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01-18-2012 05:15 PM #16
Kil-Kare,Xenia, Ohio, was about that bad in the late 50's early 60's. Knew a guy who just about bought the farm when a clutch explosion right off the line opened up his chest from one side to the other. He was standing just off the line.Ken Thomas
NoT FaDe AwaY and the music didn't die
The simplest road is usually the last one sought
Wild Willie & AA/FA's The greatest show in drag racing
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01-18-2012 06:42 PM #17
Kil-kare was difficult to stop---and the river was waiting--they had real SAND TRAPS!!!
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01-19-2012 04:40 PM #18
Neat article on the old Twister, though it is quite obvious the newspaper guy who wrote it ain't no car guy!!!!! Always enjoy seeing these old race cars being restored and put into a museum, got to preserve our history somehow!Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, Live for Today!
Carroll Shelby
Learning must be difficult for those who already know it all!!!!
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01-19-2012 08:27 PM #19
Dixie Twister Idling
Here's a video with Huston and the Dixie Twister start up at a show
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01-20-2012 05:49 AM #20
Way kewl video!!! Huston just sits in the car like it's any other day in the office!!!Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, Live for Today!
Carroll Shelby
Learning must be difficult for those who already know it all!!!!
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01-20-2012 05:39 PM #21
So true about the closeness of the fans to the track. I remember the a faitfull day in Dallas Ga., I think it was 64 or 65, when Richard Petty went into the stands filled with spectators and someone was killed. No mention of this event when the career of Petty is relived. This was the year Petty boycotted NASCAR and went drag racing.
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01-21-2012 12:12 PM #22
Any relation to Herbert Platt?
Not to be overly critical but that camaro isn't what i'd call a 'faithful representation' of the original as in the pic.
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01-21-2012 12:48 PM #23
Hubert PLatt and Huston were brothers. here is a note from Hubert
Drag Racing News Daily: RIP, Huston Platt
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01-21-2012 01:04 PM #24
Sorry, got stupid for a moment, Hubert. That must've been a pair! one die hard Ford and the other a Chevy guy. Oil and water. Dick Walters comes in my shop every now and then, he is just vaguely aware of the nostalga movement. I asked if he has anything left of the 'good old days' when he and Hubert were crisscrossing the country and he said not a thing was kept. He and Hubert were just having a ball tearing shit up and Ford footing the bill. He said the only thing he has from back then was the Revell model they made of the A/FX Falcon (the one after the above falcon)that Hubert drove.
Ahh, those were the days.
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01-21-2012 02:58 PM #25
Those two Falcons sure got a lot of us Ford guys (kids) motivated at the time!!!!! Never did run the injection on one, but I sure did have some might fine running FE's back in that time. I remember at about age 14 there was a get together for all us Blue Oval guys sponsored by our local Ford dealer and featured a couple cars and some of the people from the Ford Drag Club promotion that Ford did in the 60's. At this one they had on display a couple of their sponsored drag cars but front and center was a 427 Cammer with a set of Hillborn's, just like Platt and all the other 'big time' Ford guys ran! Then once a summer we'd get a pair of the match racers at Thunder Valley in Marion, SD.... It was always the A/FX cars and was either a Ford vs. Chevy, or Ford Vs. Dodge showdown. Then every year on the 4th of July weekend we get a couple of the Funny car match racers in, usually Tommy Hoover vs. whomever was travelling with him that year!!!! Drag racing was so much fun, so much cheaper in those days, heck, ya dang near have to treat it like a business now just to be able to run a bracket car......Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, Live for Today!
Carroll Shelby
Learning must be difficult for those who already know it all!!!!
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01-21-2012 03:17 PM #26
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01-21-2012 03:59 PM #27
Pheonix City Alabama Dragway----
I was in line behind Hubert in the blue falcon right after they haddone the straight axle in front--after his two or three burnouts and sweeping rosin around he launched with a hugh wheelstand---besides the rosin they had put there tool box in the trunk for traction--it worked--giant wheel stand and sockets and wrenches all over the track
It was almost an every week end deal to have the Platts, Dyno Don, Ronnie Sox, Jenkins , ramchargers, etc ---course it was 1964/65 and just before the flip top funny cars came out---all these guys had altered wheel base, fuel injection, solid axles, rosin burn outs etc---
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01-21-2012 04:01 PM #28
Same thing here! Usually the first day was at the local dealership where a couple of the "pro's" would be on hand, for us it was pretty much always the Tasca crew but I had ABSOLUTELY NO COMPLAINTS!!
I was always hopin' that Don Nicholson would be there but....
The second day was track day and I would just sit there with the widest grin that was stuck there all day!! Boy do I miss those days!
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01-21-2012 05:14 PM #29
I can remember in the early 60's the Platt brothers, Don Nicklson, and other Super Stock cars from the Atlanta area comming to Batesburg SC, a pull of 200 miles plus one way to run heads up for the top money of $300 to the winner. Don't remember the ET but the speed were 130 to 140 for the quarter.
My how time flies and times change.
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