"The Birth of Hot Rodding" officially occurred on May 15, 1938. Muroc Dry Lake, that Sunday, saw the first race of the Southern California Timing Association (SCTA). There was a great assortment of hot rods assembled that day with motors from many manufacturers. By the mid-late 1940s the Ford Flathead was the mill of choice, and it enjoyed ample support from all sorts of aftermarket suppliers.
The Bridgeport Special, named for Bridgeport, CT (the machining capitol of the world) is a competent build, a great example of the WWII-era T hot rods.
- 1925 Ford Model T Roadster Body
- Chopped and flipped windshield
- 1927 Ford Model TT Frame, reformed
- 1939 Ford Flathead V8, bored .080 over
- Mercury 4-inch crank
- Stock pistons
- Early 50s Pontiac rods
- Edmunds dual intake
- Dual Stomberg 97s with Sharp-Pilkington tops
- 12-volt generator
- Edelbrock block-script heads
- 1939 Ford 3-speed transmission
- Ford V8 rear spring member
- Custom spreader
- 1946-48 rear spring
- Aftermarket front spring
- 1946-48 axles and drums, 3.25:1 pinion
- School bus seat
- WWII-era aircraft seatbelt
- Ross steering gear with cowl steering
- Sprint car pitman, Ford and custom linkage
- Aftermarket headlights
- Do Ray taillight
- 1935 16-inch Ford wirewheels up front, Ford V8 caps
- 1930s 17-inch Motorwheel wirewheels in back, 1936 Cadillac caps
Brandon on Dec 29, 2012 said:
I thought you raced on DRY lakes! Haha. COOL CAR!
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