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Originally Posted by X-TECH MAN
OK....It appears that it didnt exist at all. The street racer story was just a story from long ago it seems and Simon's car was a 289. But WHAT does my friend Jim have? Its a 1967 Convertable. It was a 4-speed car and is in rough shape without an engine and a trans. It has a 9 inch rear and I just looked at the vin again this morning along with the title. It looks like an "R" on the vin with some rust and a lot of black paint over it (we sanded on it) and the title has an "R" matching the vin. What does he have? If they never made it then its possible that someone screwed around with the tile and vin during a transfer many years ago. Either way its still going to be a driver and not a collectable. If it turns out like his T-Birds it will be beautiful and a cool ride. If they never made one how did Simon get to race stock when you had to have a car that that the manufacturer have to make back in the day. How did this stuff get in the class guide? What about Richard Charbonneau's E/S 427/410 HP (1 X4) Winternationals winning station wagon back in the 7 inch tire days? One of one or one of none? What about the the wagons currently running today in B/Sand C/S(and with the glass scooped hood that was never avaliable or made on a wagon)??? Didnt NHRA require 50/100/or 500 of the combos to be made back in the early 70's to be eligable for stock?
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Years ago the way cars got into the Class Guide was the manufacturer sent info to NHRA pre-production. The intent was to build the cars but some never did get built. If the specs were accepted and put into the Class Guide, in later years, the cars were allowed to run whether they actually came off the assembly line or not. If no one ordered a particular model with a certain engine, a car built after the fact was still allowed to run because the Class Guide showed it on paper. Sometimes NHRA would ask for verification that a certain number of cars were built but not always. The number verification included all body styles grouped together, but not necessarily a minimum number of each body style.
A prime example of specs sent to NHRA but the car never being built is still in the Class Guide. The specs still show a 1970 Monte Carlo convertible. GM had plans to build Monte Carlo convertibles, sent the specs to NHRA, but at the last minute pulled the plug on the cars.