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1932 Ford Highboy Roadster

1932 Ford Highboy Roadster - Lucky Penny

High Tech Or Traditional? Retro Rods Shows There Are Two Sides To Every Coin
From the July, 2010 issue of Street Rodder
By Chris Shelton
1932 Ford Highboy Roadster
We all have our reasons to build cars, some more noble than others. But so far Greg Parsley's reason for building a 1932 Ford Highboy roadster is one of our favorites: "This was just kind of a weird phase of my development."

1932 Ford Highboy Roadster
Chevrolet's small-block was... 
   
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1932 Ford Highboy Roadster
Chevrolet's small-block was as popular 55 years ago as it is today, making it possibly the most versatile vintage engine ever. This one's a '68 327 with big-valve, camel-hump heads, a mild cam, and flat-top pistons. Greg fabricated the headers from a Speedway kit; the turnouts are Sanderson Jaysters.
But that's exactly what makes one so weird for Greg; he's sort of an everyman's maverick. He runs a shop called Retro Rods, which is about an hour north of Seattle. And typical for Northwesterners, he bucks convention.

1932 Ford Highboy Roadster
A mechanical Hilborn fuel... 
   
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1932 Ford Highboy Roadster
A mechanical Hilborn fuel injector has about as much cache and vintage appeal as any old speed part but it isn't very street friendly. Modern electronic controls, on the other hand, tamed the beast.
But to Greg's defense, this isn't your typical roadster. It's different, albeit by very conventional means, if that makes sense. In fact, it's probably one of the most straightforward examples we've seen in a while. Let us explain.

1932 Ford Highboy Roadster
Paint serves as a deeper and more appropriate metaphor for the car's split personality: without a doubt both are modern. At the same time both the car and the color have a latent streak: by its shape. A Deuce is traditional and the paint looks somehow as if it were blended in lacquer by an old hand to gild some would-be famous custom decades ago. Greg didn't just pick up on that streak; he ran with it.

1932 Ford Highboy Roadster
Greg built up the interior... 
   
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1932 Ford Highboy Roadster
Greg built up the interior with a Glide seat and a LimeWorks Speed Shop '40 Ford-style wheel and bell-topped column. Scott Stratton at S&S stitched the interior with a vintage flair but with a modern twist and materials.
The color suggested '60s show car, so he picked a wheel keeping with the time: tri-rib Radirs. They're full-alloy recreations of Rader wheels created by Dick Rader and made famous by motorsport marketing guru Mickey Thompson. The tires are every bit as responsible for the car's vintage personality: ribbed 5.00-15s and diamond-tread 8.20-15s-both Firestones, and both of which appeared on hot street cars occasionally in the early '60s. Even the front brakes pull the modern/primitive one-two punch: they're SO-CAL Speed Shop discs.


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