

Like any era, there are good and bad elements, however, as I went through each and every mag, I consistantly came away with a few 'impressions'.....
(1) Rodding & Drag Racing in Oz was at a 'honeymoon high', with all sorts of fresh perspectives and passion, eclectically combined into raw but definative foundations of what we have today.....
This covers everything rodding, from the cars, to the journalism (although, to be honest, I found the tech stories and event coverage to be far 'in depth' & superior to what we're currently 'presented' by any of our existing publications), to the events, to the classifications of vehicles, to the 'rodding scene' and supplier structure. Photography illustrated a 'make do with what we had' approach, with plenty of great examples of people pushing boundries, and enjoying the opportunity.
(2) American Influence, but an entirely fresh perspective, with cars that reflected a truely Aussie taste.
Again, this was steered/influenced by the fact it that we had to make do with what we had, leaving two distinct paths, either become a pioneer and make our own aftermarket world, or use what we had, and many chose the latter. This effectively steered the rodding population and stlying, with the humble Y blocks becoming the engine of choice, closely followed by the early Holden 6's and mopar offerings, big channel jobs, and a less 'structured' cars, that really were forced to have their own identity, without the global influence we have today.
(3) Our pioneers of that era really pushed boundries, harrdly took no for an answer, and their focus was on their passion, with the money being a bonus, not the other way round.
Now, I wasn't there, so the above comments are purely what I interpret from what I've reviewed, can people who were there offer me a better insight, and ideally photo's and stories to feed my curiosity?
Last night, looking through Larrys great book, "Australia's Hotrod Heritage", I noted the array of 'personal' photo's and brief descriptions/details offered by many names I recognise, some of which frequent this forum, hopefully they can share more, both here and in print (Larry, another book please


As a last request of sorts (in this post anyway

Thanks in advance,
Drewfus