
THE AUTO BUILDER
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An Overview of Restoration Products
Gone are the days of struggling to find restoration chemicals and parts. The article highlights how the availability of reproduction parts and user-friendly chemical solutions has revolutionized car restoration. It introduces popular and effective chemicals like 3M Underseal Undercoating, Eastwood Self-Etching Primer, and OEM Paints React, highlighting their benefits and applications. It even delves into restoring cast-iron parts, suggesting solutions like OEM Paints’ Steering Gear Box Finish. Get ready to be amazed by the latest advancements in car restoration!

FOX-BODY SPOTTER’S GUIDE
Fox-body cars changed over the years, usually for the better. So, while everyone can spot a Fox Mustang, we decided to take the time to compile photos of some of the more popular Fox variations so that you can tell just what you’re looking at the next time you head to a car show or dragstrip. Sadly, we can’t provide an absolutely comprehensive guide to spotting every Fox-body model produced. Some of these cars, such as the Mercury Marquis, are just too rare in enthusiast circles for us to have a single example of one in our photo library. We’ve also included a few pictures of historic Fox-platform racecars, for no other reason than we like them, and thought you would, too. So, if you don’t know an SVO from a Turbo Coupe from an XR7, study this guide so that you, too, can become a true Fox fan.

SOBE IT
When the sun is high and you want to reach for something cool, the presence of this surf-inspired ’60 Mercury station wagon is meant to provide onlookers with the next best thing to a refreshing SoBe beverage. We think the effort is successful—the Merc is a refreshing approach to vehicle personalization.
Spotlighter
POPULAR READS
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Product Spotlight: Bill Mitchell Products Aluminum LS Engine Block
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PRODUCT SPOTLIGHT: 60-66 Chevy C10 Fresh Air Vent Block Off Plate
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Product Spotlight: Pyramid Optimized Design Sequential Aurora Taillight for 1964½–1966 Mustang
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PRODUCT SPOTLIGHT: Cam Covers for GEN/3 Coyote from Pyramid Optimized Design
Detroit Riddles
A Look Back at The 2006 Detroit Autorama




The Ridler Award for 2006 went to Kevin and Karen Alstott of Fort Dodge, Iowa, with their one-off ’35 Ford roadster. Roger Burman of Lakeside Rods and Rides in Rockwell City, Iowa, built this one-of-a-kind ’35 based off an original ’35 roadster. The body is steel and Marcels Custom Metal handcrafted it from scratch. All aspects of the ’35 came together to create one beautiful roadster.
Why We Build Top-End Hot Rods… for Awards and Attention
Why is it we build top-end hot rods? We all have many different reasons, but the underlying one will always be to get a little attention. Even though it may not be your sole intent, there is a part of you that wants people to tell you “nice car” or, better yet, to win an award at a show every once in awhile. Many hot rodders and builders create their cars to win major awards, which gives your custom creation or your shop “pedigree,” in much the same way the right wins give a racehorse pedigree.
The Dominance of Pre-’49 Cars in Major Hot Rod Awards
For years now, many of the major awards out there have been directed at and dominated by pre-’49 hot rods. America’s Most Beautiful Roadster has always been an award presented to a ’37-and-older car, which is understandable since ’37 was the last year that Ford built a roadster. There are many other awards for pre-’49 hot rods, including Street Rod of the Year, America’s Most Beautiful Street Rod and the Ridler Award. Of those, the Ridler Award is the only one that any year of car can win, making it one of the few awards that a late-model car can win to gain a little pedigree. Today the Ridler Award is considered the definitive win, and only the finest cars in the country will have a chance at this coveted prize.
The Ridler Award and Late-Model Cars at Detroit Autorama
However, the Michigan Hot Rod Association has been presenting the Don Ridler Memorial Award for 42 years at the Detroit Autorama, and of the 42 winners, only 10 have gone to cars built after 1948. The whole show world has been a street-rod-dominated production for a long time, and only in the last 10-15 years have there been late-model cars built to the level of a street rod. In fact, the last time a car built after 1948 won the Ridler Award was 2001, when Chris Williams’ M-80 Chevy coupe won, but it was only a ’49. So when will a ’50s car win the Ridler Award? For that matter, when will a ’60s car win?
The Future of Late-Model Cars Competing for the Ridler Award
The 54th annual Detroit Autorama was held this past March (2006), and the field of cars was just amazing. This year the quality was as high as ever, and those competing for the Ridler Award were more evenly matched than in the past. It was said that approximately 32 cars registered at the Detroit Autorama to compete for the Ridler Award. Surprisingly, a large number of the cars at the show were built after 1948. Even though the quality of late-model cars is getting better, only two of the eight finalists qualified to compete for the Ridler Award were late-models. Nevertheless, that is still one more than last year, and with a little luck, in the next couple of years we may see more than half the finalists be late-model cars. So who will be the next, great late-model champion? Only time will tell.
The Rest of the Great 8





