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#1 |
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Might as well accept it ................"Nothing is ever going to be like it was...." This may be the "quote of the year"
I feel really blessed to have grown up in the time that i did,, lots of good " memories " and was proud to be a part of it.....Just have to learn to go with the flow , like it or not....we do have a choice.... HAPPY THANKSGIVING to all......
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Danny Waters, Sr / 73 Duster "340" |
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#2 |
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So Dan, instead of trying to re-invent the wheel why don't you just build a lower classed Stocker, call it a Jr Stocker and call it a day? I truly do believe that a car like my gold Nova IS a Jr Stocker. As a matter of fact, a famous husband and wife Jr Stock team borrowed it to do some nostalgia racing and are having a blast!
I remember being a kid and trying to figure out the whole Jr Stock thing and I can tell you that it wasn't easy or cheap and it was VERY time consuming. What I'm getting at is if it looks like a Jr Stocker and sounds like a Jr Stocker, it's a Duck right?
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Billy Nees 1188 STK, SS I'm not spending 100K to win 2K |
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Smart thing to do (IMHO) would be build a car that can run either HRA. If one or the other folds up, or you have to move to another part of the country, you may not find enough tracks whete you can race if the other HRA doesn't have a class you fit.
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Ed Wright 4156 SS/JA |
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I'll keep racing my Pure Stocker until the P/SA Mustang is done. Sadly, the days of an average working class guy buying a mostly stock car off a car lot and racing it in a "stock" class are over. Too many people these days are glory seekers, and they are not about to let a little thing like money stop them. If they have to cash in their 401Ks or get a 2nd mortgage for a few extra h.p. so they can go set a national record or win the "big one", they will. The hell with the future they think. Sad way of thinking.
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Alan Mackin Stock 3777/ SS 3377 P/SA & SS/PA Fox Thunderbird I/PS '95 Mustang GT |
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#5 |
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Alan said:
Too many people these days are glory seekers, and they are not about to let a little thing like money stop them. If they have to cash in their 401Ks or get a 2nd mortgage for a few extra h.p. so they can go set a national record or win the "big one", they will. The hell with the future they think. Sad way of thinking. Man, Alan, that's cold! LOL Stock & Super Stock has been populated by guys that live to make their cars faster since I started racing in 1961. Then bracket racing came along, that is where most of the guys that couldn't keep up moved. Most of the faster guys have the money to do it, and most run the higher classes. Many are capable of doing their own engines, etc. Should not be too much of a problem in the lower classes, I wouldn't think. I sure wouldn't think anybody would take a second mortgage on their home to race. LOL We do have the problem of check book racers buying the new bogus cars with the funny HP ratings, but probably not in R/SA.
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Ed Wright 4156 SS/JA |
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#6 | |
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Billy Nees 1188 STK, SS I'm not spending 100K to win 2K |
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#7 |
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The average working class guy .....like myself....could not be competitive with a car he bought off the showroom floor and raced all the way back to 1966 when I raced in Jr Stock....If you could afford a new car it would need a lot of work to make it competetive.....and any car that was raced needed a lot of work to run anywhere near what the top cars ran.
Pure Stock was for locals in the late 60's.....and at our local track they ran Cups and Bucks....Cups cars were NOT competetive with the Bucks cars.....The cups cars ran for a class trophy......the Bucks cars ran for the eliminator money.....and you had to win your class first..... Pure Stock came along on a more serious level in 1972 after NHRA dumped Stock......and had ringers( purpose built cars) in there too......but was not all that popular as I recall it.... Jr Stockers were built from the ground up by the mid 60's......and had all kinds of tricks in them....They were NOT Stock other than the parts required to be run....and many of those parts were already being modified or replaced...Aftermarket pistons.....Aftermarket cams....both were very common by the mid 60's...... Traction devices....Shifters....Clutches......Transmissions .....Wheels.....all these parts were commonly changed modified or replaced with aftermarket.... I raced a car in 1966 thru 1968 and another one in 1970-1972 both stockers. Neither car was "Stock"......and one was basically not even a combination that was ever built by GM....
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Rich Biebel S/C 1479 Stock 147R |
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Back in the older days at Kinston Drag Strip we used to run a class called showroom stock....while the reg classes competed in a semi-pro type race ..we would also let anyone that had a car that drove in on the street and would figure out of the NHRA/IHRA class book and would run as a show room stock...My dad had a 62 ols full size convertible big block car and always got beat by a 59 chevy 4-door 348 big block...my dad used to get mad everytime..if the car was figured j/sa ,you would mark the window and then put a circle around the class #'s showing it was in showroom stock.....
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Danny Waters, Sr / 73 Duster "340" |
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There's not alot of the class racers mortgaging their future for 15 minutes of fame. I admire and respect the racers that slowly work their way up with hard work. I was referring to the newbies that burst onto the scene, spend a wad of cash to run at the top, and within a few years they are filing for bankrupcy. I saw alot this with the NMRA about 10 years ago. I couldn't figure out how the 20 and 30 something year old guys were getting their money for the fancy rigs and 100K race cars. Come to find out they were financing their hobby. Now that's insane !
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Alan Mackin Stock 3777/ SS 3377 P/SA & SS/PA Fox Thunderbird I/PS '95 Mustang GT |
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#10 |
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Alan, walk through the staging lanes at an NHRA points race or national event. You won't find a whole lot of brown hair.
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Ed Wright 4156 SS/JA |
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