
THE AUTO BUILDER
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Honda Header Shootout
When it comes to performance, there is one steadfast rule: All the good air that goes into making horsepower must eventually find its way out. This means that adding all the cool camshafts, intake manifolds and even superchargers to help improve airflow into the motor will be useless (okay, maybe not useless, but certainly much less effective) if the motor is not able to rid itself of the exhaust. Cork up a serious performance motor and watch it struggle and gag on its own exhaust fumes.

PROJECT ’67
In the long continuation of our Project ’67, the 1967 Chevrolet C10 buildup, several major components and systems have been previously addressed, most notably the Goodwrench LQ4 6.0-liter 366ci Escalade engine buildup by Arizona Speed & Marine. This included the versatile Magnuson Radix supercharger, 4L60E transmission and numerous performance parts and accessories. Continuing along those performance lines and all-out fashion, we would need to contend with the great amount of power this engine package would deliver. Initially, we can’t say that the stock brakes on the C10 were ever designed for the shear torque that would be applied to these assemblies, so it would eventually be necessary to address the stopping performance as well as the go performance. And, after all, brake upgrading was a part of this project plan from the beginning.

AMERICAN RACING TORQ-THRUST
Undoubtedly, the most significant and influential hot rod component in recent history is the American Racing five-spoke Torq-Thrust wheel. It has been the most-copied wheel ever, as American Racing continues to fight off design infringements. In its many legitimate variations, it has—in many ways—influenced the whole of the aftermarket automotive car culture. No single wheel has ever made such a significant impact on the customizing scene as the Torq-Thrust has.
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Secondhand Rose
THIS ʼ34 COUPE HAS BEEN DRIVEN 150,000 MILES
Author
Bob Carpenter
Story & Photography
A Dream Car Gives Way to Secondhand Rose
In early 1972, just before Bill Hogue got out of the Navy, he owned what he thought was his dream car. It was a dumped ʼ40 Ford Deluxe coupe with a big Nailhead Buick, a four-speed, burgundy paint and a Tijuana tuck-and-roll interior. Then he discovered an old, chopped ʼ34 Ford three-window coupe, and he was hopelessly smitten.
The coupe was a seedy, lumpy refugee from the Southern California dry lakes and dusty old dragstrips. It had an ancient Cadillac engine and Plexiglas windows, the frame was butchered, the rollcage was a joke and the floorboards were gone—but he just had to have it. It took a lot of talking, but he finally convinced the owner to sell him the car. Hogue then sold his ʼ40 Ford to raise the cash, and his friends thought he was nuts to trade a finished hot rod for a dog of a project car.
Building a Legendary Street Rod
The coupe was such an eclectic collection of pieces and parts that they called it Secondhand Rose, or Rosie for short. The name stuck over the years. It would be another two years before Hogue saved the money (almost $4,000 in 1972 money) to do a complete rebuild of the car, but that didnʼt stop him from patching up the coupe and driving it. Actually, he had to do it that way because it was the only form of transportation he had. In late 1974, just one week before his wedding, the antique Cadillac engine blew a piston on the way home from the Las Vegas run. He disassembled the coupe to the bare frame the very next day in his one-car garage and went to work.
Hogue had only the most basic of hand tools, so every time he wanted to weld or cut something, he had to load it in his old pickup and haul it to a friendʼs house. Almost all of the parts came from junkyards, swap meets and friends. Hogue thinks that virtually every member of the Over The Hill Gang gave him something for the car just so they could get rid of him as he prowled their garages. “I also got help in the many technical areas I wasnʼt skilled in,” Hogue told us. “After I roughed out the bodywork, I took it to a Mexican truck repair shop (hey, they were the only guys I could afford) for the final bodywork and paint. I then drove the car to Tijuana, where a complete interior was installed in one day!”
150,000 Miles of Hot Rod Adventures
Only six months after the day he took the car apart, he drove it (with his wife, Patti) to the NSRA Nationals in Memphis. The car has been going almost nonstop ever since. Rosie has traveled more than 150,000 miles in the past 30 years, visiting 36 states, three countries and six traffic courts (the most memorable ticket was for 85 mph in a 55-mph zone, while towing a trailer). Most of the mileage was accumulated as a daily driver, but Rosie has also been drag-raced (high 13s in the quarter mile), slalom-raced and time-rallied, and it has made passes in the dry lakes. “Itʼs as aerodynamic and as fast as a two-bedroom condominium,” Hogue said. Itʼs possible that this ʼ34 Ford three-window coupe is one of the most-traveled street rods in the country.
A Family History on Four Wheels
Both of the Hoguesʼ sons took their first automobile rides in Rosie (coming home from the hospital). The family of four used to cram into the coupe for outings and vacations, so Hogue added a cargo trailer to tow behind it. The family has photos of Rosie at Mt. Rushmore, by the Golden Gate Bridge, in front of the St. Louis arch and in the deepest parts of Baja California. “The stories and memories we have of our trips and adventures could fill volumes,” Hogue said, “like driving 40 mph with four large adults in the car, or opening a suicide door at 65 mph, and there is no end in sight.”
More Than a Street Rod
Rosie may not be state-of-the-art or the most pristine street rod youʼve ever seen, but as proven here, thatʼs not what counts. This is a car that is loved by those who drive in it and those who understand how much it is loved. As Jackson Browne once crooned, “Rosie, youʼre all right.”









