The ISKY Roadster |
The Dawn of Hot Rodding
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This little black Model T has plenty of stories to tell. That it happens to be one of the greatest hot rods of all time, built by one of the greatest hot rodders of all time, only makes those stories a little more interesting. Those are big words, but it’s hard to argue the fact that Ed Iskenderian, the little T roadster that he built when he was just a kid, and the racing cam company that bears his name are hugely responsible for making our hobby and industry what they are today.
In the 1930’s, hot rodding was far from the international phenomenon that it would become after the war. Instead, it was just a spark that was starting to burn in garages and back-alley shops across the country. Isky and Athan grew up in the same neighborhood in Los Angeles. They saw hot rods and race cars going together in a few local garages and started collecting parts to build their own. Ed has said numerous times that the term “hot rod” didn’t even exist at that point. Cars like the cut down early Fords that he and his friends were building were called “gow jobs.” They didn’t have magazines to tell them how to do it. Instead, these founding fathers of hot rodding relied on ingenuity and their generation’s legendary work ethic to figure it out on their own.
Once Ed acquired Athan’s Model T around 1937, he pulled the broken four-cylinder in favor of a then only five-year-old flathead V8 from a ’32 Ford. The flathead was soon fitted with what would become one of the car’s trademarks, a very rare set of Maxi overhead valve heads. These heads were developed for Ford trucks to solve the flathead’s famous cooling woes. The intake valves remained in the block, but the exhaust valves were moved overhead. Maxi heads were delivered with two short valve covers per side, but Ed had the cool one-piece covers that bear his name cast by a friend. After some experimentation with different intake manifolds, carburetors, and ignition systems, Ed would settle on the Edelbrock triple manifold and Vertex mag that are still on the car.
The engine was no slouch. In the pre-war era when 100 mph in a street driven hot rod was impressive, Ed managed 120 at a Western Timing Association meet at El Mirage on May 8th, 1942. How do we know such detailed information? Well, the timing tag is still screwed to the dash, where it’s been for almost 80 years.
The Essex chassis was fitted with a ’32 Ford front axle using ’37 wishbones to mount the spring in front of the axle to lower the car. The front brakes are not the Ford juice brakes that you might be expecting. Remarkably, the Ford factory was just switching from mechanical brakes to hydraulics as Isky was building his hot rod. Since those brand-new brakes were likely all but impossible to find in the junkyard, Ed used Plymouth hydraulics on the front. In the rear, the spring was mounted ahead of the Ford banjo axle to lengthen the wheelbase. Both ends use Houdaille shocks, fitted after a particularly rough road trip to Mexico in the T. Kelsey-Hayes wire wheels mount tires that date from sometime around WWII and miraculously still hold air.
The interior features a ’37 Ford banjo steering wheel and a gauge panel from an 8-cylinder Auburn. Now a rare and coveted hot rod accessory, it was just a neat part on a car in the junkyard when Ed picked it up in the late 30’s. The tach is mounted in a cool column drop that was built by young Ed. The leather upholstery is secured to the cut down T body using a trim strip that Ed created from half-round stock and had plated.
A quick search of the internet will tell you that the unique grille is made up of two ’33 Pontiac grill shell top halves welded together. You will also find that the unbelievably cool flying skull hood ornament was cast by Ed himself in his high school shop class. But, unknown to most and visible only when you have the privilege to be close to the car, is the engraved medallion inside the winged emblem from the long-forgotten Pontiac that gave up its grill shell. The medallion is engraved “Iskenderian” and there's a little racing roadster engraved below the name. This is just one of the many examples throughout the car that show the care and attention to detail that went into it. Ed and John were not just kids throwing a hot rod together. This is a carefully planned and well-executed car, and even by today’s standards the results are exceptional.
This car has received plenty of press over the years, including a cover story in the sixth Hot Rod Magazine from June of ’48. But what we’ve never seen mentioned is a description of just how it feels to stand in the presence of this amazing little roadster. For lack of a better word, the car has a glow about it. Sitting static, it almost vibrates with the energy of a life well lived. Articles about the car from the past 20 years or so always describe it with adjectives like “scruffy”, “tarnished,” and “faded.” (Ed was famously once refused entry into the L.A. Roadsters' show because his car didn’t meet their standards.) It may be showing some wear, but all the scuffs, tears, and weathered chrome only add to its charm. Its soul isn’t buried under an over-restored candy shell. It’s an open book, and it’s earned those scars from over 8o years as a hot rod.
So, what is this roadster doing in Nebraska, far away from its California birthplace? For one thing, it fits right in with the other legendary cars, engines, and speed parts in the Museum of American Speed. It also doesn’t hurt that the only other pair of Maxi heads known to exist are bolted to an engine only a few feet away. But maybe the biggest emotional connection comes from the rugged old cam grinder that’s displayed next to it. That was Ed Winfield’s cam grinder, and Isky’s lifetime of impact on racing and hot rodding may just have started at the controls of that very machine. Winfield worked with Harry Miller and was a legend in the early days of racing. He was among the first to really figure out the concept of regrinding a cam to improve an engine’s performance. When an eager young Ed Iskenderian approached Winfield about having a cam ground for his hot rod, Winfield took a liking to the curious, mechanically inclined kid and showed him the basics on this machine. The two remained friends until Winfield’s passing in 1982, at which point Isky purchased the trusty old cam grinder that started it all, later donating it to the Museum.
The Museum of American Speed exists to tell the stories of the people who have built the industry that we love into what it is today. Few people exemplify this principle more than Ed Iskenderian. Ed turns 100 this year. We’re beyond thrilled to call Ed our friend and feel privileged to work with him as we share his car and stories with our visitors. It seems appropriate that the cam grinder that started it all for a young Ed sits within feet of the car that will always be known as the Isky Roadster.
Written by: Joe McCollough
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Hours:
May-September Monday: 12pm-4:30pm Tuesday: 12pm-4:30pm Wednesday: 12pm-4:30pm Thursday: 12pm-4:30pm Friday: 12pm-4:30pm Saturday: 9am-1pm Sunday: Closed |
October-April
Monday: 12pm-4:30pm Tuesday: Closed Wednesday: Closed Thursday: Closed Friday: 12pm-4:30pm Saturday: 9am-1pm Sunday: Closed |
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