Hot Rod Parts - Speed Parts Hall Of Fame
            
            Hot Rod And The Automotive Aftermarket's Insiders Choose The 10 Most Significant Speed Parts Of All Time. 
            By Rob Kinnan, Jerry Pitt 
              
              
            
            
              Hot  Rod Magazine has spotted a void within the aftermarket: the lack of a  formal, permanent Hall of Fame that recognizes the impact that specific  car parts have had on our industry's success, on its culture, and on  its hobbyists. Therefore, in conjunction with the magazine's 60th  anniversary year that starts next month, we present the Hot Rod Speed  Parts Hall of Fame.  
            The Hot Rod staff  compiled a list of 30 products that we feel have had significant roles  in shaping the aftermarket, then we sent it out to every SEMA member  and industry insider and asked them to vote on the top 10 products that  they believe are most worthy of the Hall of Fame. They were also  allowed to write in their own candidates. The response was  overwhelming, and the following 10 charter inductees are what the  industry voted for. 
            The Hot Rod Speed  Parts Hall of Fame will be an annual deal, with five more speed parts  added to the Hall every year, again as voted by the industry. Here are  the first 10 and why they deserve to be the HOT ROD Speed Parts Hall of  Fame's inaugural inductees. 
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          Iskenderian Cams 
            Ed  Iskenderian earned his "Camfather" nickname honestly, by being a  pioneer in the camshaft and valvetrain field. Chet Herbert brought  solid roller cams to widespread use in racing, but in 1956 Isky  patented the first self-guided roller lifters, which made it easy for  the masses to run a roller cam. Isky and his competitor Harvey Crane  dominated the racing and hot rodding world with a bunch of innovations  in cam and valvetrain technology, but it was Isky cams that everyone  seemed to be running. Searching through the HOT ROD magazine archives  for photos for this story, we spent a lot of time poring over  photography from all the significant races back in the '50s and '60s,  from the drags to Indy to Baja, and it seems like there was at least  one guy in every shot wearing a white Isky T-shirt; in fact, Isky  himself is credited with popularizing the speed T-shirt.  | 
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            Testing another new Isky grind in 1967.  | 
        
        
          American Racing Torq-Thrust Wheels 
            In  the '50s, Romeo Palamides was a well-known car builder specializing in  drag race chassis. The need for lightweight wheels led him to team up  with machinist Jim Ellison, and together they formed American Racing  Equipment and started making magnesium racing wheels. That was in 1956,  and in 1963 the company released what became one of the most popular,  iconic wheels of all time, the Torq-Thrust. The wheel looks at home on  everything from a Fuel dragster to a stone-stock '07 Mustang, making it  truly a timeless design that is referred to even today by the simple,  generic terms "Americans" and "Five Spokes." It has had some design  revisions over the years, namely the Torq-Thrust D with arched spokes  (to clear the front disc brakes that were beginning to show up on new  cars) in 1965 and the two-piece polished Torq-Thrust II later on. But a  few years back American Racing rereleased the original Torq-Thrust  design-as Matt King said in HOT ROD three years ago, "Cementing  Palamides' timeless design forever in hot rodding history." -Rob Kinnan  | 
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                  American Racing's head engineer Tom Griffith with a Torq-Thrust. | 
        
        
          M&H Racemasters 
            The  M stands for Marvin and the H stands for Harry. In 1942, Harry Rifchin  and his son Marv started a tire recapping business in Watertown,  Massachusetts. They were racing enthusiasts, and soon their M&H  Tire Co. was supplying tires all over the New England oval-track  community. In 1957, Marv was invited to a drag meet in Chester, South  Carolina, by his friend Bob Osiecki, an early strip promoter. Marv  brought six pairs of tires with him, and a young Fuel racer from  Florida named Don Garlits got hold of a set. With them, the Swamp Rat  was the first to go 170 mph and the legend of the M&H Racemaster  was born. 
              Early  drag racing tires weren't very good, or safe, or consistent, but Marv  changed that with his Racemasters. With racer-friendly service and  support he made M&H the rubber of choice for the quarter-mile,  while Marv himself became known as the drag racer's best friend. On  Racemasters, Don was the first to go 200, and Funny Cars dipped into  the 7s. The big Akron tire makers entered the quarter-mile market in  the mid-'60s, but little M&H more than held its own against the  world-class challenge for several decades. Marv retired and sold the  business in 2001, while the M&H brand continues to this day with a  complete line of drag tires, including a slick engineered just for the  nostalgia drags. -Bill McGuire  | 
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                      M&H  Racemasters were the tires of choice on the Frye Brothers' AA Dragster,  which won Best Engineered Car at the '62 NHRA Nationals. 
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          Bell Helmets 
            Until  advances like the Bell helmet came to racing, the term "safety  equipment" was largely a cruel hoax. The state of the art in racing  helmets was the trusty Cromwell, originally designed for motorcyclists  and made of leather. After losing several close friends in racing  accidents, Roy Richter of Bell Auto Parts decided enough was enough and  developed the Bell 500 helmet. The earliest examples were hand-laid in  fiberglass in a garage behind his speed shop on East Gage Avenue and  were first used in the Carrera Panamericana by members of the Lincoln  factory team, including Bill Vukovich. 
              In  1955 Cal Niday was the first driver to crash-test a Bell helmet at the  Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and he credited it with saving his skull.  Eventually all 33 starting drivers in the Indy 500 would wear Bell. In  1959 the Bell became the first racing helmet to comply with the new and  rigorous Snell Foundation standards, and the U.S. Ski Team adopted Bell  helmets as the product line expanded from racing into all kinds of  sports applications. And in 1961, the Bell 500-TX helmet was selected  by the Museum of Modern Art in New York for excellence in design.  Sometimes the most useful ideas are the most beautiful. -Bill McGuire  | 
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                  Jimmy  Bryan and his Bell crash hat just prior to the start of the '59 Indy  500, where he finished last with engine trouble. He had won the race  the previous year. 
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          Hurst Four-Speed Shifters 
            As  a kid George Hurst was eaten up by drag racing and fast cars, and he  had his mind set on making a mark on the world. In the '50s, George and  his engineer friend Bill Campbell joined Ed Almquist and Jonas Anchel  at Anco Industries, a company that made a bunch of speed parts. George  and Bill helped Anco to develop new ideas and turn them into marketable  parts, and at George's prodding they decided to build a performance  floor shifter. George built his shifter with its signature flat,  chromed stick and cue-ball knob, and he and Ed Almquist made an  arrangement to start a new company to build and market it: Hurst  Performance. Their big break came when Pontiac selected a four-speed  Hurst shifter for its '61 Catalina with the 421 Super Duty engine.  Hurst was now associated with performance, and its OE ties led to the  development of a bunch of stuff that included the '68 Chrysler factory  lightweight cars and several exhibition cars like the Hemi Under Glass  wheelstander. George Hurst was a marketing madman and hit the road  promoting Hurst shifters in unique ways. Employee Jack "Doc" Watson  went to drag races with a portable machine shop and display to help  racers (which earned him the nickname "The Shifty Doctor"), and there  was of course Miss Hurst, Linda Vaughn, hugging the huge Hurst shifter  mounted on top of a convertible at every significant racing event of  the '60s. Hurst shifters quickly became synonymous with high  performance and, now owned by B&M Racing, are still big sellers  today.-Rob Kinnan  | 
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                      Shirley Shahan grabbin' gears at the '69 NHRA Nationals. 
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          Hilborn Fuel Injection 
            Brilliant  in its simplicity, the Hilborn was the first practical fuel injection  engineered for racing use. A constant-flow system that did away with  the need for a complex and usually troublesome metering unit, the setup  was first conceived by a young hot rodder named Stuart Hilborn while he  was serving in the Army Air Corps in WWII. After the war Stu returned  to Southern California, where he perfected his fuel-injection system on  the dry lakes, running his flathead Ford-powered Class B streamliner  over 150 mph at El Mirage in 1948. It was the first hot rod ever to run  150 mph, a feat that instantly gave credibility to Stu's fuel  injection. In fact, Ford's in-house magazine, Ford Times, described the  run as the equivalent of Chuck Yeager's airplane breaking the sound  barrier. 
              Hilborns  seem almost too simple to work: The basic fuel-delivery system consists  of an engine-driven, constant-displacement fuel pump, a  throttle-operated barrel valve, a fixed nozzle for each cylinder, and a  metered bypass circuit. That's it. But work they do, and without the  airflow-restricting venturi boosters of traditional carburetors. If  top-end power was the goal, Hilborns soon became known as the way to  get there. Hilborn injection swept through the midget and Champ car  worlds, winning the Indy 500 for the first time in 1952.  Hilborn-injected cars would win the Indy 500 34 times in all, and  quickly dominated drag racing and Sprint cars as well. To this day,  nothing says you are truly serious like a set of Hilborn stacks poking  through the hood. -Bill McGuire  | 
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                      Stuart  Hilborn holds the very first fuel injection system he ever made, which  he built with hand tools. This is the very same one that was on his  flathead Ford streamliner, the first car to break the 150-mph barrier  at El Mirage in 1948. 
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          Cragar S/S Wheels 
            You've  already read about Roy Richter of Bell Auto Parts in this story as the  man behind the groundbreaking Bell helmet. It's a true testament to him  and his infamous speed shop that there is another Bell Auto Parts item  inducted into the inaugural Speed Parts Hall of Fame-the Cragar S/S  wheel. The name Cragar is a portmanteau word for Crane Gartz, who  started the company in the '20s to build overhead-valve heads for Ford  flatheads, among other parts. George Wight, who founded Bell Auto  Parts, bought the Cragar name, and when George died, Roy Richter bought  the whole shootin' match. After huge success with Bell helmets, Roy  looked at the wheel market and realized that there was an opportunity.  The only street wheels available had been stock steel wheels with  reversed centers and chrome plating. Ted Halibrand and Romeo Palamides  were building magnesium wheels for racing only, and a few small  companies began making copies with cast-aluminum centers riveted to  chrome steel rims, but Roy felt they had a "strength and style  deficiency." An engineer with a strong sense of aesthetics, Roy spent a  couple of years creating his wheel, eventually to be named the Cragar  S/S. It was not only reportedly stronger than anything else on the  market, but it was also a really good-looking wheel. HOT ROD publisher  Ray Brock, who was a close friend of Roy's, got the very first  production set, and demand was so high that the company ended up having  three plants. -Rob Kinnan  | 
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                      Da Grumps hangin' his Cragars at the '71 Winternationals. 
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          The Holley 3310 
            Since  its introduction in 1965 as the production carburetor on the 375-horse  396ci in the Z-16 Chevelle, the #3310 model 4150's reputation is one of  ease of use and easy tuning thanks to the vast availability of hop-up  parts and loads of technical how-to assistance. It has been the go-to  carburetor for anyone building a performance engine and ranks as one of  Holley's best-sellers even today. 
              In  1966, the 3310 was dropped as an OE carb and introduced into the  aftermarket. It was still a model 4150 carburetor and was still rated  at 780 cfm, but it had a "-1" following the 3310. The primary  differences were that a 3310-1 was stamped into the air horn, the  secondary metering block ID number was changed to 7003, and there was  no longer a GM number on the carburetor. The 3310-1 remained the same  into the '70s when Holley introduced a second production change:  3310-2. In the mid '70s the Holley 3310 model 4150, became a 3310 model  4160 with a primary metering block and a secondary metering plate. The  carburetor received a manual choke, straight-leg boosters, a half-round  throttle shaft, and a reduced flow rating of 750 cfm. This started the  3310's life as the universal-fit carburetor for all makes of street  engines, not just GM. 
            Today, the current  production number for the 3310 model 4160 is 3310-11. It is offered in  the original dichromate finish or in a shiny finish. While Holley has  no official records of how many 3310s have been sold over the 40-plus  years, it conservatively estimates the number at around 2.5 million.  Wow. -Jerry Pitt  | 
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                      It's hard to beat the performance and ease of use of Holley's hot rod fuel mixer, the 3310. 
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          Flowmaster Mufflers 
            Ray  Flugger loved racing, especially circle track stuff. When he heard  rumors of the California state legislature putting harsh noise limits  on roundy-round cars, he got concerned that it would kill the sport.  Ray had an exhaust company named Hush Power, and he set out to develop  a muffler to save the racing market. His goal was to build a muffler  that would allow an 800hp race engine to meet the noise restrictions  and not lose any power while doing so. After some research Ray realized  that there had been virtually no new technology applied to the exhaust  world since the '40s-most performance mufflers were essentially remakes  of OE passenger-car mufflers, or they were glasspacks whose selling  point was the sound. Through lots of trial and error, Ray developed a  chambered muffler that showed promise. He installed it on a few race  cars and it worked really well, and Flowmaster became a company in 1983. 
              Richard  Small joined Flowmaster soon afterward and helped Ray sell mufflers. "I  was thrown out of muffler shops all day long," Richard tells us. "Super  Shops gave us our big break. They gave me 20 stores and a 30-day test  period, and it worked. Their first order was for 1,500 mufflers, which  was more than a month's production back then! It's hardly a day's  production today. "What really cemented Flowmaster's reputation among  the hot rodding world was its key involvement in the early days of  heads-up street car racing, particularly as the title sponsor of HOT  ROD's Fastest Street Car shootouts in the '90s. As the "face guy" for  Flowmaster at those events and drag races everywhere, Richard says,  "That put us on the map." 
            There were  performance mufflers before Flowmaster and new ones hit the market  every month (including Chinese ripoffs of Flowmasters), but for many  people Flowmaster has been the must-have hot rod muffler for the past  two decades. Development continues with a variety of new Flowmaster  mufflers, always chasing the goal of low noise with maximum power. For  this year, the company's 25th anniversary, they are expanding with a  whole new division that brings back Ray's original company name, Hush  Power. Stay tuned for more. -Rob Kinnan  | 
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                      Ray Flugger's original muffler. 
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          Auto Meter Monster Tachs 
            In  1957, Vern Westberg would pour sand castings in his backyard, and at  night his sons John and Ralph would help assemble products in their  Arlington Heights, Illinois, basement. Today, Auto Meter is a  state-of-the-art manufacturing operation with an advanced engineering  team headed by Todd Westberg, Vern's grandson. But it was under Auto  Meter's longest-tenured employee and current vice president of sales,  Jeep Worthan, that the company introduced the now-famous Monster Tach  in 1977 after many racers expressed frustration with the limitations of  mechanical tachs. The benefit of a mechanical tach was its quick  response, but its lengthy drive cable was a pain to route and,  theoretically anyway, created a tiny bit of drag on the engine. It also  had a lot of moving parts that were susceptible to wear and a bouncing,  vibrating needle that was extremely difficult to read. 
              Jeep  Worthan notes, "We took what the racers liked about mechanical tachs  and what they didn't like and developed the Monster Tach. It was the  world's first 5-inch electrical racing tachometer. When I would hook up  our tach to somebody's race car and they compared the speed, smooth  pointer movement, size, visibility, and accuracy of the Monster Tach,  the sale was closed . . . racers had to have a Monster Tach." 
            Auto  Meter had invented a 270-degree-sweep electric tachometer that could  keep up with a quick-revving engine. The tach was easy to install with  no troublesome cable and a smooth needle throughout the entire rpm  range. 
            Auto Meter has produced over 1.5  million Monster Tachs since their introduction 30 years ago, and today  it offers over 50 versions. -Jerry Pitt  | 
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                      The Monster Tach's big face and smooth, quick-moving pointer made most other tachs obsolete. 
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