• When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

Need help from those who survived the 70s

***, Gas or Grass, nobody rides for free sticker. :D

imagesDOKB3K8I.jpg
 
Last edited:
Great thread! I was born in 69 so I only remember a few things from the 70's. In 87 when I got my licence I had an 80 Ford Fairmont that I put a Radio Shack CB in, remember echo box's!

Put in a Realistic Cassette player with Jensen 6x9 Tri-Ax Speakers, loved blasting Iron Maiden, Black Sabbath, Dokken...etc...

Capture.JPG
 
Last edited:
My first set of slicks I swear were bought from J.C.Penny company. That's what I remember anyway.
JCPenney sold speed equipment in their auto centers and a whole lot of car stuff in their "Big Book" catalogs. so did Sears and Montgomery Ward.
 
So did JC Wittney sell "performance parts" :poke:,
albeit I never bought anything from them...
way back when,
I went to Service Center our local speed shop in Concord,
Tri-Valley Machine In Pacheco or Baily Bros. in Napa for machine work
or Super Shops in Vallejo for bolt on stuff
or Monument Auto Supply {I worked at part time}
or Vic Hubbards in Hayward for my fuel, oil & plug sponsor,
Parnelli Jones Good Year in San Leandro for my Slicks,
I'd sit down with the man himself & order them...
Uncle Joe Pisano's, Venolia or Childs & Albert for pistons rings & rods & bearings
Ed Pink or Keith Black or Paul Phaff or Mert Littlefield etc.
or any of the other "Long Beach Gang" when I needed the serious stuff...
Those were great road trips back then, going to buy or get race parts :thumbsup:...

A ton of mail/phone order places too, not point & click like we have today...
 
Last edited:
Yeah, we had all the door-car guys in Motown. Not too many fuel people....except Kallita, Muldowney, LaHaie, Ramchargers.....etc. Most of our stuff was S/S, Pro-stock, comp.
 
20minutes from mom&leads house to Arlen Vanke's shop in west side of Akron.
 
Cassette players were available in the early 70s. Became more affordable in the mid 70s.
I couldn't wait to save up enough to buy one to replace that pos eight track!
 
So did JC Wittney sell "performance parts" :poke:,

A ton of mail/phone order places too, not point & click like we have today...
I used to delve through the JC Whitney catalog at night in my youth going through the pages of performance parts while I had my cookies & milk (that's the truth) wondering what a 3/4 grind cam was... had to settle "hopping up" my Aurora t-jet cars. Mail/phone ? how about Gratiot, Honest Charley, S/K, etc.
 
Yea I was thinking about putting a shifter on mine but I was worried that it would hurt the transmission without having a manual valve body on it.

TransGo claimed that the shift kit eliminated slip and would make the transmission last longer. It was cool - it would chirp the tires when it shifted with your foot off the gas.
 
I used to delve through the JC Whitney catalog at night in my youth going through the pages of performance parts while I had my cookies & milk (that's the truth) wondering what a 3/4 grind cam was... had to settle "hopping up" my Aurora t-jet cars. Mail/phone ? how about Gratiot, Honest Charley, S/K, etc.

Warshawsky and JC Whitney were the same company. They both had catalogs that were almost identical but Warshawsky had an actual store in downtown Chicago, I picked up heavy catalog orders there to save on shipping. JC Whitney was only catalog. My all time favorite was Gratiot Automotive. I was building a Ford Galaxie in 1970 and bought an FE dual quad setup, top loader 4-speed, and 9-inch 4.11 posi pumpkin from them, all brand new and dirt cheap. I always figured they knew where an unlocked door was at the FoMoCo warehouse...
 
Those tape-becks were cool, and having the correct multiplex radio... was the only way they would work. The cords would break, and there was only one guy[back in the day] who could/would repair them around Detroit. Royal Radio, in Royal oak. Even in the late-70's/early 80's, those things were like having gold. I had lots of parts and radios. The tall stand was the real bitch to find.[non-console]
 
Back
Top