All right you got it Ralph. Pull up a chair and let me tell you about the history of my car.
To start with my father's first car was a 54 mercury which he sold and bought a 56 thunderbird when he went to collage in 59. The reason why he drove Ford products at the time was that his uncle was the service manager at the Ford dealership in Port Washington. Well as time went on the cars became faster and the thunderbird was not cutting it and the fact he wanted to propose to my mother so he sold the 56 to buy an engagement ring and to put a deposit down on a 63 chevy which he bought down in Richmond Va. The car is pretty much the way you see it today except it was a three on the tree instead of a four speed. When he picked the car up at the dealership the salesman who was a good old boy pulled him to the side and told him that the breaking in of the motor and going easy on it was B.S. and to take it an drive it hard right out of the gate. So my father raced the car that night in which he beat a 348 59 chevy and did a few other races. Well anyways when he went home the family was quite surprised by not only he was engaged but the fact he had a chevy.

In 66 when I was born the first vehicle I ever rode in was the 63 chevy. This is the car they brought me home from the hospital in. The next year my twin brothers were born and my aunt every time she sees the car she recounts the day she held the two of them in the back of the car. Throughout this time my mother drove the on a daily basis my father drove a pickup for work. On the weekends my father would race the car at local tracks on the island. He used to laugh because he would pull up to the staging lanes with the baby seats in the car and people would stare at him. In 72 my parents got a 68 Oldsmobile delta 88 a little bit bigger, more practical and my mother did not want to drive a stick shift especially with just having another son.
They gave the car to my uncle who was in high school who also raced it but almost thrashed in into the ground. It was when he owned it the car became a 4 speed. In 76 my uncle was on his way out to Montauk Point when he broke down with the car. He left it on the side of the Montauk highway that night. The next morning my father and uncle went out to tow the car home when they came across the car being stripped down.

Once they made them give the driver’s door, hood, trunk and tires back they towed the car back to our yard.
That was it for the car at the point and it sat in the shop yard with about 130,000 miles on it, till 82 when I pulled it out of the weeds. It took me two years to put the car back together where I did everything myself sometimes three times over because I was learning back then.

I did all the body work, the interior, the motor I rebuilt in a friend of my father’s shop. To find parts back then was an adventure there was no reproduction parts, so I scoured the junkyards and searching local dealership old stock to see what they had laying around. In the spring of 84 I finally got it on the road but I was flat broke and could not afford money to buy new mufflers for my car and I was driving this with my date to my prom. My Uncle took pity on me a bought me a pair of mufflers for the car. After that I raced the car all of the time mostly legal but some illegal also. Not the smartest thing in retrospect. I did most of my racing out at the strip in the Hamptons when it was still open. Back then my buddies and I would drive the cars out to the strip. So if we broke it we fixed it or we would tow each other in with another car. I also drove this car back in forth to college in the Bronx, sometimes would use it for work. My father would make me cry when I would have to carry lumber on the roof from time to time when working on apartments in Manhattan. Came the early 90’s I stopped racing because we were all busy with work and wives, families, etc. and in 98 my car went off the road for a few years.
What got me back into the car was my youngest brother started racing his 70 roadrunner (he was born in 79) and Al with his hemi was just a bad influence.

So in 2003 it was back on the road and in 05 I was at the strip again. In this time I really became a big fan of the cars tearing up but looking stock. Being that the need for speed and can never leave well enough alone and go figure with about 120,000 miles on the rebuilt motor the car was starting to lose speed.

So I finally built the motor last year which took a lot longer than I planned due to the fact my wife was diagnosed with breast cancer and is about to be one year cancer free on June 26. But I have to say that was my therapy during that tough time. Installed the motor in late fall and still dialing it in along with a current transmission issue. Along the way I joined to supercars which I have to say has been great in the two events where I have raced in. Other than that is all I have to say under 1,100 words, because I could go on for hours.
