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most famous hot rod

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by jax59, May 15, 2011.

  1. mrconcdid
    Joined: Aug 31, 2010
    Posts: 1,156

    mrconcdid
    Member
    from Florida

    "It depends on where your standing as to how dumb you are".

    My first was on an album cover but I can remember the group, it was a red t-bucket with a short set of zoomies on it" might have been beach boys or something like that. It was parked on a street in front of a park. was running a set of bigs and littles. its been 30 yrs since I have seen it.

    if anyone remembers the group/album I'd love to look at that car again?
     
  2. 34 Plymouth Hemi
    Joined: Apr 8, 2008
    Posts: 68

    34 Plymouth Hemi
    Member

  3. seabeecmc
    Joined: Jan 28, 2005
    Posts: 1,285

    seabeecmc
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I take exception to 1970 birth date for the term Street Rod. In 1953 Henry Gregor Felsen published his novel STREET ROD. Some how the term has been ruined much like GAY. We don't want to be aligned with it. But it wasn't always that way.

     
  4. Deuces
    Joined: Nov 3, 2009
    Posts: 26,796

    Deuces

    I gotta get that model kit again one of these years...
     
  5. Famous, would have to be Milners coupe. Influential, I'd say California Kid or ZZ Top Eliminator. As for my favoriate to date, it's the Ardun Roadster that Jimmy Shine built at So Cal a few years ago. The car that most influenced me personally was the 32 roadster that the two guys built for like $11,386.00 in thier garage and Hot Rod did a " you can build it " article on the car. It got me back into it after almost 13 years. Thanks guys.
     
  6. Deuces
    Joined: Nov 3, 2009
    Posts: 26,796

    Deuces

    Still my favorite!! :D
     
  7. Deuces
    Joined: Nov 3, 2009
    Posts: 26,796

    Deuces

    How about the "Beverly Hillbillys" Buick truck??? :rolleyes:
     
  8. Da Flash
    Joined: Mar 27, 2008
    Posts: 125

    Da Flash
    Member

    Hey Johnny,
    You hit it on the head, it just depends on where you were and when. Nobody has even mentioned the green roadster from the Ozzie and Harriet show. That on sure rang my bells until Kookie got out his comb and his T....
    Da Flash
     
  9. Choptop
    Joined: Jun 19, 2001
    Posts: 3,303

    Choptop
    Member

    the most famous isnt necessarily the most influential and visa versa.
     
  10. Oldmanolds
    Joined: Jan 16, 2006
    Posts: 930

    Oldmanolds
    Member

    I'm old enough to remember the Kookie Kar. It has to be my number one influence.
     
  11. F-6Garagerat
    Joined: Apr 12, 2008
    Posts: 2,652

    F-6Garagerat
    Member

  12. Deuces
    Joined: Nov 3, 2009
    Posts: 26,796

    Deuces

    TV Tommy's nailhead powered T bucket...
     
  13. beauishere
    Joined: Mar 17, 2004
    Posts: 607

    beauishere
    Member

    The Milner Coupe & The Doyle Gammell Coupe for me.
     
  14. codeblu
    Joined: May 11, 2006
    Posts: 606

    codeblu
    Member

    Nuthin' Fancy
     
  15. ZomBrian
    Joined: Jan 24, 2008
    Posts: 1,143

    ZomBrian
    Member
    from in IN

    I agree it is way too subjective, like asking "What goes best on toast?"! It ends up being a generational thing due, in part, to trends of certain eras.

    For me...at my young age...the Ed Iskenderian T has always screamed Hot Rod and been high on my "rock star" hot rod list.:cool:
     
  16. Tom Slick's Thunder Bolt Grease *******.
     

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  17. fab32
    Joined: May 14, 2002
    Posts: 13,985

    fab32
    Member Emeritus

    As a kid fresh off the farm and never exposed to any kind of modifed car I moved with my dad to his first Air Force ***ignment after WWII. Our first stop was Savannah, GA where our neighbor was a hot rodder. He let me look at his complete collection of Hot Rod Magazines. The first one I opened featured Bill Nieamp's AMBR winning '29 Roadster. I must have stared at the magazine for 2-3 days drinking in a whole dimenson of life I didn't know existed. To this day the Neikamp roadster remains my favorite if only for sentimental reasons.

    Frank
     
  18. I remember seeing the Ricky Nelson Roadster car on TV and my uncle and I went ga ga over it... pluss I'd watch "77 Sunset Strip" and couldn't wait to see the T bucket!

    I remember when it was for auction and sold for over $200k... http://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=1721

    Ricky Nelson Roadster.jpg

    Allways thought that car was a Tractor!
     
    Last edited: May 17, 2011
  19. stainlesssteelrat
    Joined: Nov 23, 2010
    Posts: 583

    stainlesssteelrat
    Member
    from ms

    this
     
  20. Greezeball
    Joined: Mar 12, 2006
    Posts: 743

    Greezeball
    Member

    Tom Slick's the man!
     
  21. scalhotrod
    Joined: Nov 22, 2010
    Posts: 138

    scalhotrod

    SeabeeCMC,

    Thank you! I was completely unaware of this reference.

    So I stand corrected in that the birth of this term seemingly can be credited to Felsen. Yet I would submit that the beginning of its general acceptance into the "hot rod" lexicon can be attributed to the NSRA.

    Chris
     
  22. HOTRODPRIMER
    Joined: Jan 3, 2003
    Posts: 64,848

    HOTRODPRIMER
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I believe it has a lot to do with when you were first exposed to Hot Rods,,some of us ol' graybeards will say the Doane Spence made a big impact when we were kids reading Hot Rod Magazine or numerous others of that period or maybe Norman Grabowski's T bucket on the old Television show 77 Sunset Strip back in the 60's.

    Some may think about the yellow Roadster pickup in Happy Day's,,or the California Kid from the 70's.

    May identify with the cars in American Graffiti in the 80's..

    The list could go on and on depending on what era you relate too.HRP
     
  23. Jimm56
    Joined: Aug 27, 2010
    Posts: 170

    Jimm56
    Member

    Pre-war cars, I'd vote for Grabowski's. Post war, it's gotta be the Project X '57. I watched it change through it's various iterations. Its current state is cool, with the input from the Chevrolet skunk works. That hood with the built in cold air intake is the sh**s!
     
  24. Rocky
    Joined: Mar 3, 2001
    Posts: 17,629

    Rocky
    Classified Editor

    amen
     
  25. HOTRODPRIMER
    Joined: Jan 3, 2003
    Posts: 64,848

    HOTRODPRIMER
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    One that completely slipped my mind! HRP
     
  26. 1933BOB
    Joined: Dec 15, 2009
    Posts: 684

    1933BOB
    Member

    Milners for famous, Doane Spencers for best and i'm not a big ford fan.
     
  27. aaggie
    Joined: Nov 21, 2009
    Posts: 2,530

    aaggie
    Member

    Remember the T-bucket that Ed "Kooky" Burns drove on the old TV series 77 Sunset Strip? It introduced a whole country to the notion that hot rods were cool.
     
  28. tlundberg
    Joined: May 30, 2008
    Posts: 124

    tlundberg
    Member
    from Arma Ks

    Easy --- Milner's 32 deuce coup in American Grafitti

    Lundo :cool:
     
  29. Special Ed
    Joined: Nov 1, 2007
    Posts: 8,661

    Special Ed
    Member

    I've got to go against the grain here. To my way of thinking, the American Graffiti coupe is not a hotrod. It's a movie prop. Huge difference (to me, anyways).

    I'd probably put Grabowski's up there in the top two or three of most famous...:)
     
  30. studematt
    Joined: Feb 12, 2008
    Posts: 433

    studematt
    Member

    Ala Kart will always be #1 in my book.
     

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