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This is a great thread! Thanks for taking us all along as you bring this old racer back to life. I'm looking forward to seeing how your headers turn out, the fitment at the ports look really great! 
This is a great thread! Thanks for taking us all along as you bring this old racer back to life. I'm looking forward to seeing how your headers turn out, the fitment at the ports look really great!![]()
Really enjoying your posts, especially showing how you are making parts. I often see completed parts and have no idea how they were made, thanks for sharing this!
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Yeah, we're all in for a treat with this thread. Already some super valuable info and were only 3 pages in.
Great build being done the way it should be with the equipment it was built with originally.
Way cooler than a CNC resto...Good work!

Neat project. The founder of Algon (Al Gonzales) passed away some years ago, but I think I read somewhere that his son can still provide some parts and service.
Interesting. The Rodder's Journal did an awesome article about Algon a few years ago. He did all sorts of things including a safety coupling for drag boats the prevented the prop from augering the boat into the water if the engine locked up suddenly.
Primarily at Lakeville (now closed), Buckeye (now called Wayne County Speedway), Mansfield, and it may have raced at the Ashland County Fairgrounds before they stopped running cars there.Thanks for doing this thread. I used to go to short track races with my dad, mostly 80s-early nineties.
What track did this car run at ? I've been to at least half a dozen in Ohio.
I grew up only knowing about European race cars, thought all this going round in circles stuff was primitive. Then I grew up a bit and realized how much artistry, engineering and skill went into this kind of car. This car and your work on it is seriously cool. John
Graham that is some beautiful work you're doing for sure. When I was young I used to go to the sprint car races in Sioux Falls SD. Doug Wolfgang was the one to watch back then. It was a great time. Paul
I've been to Sandusky too. Watched it rain at Lorain.
Your in Nascar country now.
Look forward to more progress on the race car.


Amazing job on the headers! Okay I need some help here, I have never seen one of those Algon plates before, can you explain its function to me? Sorry I do not have a racing background.
You have mad fabrication skills![]()
Those headers are outstanding.
You make the 3-pipe collectors?
I'd like to hear a clip of it running when you get that far.
It was originally powered by a 292 Chevy six cylinder, ...
I6 were common in many "budget" racing venues in the 60s. Ford had 2 families of I6s. The "small block" (144, 170, 200, 250 cid) and the "big block" (240 and 300 cid). The big block was used in full sized cars and trucks. The truck version got forged cranks, rod and pistons (?) and were more commonly used in racing.
You could not spin these engines very fast, but they had great low end torque so they worked well on 1/4 mile and 3/8 mile tracks, especially dirt.
The 240/300 engines have seven main bearings, also. Nearly indestructible bottom end. It seems like getting these old inlines to breathe is the challenge. George keeps talking about getting a pair of aluminum SBC heads and making them into a crossflow head for the 292. I guess the bore spacing, etc. works out.

I run the silicon bronze on AC with about 90% arc balance to DC...just barely a little AC arc to clean the puddle. It does a great job of making a nice, shiny joint and helps prevent overheating the parent metal and mixing it with the bronze.
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I worked in Ford Engineering as the 4.9L (300) was being phased out. A "skunk works" project cast a couple of aluminum "cross flow" heads that were direct bolt on. Impressive numbers !The 240/300 engines have seven main bearings, also. Nearly indestructible bottom end. It seems like getting these old inlines to breathe is the challenge.
I worked in Ford Engineering as the 4.9L (300) was being phased out. A "skunk works" project cast a couple of aluminum "cross flow" heads that were direct bolt on. Impressive numbers !
It's just on the outside. The inside is TIG welded and sanded smooth so it sits flat against the head.
Gotcha. Presumably for some extra build up/strain relief?
When you look at those chassis, you think "OMG, are they CRUDE !" Bit they were stout and easily repairable.
"The good ol' days". (Midgets now have STARTERS, gasp !)
