Last Thursday they showed the start of the build on the Coddington '27 T roadster on American Hot Rod. Like most Coddington builds he started with a 100% stock complete car, and only kept the body. A
My question is would the rules have allowed him to use a fiberglass body so the T could be saved for a restoration or Hot Rod build? Yes _______________________________________________ Land-speed mai
Bob, I thought the same many episodes back when they sourced an incredibly perfect 'T' coupe in running condition that in all honesty looked 10 years old. It too was unceremoniously hacked up despite
The Coddington T has got me thinking about roadster rollcages. I don't have a rule book, so maybe it is a rule to have a cage taller than most kids swing set. This must give the same aero numbers as
The tall roll cages in street roadsters are a product of the short 27T roadster cockpit, tall drivers, not enough reading of the rulebook, inexperience in building racecars and maybe a bit of "we ca
In my opinion, it's the old "I gotta see the front tires" syndrome. Some do not understand the sit on the floor deal. DW Want1937hd@aol.com wrote: The Coddington T has got me thinking about roadster
Right on Dan!! You're not the only old timer that has made that suggestion to me. The rule book requires the driver (which arguably includes the helmet he wears) to be within the confines of the cock