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What we got was a whole new trend—street cars built like Pro Stock drag racers, complete with wildly modified back-half rear suspensions, wheeltubs, rollcages, massive rear tires, superchargers ...
Pro Street is Drag Week's traditional back-half car category, broken into two classes—Naturally Aspirated, and Power Adder—with no restrictions on engine displacement.
This is a Pro-Mod drag racecar and it was recently spotted playing with tuned street cars during a rolling race series at the drag strip. As you can imagine, the results were nothing short of ...
These classic models built a reputation for straight-line speed during the Golden Age of American muscle cars.
The original intent of Pro Street was the emulation of narrowed-axle drag cars that performed on the street and strip. If that's the definition, then Richard Bondy's '72 Chevelle "540 SS" doesn't ...
Hot rods” should not be confused with “muscle cars”, insists Wikipedia. Yet in today’s classic automobile example at Beverly Hills Car Club we are considering a fusion of the two, a hot-rodded version ...
Once a term bestowed upon fairgrounds cruisers, Pro Street now covers all sorts of hot rods, from the poseur crowd to the Fastest Street Car contenders. Anythin ...
Revvin’ up on the raceways: Stock cars, drag and karts all on the track this summer ... Super Pro, Pro Street, Street Eliminator, Junior Dragsters, Superbikes and Sleds.
For now, the Nissan GT-R Pro Mod has only had its infancy run, which still wasn't quicker than the best street chassis run, but this puppy will become a 5s car ...
To date, Hoosier has made a lineup of racing tires for road courses, dirt ovals, drag racing, karting, off-roading, rallying, and even for pro street cars. None were made to be street-legal ...
Not quite a drag car and not quite a street car, ... What you are looking at is a 1978 Volvo 245 Wagon that has had the "Pro Street" treatment from front to back.
A donk is street slang for 1971-76 Chevrolet Impala or Chevrolet Caprice cars with aftermarket wheels that are 22 inches or bigger. Just how the cars got dubbed "donks" is unclear.