The Birth
of Nitro Funny Cars
Steve Bovan’s ’65 Nova
Funny Car running both as a C/FD, and against one, at the
1965 NHRA Nationals.
By Frank Oglesby
7/8/05
here
have been numerous stories written about the birth of Nitro
Funny cars over the years. Most of what you have read about
the early days is probably wrong unless it was first written
during the 64/66 time period and even that is suspect. There
are a couple of reasons for this neither one concerning conspiracies/foul
play or anything like that.
The racers making the news were racing and quite frankly
paid little or no attention to what was being written (huge
mistake) unless it directly concerned them, so a lot of misinformation
in early reporting was not questioned at the time. A lot of
this misinformation has been reprinted a hundred times over
the last forty years. In fact when you are discussing this
subject with a reader/collector of old magazines, even if
you were involved with the incident in question and in fact
were there when it happened, they will still tell you they
have read differently in ten different magazines so you must
be wrong. Actually what they have read is one writer’s
mistake repeated by ten other writers over a long period of
time and in several different publications.
The second reason for the most of the misconceptions of early
Nitro Funny Car history concerns the NHRA and, no, I am not
blaming NHRA. I am merely explaining how the early history
was derived.
ADVERTISEMENT
|
|
There
was no NHRA Nitro Funny Car class until 1969, so in NHRA’s
eyes the cars never existed until then and as the winners
write the history books and sell the videos, most young writers
(that would be under 65) who are writing from research only
cannot believe anything existed before NHRA blessed it. If
they dig a little deeper all they find is words like---Outlawed—Non
Certified and other nonsense like that. Nothing could be farther
from the truth, as Nitro Funny Cars existed for about four
years before NHRA started a class for them.
The third and probably the most important reason for the
inaccuracies were the factories' involvement and the power
of both their press releases and advertising budget. The independent
racers were their own worst enemy, as they were just match
racing and whatever coverage they received was solely from
the track reporters, while the factory cars had a huge promotional
staff behind them.
The factory unblown cars got 95 percent of the magazine coverage
but the simple fact is until the Mercury/Logghe cars arrived
in 1966, the factory unblown cars were lightyears slower than
the supercharged independents which got little or no ink.
This story will be a little different as it is being written
by someone who not only was there when it happened, but also
was either working on or driving some of the first Nitro Funny
Cars.
So let’s start at the beginning. Jack Chrisman’s
1964 Comet was directly responsible for the class Nitro Funny
Cars. His Supercharged Nitro motored stock appearing Comet
smoking the tires the length of the track at Indy in 1964
and the crowd’s reaction is what started it all.
|