The hobby of hot rodding gives us the opportunity to assume the role of detective, archaeologist and preservationist. Often times we search towers of tattered titles while the unmistakable film of dust embeds into our fingertips. Perhaps the soft glo... <BR><BR>To read the rest of this blog entry from The Jalopy Journal, click here.
SWEET!!!! And here all along I always thought Flintstone's Malfunction was putting the sabre tooth cat out and leaving the window open..... Sorry nothing of value to offer....but it is bitchin' and you have my sympathies.
This is a pretty unique car, hopefully someone will remember it or have more pics and info. Thanks for the post, Carp
Not sure on the history at all, but the car itself is sweet!! I had a 31 Chrysler coupe for a short while last year. Hopefully someone has some info on this rare bird.
Mopar purists have been looking for this guy since 1967 so he can be properly flogged for sticking a "gulp" sbc in a Mopar! Sacrilege! Blasphemy!! Heretics! Seriously, I love pics like this showing that true hot rodding back in the day was really all about cross breeding. Seems some of the uptight, my team is better than your team, brand loyalists have selected memories.
Don't bitch too much since many years ago I talked my buddy into putting a 426 hemi into his '62 'Vette.
Man that thing is Bitch! Now ranking with the Al Norton/Jack Shaw Chevy Model A...... and Joey knows how much I love that car!
I suspect that the name "Flintstone's Malfunction" may refer to the fact that Fred's feet couldn't touch the ground. Here's "Fred's Fueller".
This yeller coupe or one almost like it was built around 2000 in NW Florida by a friend with a body shop. Sold it to a woman around Orlando. Now????????
A friend has a similar body that was a old hotrod he found in a junkyard in the Dayton Ohio area years ago,do you know if it had any tail lights mounted in the panel below the trunk lid as the body my friend has I think had 50 Pontiac lights in it. I will probably see him saturday and find out what exactly it is as I am thinking its a 32 Chrysler or a 32 Dodge.
That coupe is a good solid body . Might have found it,s way back onto a restored chassis in which case it would be hard to find now. A lot can happen in 45 odd years.
It's amazing how many old drag race cars had names that became legendary through the years. In many cases I was not even sure who owed the cars but I sure knew the names of them. Jimbo
I will try to get some pics of it and he told me the Dodge body is very close to the Chrysler body,the Dodge did not have the split windshield and was a little different where the quarter panel meets the rear fender but is the same basic body.
At first I thought of Dave Koffel, who was from the Akron area, and ran the Flintstone Flyer series of cars. I doubt that it's one of his, but maybe a "team" car or similar? Might be worth contacting him or his sons (I think they run a shop in Michigan) to see if they have any info.
The car is bad ass! Tinted windows contribute to the look. We all dearly hope that it exists somewhere in a garage-in one piece waiting to be restored. The hard reality is that many times, old race cars get parked, engine gets pulled for a rebuild, sold off or swapped into another car. In some cases, race partnerships existed because someone had a good chassis/body and someone else had a killer engine. Partnership disolves and the car loses it's mill. If that car were minus the drivetrain and the wheels/tires were sold off the personality is gone. Best case scenario; It lives, waiting to be revived. Worst case scenario; It got parted out and the body is now a 10" channeled, primered R/R with a tractor grille.
I shared this post in the Facebook Group "Vintage NHRA Memorabilia". I asked if anyone has an entry list from the 1967 Indy Nationals to look for a car from Edgerton, OH. The names of their home towns are included. Also, there's probably some HAMBer's that have that entry list. I have one from the '67 NHRA Springnationals held at Bristol, TN. I checked and no one was entered from Edgerton, OH.
I was going to suggest the same thing as nitrobrother (above). Contact Dave Koffel and see if he knows anything about it. I can't imagine that, back in the day, he wouldn't have heard something about another car running the "Flintstone" moniker. Even though they were essentially across the state from each other, they probably ran at some of the same tracks.