Junior Johnson Rule Change: The Car That Won the 1969 Firecracker 400

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  • Опубліковано 17 лис 2024

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  • @fuhrstpuhl3278
    @fuhrstpuhl3278 11 місяців тому +203

    LOL, for Junior Johnson the tailpipes were probably an obvious distraction.......while Nascar and everyone else were all concerned about the rear pipes Junior had a dozen other questionable modifications going on elsewhere..........that's the way Smokey Yunick operated too.

    • @gregorygolden1296
      @gregorygolden1296 11 місяців тому +29

      You are so right. Think them two made the NASCAR rule book a whole lot thicker.

    • @firestarter105G
      @firestarter105G 11 місяців тому +10

      Yes, that is exactly how you do it.

    • @ronfullerton3162
      @ronfullerton3162 11 місяців тому +25

      I think it was Yunick who made the statement, "If it isn't in the rulebook, it ain't cheating". The two of them authored many new rules.

    • @94jimmy5
      @94jimmy5 11 місяців тому +16

      Not cheating......rules interperation!

    • @dennisholst4322
      @dennisholst4322 8 місяців тому +3

      Those guys used special spears

  • @DIARRHEA-PANIC
    @DIARRHEA-PANIC 11 місяців тому +115

    In high school, I had a 1966 Ford Fairlane 500xl. The girl I liked, liked a guy with a 1969 Torino. He wrecked his car, I got the girl. I lost the girl eventually of course... But, I still have my four speed hard top hi-po Fairlane from High School 🤪
    These cars just create battles 😅

    • @sergeantmasson3669
      @sergeantmasson3669 11 місяців тому

      @DIARRHEA-PANIC, Ford never put a 289 Hi-Po in a 1966 Ford Fairlane. Last year for that option in a Fairlane was 1964.

    • @8000RPM.
      @8000RPM. 11 місяців тому

      @@sergeantmasson3669 And I thought I knew a lot about classic Fords,...

    • @sergeantmasson3669
      @sergeantmasson3669 11 місяців тому +3

      @@8000RPM. I'm a master level factory certified auto/truck tech for 50+ years. 40 of those years with the largest Ford dealership in my state. My dad worked for Ford for 50 years.

    • @timorre3971
      @timorre3971 11 місяців тому

      Sounds like you always had the girl

    • @8000RPM.
      @8000RPM. 11 місяців тому

      @@sergeantmasson3669 Great to hear! I have a somewhat rare (well very rare) classic I'm ready to restore. My problem now is finding a shop with the skill-set. They should be able to answer questions like: Did Shelbys have over-ride traction bars, under-ride traction bars, ladder bars or panhard bars. I'm sure you know the answer!

  • @kevinhuber8723
    @kevinhuber8723 11 місяців тому +53

    RIP LeeRoy, one of the under appreciated drivers of the 1960's. Yarbrough was a force not only in NASCAR but Indycar as well.

    • @Trackratz-zl9di
      @Trackratz-zl9di 7 місяців тому +1

      Right up until he tried to kill his mother .

    • @princybella5386
      @princybella5386 4 місяці тому +1

      ​@@Trackratz-zl9di That was because of Brain Trauma he had received as a result of a Race Crash It had affected him and he continued to deteriorate If he had been able to receive The type of Medical Treatment we have today Things
      mite have been different.

    • @Trackratz-zl9di
      @Trackratz-zl9di 4 місяці тому

      @@princybella5386 That is a complete lie and is not supported by any legitimate medical facts or personal .You seem to know absolutely nothing about his background or for some reason wish to hide it and rewrite history .

    • @Trackratz-zl9di
      @Trackratz-zl9di 4 місяці тому

      @@princybella5386 There is no basis in fact in anything you said . If you have one shred of evidence to back up your obviously fabricated story please produce it .

  • @joshhuffine4522
    @joshhuffine4522 11 місяців тому +62

    Buddy Baker telling that story about drafting behind the rear exhaust was hilarious ❤.

    • @jamescaron6465
      @jamescaron6465 11 місяців тому +18

      Buddy Baker was one of a kind. I really miss him and Benny Parsons.

  • @nickmatoic9096
    @nickmatoic9096 8 місяців тому +26

    Back when Nascar was fun to watch.

    • @TractorMonkeywithJL
      @TractorMonkeywithJL 8 місяців тому +5

      Nascar quit being Nascar long ago. They might as well change the name to something else.

    • @superglx7028
      @superglx7028 8 місяців тому +3

      The need to bring back factory stock car racing

    • @thewatcher5271
      @thewatcher5271 5 місяців тому

      You're Right, It Was Fun To Watch! We Didn't Call It NASCAR Back Then, We Called It Stock Car Racing. Check Out The Movie, 'Redline 7000'.

  • @JRotten
    @JRotten 11 місяців тому +103

    Oh, the great days of Winston Cup.
    Verses CRAPcar racing we have now.

    • @sjb3460
      @sjb3460 8 місяців тому +4

      Truly, greater words have never been written.
      I find that I like watching replays of the old races more than watching any NASCAR races live. My wife and I have watched every Sunday afternoon for 25 years but it's just not the same anymore.

    • @JRCinKY
      @JRCinKY 8 місяців тому +8

      Used to I would NEVER miss a race. Now I don't even watch them on TV

    • @sjb3460
      @sjb3460 8 місяців тому +2

      My brother went to several Talladega races in the 70's, he was in the infield and nobody watched the races there. Then, the last year of the full size stock cars, I went, but not to the infield as I was married. We went to 4 more when it was the Winston Cup and we sat in the bleachers on the back stretch. One year, we crawled under the fence and was on turn 3, just feet away from the racers. I was taking pictures with a Nikon SLR using 400 speed film and all I had was a blur. The cops chased us away 2X, and then when we returned, they said if we came back they would take us to jail. The last time, all 3 of us were in the stands at Turn 3, when we saw Jeff Gordon was 3 feet ahead of Dale, Jr., the stands erupted in a shower of beer cans and coolers being heaved over the fence.
      Sad to see how the races have devolved.

    • @davechumbley7101
      @davechumbley7101 6 місяців тому +1

      LOL….Junior once famously said that if you have 10 things that are illegal on your car and inspection caught you on 5 of them you were still money ahead!

    • @lets-go-larson5
      @lets-go-larson5 4 місяці тому

      lol y'all are so salty. Y'all arent even race fans. Yes, while that was the good ol days of NASCAR, I say watching a modern NASCAR Cup Series race is 10x more entertaining than back in the 60's. While the cars are now spec and not stock, this year we've had three photo finishes, one of them a 3 wide photo finish better than the one at Daytona in '59, and the closest finish in history not that long ago.
      Grow some pants ya bunch of sad facebook boomers.

  • @danielmoose1273
    @danielmoose1273 11 місяців тому +50

    The Good Ol' Days. People my age got to see NASCAR get Real Good ... Then we got to watch it die. I don't even read to see who wins anymore.

    • @dyer2cycle
      @dyer2cycle 9 місяців тому +8

      I don't even know who the drivers are now..when I last gave a sh*t about Nascar, Jeff Gordon was still a young driver, and the "rookies" were guys like Tony Stewart....

    • @adotintheshark4848
      @adotintheshark4848 8 місяців тому +6

      there's so many rules and restrictions I'm surprised NASCAR didn't make all the drivers wear dresses.

    • @gtc1961
      @gtc1961 8 місяців тому +8

      same here, as they got out of "stock" cars, I lost interest.

    • @gabbyhayes4561
      @gabbyhayes4561 5 місяців тому +3

      @danielmoose1273 I agree with ya. I was watching NASCAR on the Wide World of Sports. I unfortunately got to witnessed NASCAR die along with Dale Earnhardt in turn 4. Such a sad day that was. RIP Dale.😢🇺🇸😎

    • @lets-go-larson5
      @lets-go-larson5 4 місяці тому

      @@gabbyhayes4561 That is the most bullshit reasoning why NASCAR "died". NASCAR reached it's peak in 2005, and while yes ratings have dropped due to other things, like Brian france fucking up the sport, I say it was in a better position than it was in say 2015. We have a more diverse schedule with a good balance of short tracks, 1.5's, road courses, a street course, and last year, a literal dirt race. NASCAR back in like the 1980's never had this kind of diversity.
      So quit your yapping. NASCAR never died with Dale. I would really like to hear your definition of dead. A sport is never dead. Pound some damn sense into your head boomer.

  • @ryanvarjas9719
    @ryanvarjas9719 11 місяців тому +11

    I really enjoy these videos about how interesting Nascar used to be.

  • @gregorylumpkin2128
    @gregorylumpkin2128 11 місяців тому +18

    I also had a Torino, a 1969, with the 428CJ engine. And...I stupidly sold it some years later. It was an awesome machine.

    • @Randy7th
      @Randy7th 9 місяців тому +1

      A regular Torino- even a GT is very different from the Talledaga...

  • @gregorygolden1296
    @gregorygolden1296 11 місяців тому +35

    I had a '68 Torino GT, 390 with 428 heads. Of all the cars I've owned, i reget not keeping that one. Never had a lick of problems with it. And it would flat fly. Damn sure wish i still had it.

    • @8000RPM.
      @8000RPM. 11 місяців тому +5

      The one that got away! Sorry to hear that. Many years ago, while on vacation visiting family in another state, I asked about a guy I knew (in the area) who had a unique/rare classic muscle car. I was told he recently married, was "settling down", and had just traded the car in at a dealership. The next morning, when that dealership opened, I was at the door. I bought that "trade in". Within a year, the original owner tracked me down and wanted to buy the car back. 49 years later,...I still own it. God willing,....it's not going to be the one that got away.

    • @gregorygolden1296
      @gregorygolden1296 11 місяців тому +3

      @@8000RPM. That's great. I raced stock cars off and on from 79-04. Cut up a lot of cars that are big money today. Chevelles Monte Carlos etc. who knew back then what we know today. But maaan, there was something about that 'ole Torino GT. I worked at a junkyard and traded it to my boss for racecar parts. One of my biggest regrets. Am happy that you were smart enough to get it and keep it. Be Safe, and GOD BLESS Brother.

    • @8000RPM.
      @8000RPM. 11 місяців тому +3

      @@gregorygolden1296 I'll leave you with a big tid-bit,...the 5th character of my vin is "G".

    • @gtc1961
      @gtc1961 8 місяців тому

      You'd be a much wealthier man today!

    • @Trackratz-zl9di
      @Trackratz-zl9di 7 місяців тому

      The 390 FE was the biggest slug of all big blocks of the era .

  • @TGL31
    @TGL31 11 місяців тому +15

    Did anyone catch that NASCAR was concerned that the fans might not like the racing the rear exhaust might create? How times change!

  • @eugenegilleno9344
    @eugenegilleno9344 11 місяців тому +24

    Plastic jelly mould bodies and space frame chassis killed off Stock Cars - how can they possibly by Stock if they are basically all the same car. Bring back the old days !

  • @operationoverloard
    @operationoverloard 11 місяців тому +14

    The NASCAR-tuned (with Ford parts) BOSS 429 had a lot more to do with the faster speeds which they were pumping out due to the fact that those things were cranking out 600+ horsepower. Setting matters straight....it's not just about the tailpipe location that made those "BOSS 9"-powered cars win.

  • @RonaldReed-ul9du
    @RonaldReed-ul9du 10 місяців тому +9

    I was there in the infield with all the other Venice race fans, I really liked ved the Paul Revere 250, the infield road track that ran at night!
    It was great timing, we could go hang on the beach a little while, and get back to Venice in time for the 4th of July Beach events! Great memories!

  • @OverlandOne
    @OverlandOne 11 місяців тому +5

    I never knew any of this and I have been watching nascar since the mid 1960's. Thank you.

  • @bronzecookie7888
    @bronzecookie7888 11 місяців тому +53

    That’s a very interesting story. The 60s and 70s was a cool time for NASCAR as that’s when all the development took place. Cars started hitting 200 MPH and the best shined even more like Petty, and Pearson. Then 1987 came and it fell apart but for good reason though.

    • @sergeantmasson3669
      @sergeantmasson3669 11 місяців тому

      @bronzecookie7888, only twice has NASCAR race car ever reached 200 MPH. Buddy Baker in a practice tire test lap at Talladega and Bill Elliott in an actual race.

    • @ihateracin
      @ihateracin 11 місяців тому +7

      @@sergeantmasson3669this is so comedically false

    • @sergeantmasson3669
      @sergeantmasson3669 11 місяців тому +1

      @@ihateracin the stats/facts prove otherwise, PUTZ.

    • @ihateracin
      @ihateracin 11 місяців тому +10

      @@sergeantmasson3669cars regularly broke 200 at California/Michigan for a decade dude.
      In fact the top 15 drivers qualified the 1987 Winston 500 at over 200 mph. Your facts and stats are impeccably lacking.

    • @sergeantmasson3669
      @sergeantmasson3669 11 місяців тому

      @@ihateracin FA:SE. Only twice has a NASCAR racecar ever done 200 MPH. Both were at Talladega. NOT my problem that your ignorance can't comprehend the stats/facts.

  • @mitchell-wallisforce7859
    @mitchell-wallisforce7859 11 місяців тому +28

    Mid-engined prototype race cars from that same era of the World Sportscar Championship had their exhausts pointed straight out the back too, as did that era's F1 cars. The F1 guys and many of the guys running open-topped sports cars didn't even have a cockpit to reroute the air away from them, and yet nobody made a fuss about it.
    _That being said,_ a commonly mentioned characteristic of the methanol-fueled CART IndyCars of the 90's is that following them was an intensely unpleasant experience due to the strong sting of the exhaust fumes, so IDK. My initial reaction was that NASCAR made a mountain out of a tailpipe mole hill but I guess somebody had better ask Bobby Allison or Richard Petty whether it had ever bothered them at all.

    • @jdoe9518
      @jdoe9518 11 місяців тому +7

      And these mid-engined sports/formula cars you mention, were the radiators likely to be affected by lead car if following closely? These same cars, was "slip streaming" as important? These same cars, did they have large driver compartments with a huge pressure differential that meant whatever got in took a long time, in relative terms, to get out?
      The larger the frontal area the greater the stagnant area in the wake.
      You know why ground effects is so efficient? Because of it's ability to all but eliminate stagnant air from rear of the car.
      Ever heard of Red Bull F1? And little trick called a blown diffuser?
      Notice on the NASCAR the rear exit exhaust was pointing up slightly?
      The NASCAR rear exit exhaust yielded multiple benefits. The upswept high pressure exhaust gas increased aerodynamic efficiency by moving the wake vortices further away from the rear of the car. It made it virtually impossible for another car to follow long enough to get a slingshot, why? Because hot exhaust gas does in fact cause overheating in the following car which reduces performance. It reduces performance further because hot air is less dense and exhaust gas has way less oxygen atoms. Fire requires fuel, oxygen and ignition. Less oxygen reduces the amount of fuel that can be burnt, so you're now overheating and ingesting stuff that doesn't want burn(fun fact this is like climate change only this real). It also reduces the performance of the driver. Many many people have reduced their performance to zero via exhaust gasses.
      Sometimes it's better to make a detour before even going up a mountain....

    • @franciscrisp6245
      @franciscrisp6245 11 місяців тому +3

      David Pearson was never nauseated. Not even while lighting up another Camel.

  • @hmdwgf
    @hmdwgf 11 місяців тому +19

    That’s a damn good looking car

  • @darkshadow31415
    @darkshadow31415 11 місяців тому +5

    Excellent research, loved that you followed up with the Gen 6 experiment. The archive footage is phenomenal.

  • @frankcastle5294
    @frankcastle5294 9 місяців тому +11

    Lee Roy's featured car was a 69 Torino Talladega. Those and the Cyclone Spoiler-II ruled the roost until Chrysler unleashed their Winged Wonders. Great times.

    • @adotintheshark4848
      @adotintheshark4848 8 місяців тому +1

      it was all in their shape, and great-looking besides!

    • @Trackratz-zl9di
      @Trackratz-zl9di 7 місяців тому +3

      I would rather have a Talladega then a Superbird any day.

    • @frankcastle5294
      @frankcastle5294 7 місяців тому

      @@Trackratz-zl9diOwning 2 SuperBirds and having owned a Talladega I have to seriously question your reasoning. Whatever that is.

    • @Trackratz-zl9di
      @Trackratz-zl9di 7 місяців тому +1

      @@frankcastle5294 First I must say I have not only never owned either one I have never driven one . I have ridden in both a lot My father first worked at Nickels Engineering and then went to Holman and Moody in 1968 . The competition version of the Talladegas I got to see with the 429s and all that trick stuff when your 12 was like seeing a space ship . Holman and Moody even had 4 street Talladegas with 429s rather then 428s . I don't know why they built them or where they went but my father drove one on and off for most of a Summer . My father had several friends that had Superbirds and it seemed they were always trying to sell him one . There was a lot less Talladegas/Spoilers then Superbirds /Chargers and I just loved the Ford's.

    • @frankcastle5294
      @frankcastle5294 7 місяців тому

      @@Trackratz-zl9diI hear ya. I've posted up actual production numbers for you, from memory. I google nothing.
      Cyclone Spoiler II---351
      Dodge Charger 500---392
      Dodge Charger 500 Daytona---506 about
      Ford Torino Talladaga---750 about
      Plymouth Superbord---1920 about

  • @gtc1961
    @gtc1961 8 місяців тому +9

    NASCAR the way it was meant to be..... National Association of STOCK Car Racing...the current cars sure as hell aren't stock. They need to go back to that.

  • @jefferyrobertson7520
    @jefferyrobertson7520 11 місяців тому +12

    I Like Generation 2 And 3 NASCAR Winston Cup Series From 1970 To 1993 Thanks For Uploading

  • @the_lost_navigator
    @the_lost_navigator 11 місяців тому +7

    You made me go and dig out my old Polar Lights kit to see if Lee Roy's ride was a back-biter - I may have to modify the model, now ;) ;)

  • @Kerry-fw6jt
    @Kerry-fw6jt 11 місяців тому +12

    Smokey Yunick says by exiting exhaust in front of rear tire, it creates a scavenging affect for exhaust pulses.
    Also, exiting the exhaust out the rear of car doesn’t have a significant affect on engine temp of the car behind. The car behind has an increase in engine temp due to no air flow when tucked in behind the car in front. Radiator can’t exchange heat into the air.

    • @EclecticHillbilly
      @EclecticHillbilly 11 місяців тому +5

      Actually both affect the temp of the trailing car........the lack of air to the front of the car and the exhaust being dumped straight into the air intake of the car. I actually remember this race and nobody could run behind Leroy without overheating. In a normal situation, the trailing car will heat up but not enough to be a problem. It was very common in those days for the trailing car to pull out going into the 3rd turn to get the car some cool air and then duck back in.

  • @timorre3971
    @timorre3971 11 місяців тому +5

    Was kinda hoping he'd mention the '69 Yarborough #21 Mercury Cyclone

  • @chucksgarage7165
    @chucksgarage7165 11 місяців тому +9

    It would be VERY interesting to test this thoery in a wind tunnel with modern data acquisition.

  • @jamesmatthies5295
    @jamesmatthies5295 11 місяців тому +27

    When Nascar was great. Bring back homologation. Win on Sunday and sell on Monday - Torino Talladega, Charger 500, Charger Dayton, Road Runner Superbird, Cyclone.... Now, it's generically bad

    • @ihateracin
      @ihateracin 11 місяців тому

      You’re describing the IMSA series which NASCAR owns. They run Homologated cars in that series.

    • @ragimundvonwallat8961
      @ragimundvonwallat8961 10 місяців тому +5

      those were the good days...but they cant go back....imagine oval racing with FWD 4cyl shitboxes. productions cars suck balls now so they have to use full on race cars in a series call ''stock cars'' the absolute state of all that crap

    • @dyer2cycle
      @dyer2cycle 9 місяців тому

      All those look-alike cockroach-shaped crossovers on the race track..no thanks to watching that...@@ragimundvonwallat8961

    • @scarbourgeoisie
      @scarbourgeoisie 8 місяців тому +2

      Actually, this could easily be done given that current NASCAR race cars don't use real stock bodies like they used to when NASCAR "was great".. NASCAR could clearly go to a throwback era and make their race cars look like they did in the late 60's and 70's, while riding on today's race car chassis. Unfortunately, GM wasn't officially in NASCAR during the aero wars of the late 60's and the few guys than ran Chevelles weren't competitive. Furthermore, Dodge is no longer in NASCAR and I'm not sure Toyota would be cool with running Daytona and Superbird bodies on their chassis'.

    • @JackF99
      @JackF99 5 місяців тому

      ​@@ragimundvonwallat8961​ you do know there are plenty of modern mass-produced domestic and imported cars that will easily outrun, outcorner, and outbrake a 1960s muscle car, right?

  • @JC-gw3yo
    @JC-gw3yo 3 місяці тому +1

    I would have never thought rear exhaust would have such an effect, But obviously it does

  • @RonaldReed-ul9du
    @RonaldReed-ul9du 10 місяців тому +2

    You know speaking of side exhaust, all of us who used to frequent all the Daytona races, all ran side exiting exhaust just behind the door as per State mandates

  • @colossae3241
    @colossae3241 11 місяців тому +19

    Please make a video about USAC stock car. I really want to know about that series.

    • @rarewhiteape
      @rarewhiteape 11 місяців тому +6

      Yeah this would be great!

    • @evanst.martin9332
      @evanst.martin9332 11 місяців тому +2

      Awesome series. Don White in the yellow and black Daytona was Usacs all time winner with 53 victories, and a two time champion. Their top drivers were every bit as good as Nascars best. They ran mostly in the Midwest with 4 races per year at the historic Milwaukee Mile. Occasionally they would run larger tracks, Michigan, Pocono,Texas and Dover. Pocono hosted the first 500 mile Usac stock car race in Sept. 1971. For those of you who loved watching the winged mopars, Usac allowed them to run until they aged out with the 3 year eligibility rule. The Usac guys would run 3-4 Nascar events per year, usually Riverside, Daytona, Rockingham, Atlanta & Charlotte. Usac driver Jim Hurtibuise won the Atlana 500 in 1966 or 67. A.J. Foyt won 64 and 65 Firecracker 400 as well as Riverside in 1970. Usac driver Roger McCluskey ran 2nd to Foyt in that race. I'm sure I'm missing a few others, plenty of info to make a video!

    • @colossae3241
      @colossae3241 11 місяців тому +1

      @@evanst.martin9332 thanks for the the info sir. That was a nice info

    • @evanst.martin9332
      @evanst.martin9332 11 місяців тому

      @@colossae3241 You are so welcome. I could go on all day about the Usac series!

    • @colossae3241
      @colossae3241 11 місяців тому

      @@evanst.martin9332 so when was the last USAC stock car race?? Is it in 70s

  • @scootergeorge7089
    @scootergeorge7089 11 місяців тому +13

    Further proof than in NASCAR, trying harder is superseded by crying harder.

    • @scootergeorge7089
      @scootergeorge7089 11 місяців тому

      @@user-cv4mb4yu8n - Someone actually tried running a 5 liter winged wonder at Daytona. Was doing great but failed to finish. Most people were surprised it qualified for the race!

  • @CudaRebelsAutoModeling426
    @CudaRebelsAutoModeling426 11 місяців тому +15

    Very informative and well made upload. Junior Johnson was a GENIUS and had so many nifty tricks up his sleve and with Lee Roy as his driver won almost every major race in 1969... Because of him and Smokey Yunick, Nascar basically had to re-write their entire rulebook. Keep up the good work!

    • @sergeantmasson3669
      @sergeantmasson3669 11 місяців тому +1

      @CudaRebelsAutoModeling426, Smokey Yunick quit NASCAR in 1970 because he kept getting nailed for cheating. Yarborough won 7 races in '69, NOT all the major races.

  • @billbob4856
    @billbob4856 10 місяців тому +2

    Actually saw DJ Williams live last year. Never thought I’d hear him as background music in a NASCAR vid lol

    • @Stuart1969-f1j
      @Stuart1969-f1j 3 місяці тому

      If it's same DJ Williams I'm familiar with, he's Afro-American dude who played at small clubs around Richmond VA. Saw him several times and purchased a CD at one gig. Had to be in the nineties.

  • @LongIslandMopars
    @LongIslandMopars 11 місяців тому +2

    Never knew that when i grew up watching in the 70s.

  • @bobwhitebread1887
    @bobwhitebread1887 11 місяців тому +4

    Junior Johnson was a very smart man

  • @1967davethewave
    @1967davethewave 11 місяців тому +17

    Seems to me side exhaust would blow right into the car next to you. I can imagine how bad it must smell on a big track after 40 cars have been racing for an hour. I have raced on the dirt for years and after 15 cars run a 3/8 track in August for 20 laps it gets pretty hard to breath!

    • @SOU6900
      @SOU6900 11 місяців тому +3

      Personally I love the smell of race exhaust. 2019 at Bristol in October when diesels invaded the track made my mouth water 😂😅

    • @SYN7H3T1C4
      @SYN7H3T1C4 8 місяців тому

      it really won't
      due to the direction of the exhaust exiting and the direction of the car is going is not lined up, it will just cause the exhaust to disperse way quicker instead of being focused at the car behind

  • @TANTRUMGASM
    @TANTRUMGASM 11 місяців тому +2

    5:20 from Stunningly beautiful to Hideous in 6 seconds.

  • @plantfeeder6677
    @plantfeeder6677 10 місяців тому +4

    RIP Cale Yarborough.😢

  • @williampotter2098
    @williampotter2098 8 місяців тому +3

    Back when stock cars were stock cars.

  • @billoddiea
    @billoddiea 11 місяців тому +8

    Excellent content…solid script with no waffle or AI stupid computer voice.

    • @Roddy556
      @Roddy556 11 місяців тому

      "DID YOU KNOW THAT IN NASCAR COMPETITORS DRIVE CARS? I BET YOU DIDN'T KNOW THERE ARE RULES"

    • @billoddiea
      @billoddiea 11 місяців тому

      @@Roddy556 Keep drinking

    • @Roddy556
      @Roddy556 11 місяців тому +1

      @billoddiea I quit years ago. This video seemed a little too quality so I thought I would interject some of that shitty AI/youtube short type content in the comment section.

    • @billoddiea
      @billoddiea 11 місяців тому

      @@Roddy556 Oh I see…got it!
      Well said.

  • @alexbaker2615
    @alexbaker2615 2 місяці тому

    Junior is a racing legend and a true pioneer of the sport! You rock, ridge-runner ❤

  • @TheRuffusMD
    @TheRuffusMD Місяць тому +1

    i was at this race , it was great

  • @michaelholder3933
    @michaelholder3933 4 місяці тому

    What made Jr. Johnson so great was that he understood the car. Befor nascar he spent time building whiskey cars back in the days befor you could call Edelbrock or AutoZone and order a kit.

  • @Stuart1969-f1j
    @Stuart1969-f1j 3 місяці тому +1

    Recall one year at Dover the King was in need of a caution towards the end of the race and "presto" Buddy Arrington's #67 Dodge spun out, bringing out the yellow. Was well known that Arrington got boatloads of used and used up race parts from Petty Enterprises. Steve Waid was the racing columnist for the Roanoke VA newspaper and he interviewed Arrington week after, asking him what caused the spin that late in the race. Waid reported that Arrington had trouble keeping a straight face but said he just lost the car and spun. There had been speculation about the relationship with Petty and Petty being in dire need of a caution that was reason for Arrington's spin. Suppose Arrington had heard all the speculation and couldnt hide his emotions when Waid asked the question. Maybe some of you old timers remember Steve Waid when he become editor in charge of the subscription based publication entitled Grand National Scene. Wow, the old days in racing. Remember in the 60s after the race finished the track would open the gates allowing fans to cross the track and walk anywhere you wanted to...among the teams loading cars and equipment, meeting drivers and snagging autographs. Drivers didnt have RVs to escape to for showers and changing clothes. Fans were allowed to peel off sponsor decals from cars, talk to drivers and crews. They werent making a lot of money in those days. Martinsville was paying the winner $5k to $6k throughout most of the middle 60s. Recall Fred Lorenzen was first driver to top 100k in race winnings. Believe he won $113k that year. Of course factory backed teams didnt have expense of cars, parts and tires. Was reported that cost for one car for top tier race team could be built for 20k. Realize that was 55-60 years ago but only about 5-6X cost of new passenger car then. Dont have clue what that multiple would be now in comparison to new passenger vehicle but many times much higher multiple. Remember looking in the race cars after the race. At short tracks like Martinsville the car would have a "trap" door on passenger side footwell and drivers could open that trap door and inspect the right front tire for wear. Was possible because trap door was connected to a small link chain that was routed over close to the driver, perhaps mounted to portion of roll cage. Suppose they could notice if wear was down to cords or maybe blistering. Of course this "inspection" only possible during cautions. The good ole days...Petty, Pearson, Lorenzen, Fireball, Ned Jarrett, Jr Johnson, Darell Derringer, Buck & Buddy Baker, Joe Weatherly, Rex White, Marvin Panch, Dick Hutcherson, Dave Marcis, Bobby & Donnie Allison, James Hylton, Jim Paschal, Paul Goldsmith, Pete Hamilton, Curtis Turner, JD McDuffy , Dan Gurney, Mario Andretti and Wendall Scott. After a Martinsville race in the 60s, Dad and I stopped at Greyhound bus station in Martinsville to get some ice cream. Wasnt any fast food joints in those days. Got our snack and sat down. Looking around, i spotted Wendall Scott at a table with some of his people. Being a kid i asked Dad if we could wait til they finished eating so i could ask for his autograph. Dad told me to go approach him then as he probably wouldnt mind. I pulled out our ticket stubs and Mr Scott signed both of them for me. I was thrilled. Always felt sorry for him since he was on a thin shoestring budget. More than once i witnnesed Scott pitting and getting out of the car to raise the hood and work on something himself. Obviously couldn't afford qualified mechanics on his crew, mainly tire changers and gas man. #34 was always loyal to racing and did the best he could. Still have those autographed ticket stubs. Who would've thought that one day Wendell Scott would have ended up in NASCAR Hall of Fame ? A coworker became good friends of the Scott family many years ago. Once i found out John was a race fan we had many discussions. John purchased an old race car from the family several years ago, 61 bubble top Chevy. Has offered several times to buy my Scott autographed ticket stubs but not interested in selling. Bet very few people have autographed ticket stubs by Wendell Scott. As a kid would write letters to Fred Lorenzen and Ned Jarrett requesting colored post cards depicting the car and driver photographed at Daytona. Would send congrats after they won races. Have several of these postcards from both of them always with a short hadwritten note on the back. Probably not many of those floating around now. Drivers and teams so much more approachable back then. Living in Roanoke VA would drive short trip to Wood Bros race shop when still located in Stuart VA. Would plan trip in off season or off weekends. Leonard, if there, was always welcoming and give us a tour of the shop except for the engine room which was strictly off limits. He answered most questions and is down to earth guy. Stopped by Benny Parsons shop one time. Can't recall who be was driving for but think shop was close to Rockingham track. Randy Dorton was engine builder and showed us arount the shop. One year coming home from Talladega after spending night north of Atlanta we stopped in Spartinsburg hoping to find Pearson at home. Asked for directions once we got into town. Drove to his house, belueve it was on Hawthorne Dr. There was Lincoln Mk 4 in driveway with DGP on license plate so we knew we had the right house. No one answered our persistent door knocks so we went to back door and knocked... nobody home but on the clothes line was his driving suit. I was soooo tempted to grab it but my conscience prevailed and I left empty handed. What a souvenir that wouldhave been. Coming home from Dega in 79 stopped by same house but he had moved to a peach farm. Got info at gas station about his new location and drove out there. Knocked on door and his wife Helen said he was out in the barn. Actually was a trophy room in small building across the driveway. She told us to go over there to see him. He was as down to earth as most people. Gave us a tour of the trophy section and invited us to walk with him up the hill to the airplane hanger on his property. It was under roof and landing strip completed. Have photos of him and then girlfriend sitting on tailgate of his daily driver...older black F150. Isn't that what most millionaire pilots drive ? Another trip coming home from Dega on a Monday we stopped by his farm to visit. Wife said he was at Bud Moore's shop. Gave us directions and we found Pearson there along with his old black F150. Went in and had pleasure of listening to Pearson and Moore talking about building a race chasis for one of David's son. Son was racing a Mercury Capri but can't recall name of series he raced in. Saw him race at Bristol once. Moore was going to give us tour of his shop but got a phone call and had to leave. Good memories traveling around to these shops and meeting builders and drivers. Can imagine encountering layers of security, gates, cameras and guards now if a fan shows up without permission or invite to a drivers home or team shop. Older, hopefully wiser now and respect privacy of others but back then was vastly different times and i was late teens to mid 20s. Most of these drivers now are multimillionaires. Saw article recently reporting that J.Johnson's estimated net worth is $400 million. Long way from race winner pocketing part of the 5-6k purse at Martinsville.

  • @jamesshipley4985
    @jamesshipley4985 11 місяців тому +4

    I love the presidential pardon he got!!!!🍻🤣

  • @HarryRenner-h9q
    @HarryRenner-h9q 11 місяців тому +2

    .
    That was back before restrictor plates. which made the slingshot pass a common technique on certain tracks. because of their layout a car that has the exhaust exiting out the rear of the car. could receive a small but significant torque increase even ultimately changing the power band. HP isn't always the ultimate goal. torque can be more handy in certain situations. 6:10

  • @Mike583
    @Mike583 10 місяців тому +1

    RIP Lee Roy. Hell of a way to go...rocky mountain spotted fever. ❤

  • @richardjohnson4696
    @richardjohnson4696 11 місяців тому +3

    Stock car racing was so much better back in the day. I don't like NASCAR because of thaw they have controlled every aspect of the cars being nothing like a stock car. It has morphed into a realm of ridiculousness. I enjoy seeing cars that you can see on the street being modified to race and then race against other manufacturers products. Racing should help with what we buy, I'd love to see stock cars come back and have companies put features that help them win races into the cars and trucks we drive.

    • @markforster6457
      @markforster6457 11 місяців тому +1

      Honda used to say: "We don't build great motorcycles to win races. We win races to build great motorcycles".

    • @richardjohnson4696
      @richardjohnson4696 11 місяців тому

      @@markforster6457 And yet Honda doesn't offer many, if any, Japanese built Hondas in the States. I will not buy an American made Honda, same goes for Toyota, or any of the other Japanese manufacturers. Once you have owned a Japanese built car , truck or SUV, there is huge difference in quality between the two.

  • @blucheer8743
    @blucheer8743 3 місяці тому

    Those 429 Torino’s and the 426 Belvedere were probably the most terrifying nascar’s ever built… going 200+ in grandpas cars! geez

  • @RandallSoong-pp7ih
    @RandallSoong-pp7ih 11 місяців тому +5

    Cool history!

  • @hendo337
    @hendo337 8 місяців тому +2

    What a shame the Torino Talladega wasn't sold with the Boss 429 and Top Loader. Instead it got the 428CJ and a C6. Yuk

    • @d.e.b.b5788
      @d.e.b.b5788 8 місяців тому

      The 428 was a better 'street' engine. The 427 at the time (of the same engine series) was for higher revving long straights tracks, like LeMans. The 429 was the inheritor of all, supposedly there weren't enough 429s to go around those first few years, and by the time manufacturing ramped up, the 1st fuel shortage and smog laws really cut the legs out from under the big engines.

  • @richardlewis4288
    @richardlewis4288 11 місяців тому +4

    Wow that was great! Never knew that!🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @leolpz_10
    @leolpz_10 11 місяців тому

    Can you make a video about the life of Junior Johnson and all the things he discovered/invented?? It would be great to watch…

  • @brucejohnson8521
    @brucejohnson8521 4 місяці тому

    My dad was in media and would take us out to Phoenix International Raceway. They raced there then went to Riverside, both rode courses. Tons of horsepower, two second gear turns, tire burning noisy monsters

  • @russellstyles5381
    @russellstyles5381 18 днів тому

    Good sideways thinking! Preventing the slingshot would be worth more than a few high rpm horsepower.
    The "boring" part probably more important than safety I'll bet.

  • @michaelmarburger1003
    @michaelmarburger1003 9 місяців тому

    LMAO!!! I love hearing stories about Junior Johnson, his cars and his innovations. A true great in NASCAR as a driver and an owner. RIP Junior Johnson.

  • @NASCARFAN93100
    @NASCARFAN93100 11 місяців тому +3

    Very Interesting Story

  • @Johnnycdrums
    @Johnnycdrums 8 місяців тому

    More more I learn about Junior Johnson's tricks, the better I like him.

  • @mixter7x7
    @mixter7x7 8 місяців тому

    The air pressure in the draft of these cars is substantially lower. I'd love to see the BARO under the spoiler. If you have pressure exhaust exiting into a lower pressure zone you create what's called passive augmentation. It lowers the resistance and pressure in the exhaust and allows the engine to produce more hp. It increases cylinder scavenging during cam overlap producing more power. It can't be tested on a dyno without a full wind tunnel - it must be done in live conditions.
    When you consider the EGT of these engines is around 1200 - 1300*F . The car will overheat if you draft another car for too long with side exhausts. Now get behind a 400 cfm furnace dumping all it's heat into your radiator. You won't last long. It's easy to see that 1300* air which is where they make their best power - it's thick on the rich side and you are expelling unburned gas into the cockpit of the trailing car. This was leaded fuel. Back then about 145 octane. Really rich - full of TEL and carbon monoxide cocktail. Not Bueno. Truly a lethal combo. You wouldn't be able to breathe and your car would overheat in seconds.

  • @mikelliteras397
    @mikelliteras397 11 місяців тому

    Probably worked like a blown diffuser also. I wouldn’t be surprised if it worked a little like someone drafting them. Not to mention showing an obvious thing while distracting from less obvious gray areas

  • @M21-w1y
    @M21-w1y 11 місяців тому +8

    😂 funny how it didn’t matter about where the exhaust exited until the Fords started winning, then the rules suddenly changed to side exhaust only 😂😂😂 nascar has always been dirty as hell😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @franciscrisp6245
      @franciscrisp6245 11 місяців тому +1

      Hendrick-Gordon-Johnson were happy with NASCAR.

    • @stephenwithem8964
      @stephenwithem8964 2 місяці тому

      NASCAR, National association supporting Chevrolet Automobile racing.

  • @Randy-v9x
    @Randy-v9x 4 місяці тому +1

    Never forget to pray: GOD BLESS A.J.

  • @hotrodray6802
    @hotrodray6802 8 місяців тому

    I always wondered why they run side exhaust 👍

  • @steelmill
    @steelmill 8 місяців тому

    If they knew the dual exhaust took some power away Im sure they were making it up in the heads or intake manifold.

  • @reinderkalsbeek4748
    @reinderkalsbeek4748 11 місяців тому +5

    That's was when racing was racing not the shit show that it is now

    • @johnpoile1451
      @johnpoile1451 11 місяців тому +1

      Yellow/ caution flags little more than bunch up the cars to make it appear closer than it actually is,

  • @fmagalhaes1521
    @fmagalhaes1521 8 місяців тому +1

    What is the NASCAR saying, “If you ain’t cheating you ain’t trying”?

  • @lincolnls0416
    @lincolnls0416 8 місяців тому +2

    Shit it wouldn't have mattered anyway because those Ford's with the 429s were unbeatable. Couldn't be beaten. So Chevy got jealous and still today when Ford wins Chevy keeps finding away to P Penalize Ford's. Why do you think Ford barely has car's in Nascar now. It's more of a show down between Toyota and Chevy now.

  • @TRUTH-4U-NOW
    @TRUTH-4U-NOW 8 місяців тому +1

    Racing used to be aout who could get their car to the finish faster. Safety blew that concept.

  • @miscprojects9662
    @miscprojects9662 8 місяців тому

    Back in the day if there was a rule change it had to do with someone other than GM winning. Horsepower and torque on GM engines were overrated while Ford and Mopar engines were underrated.

  • @kepofshangri-la8942
    @kepofshangri-la8942 11 місяців тому

    It's silly but for a short moment, I had thought it was a Generation Two Skyline.

  • @failranch9542
    @failranch9542 3 місяці тому

    Thinking about the effects of weight, it would seem that if they were that concerned, a lot of those drivers could have offset the pipe weight by simply....going on a diet? I can't see that much exhaust pipe weighing more than maybe 20 lbs. People weren't nearly as heavy then as they are now but looking at the photos, a lot of those guys could have lost 20 lbs if they tried and were really concerned about it. My point though is that I don't think the exhaust weight mattered in any measurable way.

  • @billcook4768
    @billcook4768 10 днів тому

    It’ll never happen, but it would be so cool if for one year NASCAR would go back to racing stock cars.

  • @Scout686
    @Scout686 11 місяців тому +5

    History of NASCAR. Penalize the the better teams so the mediocre ones can keep up.

  • @braddietzmusic2429
    @braddietzmusic2429 11 місяців тому

    Fantastic! Subscribed!

  • @cs1-p5e
    @cs1-p5e 7 днів тому

    with current days muscle car era, they could easily go back to actual stock car racing.

  • @C.M.343
    @C.M.343 10 місяців тому +3

    First On Race Day!

  • @Masterchief68
    @Masterchief68 11 місяців тому +1

    When nascar decided to make all the cars pure racing cars with stock car sheet metal they kind of took the fun out of it. Win on Sunday no longer meant sell on Monday like it used to. Let’s go back to racing cars that come from the showrooms! Sure add the safety equipment and big tires but use only equipment available from the manufacturer.

  • @dsb1829
    @dsb1829 11 місяців тому

    good video, subscribed 👍

  • @markshade8398
    @markshade8398 11 місяців тому

    You can't "drafting past" another car. Drafting by definition isnstaying directly behind the car which is in front. You CAN "pass AFTER drafting" behind another race car though. But can't "draft past" them.

  • @georgesykes394
    @georgesykes394 10 місяців тому +8

    When ever Ford starts winning GM goes crying to NASCAR officials.

    • @460duck
      @460duck 4 місяці тому +2

      That has always been the case,,and still is today

  • @bigtobacco1098
    @bigtobacco1098 6 місяців тому

    Only of the reasons I don't watch much... they have regularly held back innovation, punished faster cars, slowed cars down, removed advantages, etc...

  • @jimmieyoung925
    @jimmieyoung925 15 днів тому

    This from the man that invented the car draft JR Johnson

  • @fido139
    @fido139 9 місяців тому

    Any time an underdog wins there will be rules changes. NASCAR is great at rigging their rules so THEIR golden boys will win. HMS prime example. Petty before that.

  • @redlion9199
    @redlion9199 10 місяців тому +2

    Ford made some stallions,,,
    Both the 427 and 429 big blocks were designed to run full throttle races...
    Endurance is the key the 427 thunderbolts spanked Ferrari...
    Running LE Mans !!!! How many hours???
    How many down shifts, high and low revs...
    A beautiful work of art,,, GT40 ..
    Spanked the Italians 4 years in a row,,
    A race vehicle has to perform in All categories, acceleration braking cornering arowdinamic drag . etc
    The Torino beat the arowdinamic drag , allowing the Torino to fly .
    The 429 was a balanced and geometric beast, to run at ease,
    The combination was kicking the losers @$$
    So some donations from exceptional individual's declared foul!!
    The rest is history,.
    Run run as fast as you can;;;; you can't catch me, I'm the ginger bread man..
    Love the time..

    • @hendo337
      @hendo337 8 місяців тому

      The Thunderbolt was a drag race car, it never raced Ferrari at LeMans. The GT40 did.

    • @d.e.b.b5788
      @d.e.b.b5788 8 місяців тому

      @@hendo337He's referring to the 427 engines in the MkII GT40's that came in 1-2-3 in 1966 LeMans, as well as the 427 Ford engines which ran in the MkIV LeMans cars of 1967. Some people (usually not knowledgeable racers) back then called those 427s 'thunderbolts' because of the street cars which had those pushrod 427's. Ford went with those 'street' 427s because the SOHC 427's were heavier, plus the less 'hyper' design of the pushrod engine was preferable to have the engines last for 24 hours. Or so I read, back in the day. You'd really have to speak to the older guys who raced in that era, as I was just a young teen back then.

  • @db3100
    @db3100 8 місяців тому

    Enjoyed that!

  • @melvinhunt6976
    @melvinhunt6976 11 місяців тому +3

    NASCAR never ever made rule changes to any other manufacturer, Only Ford !

    • @hendo337
      @hendo337 8 місяців тому +1

      Almost like they were in Mopar's pockets.

    • @melvinhunt6976
      @melvinhunt6976 8 місяців тому

      @@hendo337 Also remember the France family had dealerships! None were Ford !

    • @d.e.b.b5788
      @d.e.b.b5788 8 місяців тому

      @@hendo337Well, Bill France did outlaw the Chrysler 426 Hemi for a couple of years. I think that he only changed his mind, after their wedge engine couldn't compete with the other makers (i.e., FORD) so he just let them race, PLUS he outlawed Chrysler's wing cars after they swept the field on the superspeedways I think in '70 (and he also banned Ford's 'King Cobra' Torino before Ford could even get it on the tracks for 71). All to keep a reign on speeds. I don't remember who the driver was, but one of them spoke on an interview after a superspeedway race, saying that the stock cars were simply not solid enough to run 200+ mph, they would all shake and float all around the high speed tracks. Scary. I remember some of those wrecks; cars coming almost completely apart, drivers dying. That's why they eventually went with the sort of spec chassis cars we see in NASCAR today; the stock frames weren't designed for those speeds. Holy crap, shades of Colin Chapman's dictum of 'make it lighter until it breaks, then fix it and made it even lighter' which Lotus kept doing until perhaps a 'too light' part broke and killed Senna.

  • @sergeantmasson3669
    @sergeantmasson3669 11 місяців тому +10

    Junior Johnson switched to Fords in 1964 because his 1963 Chevrolets kept blowing engines.

    • @davidthayer6969
      @davidthayer6969 11 місяців тому +3

      LOL HE SWITCHED TO FORD BECAUSE CHEVY PULLED OUT OF NASCAR AND QUIT PAYING HIM.

    • @DIARRHEA-PANIC
      @DIARRHEA-PANIC 11 місяців тому +2

      Misinformation

    • @sergeantmasson3669
      @sergeantmasson3669 11 місяців тому +5

      @@davidthayer6969 WRONG. The Chevy 427 "W" mystery engine were known for failures and Junior Johnson was sick of losing.

    • @sergeantmasson3669
      @sergeantmasson3669 11 місяців тому

      @@DIARRHEA-PANIC FALSE.

    • @davidthayer6969
      @davidthayer6969 11 місяців тому +4

      @@sergeantmasson3669 NOT wrong at all. GM was facing anti trust lawsuits and did not want any racing publicity.......GM cut all NASCAR funding after 1963 and did not re enter NASCAR until 1971.

  • @TRUTH-4U-NOW
    @TRUTH-4U-NOW 8 місяців тому

    If they wanted them to race safely, just put the drivers in Bumper cars.

  • @keithlawlor9993
    @keithlawlor9993 9 місяців тому

    I heard that NASCAR would not allow the Chevrolet Corvette because it was too fast and no one could compete with it.

    • @hendo337
      @hendo337 8 місяців тому +1

      The Corvette isn't a full size 2 door sedan, that's what NASCAR was then.

    • @georgesykes394
      @georgesykes394 8 місяців тому

      Chevy has never made a motor superior to Ford!

    • @jjmckay6man1
      @jjmckay6man1 8 місяців тому

      corvettes had fiberglass bodies lol.

  • @thomastessin1663
    @thomastessin1663 11 місяців тому +3

    One could say that drafting is unsafe for the leading car because some of it's created vacuum and downforce is taken by the following car.

    • @Roddy556
      @Roddy556 11 місяців тому

      Well I guess that's the game.

    • @EclecticHillbilly
      @EclecticHillbilly 11 місяців тому

      That was always the case with drafting............it loosens up the car in front and makes the trailing car tight because it takes rear down force off the front car and takes front down force off the rear car and therefore causes it to have more read down force.

    • @carlstephens1532
      @carlstephens1532 11 місяців тому

      The rear car can run a higher speed and is hitting the front car and they both gain speed at the expense of handling. It's so easy to lose control especially if hit hard

    • @EclecticHillbilly
      @EclecticHillbilly 11 місяців тому +1

      @@carlstephens1532 That's today but it's the same principle. In the 60s and 70s the cars didn't touch. There was no bump drafting back then. The trailing car would drop off the front car a little bit to get a run and the rpms would go up as much as 700 in the draft and then pull out and move past.......that's where the term slingshot came from. The cars were bigger and boxier and punching a bigger hole in the air so there was actually a bigger aero advantage in the draft back then as to now. Those bigger cars cast a long wake.

  • @jesse75
    @jesse75 10 місяців тому

    Now we know the rest of the story.

    • @d.e.b.b5788
      @d.e.b.b5788 8 місяців тому

      I don't think so; I vaguely remember rumors of ole' 98 having a longer wheelbase on the right hand side of the car, than the left, so it would go around turns faster.

  • @Johnnycdrums
    @Johnnycdrums 8 місяців тому

    Lol, those aren't stock rear pipes.
    But I like them.

  • @pkuudsk9927
    @pkuudsk9927 10 місяців тому +1

    If ya ain't cheating your not winning. The guys back then is why they have rule books now. Shit like Water in the roll cage that would flow to the right side and stay there until weigh in and WOW it corner balance within the rules lol.

  • @bluesky6985
    @bluesky6985 3 місяці тому

    Is there anything stock about stock cars these days 😊

  • @Johnnycdrums
    @Johnnycdrums 8 місяців тому

    Who knows, NASCAR might be better without drafting nowadays.

  • @barneymiller6204
    @barneymiller6204 8 місяців тому

    These were the best days for watching nascar. Today, meh...

  • @RobertHanson-km3be
    @RobertHanson-km3be 8 місяців тому

    I didn't know that.😮

  • @shanew.williams
    @shanew.williams 11 місяців тому +1

    Great vid. However, "the story" of tail pipes in NASCAR did not begin in 1969. As early as 1957 Lee Petty was running tail pipes that ran through the TRUNK and exited where the taillights would be on the 1957 Olds' that he & son Richard would drive. There's pics online of Richard's convertible Olds with tail pipes. Some T-Birds had them too, exiting ABOVE the rear bumper.

    • @gregorygolden1296
      @gregorygolden1296 9 місяців тому +1

      I saw a picture of one of Tim Flock's cars that had the exhaust going through the trunk and out the back also.

  • @NBC_NCO
    @NBC_NCO 11 місяців тому

    What a good story.

  • @76629online
    @76629online 11 місяців тому +1

    I run mine up through the hood and across the top of the roof.

    • @gregorygolden1296
      @gregorygolden1296 9 місяців тому

      Me too, and then back into the small side windows......💀🧠