SamIyam
02-15-2004, 05:48 PM
I think it may have been the Starsky & Hutch Torino on the front cover, but for whatever reason I picked up HRM on the news stand today and was pleasantly surprized.
I think it's because I've been saturated by the entire "scene" that surrounds the "RAT-Traditional-Nostalgia Rod" movement that HRM seems fresh to me... there's a great story on a couple of match race style drag cars that are street friendly and can rip off ten second quarter mile times, the seal on the S&H cars that were built for the movie... and for big-ass barges they are pretty fast... a retro story on the legend of the Turbonique drag axle... a neat intro to the new GTO, which in my opinion is probably going to breath new life into rear wheel performance in America as well as seguay into a new Chevelle... a story on the Texas Mile... a balls out one mile drag race... A kick ass story on a Sweden dude that built a '64 Galaxie into a vintage NASCAR look-alike... and above all an editorial that rings true with why I'm thinking a diverse interest in all things rodding is a little more healthy than being into just "one thing".
Check it out,
Sam.
I think it's because I've been saturated by the entire "scene" that surrounds the "RAT-Traditional-Nostalgia Rod" movement that HRM seems fresh to me... there's a great story on a couple of match race style drag cars that are street friendly and can rip off ten second quarter mile times, the seal on the S&H cars that were built for the movie... and for big-ass barges they are pretty fast... a retro story on the legend of the Turbonique drag axle... a neat intro to the new GTO, which in my opinion is probably going to breath new life into rear wheel performance in America as well as seguay into a new Chevelle... a story on the Texas Mile... a balls out one mile drag race... A kick ass story on a Sweden dude that built a '64 Galaxie into a vintage NASCAR look-alike... and above all an editorial that rings true with why I'm thinking a diverse interest in all things rodding is a little more healthy than being into just "one thing".
Check it out,
Sam.