Walt Arfons
Walt Arfons (born 10 December 1916, died 04 June 2013) is the half brother of Art Arfons, his former partner in drag racing, and his competitor in jet-powered land speed record racing. Along with Art, he was a pioneer in the use of aircraft jet engines for these types of competition.[1]
Walt's mother, Bessie, was half Cherokee, and died in 1984 at age 84. Walt had one brother, Dale, two years younger, as well as his ten years younger half-brother Art and an eight and a half years younger half-sister Lou, both from his mother's marriage to Tom Arfons. Arfons' family operated a feed mill in rural Ohio, where the Arfons brothers exercised their mechanical skills and ingenuity.[2]
Walt began building dragsters with Art in 1952; their first car was a three-wheeler with an Oldsmobile six-cylinder engine, and a particularly ugly green tractor paint finish. The announcer at the drag strip laughingly announced the car as the Green Monster, and the name was to stick to his joint projects with Art. Along with many other racers, the duo switched to using surplus aircraft piston engines, particularly the Allison V-1710 engines, due to their abundance, cheapness, and great reliability. They were the first drag racers to reach 150 miles per hour in the quarter mile. In the late 1950s, however, the brothers amicably split up.
On August 6, 1960, Walt introduced the first jet-engined dragster. He also introduced the use of a parachute to stop the car, since unlike the piston engines, the jet engine did not provide braking when shut off. Arfons is also credited with being the first to torch a junked car with the exhaust from his jet dragster, in order to provide entertainment for the crowd at Indianapolis Raceway Park one year when the race had been rained out.
In the midst of the Detroit automakers' performance competition in 1967, Chrysler Corporation gave Arfons a Dodge Dart, Plymouth Barracuda, and Dodge Charger to convert into dragsters. He simply fastened jet engines into the stock cars, with most of the accessories still installed and working. These were such crowd pleasers that he later built fiberglass-bodied jet funny cars, a Chevrolet Camaro, a [[Mercury Comet], and Ford Mustangs.
Arfons also comissioned Tom Green to drive the jet-powered Wingfoot Express (as a result of a severe hand injury sustained when unloading the Wingfoot upon arrival in Bonneville), which held the World Land Speed Record for three days during the battle between Art Arfons and Craig Breedlove.
In 1965, Walt Arfons built Wingfoot Express2, which reached 605 mph, but it did not qualify for an official record. It used 25 units of JATO rocket.[3]
References
- ^ "Herald-Tribune - Google News Archive Search". Retrieved 2010-03-18.
- ^ "www.thrustssc.com". Retrieved 2010-03-18.
- ^ "Jet Assisted Chevy" in TV program 'Mythbusters' aired on 22 Feb. 2009