Re: Street Racing in the 60's & 70's - Tell them your story
[Re: Dave Watt]
#506338
07/20/10 02:07 PM
07/20/10 02:07 PM
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Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 2,252 Sebring, Florida
Mopar Grandpa
OP
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Sebring, Florida
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Quote:
This isn't from the '60's or '70's since I didn't graduate high school until '85, but I think it fits the thread. Dave
Yes, it fits the thread just fine. And I thought you have been a Hoosier your entire life. So how many tickets have you received since you bought the car?????? And for those of you that have never seen Dave's car it still looks showroom new...almost.
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Re: Street Racing in the 60's & 70's - Tell them your s
[Re: fullmetaljacket]
#506339
07/20/10 04:04 PM
07/20/10 04:04 PM
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Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 1,141 Phoenix,Az.
hemicop
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Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 1,141
Phoenix,Az.
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Just spent the day today in Cunnnigham park with my ten year old and his new bicycle. .
Wow, Cunningham Park! I spent many a drinking party there after basketball games at Bishop Rielly(St.Francis Prep). I ran another good streetrace right by the school there. First/only time I ever saw a Stage1 Buick beat a Z/28. Afriend had his older brother's car & asked me to ride with him. We were in the Buick & I must say, I was impressed--all that luxury & performance . AS to thge Gremlin---John probably was trying to reel me in for a money race, but THAT didn't happen. I think him seeing how I caught & passed him made him leery about really pushing it. He may have thought I was running the same game . I'm building another door car now & hoping to bring it back East when it's done. I'd like to see John again & see firsthand just how well his AMX runs.......
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Re: Street Racing in the 60's & 70's - Tell them your s
[Re: HYPER8oSoNic]
#506342
07/20/10 10:30 PM
07/20/10 10:30 PM
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Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 6,849
fullmetaljacket
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I never saw the racing on the Clear view, but have seen many photos from the haunt. Now that we are talking street haunts in NYC. I just came upon the idea how some spots died and sprung up in others. I call them the "bleed over" spots. Though some spots may have been operational at the same time, as one of the two died off or became too hot, the other flourished.
As a disclaimer, I could be wrong on my assumptions, but please feel free to argue the point.
Lets see, 150th as we know it today is probably a bleed over from South Conduit Ave and Linden Blvd haunt which than moved over to the just finished portion of the Nassau. As 150th gave its last performance, the new extension of the Nassau is a bleed over from 150th.
Columbia st. or Red hook on the pier is a bleed over from the First Avenue and 25th St crowd.
In the early 80's, Fountain Ave took in all the refugee crazies from Columbia St. and Kent Ave.
The "Connecting" bled over to Laurel Hill and Laurel hill bled over to the Masbeth Avenue then trickling down over to Review Ave by the other grave yard haunt.
The Gowanus Expway at 86th St. in Bay ridge bled over to 3rd Ave under the El, hence converging with the spill over of the 1st ave crowd. Two crowds in limbo I guess.
Francis Lewis by the high school and the L.I.E is a bleed over from the Clearview/Francis Lew crowd by Union Turnpike. In the Bronx I think the "Hutch" stands alone and has no relatives. The Hunts point market strip may be a bleed over from the Sheridan Expway.
The FDR elevated by the South St Seaport is alone and unknown to most. I saw it first hand as a kid in the early 70's.
South Ave on Staten Island is a bleed over from the 440 West shore expway.
The junkyard dogs of Shea stadium and the 21 Hump St. are the bleed overs of the elevated Marina and Grand Central Pkway racers. My home and mind is a bleed over from all of the above. LOL.
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Re: Street Racing in the 60's & 70's - Tell them your s
[Re: fullmetaljacket]
#506343
07/21/10 01:37 AM
07/21/10 01:37 AM
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Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 1,141 Phoenix,Az.
hemicop
super stock
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WOW! Sounds like you covered 'most everything & looking at it thyat way it DOES seem logical. Although I know first hand the guys that hung out at the Marina would go to 150, the Van Wyck or Cross Island depending on traffic, the cars & money involved. It wasn't uncommon to lean on a guy to drive his car from the Marina to the Clearview or Cross Island just to insure (in our minds, anyway) that his car was REALLY a street car (yeah, right!) Now guys like myself or John actually lived in the middle of alot of it (I lived near Flushing Hospital, John by 150thSt.)so it didn't really make alot of difference to us. Of course some guys flat-towed (remember the NSW towing hubs?) or trailered their cars but those guys had backers, REAL strong cars, and ran for alot of money. I was just happy to get "play money" out of it all and move on....
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Re: Street Racing in the 60's & 70's - Tell them your s
[Re: fullmetaljacket]
#506349
07/22/10 11:20 PM
07/22/10 11:20 PM
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Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 2,275 Desert Tracker
HYPER8oSoNic
top fuel
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Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 2,275
Desert Tracker
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Quote:
I never saw the racing on the Clear view, but have seen many photos from the haunt. Now that we are talking street haunts in NYC. I just came upon the idea how some spots died and sprung up in others. I call them the "bleed over" spots. Though some spots may have been operational at the same time, as one of the two died off or became too hot, the other flourished.
As a disclaimer, I could be wrong on my assumptions, but please feel free to argue the point.
Lets see, 150th as we know it today is probably a bleed over from South Conduit Ave and Linden Blvd haunt which than moved over to the just finished portion of the Nassau. As 150th gave its last performance, the new extension of the Nassau is a bleed over from 150th.
Columbia st. or Red hook on the pier is a bleed over from the First Avenue and 25th St crowd.
In the early 80's, Fountain Ave took in all the refugee crazies from Columbia St. and Kent Ave.
The "Connecting" bled over to Laurel Hill and Laurel hill bled over to the Masbeth Avenue then trickling down over to Review Ave by the other grave yard haunt.
The Gowanus Expway at 86th St. in Bay ridge bled over to 3rd Ave under the El, hence converging with the spill over of the 1st ave crowd. Two crowds in limbo I guess.
Francis Lewis by the high school and the L.I.E is a bleed over from the Clearview/Francis Lew crowd by Union Turnpike. In the Bronx I think the "Hutch" stands alone and has no relatives. The Hunts point market strip may be a bleed over from the Sheridan Expway.
The FDR elevated by the South St Seaport is alone and unknown to most. I saw it first hand as a kid in the early 70's.
South Ave on Staten Island is a bleed over from the 440 West shore expway.
The junkyard dogs of Shea stadium and the 21 Hump St. are the bleed overs of the elevated Marina and Grand Central Pkway racers. My home and mind is a bleed over from all of the above. LOL.
Lee, You are CORRECT!! 100%. You have just listed HALF of MY MAP!! In College Point they used to race over on 20 ave, by the old Flushing Airport in the 70's-1980. College Point Blvd (north of Northern Blvd) in spurts 80's-90's Might of handled the "spillover" from the Whitestone Expwy during it's REconstruction. If they were BRAVE, some ran the Interboro (now known as "Jackie Robinson Parkway) westbound into Brooklyn, just past the Vermont St. Exit. At one time "hyped slalom" imports used to roam the WHOLE stretch of the road into the Grand Central Parkway/Van Wyck Expwy Junction ("Spaghetti Bowl").Their favorite part was the "Esses", or commomly known as "Snake Road". This is where they would put their car OR bike through a series of twisting turns and SHARP right and left-hand turns bordered by miles of cemeteries. In it's earlier days, (times of the wooden guardrails) these curves used to be ultra sharp and kinda narrow (speed was 20 mph or less, I think-70's), now the curves are a lot more roomy and not nearly AS sharp. The speed is about 30-35 mph now and they redid the roadway several times since then and put up "Jersey Barriers" (concrete guardrails 4ft high). The imports and bikes speed through at about 40-50 mph and hit the straight sections at 65-75 mph. Sort of like a piece of a road course!! Another oldie, but goodie was the "Cross Island Parkway", particularly the section by Creedmore Hospital, Hilllside Av to Grand Central Parkway in early 70's. An alternate site was the Conduit (north)/Laurelton Parkway westbound to just past the LIRR bridge (early to mid 70's)
Last edited by HYPER8oSoNic; 07/22/10 11:34 PM.
"Stupidity is Ignorance on Steroids" "Yeah, it's hopped to over 160" (quote by Kowalski in the movie Vanishing Point 1970 - Cupid Productions)
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Re: Street Racing in the 60's & 70's - Tell them your s
[Re: hemicop]
#506350
07/22/10 11:25 PM
07/22/10 11:25 PM
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Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 2,275 Desert Tracker
HYPER8oSoNic
top fuel
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top fuel
Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 2,275
Desert Tracker
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Quote:
WOW! Sounds like you covered 'most everything & looking at it thyat way it DOES seem logical. Although I know first hand the guys that hung out at the Marina would go to 150, the Van Wyck or Cross Island depending on traffic, the cars & money involved. It wasn't uncommon to lean on a guy to drive his car from the Marina to the Clearview or Cross Island just to insure (in our minds, anyway) that his car was REALLY a street car (yeah, right!) Now guys like myself or John actually lived in the middle of alot of it (I lived near Flushing Hospital, John by 150thSt.)so it didn't really make alot of difference to us. Of course some guys flat-towed (remember the NSW towing hubs?) or trailered their cars but those guys had backers, REAL strong cars, and ran for alot of money. I was just happy to get "play money" out of it all and move on....
I was just happy to witness SOME of the HISTORY!! Thanks to the members/racers who made it possible!!
"Stupidity is Ignorance on Steroids" "Yeah, it's hopped to over 160" (quote by Kowalski in the movie Vanishing Point 1970 - Cupid Productions)
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