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  • Hot Rod Terms

    I thought I would share these with you guys>

    The model year is rarely given in full,[5] except when it might be confused, so a 1934 model is a '34, while a 2005 might be an '05 or not.
    A '32 is usually a Deuce and most often a roadster, unless coupé is specified, and almost always a Ford.
    A 3- or 5-window is usually a Ford, unless specified.
    A flatty is a flathead V8[6] (always Ford, unless specified); a late (or late model) flatty is probably a Merc.
    A hemi ("hem ee") is always a 426, unless displacement (331, 354, or 392) is specified;[7] a 426 is a hemi, unless Wedge is specified.
    A 392 is an early hemi.
    A 331 or 354 is known to be an (early) hemi, but rarely referred to as such
    Units are routinely dropped, unless they are unclear, so a 426 cubic inch (in³) engine is simply referred to as a 426, a 5 liter engine is a 5.0 ("five point oh"), and a 600 cubic feet per minute (cfm) carburetor is a 600. Engine displacement can be described in cubic inches or liters (for example, a 5.7 liter engine is also known as a 350 {"three fifty"}); this frequently depends on which units the user is most comfortable or familiar with.
    Some other common terms:

    3/4-race — high-performance flatty cam, suitable for street and strip use
    3 deuces — arrangement of three 2-barrel (twin-choke) carburetors; distinct from Six Pak and Pontiac and Olds[8] Tri-Power[9] (also 3x2 arrangements)
    3-window — 2-door coupé; so named for one door window on each side plus the rear window[10]
    5-window — 2-door coupé; so named for one door window and one quarter window on each side plus the rear window[11]
    97s — “ninety-sevens,” a reference to the model number of Stromberg carburetors[12]
    A-bone — Model A coupé[13]
    Alky — alcohol (methanol) racing fuel
    Anglebox - British Hot rod slang for a 1959-68 Ford Anglia 105-123E
    Awful Awful (mainly North American) — AA/FA ("double A" Fuel Altered) drag racer
    Blower — mechanically-driven supercharger; excludes turbochargers. Commonly a Roots.
    Blown —
    An engine equipped with a supercharger (a "blown hemi"); rarely used in reference to turbocharged engines
    A vehicle equipped with a supercharged engine (a "blown higboy")
    A wrecked engine or transmission
    Blue oval — Ford product (for the Ford badge)
    Bondo — brand name for a body filler putty, often used as a generic term for any such product
    Bored — increasing the diameter of the cylinders in order to increase engine displacement
    Bottle — nitrous
    Bowtie — Chevrolet product (for the badge)[14]
    Bugcatcher (or bugcatcher intake) — large scoop intake protruding through hood opening, or on cars with no hood.
    Bumpstick — camshaft (for the lobes)
    Cam — camshaft
    Cammer — most commonly, the SOHC (single overhead camshaft) version of the 427 Ford V8.[15]
    sometimes, the Ford Racing Power Parts 5 liter.[16]
    rarely, any engine with overhead camshaft(s).
    Cherry — like new[17]
    C.I.D. (sometimes Cubic Inches or Inches) — cubic inches displacement
    Crank — crankshaft
    Cubes — CID
    Cubic inches — CID
    Deuce —
    '32 Ford Model B (most often a roadster);[18] now commonly on A frame rails[19]
    Chevy II Nova[20]
    Dual quads — two four-barrel carburetors
    Dragster —
    broadly, any vehicle modified or purpose-built for use on strips.
    specifically, specialized racers (early or recent types, in gas, alky, or fuel varieties)
    Elephant — Chrysler hemi[21]
    Fat-fender — 1934-48 (U.S.) car[22]
    Flatty — flathead engine[23] (usually refers to a Ford; when specified, the Mercury-built model)
    3/8s by 3/8s — lengthening the stroke and increasing the cylinder bore 3/8 inch. A term only applied to flattys.
    Frenched — headlight slightly sunken into fender[24] or to install as such ("she frenched the taillights")
    Fuel —
    most commonly, nitro (or a mixture of nitro and alky); also, the top drag racing class
    broadly, gasoline (petrol)
    Full-race — high-performance flatty cams, suitable only for strip use
    Gasser — car used in gasoline-only drag racing classes in the 1960s (as opposed to alcohol or nitromethane fuels), where the front end of the car is raised along with the motor. Characterized by a body that sits well above the front wheels. Distinct from hiboy.
    Gennie — genuine[25]
    Goat — GTO (not the Ferrari)
    Hair dryer — turbocharger (for the shape of the casing)
    Hairpins — radius rods[26]
    Hopped up — stock engine modified to increase performance
    Huffer — supercharger,[27]
    Inches — CID
    Indian (also "Tin Indian") — Pontiac (for the grille badge)
    Jimmy (or Jimmy Six) — GMC straight 6
    Any GMC product, such as a compressor used on 2-stroke diesels used as a supercharger.
    Lakes pipes — exhaust pipes running beneath the rocker panels, after use by lakes racers
    Lunched — wrecked; caused to be wrecked ("lunched" the transmission)
    Mag —
    magnesium wheel, or steel or aluminum copy resembling one such
    magneto
    Merc — Mercury
    Mill - any internal combustion engine
    Moons (or Moon discs; incorrectly, moon discs) — plain flat chrome or aluminum disc hubcaps, originally adopted by land speed racers. Smaller examples are "baby moons". Named for Dean Moon.
    Mouse — small-block Chevy[28]
    Mountain motor — large-displacement engine. Named for their size, and for being constructed in the mountains of Tennessee and North Carolina.[29] In organized automotive competition, the term commonly references a V8 engine displacing more than 500 cubic inches; informally, a V8 engine displacing more than 560 cubic inches
    Nail - any car used as a daily driver[citation needed]
    Nailhead — Buick V8, so named because the relatively small diameter valves
    Nitro — Nitromethane, used as a fuel additive in some drag cars
    Nitrous — nitrous oxide
    NOS — Nitrous Oxide System (a.k.a. laughing gas, liquid supercharger, N2O, nitrous, "the bottle"): apparatus for introducing nitrous oxide into the air intake of an engine prior to the fuel entering the cylinder.
    Pop — a mixture of nitro & alky. Also British shorthand for a sit-up and beg[clarification needed] Ford Popular.[citation needed]
    Plod - British hot rod slang for body filler. Also slang for the traffic police (after PC Plod in Enid Blyton's Noddy Series).
    Pro Street — street legal car resembling a Pro Stock car. Some are very thinly disguised racers.
    QJ — Quadrajet (Rochester 4-barrel carburetor)[30]
    Q-jet — Quadrajet[31]
    Rail (or rail job) — dragster with exposed front frame. Usually refers to early short-wheelbase cars, and not usually to Altereds.
    In drag racing, also refers to the guardrail
    Rat — Chevy big block engine[32]
    Rockcrusher — Muncie M22 4-speed transmission[33] so called because of the audible differences in operation between the model M-22 and its lower strength but quieter cousin, the M-21[citation needed]
    Rocket — Oldsmobile, in particular their early V8s
    Rolled pan - Contured sheet of metal that covers the space where the bumper used to be
    SB — small-block (Chevy)
    Shoebox — '49-'54 Ford (for the slab-sided appearance)
    Souped (souped up) — hopped up, performance improved (more common in '40s and '50s)
    Steelies — stock steel rims[34]
    Stovebolt — Chevy straight 6[35]
    Street legal — dual-purpose car, capable of performing routine duties as well as weekend racing. Some cars described as such, such as Pro Street cars, are very thinly disguised racers.
    Street-strip — dual-purpose car, capable of performing routine duties as well as weekend racing. Some cars described as such have very marginal off-track utility.
    Strip —
    drag strip.
    More broadly, cars or parts used or intended for racing only. Thus "street-strip" is a dual-purpose car.
    Stroked — increased stroke, to increase displacement; usually by adding a longer-stroke crankshaft
    Suicided — changed from front- to rear-hinged ("suicide door") type
    Tin Indian — Pontiac (for the grille badge)
    Toploader — Ford 4-speed manual transmission[36] so named because access to the transmission internal was made via an access panel located on the top of the transmission housing [37]
    Track T — Model T roadster built in the style of a dirt track race car[38]
    Tunneled — deeply sunken into fender[39]
    Wombat — A nickname for the General Motors W series engine 348-409 cubic inch, manufactured circa 1958-1964 [40]
    Wrinkle walls — drag racing slicks[41]
    Zoomie pipes (or zoomies) — short exhaust pipes with no mufflers, used for racing, or just for show (not street legal)[42]

  • #2
    Flathead is also used on 392 / 417 hemi fuel motors from time to time...
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