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Folks Of Interest God Speed Alex Xydias

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Robert J. Palmer, Aug 24, 2024.

  1. BrerHair
    Joined: Jan 30, 2007
    Posts: 5,061

    BrerHair
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    We salute one of the greats from the Greatest Generation. God speed indeed!
     
    49ratfink likes this.
  2. upload_2024-8-25_7-55-17.png upload_2024-8-25_7-55-37.png upload_2024-8-25_7-56-7.png

    It looks different today but at least it exist!
    upload_2024-8-25_7-59-34.png

    upload_2024-8-25_8-0-22.png
     
  3. Michael Ottavi
    Joined: Dec 3, 2008
    Posts: 311

    Michael Ottavi
    Member

    Great loss for all hot rodders. RIP
     
  4. V8 Bob
    Joined: Feb 6, 2007
    Posts: 3,026

    V8 Bob
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    RIP Alex, and thank you for all you've accomplished over many years!
     
  5. 39ChevyBob
    Joined: Jul 14, 2011
    Posts: 619

    39ChevyBob
    Member

    GodSpeed, Alex. A real gentleman and pioneer. From a Dean Moon photo-board from 1951, first time he ran the coupe at Bonneville, after buying it and putting in a built flathead. They would blow it apart and chop it to it's more famous look after this season.
    So Cal.jpg
     
  6. Mitchell Rish
    Joined: Jun 10, 2007
    Posts: 2,092

    Mitchell Rish
    Member
    from Houston MS

    God Speed. The Greatest Generation Indeed.
     
    Robert J. Palmer likes this.
  7. 65pacecar
    Joined: Sep 22, 2010
    Posts: 21,897

    65pacecar
    Member
    from KY, AZ

    RIP. Great hot rodder, innovator and businessman. A life well lived.
     
    41 GMC K-18 likes this.
  8. denis4x4
    Joined: Apr 23, 2005
    Posts: 4,281

    denis4x4
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Colorado

    MVC-005S.jpeg

    Met Alex when he was the publisher of HOT ROD INDUSTRY NEWS. I will be making a contribution to the Center for the Automotive Arts at the Fairplex. This is a program the Alex and Pete started years ago to get young people interested in the automotive industry. The Pedal Car with the SoCal paint job and signed by Pete and Alex sold for $2000 at a non profit auction for therapeutic riding.
     

    Attached Files:

  9. RIP and condolences to Alex's family, friends and associates.

    A hot rodding icon, successful businessman and innovator, a WWII veteran and most importantly, a gracious and humble man.

    Kalo Paradiso Sir.
     
    lumpy 63 and 41 GMC K-18 like this.
  10. dirt car
    Joined: Jun 26, 2010
    Posts: 1,262

    dirt car
    Member
    from nebraska

    Certainly, A mover & a shaker.... those vintage photos will live on in his memory !
     
    41 GMC K-18 likes this.
  11. Tom Thatcher did a excellent piece on Alex for The American Hot Rod Foundation, I posted it here making it easier to access the article.

    God Speed Alex. HRP


    Alex Xydias
    To many today, the name Alex Xydias (pronounced Ex-hideous) is synonymous with the famed hot rod company So-Cal Speed Shop. Yet, as the records show, Xydias’ achievements on the lakes, in publishing and ultimately in event productions are equally phenomenal. The man had quite a career.


    Before World War II, Xydias, who grew up in Los Angeles, was campaigning a ’34 coupe at El Mirage enjoying moderate success. In 1946, after he was discharged from the army where he was a B-17 engineer and gunner, Xydias, using his $100 demob money, opened So-Cal Speed Shop, supplying hot rodders with speed equipment, much of it sourced from his friend Vic Edelbrock. There was no way to advertise back then and in an effort to market his business, Xydias decided to go lakes racing in a surplus P-51 belly tank powered by a mid-engined, Ford-V8-60 built by Edelbrock’s Bobby Meeks.

    “I only had limited racing experience.” Said Alex. “The belly tank was like a pressure cooker inside and I was perched in the nose with no protection—I was the crush zone.” Nevertheless, by the end of 1948 Xydias owned the Class A Streamliner record at 130.155 mph. He also garnered the cover of a new magazine called HOT ROD—the first of five such covers. The tank and the magazine helped launch the So-Cal Speed Shop as an internationally recognized brand.

    Wanting to go faster, Xydias teamed up with legendary racer and author Dean Bachelor. Inspired by the small, lightweight, pre-WWII Auto Union Type C land speed racecar, they built the So-Cal Streamliner using the Model T Ford frame and engine from the tank. Neil Emory and Clayton Jensen of Valley Custom hand-formed the sleek aluminum body and with Batchelor behind the wheel the car turned 152 mph in the spring of1949.

    Encouraged by their success, the team took the Streamliner to the first Bonneville Nationals in August that year. With a new, Meeks-built Mercury V8 they set a Class C Streamliner record at 189.745 mph. Their top speed was 193.54 mph. They returned to Bonneville the following year and set a record at 208.927 mph. The So-Cal Streamliner became “ The World’s Fastest Hot Rod.”

    Xydias quickly understood the meaning of the adage “Win on Sunday, sell on Monday,” and what was now the So-Cal Racing Team continued to build hot rods and racecars that set records at the lakes and on the drag strips enabling Xydias to sell parts. Now restored to its former glory by Pete Chapouris and his team at the revived SO-CAL Speed Shop, the original So-Cal belly tank has become one of the most iconic hot rods ever.

    Facing changes in the industry, Xydias tried his had at filmmaking, something his father had done in the “silent” era. Xydias, however, filmed motorsports—everything from Bonneville to Indy to Daytona—and while his productions were very professional he soon realized that he was ahead of his time, people just wouldn’t pay to go watch racing movies. It was time for a career change. His legacy lives on though in such enduring documentaries as “The Hot Rod Story.”

    In 1963, Xydias joined HOT ROD publisher Petersen Publishing as editor of Car Craft Magazine. Within a year he moved on to be editor and then publisher of Hot Rod Industry News where, as a director, he helped launch an industry trade show that would eventually grow become the annual SEMA Show. He was inducted into the SEMA Hall of Fame in 1982.

    After 12 years at Petersen, Xydias partnered with racer and entrepreneur Mickey Thompson and launched the SCORE Off-Road Equipment trade show. They operated that show for 10 years until Thompson’s untimely murder. Meanwhile, Xydias was inducted into the Dry Lakes Hall of Fame, the HOT ROD Magazine Hall of Fame, and the Route 66 Hall of Fame. He also received the Robert E. Petersen Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008.

    Over the years, Xydias had always maintained the So-Cal Speed Shop with reunions and commemorative catalogs. Consequently, when his friend Pete Chapouris came asking about resurrecting the iconic brand, Xydias was ready and in1997 the new SO-CAL Speed Shop was launched to much acclaim. Xydias remains active with the company as an advisor. He is also Chairman of Board of the Wally Parks NHRA Motorsports Museum.

    Our story doesn’t end there though. In 2012, the Learning Centers at Fairplex, Pomona, California, created a new automotive school called the Alex Xydias Center for Automotive Arts (AXC). The purpose of the school is to help educate young people and provide them an opportunity to develop skills for a viable career in the auto industry. At a time when high school auto shop programs have all but disappeared, AXC provides a much-needed auto-centric educational environment that facilitates opportunities for young enthusiasts and provides an incredible bookend for Alex Xydias’ amazing career.

    By Tony Thacker
     
  12. Jalopy Joker
    Joined: Sep 3, 2006
    Posts: 32,275

    Jalopy Joker
    Member

  13. azmodela
    Joined: Mar 2, 2010
    Posts: 39

    azmodela
    Member
    from Tucson, AZ

    High speed brake fluid!
     

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    lumpy 63 likes this.
  14. Gary Addcox
    Joined: Aug 28, 2009
    Posts: 2,559

    Gary Addcox
    Member

    AMEN ! He was a member of the greatest generation to ever cruise down the PCH along with being a Rodfather of all that goes on today in our wonderful "disease". So wish I come have met him.
     
    mopacltd and BrerHair like this.
  15. Gary Addcox
    Joined: Aug 28, 2009
    Posts: 2,559

    Gary Addcox
    Member

    Can this film be ordered ?
     
  16. 49ratfink
    Joined: Feb 8, 2004
    Posts: 19,243

    49ratfink
    Member
    from California

    1922 to 2024. you coud not pick a better time to have lived in the USA than that.
     
    26 T Ford RPU likes this.
  17. Super Streak
    Joined: Nov 22, 2011
    Posts: 304

    Super Streak
    Member
    from Florida

    May he Rest in Peace! My condolences to his family. As we age it's sad to see our Hero's passing on.
     
  18. It is with great sadness that I see this thread.:( R.I.P. Alex, hot rod hero . He was a great inspiration too many of us. Condolences to his family and many friends.
     
    HemiDeuce and lumpy 63 like this.

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