I have a note that the red car above was run by Gene Altizer for a few months in 1968 with an injected BBC in B/G. I have the above two S & S cars in a file as well as this blue 62 which I think has a classic look to it. Would be interesting to know the story on it as well. Not really a gasser and it appears this may be at a Corvette meet. Still like the car though.
This picture is at Lebanon Valley Dragway before the new tower was built. I'm not sure when that was maybe around 1990. And it says S & S speed equipment Pat
I understand it is a different S & S. The red car is the S & S I am familiar with out of Falls Church Va that sponsored some big names in the 60s until 1972 I believe. The blue 62 is a completely different S & S out of Massachusetts and interested me as I am partial to 62s. I just wanted to see if I could find out some info on the car. I have collected hundreds if not thousands of pictures of old drag Corvettes and am trying to file them into some sort of system that makes at least minimal sense. I have an S &S miscellaneous file (for lack of a better way to file unknown cars) with these three cars and have a few notes in the file as well. Hoping to add to it. I have thought it would be a good idea to write someday about early Corvette in drag racing but it is a pretty large task for sure. I have written some articles on racing back in the teens (AAA racing 1915-1919) and that was an easier task than tracking down all of the info on these obscure Vettes. Still trying to see what I can find I suppose. Pat thanks on the Lebanon Valley but I had another picture with the car that shows you are correct. Just did not want to post all the pics.
Enloe only one more picture left in the file so here it is. Some mid years in these photos as well which I am sure are of interest to you and your son.
Dancing Bear II on the back it has some days you get the bear some days the Bear gets YOU John Alger Minuteman Vendetta wasn't sure where this one belonged
My old Vette was previously owned by Buz Post and driven by Jeff Hefler. Actually won Super Gas in Houston in 1994. I bought it soon after and did a complete rebuild/update. She has a homemade straight axle with a rack and pinion steering mounted directly to the front axle. Slip steering shaft and u-joints allowed front end travel. Worked fine on and off the track. Chassis wasn't inspected this day, so we ran 10.0, leaving at idle and mat it. Still managed 150 trap speed and long low wheelies. Fun car, sure miss it sometimes. I think we won that day, that's my sister helping me down the lanes at Maple Grove.
Getting hard to figure out the classes for these but they are all Hot Rod Corvettes so I will put them here. Corvette Auto Parts at Fontana MO JO
Out of the clear blue last night, something in my clutch let go in the Corvette. Guessing one of the springs in the center hub broke. My question is who's using the Center Force clutch's and how do they perform on the street and strip. The last thing I want is a clutch that chatters in traffic. Thanks in advance.
I put in one on a friends car for the street and it worked good, as long as its not high HP application with sticky tires. jp
Thanks JP. The Corvette is probably 400 HP and I'll be running slicks at less than 1/2 dozen events. The other suggestions I have is Dual Force Ram Clutch and a McLeod Super Street Pro. Don't have any past experience with either.
Hope this hasn't been posted, I don't remember. The link is to the cars story and more pictures on Hot Rod. http://www.hotrod.com/articles/1956-corvette-gasser-comes-back-to-life-from-the-dead/ 1956
McLeods are great and good tech support, my personal experience I stay away from dual disc systems, I think a higher end centerforce system would work well. jp
Baron I have been running a couple of Centerforce clutches for a number of years in my black 62. The difference may be that I do not have quite the horsepower of your car. The black car has a stock 327/365. I have not babied the car nor the clutch and have made a few trips down the track with good results. I had a problem 6 or 7 years ago with slipping after a while with the first Centerforce so I upgraded and after talking to Centerforce tech support they suggested I go with a different pressure plate and one of their discs that have the pucks on one side. If I remember correctly he told me it was the disc they suggest with RB block Mopars. It has really stood up well for the past 5 years or so and I have been happy with it and when I replace it I will probably go with the same setup. I have also heard good stuff on the Ram clutches. If you want me to look up the numbers of what I am running I will see if I put the numbers in my build book-probably did but have not looked at the book in years.
Thanks guys. I appreciate all this info. I used to buy all my clutch and pressure plates right from GM, all HD parts that I had great luck with over the years. Now they are discontinued, and after not using any of these after-market clutches for over 30 years, I trust you guys over what I read in the magazines / internet. Not getting any "fake news" or BS here. Thanks !
Once you get the HP and traction correct, None of the street/strip clutches will work. I went through 12 clutches in one season. Center Force is street only, Even Ram dual force only gave me 14 runs before failing. If you are serious about a street and race clutch, you need a slipper clutch like the Ram 471 clutch and the 1363 sintered disc. Be aware, This clutch is strictly business. Not street friendly. More like an on/off switch. That disc is indestructible. It grabs hard and will scream like a Banshee if you slip it too much. It has a lot of rules to set it up. Also to get it to work at the track. I just set it at mid point and it works for me.
Thanks Jim. I wondered what you used as your car launches real hard. My car will see much more street time than track time, so I want something that is "user friendly". Appreciate your reply. ( 12 clutches in one season...almost $5K in parts. Yikes.)