dago" has nothing to do with a nationality. Ed Stewart, nicknamed “Axle” by friends and customers, gave Hot Rodding a piece of hardware that would impact the look and character of hot rods in the late ’40s. Given the nickname of the town from whence it came, San Diego – “Dago” – the Dago dropped axle, was requisite metal for any ride worthy of being called a hot rod. Re-manufactured, as it was, and marketed by San Diego speed merchant Ed Stewart, the axle was such a pervasive part of hot rodding that it’s nickname became a description for a down-in-front hot rod; when someone described a car as “Dago’d” there was no question about it having a nose-down stance.
     
  14. HOT ROD BILL
    Joined: Apr 7, 2007
    Posts: 714

    HOT ROD BILL
    Member

    "Trans" not "Tranny"
     
  15. Ricci32
    Joined: Jul 30, 2010
    Posts: 416

    Ricci32
    Member

    Two antenna's - duel tanners
    wing vents - no draft windows
     
  16. pbhats
    Joined: Dec 6, 2010
    Posts: 19

    pbhats
    Member

    Petal to the metal
    Romp on it
    Smoke em
     
  17. 64gtoguy
    Joined: Aug 22, 2008
    Posts: 277

    64gtoguy
    Member

    YO-YO,, A pieced together Hot Rod,,,,,,,, or that other kind we are not supposed to refer to.
     
  18. billsill45
    Joined: Jul 15, 2009
    Posts: 784

    billsill45
    Member
    from SoCal


    Another version of the origin of "the whole nine yards": For many years, readi-mix or transit-mix concrete delivery trucks had a 9 cubic yard capacity ... therefore, if you wanted a full truckload you asked for "the whole 9 yards".
     
  19. Coupe Crazy
    Joined: Sep 20, 2010
    Posts: 83

    Coupe Crazy
    Member
    from LI, NY

    "haulin' ass"
    "layin' rubber"
    "gittin' it"
     
  20. k9racer
    Joined: Jan 20, 2003
    Posts: 3,091

    k9racer
    Member

    And the name was slang used by saliors /radio men on ships while talking about the port and the name stuck. all the saliors called the city of San Diego dago and they were hot rodders..thank you for getting this straight..
     
  21. FOOT FEED is the gas pedal.
     
  22. newpy383
    Joined: Mar 30, 2007
    Posts: 113

    newpy383
    Member

    My dad always said. "I had it wound tighter than an 8 day clock"
     
  23. 2Hep
    Joined: Mar 3, 2005
    Posts: 523

    2Hep
    Member

    Correct with air combat and fighter planes, actually comes from WWI and the ammo that was held, was 9 yards. If you went the whole 9 yards (like you said, everything you've got) then you had to head back to base.
     
  24. KustomRocket88
    Joined: Dec 12, 2009
    Posts: 291

    KustomRocket88
    Member

    Wow, I remember the term "full house," no one says that anymore these days.

     

  25. I used to hang around this old man who used to race the equilavent of comp eliminator in the late 60's early seventiesish time period and he would tell me " Kyle, I'd mash the foot feed to the floor til the rev indicator read 9 thousand then side step up the clutch and away it went wwwwwaaaaaaaaaa"
     
  26. KustomRocket88
    Joined: Dec 12, 2009
    Posts: 291

    KustomRocket88
    Member

    May I point out a term never used back then used today, "Old school." Back then all these things were modern, this wasn't old!! Guess if one wants to be truly "old school" don't use the term "old school"!
     
  27. low-n-slo54
    Joined: Jul 25, 2009
    Posts: 1,920

    low-n-slo54
    Member

  28. Greasy64
    Joined: Nov 1, 2008
    Posts: 198

    Greasy64
    Member

    Heard these from "old guys" at car shows and the drags as a kid.

    Twice pipes = dual exhaust.

    Sun deck and toilet seat = continental kit

    Mexican radar = curb feelers "I'm in so cal"

    Pumpkin = drop out differential

    Mom's car = four door (no exceptions)

    parts car = see above

    door stop = Studebaker Avanti
     
  29. Frank
    Joined: Jul 30, 2004
    Posts: 2,325

    Frank
    Member

    LOL! I think that's where I picked up most of mine when I was a kid!
     
  30. encswsm
    Joined: Oct 24, 2008
    Posts: 149

    encswsm
    Member

    How about "Boss" "Sled" or "Souped Up"? or any call their Motorcycles a Scooter or a scoot
     

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