Went to the world of Wheels show and saw this really one of a kind charger set up that is pretty rare unit !
I'm not real crazy about those upper shock absorber mounts or the driver side brake hose rubbing on the hairpin.
the car belongs to my good friend MercDeuceMan on here - he is the show chairman of Indy World of Wheels - he has many super cars and all are HAMB friendly - his son is VonDust, wife is RoundAboutSue - all are members of the Indy Road Rockets
Any rubbing of the front lines on the hairpins is a photo illusion, but thanks for the observation. As for fuel leaks at the regulator, that is an inherit risk that you have with any multiple carb set up and fuel regulator that I am willing to accept. I perform a comprehensive pre-flight check on each of my cars everytime before I take them out on the road. That's what we do in aviation. Rarely do I find anything that needs attention. But that is part of owning a reliable Custom or Hotrod. The front shock mounts have been that way for 64 years and haven't broken yet driving on our midwestern roads, so I expect they will last me the rest of my lifetime. Sent from my SM-G955U using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
That is a good looking car. I am trying to figure out the supercharger drive. Ok, got it, electric. My eyes are not what they used to be. I thought for a minute it may have had a distributor drive.
MDM, clean little roadster! Did you do a "road test" on this set -up? Sure is Interesting, remember pics/video or it didn't happen.
Great looking setup. My only question is where do you put in the oil? Sent from my SM-T350 using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
I have a question, how does an electric supercharger work? Is the electric motor only engaged when the throttle is on the floor? Maybe a switch under the gas pedal? Have you tried it out? How does it seem performance wise?? Sent from my iPhone using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
I've never seen one of these installed. How does it perform? "Put on a stock 283 cu. in Chevy engine, Oberhausen advertised that the supercharger would give a 65% boost, and a 107 horsepower increase." https://kustomrama.com/wiki/Oberhausen_Engineering_Corp https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_supercharger
I'll try and answer as many of these questions as I can: You add oil thru the PCV opening mounted in the right valve cover. A monetary push button switch mounted to the right of the steering colunm activates the blower on demand while under full throttle. If you recall Mark, you were fondling this thing in my swap space up at the Ducktail swap meet 7-8 years ago. I have not used the blower, there is no pop-off valve and the carbs aren't nearly big enough in CFM to make the blower function properly. I've only seen three of these and this is the only one that I know of that is on a car and running.. It is a low grade sand casting and I don't expect it would take much of a hard backfire or over pressurization to bust the plenum When I had the unit all apart to get it powder coated I bench tested the electric motor head on the table before mounting it. It moves some air but not nearly enough to make the difference they claim it will make.
Yeah, the car was first built in 1955. At the show last weekend it sat next to my buddy's red 31 roadster. It was built in 1959. Those two cars represented over 124 years of hotrod heritage in Indianapolis. Sent from my SM-G955U using The H.A.M.B. mobile app