SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee

 SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee -

Chuck operated one of the midwest’s most successful warehouse distributor operations, CB Sales, based in Chicago, during the heyday of speed equipment distribution. Chuck was a “doer” in the truest sense of the word, known for being reliable and dedicated to his company’s manufacture and wholesale clients.

SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee

 SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee -

A prominent professional drag racer who is credited with innovations such as the rear-engine dragster design, Donald Glenn "Don" Garlits is a legend of the quarter-mile acceleration sport, a driver whose following of fans remains virtually unmatched in automotive racing sports. He won his first NHRA race in 1955, turned pro three years later and amassed a career total of 144 national event wins and 17 championships. In 1957, he was the first drag racer to go faster than 170 mph, the first faster than 180 in 1958, and the first to the 200-mph mark in 1964.

SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee

 SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee -

Joe and his brother Tom were drag racers in the early 1960s (back-to-back NHRA champions in 1961 and 1962), who got the idea that they could win more races if they could improve the seal between the headers and their engines. Joe hit on a durable gasket recipe and tested it successfully on his own cars. Earliest prototypes were built in his home basement. As it happens in the racing world, word got around to other drivers, and soon Joe was literally “Mr. Gasket,” selling the popular sealers, at first under the Speed Specialties name, then as Mr. Gasket Co.

SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee

 SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee -

Jack was a pioneer of what is known today as a sales representative or sales agent—a rep in today’s automotive industry jargon. He was an innovative planner and marketer, one whose successful career was founded on honesty, integrity and trustworthiness.

SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee

 SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee -

Considered an innovator, Kenny was the founder of Harman Collins, a producer of high-performance distributors and related ignition components for the Ford flathead V8. The Harman Collins units were used extensively in early-days circle track competition and drag racing, and can be found today on the engines of nostalgia race cars. He also had a shop that focused on motorcycle camshafts, called K-H Cams. Kenny’s background included racing Muroc and Rosamond dry lakes.

SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee

 SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee -

Appropriately lauded as the patriarch of the entire performance industry, Wally was the first editor of Hot Rod magazine and the founder and CEO of the NHRA, which he founded in 1951, and for which he also served on its Board of Directors. The beginning of hot rodding and drag racing spurred the start of an industry to serve a growing population of passionate, hands-on enthusiasts, the industry today guided by SEMA. As a proponent of safety in drag racing, he also helped organize the Safety Safaris.

SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee

 SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee -

Jack was said to have drag racing in his soul. He drove a variety of cars in quarter-mile competition, and was a pioneer in the drag-racing world, racing innovative cars of their time. He eventually went to work at the NHRA; he was with the organization for more than two decades, including as executive vice president. Jack was one of drag racing’s most respected administrators. Soon after the formation of SEMA, it began addressing an important issue: product specifications. With Jack’s encouragement and help, a SEMA specs program was made official in 1967.

SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee

 SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee -

He was a true hot rodder, an innovator responsible for the design of motor-mount kits for engine conversions in hot rods, as well as the popular Hurst shifters. George was also a key player in drag racing in the 1950s. And a fact not known by many: George invented the Jaws of Life cutting device used by fire departments and rescue crews throughout the world to remove victims of crashes from damaged vehicles.

SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee

 SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee -

When he was a young man racing his own cars, Ed Iskenderian—or as he was later nicknamed, “Camfather”—had trouble buying racing-grind camshafts. He didn’t like to wait for them. So, he said to himself, “I can make those….” And that was the start of Iskenderian Racing Cams, popularly known as “Isky Cams,” one of the largest specialty cam grinders in America. The company developed the first high-density, chilled-iron lifters for Top Fuel dragsters, and was also responsible for the first anti-cam-walk kit for Chevy V8s and the first offset cam keys and bushings for adjusting cam timing.

SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee

 SEMA Hall Of Fame Inductee -

Mallory Ignition products were the result of a young racer’s imagination. Boots set out to improve the performance of Ford flathead V8s by modifying the ignition, and thus was born the likes of dual-point breaker assemblies, high-output coils and a host of ignition products that carried the Mallory name. Boots was also a driving force in early sponsorship of auto racing—the first Mallory ignition won at the Pikes Peak Hill Climb in 1926—including drag racing and NASCAR. Many NHRA-winning Funny Cars and Top Fuel dragsters have sported Mallory Super-Mag ignition systems.

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