331 cu. in. Chrysler Hemi V8 engine with four   Stromberg 97 carburetors on a Weiand manifold, external exhaust headers,   three-speed De Soto manual gearbox with floor shifter, tubular front   axle, semi-elliptic leaf springs, front and rear drum brakes, solid axle   ’42 Ford rear end with semi-elliptic leaf spring. Wheelbase: 110" 
                 
                This “Aztec Golden Copper” lacquered ‘32 Ford 5-window competition-style   street and show “Deuce” coupe was built by the late Don Tognotti, a   noted Sacramento area entrepreneur and promoter whose 1914 “King T” won   the coveted America’s Most Beautiful Roadster (AMBR) award in 1964.   Tognotti later went on to own and manage the Grand National (Oakland)   Roadster Show. He purchased this soon-to-be radical deuce from Bob King   in June 1960, quickly set about making it a show winner and succeeded   beyond his wildest expectations.  
                 
                An early example of ‘wedge channeling,’ where the body was dropped a few   inches lower over the frame in front than in the rear, (for a more   pronounced ‘rake)’, the sleek Tognotti coupe’s roofline was chopped   3.5-inches, and the roof was filled. It was then radically channeled ten   inches in front and eight inches in the rear, over a 4-inch stretched,   pinched and narrowed ’32 Ford frame.  
                 
                A dropped tubular front axle, a flattened semi-elliptic leaf spring,   with split wishbones and inclined airplane-type tubular shocks smartly   lowered the front end. A filled cowl vent, solid roof insert, and a   rolled rear tail pan completed the major body modifications. The   extended 110-inch wheelbase helped showcase this coupe’s aggressive,   permanently raked stance, and gave it a very distinctive appearance.  
                 
                This hammered hardtop’s competition flavor stemmed from its “suicide”   front end, 331 cubic inch ’51 Chrysler Hemi power plant, eight   individual chromed headers that sweep all the way under the rear axle to   flared exhaust tips in the rear; its beefy ‘37 De Soto 3-speed floor   shift transmission with a competition clutch, external four-into-one   headers, and polished Halibrand slotted and polished mag wheels with    8:20  x 15 Bruce “pie crust” whitewall drag slicks. Inside the trunk, an   18-gallon fuel tank with a Bendix electric fuel pump feeds four   Stromberg 97 carburetors on a polished Weiand intake manifold. A chromed   firewall, typical of popular modifications in that period, reflects the   polished and plated Hemi.  
                 
                The coupe’s lavishly rolled and pleated Black Antique Naugahyde interior   – even the headliner is black – is unusual because the black-grained   instrument panel, replete with period white on black winged   Stewart-Warner speedometer, water temperature and fuel gauges, is   located on the floor between the two bucket seats. The steering wheel is   a three-spoke, race-inspired Bell Auto Parts accessory; the shift lever   sports an aggressive custom shift knob and the steering column has a   chromed rippled cover that matches this car’s competition theme.  
                 
                Period show touches include a neatly filled and peaked grille shell with   an insert made of 3/8ths-inch clear plastic rod and horizontal X-shaped   mesh bars. The lower portion of the shell was omitted and instead, a   rolled front panel covers the chopped frame horns. Circular ’60 Corvair   taillights accent the lower rear panel.  Both the hydraulic brake and   clutch pedals are ‘swung’ units, operated by a matched pair of   chrome-plated, firewall-mounted  master cylinders.  
                 
                Right after it was completed, the altered wheelbase five-window   convincingly won its class at the Grand National Roadster Show in   Oakland in 1961, and starred on the cover of Car Craft the following   year, where it was featured  in a special July 1962 article called,   “Those Swingin’ Coupes/Sedans.” Tognotti’s freshly-built show coupe won   seven major awards and countless others in its first two years of   competition. A show sensation, right from its outset on the circuit, it   took “Outstanding Coupe” at Sacramento, Fresno and Hayward, the   “Sweepstakes” award at Yuma City, first place at San Francisco, and   “U.S. Western Champion” at Oakland. In an unusual move that proved the   coupe’s viability, Tognotti frequently drag-raced this car, as well.  
                 
                After Tognotti had probably won all the awards there were to win, the   coupe was sold to Bob McCloskey and was featured in Rod & Custom in   September 1962. McCloskey added his own racy touches: a GMC 6-71   supercharger, an Isky 5-Cycle racing cam, Hilborn fuel injectors and   lightweight Jahns pistons. These additions boosted the Hemi’s output to   490-bhp.  The new owner also added vestigial finned fenders, front and   rear. 
                 
                Next the Avenger was sold to an Oregon man who reportedly installed a   blown Chevrolet V8 engine. Jack Ivie of Tacoma then purchased the   Avenger and showed it in 1982 at the 26th Anniversary Portland where it   won first in its class, apparently fitted with a blown 327 cubic inch   Chevrolet engine.  
                 
                In 1996, Ivey sold the coupe to Ken McBride, a major Seattle collector   of sports and classic cars, who commissioned a first-class restoration   to ready the car for its Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance showing in the   Hot Rod Class in 2001. McBride’s restoration was facilitated by Don   Tognotti’s original hand-written notes, which detailed every   modification to the car, along with the cost of each item.  Ken McBride   kept all these painstaking records, which will be presented to the   winning bidder.  
                 
                McBride enthusiastically drove the Avenger on the Pebble Beach Tour.   Exhaust blasting and Halibrands flashing in the sunlight, it was the   only hot rod class car that year to finish the driving event. While the   Tognotti coupe did not win an award at the Concours, it impressed   everyone with its aggressive stance and the sound of that hefty Hemi   running through eight straight pipes.  
                 
                Don Tognotti’s Avenger has all the desirable provenance of a top-flight   historic hot rod...a famous owner, a multi-carb Hemi V-8 engine,   drop-dead good looks, multiple show wins, serious provenance and a   well-documented history.  Best of all, it is fast, loud and eminently   drivable.  
                Sold at auction by RM Auctions on Saturday, September 26, 2009 for $176,000   |