Unlike other named trends, like rat rods and Pro Touring, it's very easy to define a Pro Street car: It's one with the rear wheeltubs drastically enlarged to accommodate enormously wide tires. It gets ...
How did a Pro Street 1961 Plymouth Belvedere, '66 Chevy Chevelle, '67 Impala, and a 1980 Dodge Mirada log almost 700 miles? HOT ROD Power Tours technically aren’t as grueling on cars and drivers as ...
Hot rodding is an iconically American phenomenon. Hot Rod magazine defines a hot rod as "an early American car that has been modified for improved looks and performance." Hagerty adds that the term ...
As the name implies, Pro Street evolved from both the drag- and street-racing scenes. Its direct predecessors were the street freaks of the Seventies, American cars modified with drag parts for ...
The hot rod dates way back to the 1920s, but found its cultural footing in post-World War II America. Soldiers armed with mechanical training picked up cheap Ford Model Ts and found ways to make them ...