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Entries in Familia Drag Truck (3)

We All Had A Favorite Car . . .

I've had a lot of vehicles in my life, but this one stands out as a definite favorite: a 1959 Napco 4X4 Chevrolet short wheelbase Suburban.

 

This photo was taken in Monmouth, Oregon in April 1976, a year before I sold it and moved to Kinshasa, Congo.

 

Yep, I sure loved that old Suburban.

 

Monouth, Oregon, April 1976.  I painted the "crummy" (def. "A truck used to haul loggers to the forest and back.") a nice fire engine red not long after this photo was taken.  It had a 302 Chevy small block, 4bbl, headers . . . . and those wonderful 9.00.16 military tires.  Too Cool.  I miss this car very much.

 

This is the only image I have of my old '59 crummie the way it looked when I sold it.  It was a real show-stopper in its red paint and straight body.  Nice.

 

In 1985-86 I was a crew member on the IMSA World Sports Car team of Paegasus Racing, owned by Oliver Kuttner.  He had somehow acquired these unfinished "bodies in white" 1975 Iso Rivolta Lele that were left on the bankrupted Iso Rivolta Lele assembly line. Technically there is no such thing as a 1975 model . . . except these! He gave me one.  I had dreams of making one into an NHRA Super Gas class race car . . . . but, alas, I stayed in Bangkok for 17 years and never even started on it.  Oh . . . what might have been!

Bye-Bye Baby, Bye-Bye.

My beloved drag race car and shop equipment have been sold, and paddock lease given back.  I saved a few tools and a lot of good memories.  It was a major lifelong dream of mine, from early childhood, to drag race with a 'real race car' one day. It is almost the only constant in my life of constant change.  I spent countless hours imagining every detail of the car I would build and drive one day.  I spent countless money on drag racing related books and magazines to educate myself before I eventually fulfilled the dream with this race car.  It was very, very difficult to make this dream come true in Thailand and required all my perseverance and patience in the face of not enough quality, timely, or reliable mechanical help available.  But still, it was always an adventure to find myself in strange environments while trying to complete race car construction tasks in Bangkok and surrounds. I met a lot of good people and made a lot of good friends through my racing -- but also some cheaters and many posers. Drag racing for me was a very simple thing: the phenomena itself was captivating -- I didn't analyze it, I just enjoyed it as a crazy desire.  The noise and the cars are, somehow, Beauty to me.  The best compliment I ever received was an American hot rodder who said, when I asked him if he liked my race car, "You built it, you didn't just talk about it."  Yes I did. It is by no means my only accomplishment in life, it is only a small accomplishment, but it carried so much meaning to me because, I now believe, it was a positively affirmative answer to the doubts of a youthful self about my own efficacy in the big world.  I often said that drag racing was the only high risk behavior that a 60 year old man should be involved in Bangkok. I have many more dreams yet to fulfill, but my "race car attachment" -- what has kept me from being a Once Returner (Sakadagami) this time -- has been satisfied. Thanks for the memories.  I happily move on toward my eventual death: the tank shows only 1/4 remains.

Down for a new engine

I woke up at 5:00 this Sunday morning and trailered my race car the 150 miles across Thailand to the race shop that will be installing a new supercharged race 1UZ V-8 engine.  It will be about eight (8) weeks before I will see the race track again . . . but when I do . . .  it is going to be really fun with a blown and injected HEMI! You can check the progress at my Racing Projects Blog link.

6:30am: Getting ready for the long trip down the road. Owning a race car in Thailand has been a lot of fun . . .  and very interesting.