The Caddy Build Gets A ProCharger! Boosted Caddy Power For The Win!


The Caddy Build Gets A ProCharger! Boosted Caddy Power For The Win!

Man this thing is awesome! Remember how we said the 500 inch Caddy was going to get boost from a ProCharger? Yeah, well here it is and it rules and we love it and want it. If you missed the first part of this series, here’s the low down on what is going on. Watch the video and you’ll love what you see.

Our friend Richard Holdener has been hanging out in New Mexico with Courtney and the guys at Cad Company, doing some killer dyno testing on a 500 cubic inch Cadillac recently. They put together a stock rebuild and then started putting more and more power parts on it to see just how much power it would make. At 500 cubic inches, these are not little engines, but they were made for cruising but not big horsepower. With that said, they  do make amazing torque and very respectable horsepower. But in the previous videos you saw that a camshaft, bolts ons, and testing proved there could be some real gains in power on this thing. Well what if we told you that there was more to be done?

Did you know that there are big valve aluminum heads available for the 472 and 500 inch Caddy?  Well there are, and they can support a lot more power. The kind of power the ProCharger will be encouraging the Caddy to make.

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Bonneville Speed Week Video: Record Setting Runs And Muscle Cars On The Salt During Speed Week 2020


Bonneville Speed Week Video: Record Setting Runs And Muscle Cars On The Salt During Speed Week 2020

What truly makes Bonneville Speed Week special is the variety of vehicles that you see hauling ass down the salt. Different body styles, different engine combos, and different visions are what Bonneville Speed Week is all about, and it is what people who come for the first time always comment on. There are so many classes, so many combos within those classes, and so much flexibility in how you build your perfect race car for Speed Week, that there is no way that any two are exactly the same. Streamliners, Lakesters, door cars, roadsters, and sports cars just scratch the surface as there are so many different classes, variations, and interpretations of each of these classifications. When you watch the two videos below, one that is all record runs from Bonneville Speed Week 2020, and the other that is nothing but Muscle Cars on the salt, you’ll get to see just how cool this place is and just how cool the racing is.

Watch and see what you think and tell us what vehicle in these videos is your favorite. Would you rather drive a streamliner down the salt? A lakester? That’s like a streamliner but with the wheels hanging out. Or a door car? Maybe a roadster?

Watch and tell us what you think.

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Wreckage Bonanza Video: Four Minutes Of Open Track Day Destruction From Around The World


Wreckage Bonanza Video: Four Minutes Of Open Track Day Destruction From Around The World

Street cars are not race cars and most enthusiasts are not race car drivers so when we take those two elements and combine them at open track day events, crazy stuff is bound to happen. This video is proof that crazy stuff does happen when the drivers run out of talent and the cars run out of grip. In this footage you’ll see everything from exotic sports cars to pretty common high performance iron getting crashed, smashed, and even jumped into the air (note the Subaru taking flight in the lead photo). One of the positive things to glean from this video is the quality of construction that new cars have and also the safety features built into them. There are some VERY hard hits in this video and after all of them it is clear to see that the airbags have deployed, the car structural integrity has held up and most often the helmeted occupants can be seen looking around to try and figure out what the hell happened.

Some of the crashes seem to be cosmically destined to happen, like the wreck between the Evo and the BMW. The Evo guy loses the handle just as the BMW dude is leaving the pits and whamo…he mashes the side of the Beemer like a wrecking ball. The odds of that happening are fairly astronomical, like hitting the lottery and being struck by lightning on the same day. The flying Subaru in the lead photo? Yeah that one has its own special category of bizarre as well.

Press play below to see open track day wreckage and destruction from around the world!

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Preparing For The Final Goodbye: Giving A Destroyed Dart Sport A Final Cleaning


Preparing For The Final Goodbye: Giving A Destroyed Dart Sport A Final Cleaning

When you are a kid, chances are good that you wanted to be a cop , or a firefighter, or a well-paid athlete. Maybe you wanted to go to space, or to see the world. When you are young, the possibilities are endless. Every kid has dreams of what their career path will be, but no young child will look at you and tell you that they want to be involved wit mortuary affairs. That’s a decision that’s made after wisdom and maturity have taken hold. That is a somber, serious career and one that very few choose to do. Those that do tend to have a similar viewpoint amongst themselves: they are proud to help bring the last bit of dignity to those who have passed on for the sake of their greiving family and loved ones. Getting the final outfit together, making sure that everything is ready to go for the funeral…there’s a nobility to the profession that is almost beyond belief.

Seeing this 1974 Dodge Dart Sport being plucked from where it’s been sitting for decades gives me the same feeling. This car died young…if the math is correct, sometime in 1979 this thing was drilled in the passenger side hard and that was that. Ever since, it’s just been sitting in the woods, left alone to waste away. The trees grew up around it, the moss and algae covered the paint up, and it slowly sank into the earth. This car was never going to move again, so why rescue it at all? Parts harvesting. Did that necessitate a cleaning? Eh, you can be the judge of that. From where we sit, this is the same as picking out that last suit, making sure the hair is done up, and making sure appearances are up to par.

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Mopar In A Suit: 1970 Monteverdi High Speed 375S – Worldly Gran Tourer!


Videos: 609 Supercharged Conley Precision Stinger Big Block On The Stand And In A Fuel Dragster

If you don’t like V8 engines, then BangShift probably isn’t the place for you. Don’t get me wrong, we dig 4 and 6 cylinders as well, depending on the circumstances, but in general V8s are where it’s at. So when Neal Sabo sent us this cool video of the Conley “Stinger 609” we couldn’t stop watching. Oh, and that 609 stands for 6.09… cubic inches that is. Check it out. You’ll dig it.

We seriously want to build an RC ’69 Camaro for one of these. It would rule.
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Alfa Romeo Celebrates 110th Anniversary

Today marks eleven decades of Alfa Romeo, so it is time for a big celebration. It started yesterday morning with a 1-hour documentary uploaded to YouTube. Their next move was to open the museum to the public. Over 150 cars from all eras are placed among countless trophies and championship history. A new exhibit “Alfa Romeo in Uniform” is dedicated to Italy’s law enforcement officers. They have been provided with the fastest and most stylish police cars the world has ever seen.

Looking to the future, the GTA badge will be spread across their lineup. Inspired by the 1965 “Gran Turismo Alleggerita”, their goal is offer more power and less weight for the ultimate combination of luxury and performance. Six videos have been produced to offer a virtual tour of the museum since quarantine is looming on the horizon. Here is a synopsis of the series

  1. An introduction, offering a panoramic view of the museum
  2. The Timeline concept, describing the brand’s industrial continuity
  3. The Beauty area, combining style, design and lifestyle
  4. The Speed section, a summation of technology, competitive spirit and driving pleasure
  5. An exclusive view of the Storage area, featuring a collection of vehicles and artifacts previously unseen by the public
  6. An overview of the Archive, showcasing photographs, videos, technical drawings, sketches and production records

Rounding out the festivities, Eberhard & Co have unveiled an anniversary chronograph while Compagnia Ducale are offering a 500-watt electric bicycle designed by Alfa Romeo’s Centro Stile. The quality of their lineup speaks for itself, so click the link below to find our dealer near you and stay with us for all you Alfa Romeo news.

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The Greek’s Great Weekend: Watch Chris Karamesines Make His First Career NHRA Final Round In Montreal Circa 1990


The Greek’s Great Weekend: Watch Chris Karamesines Make His First Career NHRA Final Round In Montreal Circa 1990

It was a magical thing to watch. The oldest top fuel finalist in NHRA history at 61 years of age, Chris Karamesines “The Golden Greek” the man, the myth, and the legend, was finally standing on the verge of winning an NHRA National event. The event in question was Le GrandNational Molson, which was the NHRA event held each year at the Sanair Super Speedway for decades. A day of awesome competition had seen the Greek outrun Lori Johns, beat Joe Amato, and finally find himself in the final against Gary Ormsby who had won the 1989 NHRA top fuel championship.

Karamesines was a long way from the halcyon days of 1960 at Alton, Illinois where he and crew chief Don Maynard supposedly made drag racing’s first 200mph run. It was that run that started a career that still maintains today as Karamesines can be found racing top fuel dragsters in 2020, albeit not with the success he had in 1990.

This is the first of two Christ Karamesines Time Machines I made and it’s a really fun watch. The dude it awesome and he is still awesome today. Quick with a smile, soft spoken but never one to be messed with, this 90-ish year old guy is a national treasure and he was one at the age 0f 61 as well.

Enjoy!

Press play below to see Chris Karamesines make his first career final round in 1990

#NitroTimeMachine: The Greek

#NitroTimeMachine: After 35 years The Greek makes it to his first final round Nitro Time Machine presented by E3 Spark Plugs

Posted by NHRA on Thursday, June 11, 2020


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Just A Small Step In The Right Direction: Giving A 1964 Galaxie A New Spark


Just A Small Step In The Right Direction: Giving A 1964 Galaxie A New Spark

I love the whole idea of driving your classic. They were regular cars that just managed to get old…what’s the issue with still driving them? Well…a couple of things, to be fair. Advances in technology have made keeping an engine in tune easier, parts wear out and electrical components get cooked over the years. That’s why we build these cars, that’s why maintaining them is so important, and that’s why keeping every last thing as it was back in the day may or may not be the best thing to do. Luke’s 1964 Ford Galaxie is a Midwestern gem, a four-door sedan that was treated wonderfully over the years. By all accounts, it should be a daily-driving gem as it is, and Luke is more than up for driving the car near-daily. But there are issues with this car, and in this video he will take on the ignition system with a new distributor and some spark tuning. This is one part of at least a two-part series that will give the Galaxie a much-needed boost in performance and a healthy step forward in actual drivability. It’s not as simple as swapping a distributor, either!

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If At First You Don’t Succeed Hammer Down Again: Ride Along In This Rock Bouncer And Claw Your Way To The Top!


If At First You Don’t Succeed Hammer Down Again: Ride Along In This Rock Bouncer And Claw Your Way To The Top!

Alex Sanders is the driver here and we’re all riding shotgun in his rig known as Ribcage. If you cannot figured out why it carries that name you’ve got some bigger problems in your life. Rather than an LS engine or a big block, this thing uses a tough as nails small block Chevy for power and as you will see, the only thing tougher than the bouncer itself is Sanders the pilot.

All racing and automotive competition requires tenacity. Whether it is the guts to drive a stock car or Indy car hard into a corner at full throttle or its the willingness to stand on the gas in an 11,000hp funny car, these things are all hard to do and to do well. In the case of rock bouncing like we are going to see here, its the idea that the hill is not going to beat you, no matter how hard it tries. Sanders is a veteran of this type of competition and as you will see, he adjusts his approach, his aggressiveness, and his steering inputs each time he nearly makes it up what seems to be about a vertical face before he succeeds.

The payoff here is not just making it up the hill it is seeing the whole course. Coming down is about as freaking as going up! Rock Bouncing continues to be immensely popular and after watching this, we know why. The machines themselves are bad ass, the stuff they are doing seems impossible, and guys like Sanders put on one hell of a show.

Press play below to ride shotgun in a rock bouncing rig known as Ribcage –

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Unhinged: My First Automotive Sin, And It Involved A Mustang II

It’s no secret that I appreciate the Mustang nobody else seems to, the Ford Mustang II. The early cars through 1970 are nearly worshipped. The 1971-73 big-body cars have a lot going for them, even if many are critical about those big hips. Fox bodies are the easy speed high going right now, a do whatever platform that can drag race, road race, rally, or be perfect just fk’ing off in a parking lot until you hear the siren of the security guard’s car pop off. The Deuce, however, gets crapped on simply for being a product of it’s time. Lee Iacocca didn’t like how big the Mustang had gotten and wanted a return to his “little jewel”. Ford fans were echoing those complaints. And in 1973, as if to ram the point home with a back-handed slap to the head, the first gas crisis hit. The Mustang II made perfect sense when it showed up. Smaller, lighter, and more fuel efficient. Perfect, minus the fact that for 1974 they forgot the V8 altogether. The next year they fixed that one mis-step and started cramming 302s back into them. In stock form…once again, they were a product of their times. But a hot rodder in 1988, who knew what a 1970 Boss Mustang could do and who had a then-disposable Cobra II to play with, could spend a weekend turning the PintoStang into a little nightmare.

I have to be a bit thin on the details here for two reasons: one, this story happened 31 years ago and between then I’ve had concussions, nights of heavy drinking, and some excellent painkillers along the way. The second part is that the people involved in the story, for the most part, are dead, some before I was even born, and those that are still alive I haven’t had communication with in years, maybe decades.

So here it goes: an uncle in my family line was a gearhead to the core. He built cars for the other siblings…I know my mother was rocking a 383-powered 1969 Plymouth Fury in high school thanks to this guy, and he might have had a hand in building the 1973 Newport that my cousin Vance used to introduce me to the drug of speed. He passed on shortly before I was born, but not before providing one of my aunts with either a Cobra II or a Mach 1 Mustang II. Either way, it was red, it was rowdy, and it was an automatic. That last part is key. At the age of five, I proved to be an insatiable learner, to the point of freaking out the adults. Not only was I an avid reader, but I had comprehension skills that football players in my high school lacked. I read encyclopedias for fun and soaked up every ounce of information I could acquire like a sponge. So, when I watched my mother drive her 1982 Ford Mustang around, I mentally took notes. When my grandfather drove me around in his 1984 Chrysler E-Class, I took notes. And when this aunt drove the Mustang II around, I took notes.

Now, around this time frame, I’m feral. My mother works, my grandparents are up in age and aren’t up to keeping me under strict control, and the others…well, no. They weren’t bothered. So nobody noticed when I hooked the keys to a little red coupe, fired it up, and slowly backed it out of the driveway. Nobody gathered that I took great care to not scrape the tailpipes on the road backing out of the sloped drive. But somebody saw the car moving with me in it. And as they bolted outside to stop the scene, it happened: I selected “D”, and matted the throttle hard-core. The Mustang, facing uphill on a steep section of Rockies foothill, was pretty much in standstill burnout mode. The little fourteen-inch tires didn’t have a prayer…and neither did I once a hand reached in and in one swift motion, killed the engine, ripped the E-brake up and ripped my ass out of the front seat.

Rumor has it that somewhere in a box is a Polaroid picture of me being dragged away from the Mustang II by either my aunt or my mother, with an uncle dying of laughter in the grass. Somewhere, that picture has my first burnout recorded for the record. And that’s why I dig the Mustang II…it’s one of the most base parts of my gearhead history.

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