1962 Volkswagen Bus - Riding with the King of Chop *** Pic's & Info***
#1
Thread Starter
GTcars - Post God !
iTrader: (1)
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 3,516
From: Toronto East
Rep Power: 0
1962 Volkswagen Bus - Riding with the King of Chop *** Pic's & Info***
Ken Prather's Eye-Grabbing 1962 VW Drag-Style Bus is One Unique and Stunning Machine
Ken Prather, the creator of this stunning '62 VW drag-style bus had a vision.
"I always wanted to build a mid-engine hot rod," he says. "The first thing I did was chop the top, then I pulled the motor. And you know how it escalates once you start on something." Originally a hippy van with a wooden bunk and table, this powerful machine now sports a mid-engine blown 355 small-block, 310 louvers, and an outrageous 7-inch chop.
Ken's build evokes the stark feel of a vintage Gasser with customized drag seats, a Sprint Car steering wheel, and a handbuilt dash sporting giant Auto Meter gauges and some toggle switches. Zeus fasteners make the entire piece removable for easy access to the brake master cylinder mounted below. The precisely hung suicide doors lift by the chrome mirrors instead of the door handles, and Ken has to slide head-first past the steel rollcage into the aluminum seats. Other tasteful performance modifications include a fuel cell, a drag parachute, and a throttle pedal made out of a spoon from the kitchen of his understanding wife, Georgia.
Hooking up the blown Chevy to the rest of the driveline, the head-snapping, full-manual 350 automatic attaches directly from its yoke to the differential. The Ford rear was narrowed a whopping 14 inches to fit inside the custom frame, which is like a giant swing arm from the engine back, and it accommodates monstrous 10-inch wide American five-spoke wheels out back. When Ken piloted the beast 4,000 miles from his home in Waterford, Pennsylvania, to the Bonneville Salt Flats last August, he coaxed 8-10 mpg out of the two Holley four-barrels.
Daring to be different, Ken invested four years in metal bending, frame building, and custom fabrication, and the result is a hot rod pushing ahead of the cultural curve. But what about the paint? "I'm having too much fun just the way it is. You know, if a part starts looking ratty, I just re-primer it."
Hot Rod Magazine
Ken Prather, the creator of this stunning '62 VW drag-style bus had a vision.
"I always wanted to build a mid-engine hot rod," he says. "The first thing I did was chop the top, then I pulled the motor. And you know how it escalates once you start on something." Originally a hippy van with a wooden bunk and table, this powerful machine now sports a mid-engine blown 355 small-block, 310 louvers, and an outrageous 7-inch chop.
Ken's build evokes the stark feel of a vintage Gasser with customized drag seats, a Sprint Car steering wheel, and a handbuilt dash sporting giant Auto Meter gauges and some toggle switches. Zeus fasteners make the entire piece removable for easy access to the brake master cylinder mounted below. The precisely hung suicide doors lift by the chrome mirrors instead of the door handles, and Ken has to slide head-first past the steel rollcage into the aluminum seats. Other tasteful performance modifications include a fuel cell, a drag parachute, and a throttle pedal made out of a spoon from the kitchen of his understanding wife, Georgia.
Hooking up the blown Chevy to the rest of the driveline, the head-snapping, full-manual 350 automatic attaches directly from its yoke to the differential. The Ford rear was narrowed a whopping 14 inches to fit inside the custom frame, which is like a giant swing arm from the engine back, and it accommodates monstrous 10-inch wide American five-spoke wheels out back. When Ken piloted the beast 4,000 miles from his home in Waterford, Pennsylvania, to the Bonneville Salt Flats last August, he coaxed 8-10 mpg out of the two Holley four-barrels.
Daring to be different, Ken invested four years in metal bending, frame building, and custom fabrication, and the result is a hot rod pushing ahead of the cultural curve. But what about the paint? "I'm having too much fun just the way it is. You know, if a part starts looking ratty, I just re-primer it."
Hot Rod Magazine
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Eugene Galchenko
Honda Mailing List
0
01-06-2004 01:19 AM
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)