Mickey Thompson’s Dragster Slingshot

June 25, 2022 0 Comments

This rail may not seem abundant by today’s Hot Rodding standards, but in 1954, Mickey revolutionized drag racing forever by building the first dragster. Mickey Thompson’s interest in drag racing (and racing in general) began when he attended the first legal drag races in 1950, when Mickey saw his opening pass, he was hooked! He started working on his own cars and noticed ways to get more power out of the engines, at the time he didn’t have a lot of money, so Mickey decided to try to do it all himself! He would weld his own cylinder heads inside the combustion chamber to spread out the compression and even grind his own camshafts. He would use these abilities in the early 1950s to make his cars faster.

However, by 1954 a growing problem in drag racing was the need for traction. Hot rodders got more horsepower and torque from the engines, but the cars lacked the traction to put this power to the bottom. Mickey, being the hard thinker and innovator that he was, spent his countless sleepless nights (he apparently didn’t get much sleep and worked a night shift for the LA Times) devising ways to get extra traction and during the day. his garage building a hot rod that would soon become known as the slingshot dragster.

Mickey had this to say about his thinking: “Throughout my usual waking nights, I pondered this and what could be done about it. Little by little, the idea took shape. The big obstacle kept the driving force between the motor and rear axle”. This necessitated a driveshaft of a certain length, which pushed the engine forward by that amount. Now if you put the driving force behind the rear axle you could couple the engine drive assembly and you would have the main weight. of the vehicle directed at the drive wheels”.

What Mickey did was move the drive behind the rear axle and extended the wheelbase so the load would be transferred higher up to the rear wheels. Mickey’s next problem was trying to put extra rubber on the bottom for more traction. He realized that the current tires were not big enough to handle that much power. So he went to A1 Tire Company and convinced them to make new wider tires, also known as early drag slicks (Mickey also invented early drag slicks).

Because the slingshot was nearly finished, Mickey says the name went like this: “As it gradually took shape, the results of these ideas made me the butt of jokes in Southern California. The funny problem, though.” was that it worked and one day a Santa Anna hot rodder Leroy Neumeyer said to me, “Do you understand that that beast strikes a chord in my memory, Mick? a slingshot. You notice, the way the driver sits there like a rock during a slingshot.” That was the name that stuck, and so the setup turned out to be successful, therefore unbeatable, that in a few few years became the quality of sport.”

His innovative new design proved successful, and before long, Mickey rebuilt his slingshot and another racer named Calvin Rice had the first slingshot racing race at the inaugural 1954 NHRA Nationals, showing the world what slingshots could do. and forever changed the face of drag racing.

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