Re: What is the correct description of a 60's Jr. stocker.
Quote:
|
Re: What is the correct description of a 60's Jr. stocker.
This is a link to a Hot Rod magazine article that pretty much covers it:
http://www.hotrod.com/whereitbegan/h...ing/index.html |
Re: What is the correct description of a 60's Jr. stocker.
So basically, anything not 'Top Stock'
As per 1966. B/Stock and on down. Hard to imagine a 66' Chevelle SS396/375HP considered as a Junior Stock car. I just kind of though that the small-block Chevy was the basis for Junior Stock. Kind of remember in 1967, the 57' Chevy 283/283HP Fuel Injection D/Stock car as the base point for some reason. In 1967, more or less, any car that ran 13.00's and above. PC |
Re: What is the correct description of a 60's Jr. stocker.
Weren"t Jr. Stockers really like H/S on down stick and auto? TERRY?
|
Re: What is the correct description of a 60's Jr. stocker.
Quote:
|
Re: What is the correct description of a 60's Jr. stocker.
X-Tech,
Right, on the Little Eliminator and Middle-Stock stuff. Same stuff at Dover in the mid-60s'. If you won your class, for an additional $5.00, you could enter the Eliminator event. Usually, about a dozen cars or so. Winner would get about $40, Runner-Up $20, on a good Sunday. Always the late-races, around 5:30 PM or so. Still think the base for Junior Stock in 1965 was the 57' Chevy 150 Sedan with the 283/283HP Fuelie. Fell into D/S (11.30-11.88 wt/hp). 1965 - D/S 1966 = E/S 1967 = D/S 1968 = G/S 1969 = H/S PC |
Re: What is the correct description of a 60's Jr. stocker.
Jr. Stock to my recollection might have been a term used a little but it was really made popular by the magazines that promoted the term I believe.
Stock eliminator was broken into 2 seperate eliminators at my local track. Stock I and Stock II. A to H or something like that was Stock I. There was no AA/S class when I began racing in 1966 or at least I don't recall it being a class by then. A was the top class. Stock II was all the remaining classes. I think this might have led to it being called Top Stock and Jr. Stock at some tracks. They had a lot of cars so splitting the field was common. Once the magazines used the term Jr.Stock.....it caught on. At some point the term Jr. Stock became very accepted but to me it meant the cars that ran in the "second tier" group. I would never call an A or B stocker a Jr.Stocker.......All you had to do was stand behind one and watch it leave the line on 7" tires.......There was nothing JR about a 427 Biscayne with a 4 speed on 7" tires......or a 396/375 Chevy II with a 4 speed..... To me the term Jr.Stocker really meant a '55 to '57 Chevy in about 1967-1968. |
Re: What is the correct description of a 60's Jr. stocker.
Tri State in Ohio ran a top Stock and Jr. Stock with $50 to winner of Jr. and you sold the trophy back for 15$ more. We had a lot of great Steak dinners after those races. Won 7 out of 8 week ends with the converted Dianna 56 Sedan Delivery. (rained the 8th) Old stories are always the best.
|
Re: What is the correct description of a 60's Jr. stocker.
Local tracks here ran Cups or Bucks........You could run cups for class and get just a trophy.....or you could run bucks.....win class and then go into Stock eliminator. Class trophy or cash in bucks was worth 15 or 20 bucks and eliminator win was 75. We almost always won class and won the eliminator a number of times as well. We won a big Stock event one year and it paid something like 175-200 bucks. There were lots of events like that back then that drew in a lot of cars from the surrounding states. I can recall driving to Capitol raceway for a big $$$ stocker event.
|
Re: What is the correct description of a 60's Jr. stocker.
The last Jr. Stock contested was Nov. 1971 . Ontario Calif.
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:03 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright Class Racer.com. All Rights Reserved. Designated trademarks and brands are the property of their respective owners.