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Back in the day, anything was
possible. How about an Offy with a
side-mounted blower on Ed Donovan's
dragster?

Nothing says drag racing like way
too big of an engine stuffed into
too
little car; reminds me of the models
I used to imagine as a kid.

Rear slicks churning, front tires
grabbing air, and, an acrobatic
flagman.

Uhhh, dude? I don't think you asked
for a big enough head start.

A wheelstander with everything but
the kitchen sink.

Who said snakes can't fly? Prudhomme
gets air in the lights in Seattle .

Hard to believe that today's Top
Fuelers evolved from this; from its
whitewall tires to its Rat Fink-like
shifter placement, I really dig this
car.

( A bove) So you still think that
Don Garlits invented the rear-engine
dragster, do ya? (Below) Donnie and
Gene Bowman's flathead-powered
Vineland Villain wasn't pretty, but
it sure looked crude. Back then,
functionality trumped almost
everything.


I love this shot, taken in the pits
at Lions. No, not the neat old
flip-top panel wagon -- the lady,
dressed in skirt and heels.
Priceless.

Kinda funny, too, but for a
different reason is Surfers pilot
Mike Sorokin almost having his
helmet sucked off at speed (center).

A nd speaking of in-car cameras, I
just love this shot from Jess
Sturgeon's car.

This is a great shot, too, taken
from the cockpit of one of Scotty
Fenn's legendary Chassis Research
chassis that revolutionized the
sport.
I took some Photoshop liberties with
the original to blur the background
as the El Camino tow vehicle was a
distraction. Love that steering
wheel and big ol' brake handle.
(Below) This is Fenn's workshop.
That's Fenn at far left overseeing
work on some of his K-88 and TE-448
chassis.


A nother vintage chassis on this
cool twin. A lways amazing to me to
see how primitive the early
driver-protection devices were.

Okay, if you don't like this photo,
you can hardly consider yourself a
drag fan. Classic Lions stuff.

Here's how those early dragsters got
their nickname; the driver sat
behind the rear tires like a rock in
a slingshot.

A couple of engines, four tires, a
little extra tubing, a welder, and
there's little that early drag
racers couldn't -- and didn't --
try.

Ilooooooooove this shot. The
photographer did such a great job of
exposing it and allowing you to see
every detail, nut, and bolt on the
blower.
A rthur Trim tells me that this is
Connie Kalitta's Logghe-chassised
Ford-powered digger, photographed on
a chassis dyno in one of Ford's
labs/

Indy is a place where magical thi
ngs happen. Look closely, and you
can see that "Big John's"
battle-scarred 'Cuda has all four
tires off the ground.

Not all new ideas were good ones;
Exhibit A is Noel Black's
two-engine, four-wheel-drive Top
Fueler from 1967.

Call me an astute observer, but I
reckon that "Big Jim" Dunn was
pretty much done for this run at
Lions in the rainbow-hued Dunn &Reath
digger.

Who says you need four wheels?

"I'll take Scary Fast Tricycles for
$500, A lex."

In the same vein, who says you even
need four wheels or three wheels?
The famed Leffler-Coburn Iron
Mistress
coupe had six! In a true example of
the sum of the parts not being equal
to the whole, Neil Leffler and Bill
Coburn
each took the fuel-burning Hemis
from their competition coupes and
paired them for this interesting
experiment.
It wasn't real fast, but it was
spectacular.
?
We've seen lead weights and tubes
filled with lead shot as front-end
ballast, but a rock? I kid you not.
Clearly, the Red Mountain Boys knew
how to rock.


I think we've all seen the classic
photo above of Don Garlits'
career-changing transmission
explosion at Lions,
but at left is the less-seldom-seen
but equally-breathtaking downtrack
angle. I'm not sure who circled the
fan
in the stands or why, but that's how
this image was posted.

I've never seen this car before, but
it can't be any mis take that the
names on its side are Capp and
Fedderly,
as in future Top Fuel partners (and
Indy winners) Terry Capp and Bernie
Fedderly. Both are still at it years
later,
Capp in nostalgia racing and
Fedderly as A uston Coil's alter ego
on the John Force team.

The first rule of running against a
jet dragster: A lways leave first.

Herman Munster , far lane, and
Grandpa dueled at Lions in a
ghoulish go that was featured on the
popular television show.

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