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P R E S S R E L E A S E
Note:
This press release may have been edited for formatting
purposes only |
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Rare NASCAR
Prototypes on Display During April 3-6
Food Lion AutoFair at Lowe's Motor
Speedway
CONCORD, N.C. (March 21, 2008) - A
one-of-a-kind 1970 Mercury Cyclone
Spoiler II and one of three surviving
1970 Ford Torino King Cobras, both
prototypes intended for competition on
NASCAR's superspeedways, will be on
display during the April 3-6 Food Lion
AutoFair at Lowe's Motor Speedway.
"These cars were built to compete with
the Dodge Daytonas and Plymouth
Superbirds on the NASCAR circuit," said
Bill Adams, president of Comet East Car
Club. "In the midst of all of that,
there was a shift in thinking. Fuel
standards changed and insurance rates
for cars this big and fast skyrocketed.
Ford backed off and never mass produced
these cars."
Couple those facts with a new NASCAR
rule that raised the minimum production
number for homologation from 500
vehicles to 3,000, and even the
prototypes became scarce.
"There is only one Cyclone Spoiler II,"
said Adams. "There were two of them
built and this is the only one that
survived. There were four King Cobras
and only three of those are known to
still exist."
These rare examples of Detroit muscle
are owned by Steve Honnell, 68, a former
Ford representative from Belfast, Tenn.
Honnell has owned the King Cobra since
purchasing it from Holman-Moody in 1970
after Ford suspended its factory support
of stock car racing. The Cyclone Spoiler
II was rescued from a muddy chicken coop
in Indiana after the late Larry Shinoda,
best known for designing the Corvette
Stingray, gave it away as a gift once
Mercury abandoned the project.
"Shinoda didn't want these cars
destroyed," Honnell said. "He kept
telling me there was a Mercury out there
like the King Cobra. He helped me track
it down in 1997 because he was so happy
I saved the King Cobra."
As a result of being stored in a chicken
coop, the body and interior of the
Cyclone Spoiler II were in desperate
need of repair and Honnell spent several
years restoring the car.
Each of the three surviving King Cobras
were built with a different engine.
Honnell's came with a 429 Super Cobra
Jet powerplant that he later replaced
with a 494-cubic-inch V-8. Other than
the engine change, the car is still in
its original condition.
"The King Cobra has never been
restored," Honnell noted. "It's pretty
much the same as the day I got it and I
still have the old Super Cobra Jet
engine in a crate at home."
From the firewall back, the King Cobra
is a stock Ford Torino. What makes the
King Cobra special, besides its powerful
engine, is a wind-cheating design which
features a rounded nose that slopes
aggressively to the front bumper. Unlike
the stock Torino, the King Cobra has no
front grille and was designed to
maximize downforce at high speeds.
The Cyclone Spoiler II features a
similar design with the front end being
the major difference between it and the
stock Mercury Cyclone. In an attempt to
meet NASCAR's minimum of 3,000 units,
Mercury planned to simply switch the
nose of the car based on customer's
wishes.
However, the Cyclone Spoiler II could
not escape the same outside factors that
killed the King Cobra and only two were
built and tested.
Due to the difficulties of traveling
with two vehicles, Honnell and his cars
have stayed close to home recently but
he did take them to Dearborn, Mich., for
Ford Motor Company's 100th birthday
celebration in 2004.
"I think the most fun I've ever had with
them was when I went to Dearborn for
Ford's 100 year celebration," Honnell
said. "I unloaded my cars in the parking
lot and was ready for the show. Someone
came up to me and said, 'You can't park
those there,' which made me wonder what
I did wrong.
Then he told me, 'They (the event
organizers) saw your cars and they want
them up front.' So they moved me up to
the rotunda where the honored guests
were and I got to meet Edsel Ford while
he was admiring my cars.
"Ford thought these cars had been
destroyed. One of the greatest things
about it was that Ford took notice. They
were tickled to see that I had saved
them."
Honnell is eagerly anticipating his trip
to Food Lion AutoFair.
"I love coming to Charlotte," Honnell
said. "That is quite a facility up there
and I can say that I've never been to
anything that big.
The Charlotte show is enormous and I am
excited to be bringing my cars there."
The Ford Torino King Cobra and Mercury
Cyclone Spoiler II will be shown
Saturday and Sunday on the Turn-4 end of
pit road as part of the Comet East Car
Club display.
The spring Food Lion AutoFair annually
attracts more than 160,000 visitors. It
features more than 50 car club displays;
more than 10,000 vendor spaces that
offer a plethora of automotive parts and
memorabilia; and a collector car auction
conducted by Tom Mack. More than 1,500
collectible vehicles of all makes and
models will be available for sale in the
car corral that rings the 1.5-mile
superspeedway.
Food Lion AutoFair hours are 8 a.m. to 6
p.m., Thursday through Saturday, and 8
a.m. to 4 p.m., on Sunday. Tickets are
$10 for adults while children 12 and
under are admitted free when accompanied
by an adult.
Parking for the event is $5.
For more information, contact the Lowe's
Motor Speedway events department at
(704) 455-3205 or visit
www.lowesmotorspeedway.com
The opinions expressed
on this site are not necessarily those of the publisher. All
comments other than website related problems need to be directed to
the author. Copyright 2000-2008 SpeedwayMedia.com.
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