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https://www.modelroundup.com/Arnie-Be... Join this channel to get access to perks: / @hpiguy #Scalemodel #mercury #comet #ICM #Kit #Reviews #Plastic #Scale #Model #Models #AMT #Tamiya #TamiyaUSA #Revell #MPC #Academy #Italeri #asmr #Ford #chevy #Tank #Armor #Aoshima #Hobbyboss #Modelroundup #Tool #Tools #onedaybuilds #onedaybuild #tested #scalemodels #hpiguy #hpiguys #scalemodels #Scale_model #hobby #hobbies #adamsavage #2025 #model #models #modelling #scale #modeling #weathering #howto #diy #create #make #STEM #future #floor #polish #tutorial #decal #decals #waterslide #automobile #fomoco #moebius #modelkit #kit #rust #rusty #rusted #rustoleum #hotrods #cyclone #gasser #dragster #dragcar #AFX 1965 Mercury Comet Cyclone 427 A/FX 1/25 Scale Model Kit Build How To Assemble Paint Gasser Drag Moebius Model King 1223 This A/FX car was raced by Arnie Beswick who is known for his prolific career as a Pontiac racer, but like Sox and Martin, he had a brief career as a Mercury factory pilot. This is a very low production "Encore" reissue from Moebius and Model KIng. Features Factory Ford 427 SOHC Engine Dual Snorkel Hood Drag Racing Chassis and Suspension Authentic Racing Interior with Rear Seat Delete Race Bucket Seats, Roll Bar, Hurst Shifter and Gauges Cragar S/S Mags and Drag Slicks Authentic Decals Funny Car was a type of drag racing vehicle and a specific racing class in organized drag racing. Funny cars are characterized by having tilt-up fiberglass or carbon fiber automotive bodies over a custom-fabricated chassis, giving them an appearance vaguely approximating manufacturers' showroom models. They also have the engine placed in front of the driver, as opposed to dragsters, which place it behind the driver.[1] Funny car bodies typically reflect the models of newly available cars in the time period that the funny car was built. For example, in the 1970s, then current models such as the Chevrolet Vega or Plymouth Barracuda were often represented as funny cars, and the bodies represented the Big Three of General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler.[2] Currently, four manufacturers are represented in National Hot Rod Association (NHRA) Funny Car: Chevrolet with the Camaro,[3] Dodge with the Charger,[4] Ford with the Mustang,[5] and Toyota with the Supra.[6] Worldwide, however, many different body styles are used. These "fake" body shells are not just cosmetic; they serve an important aerodynamic purpose.[7] Modern funny cars can rival or surpass Top Fuel dragsters.[8][9] Today, fielding a Funny Car team can cost between US$2.6 and US$3 million.[10] A single carbon fiber body can cost US$70,000. In drag racing in the mid-1960s, Top Fuel horsepower began to be combined with bodied cars with altered wheelbases to produce the first "funny cars". The term "funny car" is attributed to Mercury's chief of racing, Fran Hernandez, as in "We need to beat those 'funny' cars."[12] The first funny cars were built in the early to mid-1960s. Funny Car as a class traces its roots to Super Stock, through "the intriguingly named Optional Super Stock class", to A/Factory Experimental (A/FX), which NHRA introduced in 1962, and ultimately XS (experimental stock).[13] At the start, the rear tires ("slicks") were made with a bias-ply construction ("wrinklewall" slicks had not been invented yet), which meant that grip upon launching was poor. Racers who performed these altered wheelbase modifications found it shifted the center of gravity rearward, which placed more weight on the rear wheels, enhancing traction from these bias-ply slicks. Because of these many obvious modifications they did not look stock, hence the name "funny".[14] The wheelbases were changed to assist traction for the narrow (7 in (180 mm)-wide) slicks (required by NHRA rules), while keeping the mandatory factory distance between axle centers.[15] The first of the "funny-looking cars" were a trio of 1964 Dodge 330 Max Wedges which were named the "Dodge Chargers". They debuted in March 1964 at San Diego Raceway.[16] Funny Cars started as stockers, and were, at first, pure exhibition cars, in the Super/Factory Experimental (S/FX) class; NHRA treated them like a passing fad,[17] and tried to "legislate them out of existence" by placing them in first gas and then fuel dragster classes, with cars of half the weight and twice the horsepower.[17] Funny car success followed the popularity of gassers, the previous favorite doorslammer class.[18] The precursor of the funny car, appearing almost a decade earlier, was John Bandimere's blown '55 Chevy.[18] Funny cars were also preceded by the Modified Sport cars, which had fiberglass bodies, tube frames, and supercharged set-back engines even before Super Stock was conceived