Jalopnik Breaks Down 9 Hot Rod Styles From Street Rods to Deuces
Updated
Updated · Jalopnik · May 24
Jalopnik Breaks Down 9 Hot Rod Styles From Street Rods to Deuces
1 articles · Updated · Jalopnik · May 24
Jalopnik outlined nine hot rod styles that it says gearheads should know, framing hot rodding as a broad American car culture rather than a single build formula.
Pre-World War II gow jobs and postwar Flathead V8 builds anchor that history, with the article tracing how stripped-down early Fords evolved into multiple distinct styles.
The list spans street rods, rat rods, track roadsters, T-buckets, lowboys, highboys, gassers, Pro Street builds and the 1932 Ford Deuce, highlighting differences in stance, purpose, safety and street usability.
Examples used to define the categories include ZZ Top's 1933 Eliminator street rod, Norm Grabowski's Kookie T, Bob McGee's 1932 highboy and a track roadster that sold for $145,600.
Taken together, the guide emphasizes how hot rod vocabulary reflects decades of improvisation, racing influence and individualism across American custom-car culture.
As the auto industry goes electric, will the classic V8-powered hot rod become a museum piece or find a new identity?
As new laws threaten street use, can the rebellious spirit of American hot rodding survive on public roads?