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  • Image of How to Chop Tops: A Pictorial Guide to Hot Rodding's Most Popular Modification
  • Image of How to Chop Tops: A Pictorial Guide to Hot Rodding's Most Popular Modification

How to Chop Tops: A Pictorial Guide to Hot Rodding's Most Popular Modification

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Product Code: SA508
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How to Chop Tops: A Pictorial Guide to Hot Rodding's Most Popular Modification

Your Price:
$36.95
Currently out of stock

Learn how to chop tops with advice from the experts!

Today, the purpose of a chopped top on a hot rod is mostly to make a visual statement, but that wasn’t always the case. In the late 1930s, roadsters were considered to be real hot rods, while sedans and coupes were not considered to be race cars. Over time, sanctioning bodies began to accept sedans and coupes as race cars, which created the need for chopping tops. When competing in dry-lakes racing, the tall birdcages of cars that had not been chopped created an excessive amount of aerodynamic drag. Chopping the top increased the aerodynamic efficiency to the point that the coupes were competitive with the roadsters.

Tops aren’t often chopped for those reasons today. However, when viewing the works of art that have been created by the best chopping masters, it’s clear that enhanced aesthetics is the only reason that is needed.

Chopping a top may seem simple at first (especially if you think that old tops are mostly square), but it is not. The process of chopping a top severely alters the angles of the A-pillars, the intersections where metal meets at the C-pillars, and the rake and fitment of the glass.

In How to Chop Tops, hot rod expert and historian Tony Thacker takes you through the process of chopping a top. Individual chapters feature a variety of chops that have been performed by the industry’s most talented fabricators. The most popular candidates for this modification are covered, including Ford Model As, Model Ts, 1932 3-window and 5-window coupes, 1933s, 1934s, and Shoeboxes. Featured industry experts include Rick Lefever, Evin and Justin Veazie, the Kennedy Brothers, Bobby Walden, Troy Ladd’s Hollywood Hot Rods, Rolling Bones, Roy Brizio, Cornfield Customs, Max Grundy, and more.

Whether you want to give chopping a try or you just want to see how it’s done before hiring a professional, this book is a valuable addition to your library.

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Learn how to chop tops with advice from the experts!

Today, the purpose of a chopped top on a hot rod is mostly to make a visual statement, but that wasn’t always the case. In the late 1930s, roadsters were considered to be real hot rods, while sedans and coupes were not considered to be race cars. Over time, sanctioning bodies began to accept sedans and coupes as race cars, which created the need for chopping tops. When competing in dry-lakes racing, the tall birdcages of cars that had not been chopped created an excessive amount of aerodynamic drag. Chopping the top increased the aerodynamic efficiency to the point that the coupes were competitive with the roadsters.

Tops aren’t often chopped for those reasons today. However, when viewing the works of art that have been created by the best chopping masters, it’s clear that enhanced aesthetics is the only reason that is needed.

Chopping a top may seem simple at first (especially if you think that old tops are mostly square), but it is not. The process of chopping a top severely alters the angles of the A-pillars, the intersections where metal meets at the C-pillars, and the rake and fitment of the glass.

In How to Chop Tops, hot rod expert and historian Tony Thacker takes you through the process of chopping a top. Individual chapters feature a variety of chops that have been performed by the industry’s most talented fabricators. The most popular candidates for this modification are covered, including Ford Model As, Model Ts, 1932 3-window and 5-window coupes, 1933s, 1934s, and Shoeboxes. Featured industry experts include Rick Lefever, Evin and Justin Veazie, the Kennedy Brothers, Bobby Walden, Troy Ladd’s Hollywood Hot Rods, Rolling Bones, Roy Brizio, Cornfield Customs, Max Grundy, and more.

Whether you want to give chopping a try or you just want to see how it’s done before hiring a professional, this book is a valuable addition to your library.

Pages : 176
Size : 8.5 X 11 (inches)
Format : Paperback / softback
Illustrations : 610 color & 43 b/w photos
Publisher : CarTech
ISBN : 9781613256053
Product Code : SA508

Acknowledgments

Introduction 

Chapter 1: Tools and Equipment

Chapter 2: Ford Model Ts

Chapter 3: Rick and Rayce Lefever: Ford Model A 

Chapter 4: Veazie Bros. Fabrication: Bruce Fortie’s 1932 Ford 3-Window Coupe

Chapter 5: The Kennedy Brothers: Two 1932 Ford 3-Window Coupes and a 1932 Ford 5-Window Coupe

Chapter 6: Walden Speed Shop: 1932 Ford 5-Window Coupe

Chapter 7: Hollywood Hot Rods: 1933 Ford 3-Window Coupe

Chapter 8: Rolling Bones: Schmidt & Suckling 1934 Coupe 

Chapter 9: Roy Brizio Street Rods: Jeff Beck’s 1934 Ford 5-Window Coupe 

Chapter 10: 1936 Ford 3-Window Coupes

Chapter 11: Cornfield Customs: 1940 Cadillac LaSalle Model 50 

Chapter 12: Pete and Jake’s Hot Rod Parts: Billy F Gibbons’s 1950 Ford Shoebox Kopperhed 

Chapter 13: Fabian Valdez: 1950 Chevy Styleline

Chapter 14: Max Grundy: 1960 Dodge Dart Phoenix and 1961 Chrysler Newport

Chapter 15: Glass Cutting

Source Guide 

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How to Chop Tops: A Pictorial Guide to Hot Rodding's Most Popular Modification

$36.95

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