There’s a rod shop about an hour west of Boston called East Coast Custom where David Simard and his team build hot rods for customers. The Leominster, Massachusetts, shop also features a spectacular barnful of David’s own iron, traditional prewar Fords mostly, collected over the past several years and in various stages of progress.
We’ve talked about David Simard’s East Coast Custom before. On our website last year, we featured a 1933 Ford five-window coupe called The Devil’s Coupe, a surviving ’30sera hot rod that had been out of commission for more than 50 years before being revived and put back on the street in perfect period unrestored condition.
If The Devil’s Coupe had a brother, it’d be this channeled 1933 roadster—another perfectly preserved piece of hot rod history—with a pedigree just as impressive and a personality just as wicked as the coupe.
“In 1975, a fellow member of the Boston Area Roadsters Club introduced me to Bill Schultz,” David started the story. “Bill owned Country Club Auto Body in Norton, Massachusetts. He had numerous old Fords around his small one-man shop. Sitting outside was the 1934 three-window coupe, which he’d raced on the oval tracks in the area back in the ’50s. But inside, buried under numerous auto parts, was the channeled ’34 Ford roadster that he built in 1950 and parked in 1962. Bill intentionally buried the car in the corner to avoid everyone inquiring about it.
Denne historien er fra September 2022-utgaven av Hot Rod.
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Denne historien er fra September 2022-utgaven av Hot Rod.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
What Is Pro Street?
You know it when you see it.
Pro Street in Pure Vision
Builder Steve Strope weighs in on the Pro Street look and what he would build today.
THE GAS ERA LIVES ON
These vintage race cars chart the evolution of technology in the early days of drag racing.
MOTOR HEAD FOR LIFE
Scott Sullivan is one of the original Pro Street pioneers. He still builds cars today out of a small shop in Dayton, Ohio.
BRINGING BACK PRO STREET!
David Freiburger and Roadkill Garage built a Pro Street Nova.
SWEET ASPIRATIONS
Jerry and Matthew Sweet added an 800ci Pro Stock mountain motor to chase HOT ROD Drag Week's Pro Street NA Record.
Making Bad Decisions Badder
Bradley Gray's 1970 Nova is a Hybrid! It's a streetable Funny Car.
ART PROJECT
This Rad Rides by Troy-built '63 split-window Corvette went from restaurant prop to ripping up the street!
WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?
THE PRO STREET ERA PEAKED IN THE '80S. ARE WE IN THE BEGINNING OF A RESURGENCE?
Making Connections
Project T-top Coupe: We install a Terminator X Max for big power.