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#31 |
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Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Montreal
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The most fun/results was always due to a comination of hard work, ingenuity, trial and error and money.
Our Canadian dollar always well below the US greenback did not help the money aspect either...... There may have been fewer grey areas during tear down and protest situations given the field of cars and combinations being smaller and simpler with fewer classes. There were always does who gave and earned respect and a minority that did not. Incidents were not ''in the open'' as they are today with the internet. There were great things and some not so great back then...today there are also some great things and some not so great.... Could it be that the more things change the more they are the same? Fortunately there is enough out there for us to choose where we can afford to have the most fun ![]() |
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#32 |
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Join Date: May 2003
Location: Billings Mt
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I remember 1959 when a floor shifter on a 3 speed put you in a gas class. That was the first time I ever went to the drags and I thought Id died and went to heaven at Amelia Earhart Field in Hialeah Fla., an old WW2 air base. There was no such thing as street mag type wheels for stockers then, just chrome.
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#33 | |
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Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: NJ
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Frank Bialas 1570 STK Last edited by Frank Bialas; 09-17-2010 at 10:47 PM. |
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#34 |
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Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: lyndon ky. ... louisville area
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im not miserable because of my hobby evan, and i agree with you and others life has changed... and not for the better.
i simply posted what i missed the most about "stock eliminator"... what we run is no longer that class and i miss it. as far as charley bob and a few others go maybe they are too young to realize what we had. i have raced what i could afford to race, not raced on someone else or my daddy's money i paid for every cent it cost, and i raised two kids etc... but that was one of the great things... it did not cost a lot, just a lot of work, trial and error, testing and truly researching your combo. > that ship has sailed it cost big bucks to play now, just look at my old wagon it might as well be a 1970's pro stocker. i miss the integrity of the racers (im not going to discuss the integrity of NHRA greg hill has that post)...we had TEARDOWNS at EVERY race not just indy and going through the barn was critical to your reputation and the respect given to you by the other racers... and getting tossed (and ive been tossed) was embarrassing to you and your family. today its no big thing to get caught with cheating parts... just lobby to change the rules and act like you were picked on by NHRA with the old"everyone else does it" excuse. i miss the decency of our class... maybe it is the internet's fault, maybe it is society's changing morals but what the hell happened ? every time i log onto this / other forums i see jealous, whining, accusing posts. rarely is credit given. bob shaw has an outstanding record kicking my *** in several combinations, yeah ive given him fits and won a couple of races and i could whine with the best of them, accuse him of cheating, protest him but hey i RESPECT him... that seems to be gone. and charley bob if all three of these cause you to reflect on your attitude and comments it would be great because you fall into all three... you race on daddy's (and now someone elses) money, you embarrassed yourself and a man i respect (your dad) by getting tossed for cheating at indy, and you are first to attack and accuse with mouth and keyboard at every opportunity (like harrisons carb)...and believe it or not until i was writing this post i did not realize this, this was never intended to be a charley bob bash...sorry. anyway im sure im gonna get a keyboard assination from you and others but hey... im entitled to my opinion, and i miss the old days... do i think they are coming back > hell no not a chance. charley bob is right it is 2010 now get off the lets go back to 1970 bandwagon. thanks for all the replies, sorry if i disagree with some of you, and to those who agree you guys know where to find me ... in U/SA captain jack
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Jack McCarthy 3609 STK "the Captain" |
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#35 | |
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Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: usa
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-No tech will ever be perfect but it should be unbiased and the rules should be clear and strictly enforced. -There will always be underfactored combos but there should never be laughable underfactored combos. -The economy sucks because voters listened to politicians with hidden motives when they should have been voting them out. Last edited by SS Engine Guy; 09-18-2010 at 12:36 AM. |
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#36 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Bison, KS
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It wasn't a disadvantage to use the steel wheels as the lighter aftermarket wheels didn't exist. You could disconnect the exhaust from the manifold but no headers. For most of that first year you had to run street tires also, at the world finals they allowed slicks because they didn't like the idea of the low horsepower cars outrunning the high power cars due to traction issues and they didn't want a Pinto world champion.
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Stock - 5013 |
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#37 | |
Banned
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Lake Placid, Florida
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#38 |
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Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: The Lowcountry.
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I too miss the old days. I wish NHRA never changed the cam rule which in my opinion changed everything. But, I envy everyone of you that stills races today. I sold my race car 15 years ago for all the right reasons and I have regretted it everyday since.
Guys, enjoy it while you can! |
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#39 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Nineveh, Indiana
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Looking back in reflection. Their car wasn't that trick. Back then, you could still build a car from junkyard parts. It's a lot more difficult today. 90% of what I've ammassed(sic?) for my 79 Firebird IHRA car has been swap meet "junk" and other peoples castoffs. As well as pieces I've acquired over the internet forums (both here and on RJ). With everything I keep reading, I wonder IF it's going to be worth building this car. Yes it is an IHRA crate motor car, which that seems to be looked down upon by many on the forum. A), I can afford, at least think I can, to build it, B) once I get the ball rolling, it will take less time to get it to the track. I'll admit racing was always a lot of hard work and cost a tremendous amount of money. In fact not too very long ago, Toby Meek asked my wife, WHY is Bob building another race car after 20 years? Doesn't he remember how expensive it was? The thing is, racing was fun. Maybe I should have my head examined. The cost factor started making it less fun back then. Not just the cost of a car but tow rigs added to the cost. I remember when a crew cab pickup was the thing (late 1970's), then the enclosed trailers came into vogue (1980's). When we were bracket racing in the late 80's, most people had more in their tow rigs than I had in my whole operation. Now I go to the track, I see motorhomes and semi's, LOL! If I were blessed with that kind of cash, I could have a killer operation. I too remember when cars were driven to the track. I won a couple of class trophies with my 74 Pinto. Through the muffler, Crager SS wheels with street tires. Trickest thing about that car was the tuneup. Even back then at the local track, you had to race 3-4 rounds just to get into the eliminator. I even remember when it wasn't unusual to see steel wheels on SS and MP cars. It isn't the 1970's anymore or even the 1980's for that matter. I have realised, one axiom is still true about racing, "it still hasn't gotten any cheaper"! Not certain I've added anything to the thread but guess I've had my vent for the day. I feel I understand where Jack is coming from.
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Robert Swartz - Swartz & Lane 66 Chevy II Pro 95 Achieva EF/SA, 78 Mustang II U/SA (work in progress) #354 stock |
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#40 | ||
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Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Arkansas - In the middle of everything.
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Jack, I'm not here to bash you or anyone who has nostalgic memories of racing in the "old days"; I was there, too, and it was an era that afforded good experiences. However, maybe time has smoothed over some of the reality of those times so that now our memories are more romantic impressions, tainted by remembering the good and choosing to filter out the bad.
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The respect level is still there. You may not see it written in people's posts here, but I know it still exists in the face-to-face interaction at the races. You would not have the congratulatory posts that are so common here, or posts like the recent one praising the performance of Wade Owens if respect had gone away. And you have to give respect to be positioned to receive it. So, Jack, I think everything you mentioned in your post is probably true. But, it has always been that way; it depends whether you want to see a half-full glass or a half-empty glass. My saying that does not mean I think everything is hunky-dory with class racing and that nobody should do or say anything. Without people working within the sport, it would have disintegrated a long time ago. We have to keep pushing to make it better. Relative increased cost of competing is the biggest detriment to the sport. Too much emphasis and hoopla on the "glory" of going fast at any cost is another, but if you do away with heads-up competition the attraction for the competitor will rapidly diminish. NHRA makes lots of mistakes, but that is the nature of trusting systems and organizations - their ability to administer will eventually be reduced to the lowest common factor. Fools and people with no character will always invade public arenas, so support and add to a culture that makes them ineffective because rules won't. I do think the sport could benefit from some competitor-level attitude adjustments and moral reformations, though. |
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