Recently I've been obsessed with building something Rat-Rod-y. I've been digging through gazillions of pictures looking for inspiration, and have (what I think) are some pretty cool ideas for something "different."
I've also been digging through "rat-rod" message boards, and I'm surprised how narrow-minded a lot (not all) of these folks are. i.e., "If it's not a ford or a chevy, it's not a Rat-Rod. If it was produced after 19XX, it's not a Rat-Rod. If there's ANYTHING shiny on it, it's not a rat-rod. If it the wheels aren't red, it's not a rat-rod. If it doesn't have the number 13 painted on the side, it's not a rat-rod." (ok, so I made up the last few, but they seem implied.) There were some pics of a BITCHIN' Volkswagen rat in one thread, but the poster was immediately flamed with tons of "that ain't a rat rod! Take that E36 M3 over too..."
I grabbed a rat rod themed magazine at the grocery store this weekend, again, looking for more inspiration and ideas. Don't worry, I'm won't be trading my subscription of GRM for "Greasy hair, neck tattoo, rolled up pants...and oh yeah, rat-rods" magazine anytime soon.
Like a four-year-old, I was really just interested in the pictures, but inevitably started reading some of the articles. While the "build" articles on the cars were generally short, vague, and uninteresting, some of the editorial and how-to stuff was pretty cool. Toward the end of the magazine, one of the contributors had a pretty good article on being a "patient" car builder, and how a lot of folks in the rat-rod "scene" had become too dependent on online auction sites, CL, etc.
The article was very insightful and well written, but the author still felt the need to throw in a "Save that E36 M3 for the credit-card funded riceburner crowd..." Ouch.
Anyway, still pretty confident that this attitude might be the exception and not the rule, I went to the magazine's website. On their "submitted photos" page, they had specific instructions NOT to post pictures of anything built after 19XX. Well damn.
Desperate to find pics of SOMETHING other than 33 Fords, chopped Mercs, etc, etc, etc, I skipped over to Jalopnik, where I found this:
Okay, let's get this straight right off the bat: we love traditional hot rods and customs. We love Carl Perkins. We love the Blasters. And we think girls in sexy outfits "inspired" by the fashions of the '50s are really freakin' hot. But we're entirely sick of this whole rockabilly badass lifestyle. Case in point, we were once threatened with a beat-down for admitting we thought electronic fuel injection was a good idea. Seriously. Anyway, if you can deal with a number of pseudo-hard-guy, backwards-thinking, "It was better in the '50s because we could be raging homophobes and it was entirely acceptable" types, there should be some fully-awesome cars at the Strip at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Saturday, October 15th. Oh, and before the hate-mail flies, we've got just as much ire directed at polo-shirted, braided-belt-and-denim-shorts billet rodders and bro-ham import scene types. There are a ton of great people involved in every branch of the car hobby, no matter what their preference. That said, we call 'em like we see 'em.
So before I go any further into this "rat-rod" thing. What do you guys think? Are the "I'm going to beat your ass if you like fuel injection" rockabilly greaseyheads the exception or the rule in the "rat-rod culture?" Seriously. Who the hell can look at the Andy Nelson Volks-rod and say "That's not cool?"
-rantover.