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The History
It all
starts in the spring of 1969. My dad was all of 20
years old. Gene Crane Lincoln-Mercury in Ironton, OH
had a brand new yellow cougar eliminator and a white
with black vinyl top Q-Code cougar sitting on the
lot. Mr. Crane had ordered these cars because he
owned a GT-E that he raced and eventually sold to a
customer so he needed something to replace it. The
eliminator was Mr. Crane's "demo" vehicle and at 60
miles on the odometer he spun a main bearing. The
guys in the garage tore the engine apart and ordered
a new crank and bearings, unfortunately they ordered
the wrong one. When they reassembled the engine, it
shook horribly. They disassembled it for a second
time to find out why. Their visual inspections
couldn't turn up anything wrong. They put it back
together, started it and the same result. The car
sat in one of the service bays for quite some time
until a factory representative could come down to
personally inspect what was wrong.
The factory rep determined they were using a 1UB
(regular cobra jet) crank instead of a 1UA (Super)
crank. Thankfully they didn't throw away the
original crank and through that ordered the correct
one. When the crank arrived the whole rotating
assembly was sent out to be balanced, this occurred
in August. After that there were no problems. In
December my dad came home from Army Advanced
Individual Training and visited his friends there at
the dealership. He noticed that the car was sitting
in the service bay again, and asked Mr. Crane why he
hadn't sold the car and the response was, "Well,
everyone's afraid of it because the engine's been
apart". My dad asked how it ran and Mr. Crane
offered a ride, so they went out behind the
dealership on 2nd Street and "set the polyglas tires
on fire". My dad says it pinned him back in the
seat. After the ride, my dad asked how much Mr.
Crane would take for it. At the time my dad had a
'68 Montego MX 302-4V 4-Speed that he had purchased
from the dealership a year and a half earlier and
was using that as a trade-in. The trade was made on
December 31st 1969 which the picture on the left was
taken that day..
When Springtime 1970 rolled around the car and my
dad were at the track, he couldn't wait to get
there. The best time he ran stock in G/SA was 13.11.
That was on slicks. Roger Gustin of Gustin Brothers
Racing and Jet Drag Racer fame was a close friend of
my dad's. Roger was sponsored by Ford at the time
and had a SuperStock 429 Cyclone. After numerous
discussions with Roger and the service and parts
managers at the dealership came to the conclusion
the car could do much better than low 13s. After
hours of scouring the Muscle Parts publications from
Ford, the conclusion that several 427 medium riser
parts would significantly help the engine breath and
operate better. These parts included: a dual-point
distributor, aluminum medium riser intake and a 427
hydraulic cam. Head gaskets seemed to be a problem
so Mr. Gasket ones were used in place of the factory
ones. All of the valve springs were replaced with
Isky ones due to valve float at max rpm. Finally a
set of Jardine competition only headers which
required the removal of the power steering and
portions of the shock tower braces with an acetylene
torch.
With all these mods the car saw low 12s, but still
wasn't fast enough. That's when 90/10 shocks were
put on for better weight transfer. The stock fuel
pump was replaced with an electric one, a cast iron
timing chain and gear replaced the stock unit for
more accurate timing and a good set of slicks. The
length of the header collector was messed with to
optimize exhaust flow and the final mod was changing
the 3.91 trac-lok to a 4.30 Detroit out of a brand
new '70 cyclone. The need for speed obsession got so
bad and as much as he would've hated to admit it
back then, my dad called in a Chevy guy to re-jet
the Holley carb. Finally after all the second of
tweaks and mods, 11.70 was the dial-in number. The
car was never beat by a single 396 or 454 GM
product. The car never lost to a 383 or 426 Hemi
Chrysler product either on the street or a drag
strip. However, one pesky little 427 Camaro would
give the car fits. Finally after a while my dad beat
the car on the street but the last time my dad raced
that car down the 1320 the F-body won. It was so
close neither knew who won until they got their time
slip. It should be noted that the car was not
undefeated completely, as cars set up specifically
for racing would beat the eliminator, but mostly
stock cars were not much of a problem. One night a
friend that had a BOSS 2 Mustang that the Rod Shop
out of Columbus, OH had worked on beat the
eliminator and won the class, but yet the eliminator
went on to race a hemi charger that night and
handily defeated it.
The last time the car was drag raced it was in the
E.T. bracket and my dad won all the money for that
event. The Camaro guy was the one who talked him
into doing it. By late 1972, the car had
approximately 19,000 miles on it, mostly in half
mile increments. My dad was helping Roger get a
sponsorship with a ProStock Maverick and this became
one of the main reasons for trading the car in. He
traded it back to the local Ford dealer for a Gran
Torino Sport and a friend of his bought it the same
day. The guy took the car out to California and the
last my dad heard of the guy (and the car), the bank
that held the title to the car was looking for him.
Fast forward to June of 2006....when the car was
found in the hands of a very gracious caretaker.
Check out
the progress
for the rest of the story!
Here are the only three pictures in existence of the
car in it's "original" state.
  
Of the
100,085
1969 Cougars,
66,351
were hardtops.
510
of
those came with Ram Air 428SCJ-4V Engines.
304 of
them had Automatic Transmissions. Of them,
162
were equipped with the Eliminator Package.
61 of
those were Bright Yellow and
53 of
them had Black Hi-Back Bucket Seats, of which
17 were
ordered with Super Cobra Jet Engines. Of those,
10 had
Drag Paks with 3.91 Traction-Lok Rear Axles.
3 were
equipped with Hood Pins. Of them,
1 had
Clear Glass.....Mine is that Cougar.
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