Go Back   The Supercar Registry > General Discussion > Pit Area - Racing


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #151  
Old 12-26-2008, 10:50 PM
sixd8rs sixd8rs is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Westminster, Md
Posts: 1
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
Default Re: Old Drag Car Pictures.........

Found these on photobucket. 1968 AHRA Bristol TN







Here is a link to the rest of them.
http://s48.photobucket.com/albums/f2...%20TN/?start=0
Reply With Quote
  #152  
Old 12-26-2008, 11:28 PM
kwhizz kwhizz is offline
Yenko Contributing Member
 
Join Date: May 2004
Location: LS Make'um Better Guy
Posts: 7,738
Thanks: 739
Thanked 652 Times in 196 Posts
Default Re: Old Drag Car Pictures.........

Look at the Big Block Chevelle behind the Bike.......




Ken
__________________


The Best things in life......Aren't Things
Reply With Quote
  #153  
Old 12-27-2008, 12:03 AM
John Brown's Avatar
John Brown John Brown is offline
Yenko Contributing Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: South Bend, Indiana
Posts: 2,740
Thanks: 279
Thanked 416 Times in 198 Posts
Default Re: Old Drag Car Pictures.........

[ QUOTE ]


[/ QUOTE ]

A little more about E.J. Potter.....

A short history of E. J. Potter

(or: So you thought Evel Kneivel was a wild and crazy guy!)

I don't know where E. J. Potter came from, the first time I became aware of him was when he was racing/showing off his exotic motorcycle. He took a Harley Davidson frame and put a small-block chevy engine in it, sideways. This engine had Hilborn injectors and burned Nitro, and was producing about 500 Hp. It was started by having a couple guys hang on from the side, and it was pushed with a truck. When the engine fired, the assistants lifted the rear of the bike (these must have been some strong guys!) and put it up on a wooden stand that kept the rear tire, a 10" wide racing slick, off the ground. When the christmas tree said go, E. J. would rev the engine to 6000 RPM and the assistants would push him off the stand! It did a wheelie about half-way down the strip, and did about 160 MPH in the quarter mile. E. J. tried to find a small, light clutch for the thing, but he never found anything that would work. He tried helicopter clutches, but even they didn't quite do it. The rear wheel was coupled to the engine with a huge multi-width roller chain. Well, one day he reached the end of the strip and closed the throttle, and nothing happened - the throttle was stuck! He cut off the magneto, but a very hot engine (no radiator, just the thermal mass of the water in the block) burning nitro at wide open throttle doesn't need much ignition! It kept right on running. He hit the brakes (dual caliper aircraft brakes) and that slowed him to about 150 MPH, but he could feet the handle retreating under his grip. There was no fuel cutoff! As he was approaching a line of trees at the end of the strip, he took the only action he could think of, he jumped off! He slid on his rear until it burned through his chaps into his skin, and then did some somersaults. Amazingly, he ended up being able to walk after all this, and followed the new gap into the forest to see what became of his machine. All he could find was an engine block! Nothing else recognizable.

Realizing that this was a bit more dangerous than he imagined, he started thinking of ways to make life safer, and while continuing with a rebuilt 327 CID bike (with, amazingly, a fuel cutoff!) he started to design his next generation machine. He got an old Dodge Dart station wagon and put an Allison 17xx CID V-12 airplane engine in the back, hooked up to something like a Borg Warner truck transmission. I don't know how he ever heard another sound after being inside a station wagon with an 1800++ horsepower engine. Anyway, there were some problems with the new machine, but it certainly was a crowd pleaser, and it did fairly good times on the clock, too. He felt that his new exhibition machine was a whole lot safer. Then, something happened. I suspect he couldn't leave well enough alone, and had to soup-up that Allison! Well, the engine blew apart one day, and he felt himself in a bit of deja-vu, sliding down a drag strip at 100+ MPH on his rear, again! This time, he was wearing Nomex, and had a racing seat still strapped to his rear, but the somersaults at the end were just as hard on the body!

Well, maybe giant engines are dangerous - so he had to get the engine OUT of the car! How can you do that? Ah ha! Make the "World's Fastest Slot Car" is how! So, he put another Allison on a flatbed trailer, hooked it to a locomotive dynamo, and laid copper strips down the length of the track. He gutted an old Honda Civic (back when they were little more than tin cans, anyway) and put four rewound jet engine starter motors in the Honda. Aside from brake rotors, there wasn't much else in the car but those 4 motors, 4 wheels and tires, and a seat! Well, it WENT! I don't remember the times, but it was FAST! This thing weighed something like 800 Lbs, hardly more than the drive train on a rail. It would beat the rails off the line like they were standing still. No tire burning, just 4 racing slicks pulling the car like a rock out of a sling shot. I think the rails sometimes caught up at the far end, since the Honda wasn't really designed for 300 MPH aerodynamics. This all takes the history up to maybe 1975 or so. I haven't heard any more stories about E. J. Potter since the slot car. I wish now that I had taken the opportunity to SEE this in person. All I know about this is from reading magazines, and I'm sure it would be MUCH more memorable to have actually SEEN it!


Taken from this link. http://www.crazyrider.com/historypage1.htm
__________________
......................
John Brown

This isn't rocket surgery.....
Reply With Quote
  #154  
Old 12-27-2008, 12:26 AM
Salvatore Salvatore is offline
Yenko Contributing Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 9,880
Thanks: 3
Thanked 213 Times in 178 Posts
Default Re: Old Drag Car Pictures.........

E.J. Potter "The Michigan Madman."
Reply With Quote
  #155  
Old 12-27-2008, 01:06 AM
kwhizz kwhizz is offline
Yenko Contributing Member
 
Join Date: May 2004
Location: LS Make'um Better Guy
Posts: 7,738
Thanks: 739
Thanked 652 Times in 196 Posts
Default Re: Old Drag Car Pictures.........

[ QUOTE ]
Look at the Big Block Chevelle behind the Bike.......




Ken

[/ QUOTE ]

Notice the Whizzer Gas Tank 0n the Bike..........LOL

Ken
__________________


The Best things in life......Aren't Things
Reply With Quote
  #156  
Old 12-27-2008, 01:18 AM
Mr70's Avatar
Mr70 Mr70 is offline
Yenko Contributing Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Illinois
Posts: 20,444
Thanks: 70
Thanked 2,565 Times in 1,158 Posts
Default Re: Old Drag Car Pictures.........

Ha!..
Reply With Quote
  #157  
Old 12-27-2008, 08:05 AM
olredalert olredalert is offline
Yenko Contributing Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Marine City, Mi.
Posts: 8,860
Thanks: 27,615
Thanked 3,800 Times in 1,613 Posts
Default Re: Old Drag Car Pictures.........

-----I watched E.J. run at Epping back in about 68 or 69. He was certifiable. He launched just as the story above said and ran all the way thru the back door with the front wheel a foot off the ground and the back wheel spinning. He made two runs that day and we went down to the finish for the second run. I thought it was cool seeing it from the starting line but his run was unbelieveable when watching him come at you!!!.........Bill S
Reply With Quote
  #158  
Old 12-27-2008, 08:43 AM
427TJ's Avatar
427TJ 427TJ is offline
Yenko Contributing Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: PNW
Posts: 5,578
Thanks: 1,007
Thanked 289 Times in 162 Posts
Default Re: Old Drag Car Pictures.........

Found this over on the HAMB. The perfect '50 Austin gasser. So sanitary.


Reply With Quote
  #159  
Old 12-28-2008, 12:41 AM
Jerry@CHP Jerry@CHP is offline
Banned
 
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Eldersburg, Maryland
Posts: 351
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
Default Re: Old Drag Car Pictures.........

I have a shoe box full of photos that Tim Bishop and cousin David Bishop took at the tracks throughout the 1960s. Thousands of color photos here and I just don't have the time to fool with them and log them in. I could of if I was retired but not yet.

If anyone would like to take on this scanning project and work with me I would be glad to do it. FYI, David Bishop is the official NHRA photographer for Division One. Both Bishops are world class people. Timmy tells me that he has more photos in his hog house at the farm. That's a drag racer for you!

Jerry
Reply With Quote
  #160  
Old 12-28-2008, 10:13 AM
HPMIKE HPMIKE is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 97
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
Default Re: Old Drag Car Pictures.........

my 71 Hemi Challenger at Etown in '74


Attached Images
 
Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 08:52 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.

O Garage vBulletin Plugins by Drive Thru Online, Inc.