Dyno Don: The Cars and Career of Dyno Don Nicholson. Doug Boyce
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Название: Dyno Don: The Cars and Career of Dyno Don Nicholson

Автор: Doug Boyce

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Сделай Сам

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isbn: 9781613256336

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СКАЧАТЬ Don, life wasn’t all about cars. On May 22, 1950, he married his sweetheart, Patricia McNamara. Patty was a local Pasadena girl who met Don through mutual friends in 1948. Neither wanted a large wedding, so they eloped and were married by a Catholic priest in Las Vegas. Don, raised in a Protestant home, took the necessary classes to convert. This flew in the face of Don’s strict father and drove a wedge between the family. This didn’t affect Patty and Don’s relationship; the two proved to be the consummate lovebirds and were inseparable through the years.

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       Proud parents, Don and Patty, pose with their little bundle of joy, Cindy, who is approximately five months old in this photo. Cindy was the only child for the couple and, when old enough, she often traveled to the races with Mom and Dad. Don enjoyed hunting, and the mounted deer seen hanging to the rear in the photo was one he bagged in the San Bernardino Mountains. (Photo Courtesy Nicholson Family Collection)

      In 1956, the pair celebrated the birth of their only child, a bright-eyed girl they named Cindy. At the time of Cindy’s birth, Don and Harold were running their operations, calling it Horsepower Specialties, out of an old service station on Lime Avenue in Monrovia. In 1957, Don was toying with a hopped-up 1952 Lincoln, taking it out to Riverside where he clocked 100 mph times. Patty also got in on the action, making a pass or two of her own. Family friend Lloyd Eggstaff recalled, “Don was always so calm and cool. We were all in the Lincoln driving to the track one day down Route 66, doing about 100 when a car coming in the opposite direction took a slow turn into our path. Don remained calm and said that the driver may want to open both doors because we were driving right through.”

      Don assisted in building three identical small-block Chevys for the Bonneville streamliner of Chet Herbert. He crewed on the car and warmed it up, but, because he had a wife and daughter, it was felt he shouldn’t make the timed runs, which were handed to Dave Ryder. At Bonneville, Mickey Thompson’s twin-Chrysler Challenger, which clocked 294 mph, overshadowed it. Ryder was the second fastest, hitting 267.359 on his first pass. Any hopes of surpassing Thompson that weekend were dashed when, according to Don, on the return run “Ryder got it all ‘loaded up’ with fuel and blew the engines.”

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       Don purchased this house in Duarte, his first, in 1950. By the middle of the decade, he had added this three-bay garage. Working without the luxury of a lift, the far-left bay (partially hidden) featured a pit so that Don could access the underside of cars. Cindy Nicholson recalls with a sense of pride that “we were the only family in Duarte with a paved backyard.” The Nicholsons lived here through mid- 1962. This was also where Jerry Jardine built his first set of headers in 1959. (Author’s Collection)

      Further dry lake ventures for the brothers included running a roadster in conjunction with Don Blair out of his speed shop in Pasadena. With his own shop just down the road, Don regularly relied upon Blair’s to perform machine work. A number of trips to El Mirage followed for the Nicholsons, as Harold ran a Coupe on the dry lake bed. It was at El Mirage where Don first met 14-year-old Earl Wade. Wade tagged along with friends, the Price Brothers, who themselves ran a Fuel Coupe.

      Tragedy struck the Nicholson family in November 1959 when Harold, driving the Akins and Hawkins dragster at San Fernando, was killed when a front wheel broke loose at speed. Don, racing elsewhere at the time, had told Harold he thought the car was unsafe and recommended not driving it. Needless to say, the loss hit the Nicholsons hard, Don especially. He lost a brother who was also a dear friend. Don rarely spoke of the accident and, more than likely, it’s why his parents never took a keen interest in his career.

      In 1959, Don went to work for C. S. Mead Chevrolet, handling high-performance tune-ups and operating the Clayton dynamometer that was brought over from his Monrovia shop. He buried himself in his work, and his reputation as a master tuner exploded. It was while at Mead’s that the legendary nickname “Dyno” Don took hold. You want to talk about a man in demand? Some mornings when Don arrived at work, cars were lined up waiting for a dyno tune. And not just local racers, Don had customers coming from as far away as Ohio.

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       The Nicholson brothers, Don and Harold, flipped a couple bucks for this advertisement in the 1954 Arcadia High School yearbook. Customers’ cars ranged from hot rods to salt-flats to circle-track cars. If you Google the Arcadia address, you’ll find that the building still stands.

      Don raced a tri-powered 348 Biscayne in 1959 and out of approximately 75 races that year lost just 2. Recalled Don in a 1990s interview with Robert Genat, “Beyond a ‘trick’ valve job, I never had the engine apart. I pulled the front end off and built a set of over-the-frame wheelwell headers for it. Nobody built headers but Hedman and they were the conventional inside-the-frame type. Everybody wanted me to build headers for them but it took me two weeks to build those. I didn’t have the ambition to build headers. It was a pretty good art to cutting and fitting. I did it all with a hacksaw. I built those headers on the floor of my home garage in Duarte. Jerry Jardine came down and started building headers there. That was the start of Jardine Headers.”

      With the new free-flowing exhaust in place, Don’s Chevy had pretty much everyone covered. He entertained the thought of attending his first NHRA Nationals at Indy, but after putting his Chevy on the dyno, he felt the car just wasn’t making enough power. On September 12, Don raced eventual NHRA World Champion Bruce Morgan at San Gabriel and defeated him with a 14.10 at 99.55 mph. I guess he should have put a little more consideration into that trip to Indy.

      In February 1960, the NHRA was holding the predecessor to the Winternationals at Pomona and Don was making an appearance in his 348-powered B/S 1960 Chevy. Don’s lightweight Fleetmaster grabbed Top Stock with a 13.69 at 101.01 mph by defeating 15 competitors, including the Plymouth of Allen Villa Dyno tuner and future Stock and Super Stock legend Dave Kempton. Dyno’s record with the car equaled that of his 1959.

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       Don ordered his 1960 Chevy with a tri-power 348 and BorgWarner 4-speed. The Fleetmaster was a no-frills model that lacked deadweight such as a rear seat, radio, and heater. The trophies lined up here were won by a proceeding owner; Don garnered his share running B/S with the car. (Photo Courtesy Gary Smith)

      Butch “the California Flash” Leal remembers Don well. “I was quite a bit younger, and he took me under his wing after I raced him with my 348-powered El Camino one day at Lions. He beat me by half a car length and said it was the quickest 348 he ever ran against. When it came to the 348 and 409s, Don was the man everyone turned to for guidance.”

      C. S. Meads became Service Chevrolet in 1961 and it’s where Don first teamed up with Earl Wade. The pair complemented each other well, with Don working his magic on ignition, injection, and carbs while Wade specialized in work on heads and fuel injection. Don had stated that, “We had guys who wouldn’t run on weekends unless we tuned their cars. I had a system where I’d loosen the distributor a little bit. I’d power time it while Earl was running the dyno.” Wade became Don’s right-hand man, doing most of the Corvette stuff while Don focused mainly on the 348 and 409s. Eventually, the dynamic duo moved on from Service Chevrolet. Wade had been splitting his time working alongside another finer tuner, Dick Bourgeois, and the pair operated a successful tune-up and speed shop business. As for Don, well, the 1960s were underway and his storied career was just taking off.

      CHAPTER 2

       A BEVY OF CHEVYS (1961–1963)

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