Gasser

Jump to: navigation, search
(Evolution of the term over the years)
(Evolution of the term over the years)
Line 14: Line 14:
 
The main purpose of this classification was to have a place to race cars with seriously modified engines.  Virtually anything was legal, right up to supercharging, but the cardinal rule was that the number one sparkplug had to be within ten percent of the wheelbase, as regarded the front spindle. That is, if the car has a 100-inch wheelbase, the #1 sparkplug could legally be no farther back than ten inches behind the centerline of the front spindle.
 
The main purpose of this classification was to have a place to race cars with seriously modified engines.  Virtually anything was legal, right up to supercharging, but the cardinal rule was that the number one sparkplug had to be within ten percent of the wheelbase, as regarded the front spindle. That is, if the car has a 100-inch wheelbase, the #1 sparkplug could legally be no farther back than ten inches behind the centerline of the front spindle.
  
Gassers had to have all their basically unaltered fenders, but bumpers culd be removed.  Gas Coupe/Sefans were classifuied by weighing the car and dividing the weight by the engine displacement.  In the beginning, and "A"-class car was 0-9 pounds per cubic inch; a "B" was 9-11, a "C" was 11 and up...  The following year, an "E" class was added for cars with over 13 pounds per cubic inch.  Flathead and ibline six-cylinder cars (there were no V-6's back then) were kept separate, so they didn't have to compete directly with the OHV V8's.
+
Gassers had to have all their basically unaltered fenders, but bumpers could be removed.  Gas Coupe/Sefans were classifuied by weighing the car and dividing the weight by the engine displacement.  In the beginning, and "A"-class car was 0-9 pounds per cubic inch; a "B" was 9-11, a "C" was 11 and up...  The following year, an "E" class was added for cars with over 13 pounds per cubic inch.  Flathead and ibline six-cylinder cars (there were no V-6's back then) were kept separate, so they didn't have to compete directly with the OHV V8's.
  
 
The next step up was "Altered" or "Roadster" class, which allowed a 25-percent setback.  "Altereds" and "Roadsters"  cars could move the body back on the frame, and run without fenders.  No interior was required.  Yhere were just race-only cars.
 
The next step up was "Altered" or "Roadster" class, which allowed a 25-percent setback.  "Altereds" and "Roadsters"  cars could move the body back on the frame, and run without fenders.  No interior was required.  Yhere were just race-only cars.

Revision as of 20:36, 16 October 2008

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Categories
Toolbox