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  2. Hurst Performance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurst_Performance

    Hurst Performance was originally named Hurst-Campbell. The company was established in 1958 as an auto repair shop when George Hurst and Bill Campbell were both young men. The original shop was located on Glenside Ave. in Glenside, Pennsylvania. They later moved to a large building on the corner of Street Road and Jacksonville Road in Warminster ...

  3. Suicide clutch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_clutch

    Old-style tank shift. Regular clutch hand Shifter - This is where the shifter is a regular knob either located on the tank, which operates through a linkage to the transmission (tank shifter) or on a lever bolted directly to the top of the transmission (jockey shifter or slap shifter depending on the transmission design) and involves the semi-complex task of foot clutch operation and hand ...

  4. Hurst Hemi Under Glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurst_Hemi_Under_Glass

    Hurst Hemi Under Glass is the name given to a series of exhibition drag racing cars campaigned by Hurst Performance between 1965 and 1970 across North America and ended with the '68 model year. Each wheelstander was based on the current Plymouth Barracuda for the corresponding model year.

  5. Oldsmobile Hurst/Olds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oldsmobile_Hurst/Olds

    The 1972 Hurst/Olds was actually developed by Hurst Performance, and not Oldsmobile. Due to a tragic accident involving the 1971 Indy Pace car, a Dodge Challenger, the major auto manufacturers were reluctant to provide the pace car for the 1972 Indy race. Hurst Performance stepped up and volunteered to sponsor the 1972 Pace car.

  6. AAMCO Transmissions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AAMCO_Transmissions

    AAMCO Transmissions Inc. is an American transmission-repair franchise founded by Robert Morgan [1] and Anthony A. Martino (who used the first letter of each name to form the names AAMCO and later MAACO) in 1957 in Philadelphia.

  7. Lever arm shock absorber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lever_arm_shock_absorber

    A design for a hydraulic lever arm shock absorber was patented by Georges de Ram in 1925, [2] and the design was further developed during the post-war period. [ note 1 ] This type of shock absorber had a large cast body containing a cylinder and pistons attached to a similar spindle and lever arm. [ 1 ]