Driving Street Legal ‘33 Ford Hot Rod
You Can Buy Instead Of Build
by Ezra Dyer, yahoo autos
Rarely does Congress pass a bill that we can all agree is awesome. But
that’s what it did last year with the Low Volume Motor Vehicle
Manufacturers Act of 2015, a piece of legislation that will soon allow you
to buy some very cool cars that were formerly verboten. Like, how about a
tube-frame, inboard-front-suspension, 5.0 Coyote-powered hot rod?
Right now Factory Five Racing sells just such a car, its ’33 Ford Hot Rod,
in component form. But, thanks to the new law, next year you should be
able to buy it turnkey, no assembly required. For small companies like
Factory Five, this is a huge deal.
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The new rules include a few caveats.
First of all, the manufacturer can’t build more than 5,000 cars per year,
so the Chevrolets of the world cannot start rolling out brand-new 1985
IROC-Zs, not matter how fervently we wish that were the case. Second, the
cap on turnkey production is 325 cars. And finally, the cars themselves
have to be based on designs that have been out of production for at least
25 years. That’s frankly kind of strange: In Factory Five’s case, it means
that their GTM supercar would still be illegal as a turnkey proposition,
unless they made it look like a ‘60s Ford GT40. Why do aesthetics matter?
Ask your congressman.
Or just rejoice in the fact that you can buy a ’33 Ford hot rod without
spending 300 hours bolting it together in your garage. Factory Five’s
interpretation of a hot rod is basically a racecar draped in retro
bodywork—tube frame, bonded and riveted aluminum skin, 50-50 weight
distribution, all-independent suspension. With a 32-valve Ford 5.0 Coyote
engine and 2,248-pound curb weight, the ’33 is good for 0-60 in 3.6
seconds. Right now, Ford doesn’t sell the 5.0 as a complete
emissions-certified package (as GM does with its E-Rod crate engines), but
Factory Five expects that to change.
The Low-Volume law doesn’t concern
itself with crash testing or safety, but the completed cars still have to
meet emissions requirements, which gives companies like Ford and Chrysler
an incentive to offer their existing crate engines fitted with the
relevant emissions equipment.
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