What’s in a hood?

Nassau65

CCCUK Member
One of my favourite cars
The 1971-73 Ford mustang Mach 1
Beautiful hood especially with twist locks and black out, in either black or argent. ( silver)IMG_2205.jpegIMG_2204.jpeg
 

Roscobbc

Moderator
Forgive me if I've mentioned before Nassau - but I had a 1 of 530 or so 71' light metallic pewter Mach 1 with 429 SCJ, C6 and absolutely ridiculous 4.11 rear end with Detroit locker.....100% stock except for Hooker headers.
 

teamzr1

Supporting vendor
The best ones were functional in the 1960s early 70s
They had a butterfly that was controlled by engine vacuum and when going WOT
the butterfly would be opened all the way, allowing the marketing claim of "RAM AIR" and flowing colder air through the carb
Most of these were phonies with not flow into engine bay

The hood I had made for my C5
The openings by windshield would make use of low pressure and that colder air get sucked into engine bay
In the front openings, hot air raises and as car moving, the air stream pulls out that hot air
Hence, engine bay and all inside stay cooler

Even in rain water does not flow into engine bay and if washing C5 there is drain tubes on front ones where flows to the ground


hood3.jpg
 

Nassau65

CCCUK Member
Forgive me if I've mentioned before Nassau - but I had a 1 of 530 or so 71' light metallic pewter Mach 1 with 429 SCJ, C6 and absolutely ridiculous 4.11 rear end with Detroit locker.....100% stock except for Hooker headers.
Yes, you’ve posted a couple of pictures of it. What a car. Would stand tall against most if not everything on street drags. The only things that would be close or equal to it were the Chrysler 440 six packs or 426 hemi’s.
Bet you wish you’d kept it, but it those days it was just onto the next one. If only we knew.
 

Nassau65

CCCUK Member
Have a friend (not at the time) who bought one new. He worked for Ford in Detroit at the time, Hugh Ford employee discount. Was racing mad as a 20 year old. Some of the stories are great. Kept it until the first fuel crisis in 1973. Went from the 429 to a Ford Pinto because of the gas prices. Tho today he says he loved that little pinto 😂😂
 

Roscobbc

Moderator
Yes, you’ve posted a couple of pictures of it. What a car. Would stand tall against most if not everything on street drags. The only things that would be close or equal to it were the Chrysler 440 six packs or 426 hemi’s.
Bet you wish you’d kept it, but it those days it was just onto the next one. If only we knew.
So, so many of the hipo cars ended-up in trees or lamposts with people who were unable to sensibly 'apply' the power.......got caught out myself once too..........
Perhaps the reason why I don't like muscle cars with auto transmissions........there's always a short delay between 'letting-off' the gas pedal and things slowing-off underneath......if only 'micro seconds' its enough to send the car off-road and out of control.
 

Mad4slalom

Well-known user
Hoods really started to play an aggressive part of a cars styling in the mid sixties, and the corvette Sting Ray played along.
The all new “rat” 396ci motor was installed in the 1965 corvette, and buyers got a new design hood to announce that they had it.
The proud new owners could let everyone know they had the monster motor under their hood.
I never really liked the 1965 or the 1966 carry over design, but that’s just me.
Things all changed for the not supposed to be Sting Ray for 1967. Delays pushed back the all new corvette , so the old model got a little revamp. An all new beautiful big block hood was designed/produced for the 1967 model. It is thought of as the best corvette hood ever.
I must agree there.
View attachment 27478View attachment 27479
Case in point is the c3 LT1 hood over the base hood . Still looking for one by the way if any one stumbles across one 👍
 

Nassau65

CCCUK Member
It was a fairly common upgrade back in the day to “upgrade “your hood. They were not that expensive new over the counter at your local Chevrolet dealer, and once the aftermarket guys started doing them even more so.
Now originals are big-ish money and aftermarket ones vary tremendously in price, and shipping is expensive especially for us in the UK plus things like taxes VAT.
Keep looking, hopefully you’re come across one.
 

Nassau65

CCCUK Member
I once grafted on a LT1 repro hood scoop bought from Ripspeed onto a friends 2000GT capri. He absolutely loved it. It was the custom car era and he wanted something different rather than just buying a 3 litre bonnet.
 
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