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The Elephant In The Room: unloading the load from a B-body.

I didn't read about adding weight but have been known to remove some one area of the car to another....other than that, I never added weight anywhere!!!
 
I doubt the '65 2%r's had an aluminum dash, they were assembled with all the parts that were on the 10/15 cars, except for the obvious front fenders, although even the 2% were still made of glass. And then immediately converted after Pomona
 
Some cars have gone quicker with added weight in the right places. It's all science.
Keep in mind this was a different time, track prep, tire and suspension technology etc, have come a long way.

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I doubt the '65 2%r's had an aluminum dash, they were assembled with all the parts that were on the 10/15 cars, except for the obvious front fenders, although even the 2% were still made of glass. And then immediately converted after Pomona
One of the '65's slipped through with an aluminum dash. I think it was the "Color Me Gone" car. The front fenders were modified, but not to the extent of the 10/15 cars of course.
Y'all should see the factory memo for the '64 2% cars, it is madness and confusing all at once.
 
All of this is perhaps folklore legend, but I can tell you this. A 1965 A/FX lightweight stainless K- member was right here in Brooklyn on a street race car for many years. It ended up in the garbage because the gentleman didn't want to repair and weld all the bends and cracks. Go figure.
If it was full of bends and cracks, then perhaps they went TOO far with lightening that critical piece.
 
If it was full of bends and cracks, then perhaps they went TOO far with lightening that critical piece.
It was a thin gauge stainless piece that wasn't fairing well under crash to earth wheel stands. The '65 10/15 cars were much too light at 2800 to 3000 Lbs each. That with a hungry Hemi made for some frequent flyer miles. I mean, a factory full gauge steel unit would have cracked and bent eventually as well.
 
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