Create Your Dream Ride at Hot Rod School

Hot rods have become very popular in recent years. Car shows are filled with beautiful examples of restored and custom cars, and car clubs abound in almost every major city. Most car enthusiasts would agree that the most exciting part of restoring and customizing your own hot rod is doing the work with your own two hands, yet many car owners fear that they don’t have the knowledge to do the work well. Here is where an education from a hot rod school can help, by teaching you everything you need to know to create your dream car.


Sometimes when creating a hot rod, restoring and maintaining the original body parts is more desirable than fabricating new panels. Depending on how badly rusted or dented the original panels are, this may require any amount of grinding, filling, and sanding. However, for many car enthusiasts, creating a hot rod means replacing body parts, a task which is made difficult by the limited availability of body parts for early automobiles. For these reasons, many hot rods require custom body panels to be made for them, a set of skills that, although they seem difficult (if not impossible) to master, can be learned in hot rod school.


Custom body panels can be fabricated using a couple of different techniques. The first method of creating body panels is to cut, shape, and weld metal to spec. Metal body panels tend to be heavy but strong, and can be repaired more easily.


An alternative to metal is fiberglass paneling, which is lighter but tends to shatter on impact. As its name implies, fiberglass is a material derived from glass that is drawn into long, thin fibers. Fiberglass has many uses, including use as an insulating material, but it is also well known as a material than can be used to form body panels on racecars and hot rods. Fiberglass automotive paneling is created with layers of fiberglass “cloth,” which is laid in a mold or shaped and sealed with a hardening liquid. Once dry, fiberglass paneling can be sanded and painted to create a sleek and shiny finish.


In addition to body panel fabrication, creating a hot rod requires knowledge of a car’s frame, and how to strengthen it. Many hot rods are “chop tops,” meaning that the original, metal roof of the car has been removed. Because the roof is a point of strength in the construction of the vehicle, essentially allowing it to hold its shape in an accident rather than folding up like an accordion, cutting the roof off of a vehicle cannot safely be done without reinforcing the rest of the frame and body.


Building a hot rod also requires that the owner understand the principles of auto mechanics. Expert knowledge is required in order to customize and install an engine and driveline designed to maximize the car’s horsepower. In addition, many old cars need to be completely rewired in order to function as a hot rod, as the old electrical system is usually not powerful enough to support a modern engine and other parts.


For most people, these jobs require hiring a professional, taking the owner of the car out of the loop and depriving him or her of one of the most exciting parts of owning a hot rod: the experiences and pride that come from putting the vehicle together oneself. However, a professional education can put the owner back into the loop. Hot rod school teaches car enthusiasts everything they need to know to perform these techniques with professional skill. Students learn what tools are needed to build a hot rod, as well as how to use them. With such an education under one’s belt, graduates of a hot rod program can do anything they want, whether it is to build their own hot rods, or make a living creating beautiful cars for others.

Andy West is a freelance writer for VC Tech, The Automotive School. VC Tech is a world-class auto mechanic school offering many exciting automotive programs including hot rod school. Please visit http://www.vctechnical.com to learn more.


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The Recognition Of The Hot Rod In Automotive Art

Once upon a time, only a few years ago, if you went to an art exhibition like the Saturday night AFAS show preceding the Pebble Beach Concours, all you saw depicted was classic cars, mostly prewar cars like Duesenbergs, Bentleys, etc.
Then depictions of muscle cars started creeping in, on cat’s feet so to speak, but this was inevitable because some of the greatest car artists of our time are former ad illustrators like Art Fitzpatrick who painted the immortal Pontiac Grand Prix and GTO illustrations. At age 20, he was already working with Howard “Dutch” Darrin, designing the 1940 Packard four-door.
Tom Fritz , of Ventura, CA, was one of the first American fine artists to “break the mold” and depict the cars he grew up with;not LeTourneau et Marchand Bugattis but good ol’ hot rods he saw on the streets of San Fernando, an LA suburb. Tom’s vivid childhood recollections of the motorcycle and automotive cultures prevalent in Southern California during the 60′s and 70′s are reflected in his work.Among his clients are Harley Davidson and his paintings hang in many corporate collections and museums including the NHRA Museum.
And then, just like out on the lawn of Pebble Beach, hot rods appeared. Oh, the painters, many of them, were familiar with hot rods, heck many either owned or lusted after the ’32 Ford “Deuce” roadster in their youth but never wanted to admit it in polite company at events like Pebble Beach where the talk was all of Hispano-Suizas, Erdmann and Rossi 540Ks, James Young Phantoms and the like.
But now the secret is out. We all be hot rodders. Because fundamentally a car is a car and if it’s mechanical we love it.
The depictions of hot rodding that have appeared in fine art so far are steeped in history—say paintings of hot rods being run at the dry lake beds where hot rodders raced them even before WWII. More modern setting depictions are rarer though recently there has been a blossoming of “cruise-ins”, impromptu car shows, at places like drive-in restaurants nationwide.
And then there’s the problem of the commercial cliché—if you show a hot rod in a drive-in restaurant (like the kind where the waitresses rolled out on roller skates to take your order) then you risk painting something that commercial retro-theme restaurants are still currently exploiting.
And once you’ve opened Pandora’s box, how far do you go, because there’s a deep dark secret about hot rods. Now neat and clean hot rods are one thing, but deep down if you research the genre, you find out there’s another vein of hot rodding called the “rat rodding.” Because back in the day hot rodders had enough money to buy Smitty mufflers or Rajo axles but didn’t have enough money to paint the car so they ran them in flat primer. There’s a whole subtext/genre of hot rodders who have no intention of ever finishing their cars to normal “finished car” standards. To them, it is an outlaw statement on four wheels to leave it unfinished.
Call it being “in your face.”
One of the first books to show this side of the car world was the artful softbound Hot Rod by Barry Gifford with David Perry taking the pictures of rough cars built by some rough looking (“wife beater” t-shirts and lots of tattoos) dudes. Perry also wrote the movie Wild at Heart. This book captures the era when driving a hot rod made you a “bad dude” –almost as bad as riding a Harley.
There was a real life example of hot rod meets fine art that I saw a couple years ago at the AFAS tent at Pebble at their party. It was when Chip Foose, a young designer who has worked for the Detroit automakers but who now is famous for his hot rod designs, drove up to their tent in a Ford roadster –the car full of aeroplane parts like exhausts from a WWII fighter!
The artists poured of the tent to see his hot rod and there was plenty of admiration expressed—indicating that, deep down in many an American-born artist famous for depicting classic cars is a hot rodder who knew the names Bill Cushenberry, Dean Jeffries and Gene Winfield long before he ever heard of Sergio Pininfarina or Giorgetto GIugiaro….

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The Difference Between a Hot Rod and a Street Rod

The terms hot rod and street rod are used interchangeably by many people, but there are some technical differences between the terms. As the words suggest, street rods are generally street legal and do not race in sanctioned races.

The street rod was born during the 1950s as engine and racing technology took some major leaps forward in a small amount of time, and many hot rods were now too dangerous to be street legal. The hot rod actually split into a multitude of categories in the 1950s, so knowing some of the history of the hot rod will help explain the difference between these two terms.

Hot rodding started in the 1920s in California, where millions of cars had been sold by the middle of the decade. Young men could buy a cheap used car, and parts were cheap and plentiful to turn these into racing machines. Groups would meet up in the salt flats in central California for evening racing. Most of these cars were Model Ts powered by their tiny 20 horsepower engines. To increase speed and acceleration, the cars were stripped down to the bare minimums. This included removing any extra panels, running boards, ornaments, headlights, etc. This was the beginning of the hot rod look as we know it today, with exposed engine bays. These first cars were not called hot rods at the time. They were nicknamed gow jobs.

By the 1930s, engine technology was rapidly changing and the fun racing was now turning serious and sometimes deadly, with speeds of over 100 mph being achieved thanks to Fords newest engine, the flathead V8. This engine produced 80 horsepower from the previous 20, but hot rodders quickly learned how to tweak the engine to produce around 160 horsepower. This was achieved by adding multiple carburetors, straightening and shortening the exhaust, and removing the muffler. By the mid 1930s the Great Depression was in full swing, and through mid 1945 World War II was happening, and the hot rod scene was basically dormant.

Things would completely change after World War II as the hot rod scene ignited all over America, not just California. Soldiers were returning home from war with new-found mechanical skills, extra money, and the craving for adrenaline. California was also a staging ground for the Pacific war and millions of men would be stationed or trained there, and hot rod stories and pictures were shared by many California men to others from around the country. By the early 1950s hot rods were starting to be a serious issue in cities, with racing happening everywhere.

The NHRA (National Hot Rod Association) was founded in 1951 to discourage street racing. By the mid 1950s there were sanctioned races around the country, and the popularity exploded. Advances in engine technology now made a race car so fast that they could not be driven on the streets. Soon there would be funny cars and other types of race cars that did not resemble the earlier hot rod. Racing in these leagues was also very expensive, so many still held onto the street rod as these were now called. Looks and style started to match the importance of performance, and a new type of car would branch off the street rod. It was the custom car, which basically took a stock car of any model and heavily customized it to be a one of a kind.

So there are the technical differences between a hot rod and street rod, but you can interchange these terms as many people do. A street rod is always a street legal hot rod, but not all hot rods are street legal. Some hot rods can only race on racetracks due to their heavy modifications.

Dan F is an author and creator of a website where you can find your hot rod or street rod for sale, or advertise your ride for free in our hot rod classifed ads, with up to 10 images included.


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