Street Machine

CONCEALED WEAPON

Reece Pagel’s stunning HT Holden proves the apple never falls far from the tree

- STORY SIMON MAJOR PHOTOS NATHAN DUFF

HOW many people can lay claim to both of their parents having had cars featured in magazines? I can think of maybe two or three candidates tops, and Brisbane’s Reece Pagel is definitely one of them.

“I had no choice but to be into cars,” Reece says. “I was around them from the start, especially HK, HT and HG Holdens. My dad, Wayne, built the GAS69 HT Monaro back in the 80s [SM, Jun ’86] and my mum Sandy still owns her QIK68 HK Premier [SM, Jul/aug ’92].”

With genes like that, it was virtually a given that Reece would follow suit, and it wasn’t long before an HK/T/G project started brewing. “I had an HK sedan as a daily driver that I was trying to do up but keep on the road at the same time. It made the whole build a slow process, and as a landscaper, a sedan is a less-than-ideal work vehicle.”

So Reece found a ute for daily bashing instead and the HK was parked up and readied for a full rebuild. “It was at that time that an HT shell came up for sale on Facebook at a tempting price,” he explains. “A family friend owned it and it’d already been repaired and prepped. It seemed like a better starting point and looked to be a good, clean, straight shell.”

A sandblast was still on the cards – more for peace of mind and the certainty that there would be no long-term hidden surprises – and thankfully it only revealed a few gremlins. Any body repairs and mods were a joint effort by Josh Cardeno of Swains Motor Body Repairs and Craig Walpole from Extreme Custom Engineerin­g. Josh then donned the paint suit and laid down the custom-mix Driftwood beige.

“The factory colours were white with a teal interior, and although the subtle influence was high on the agenda, white was just too plain,” Reece says. “The beige keeps it in the sleeper zone but stamps an identity for the car too.”

But the chances of the ’T packing a 161 and Stromberg are pretty much blown once you spy the engine hardware poking through the bonnet. That Holden stroker donk is actually the second engine to fill the pin-neat ’bay in as many years.

“I’ll keep it short and sweet, as it’s a dishearten­ing tale,” Reece sighs. “I paid a fair bit for a running 355-cuber that lasted about 30km. We busted our arses to get the car finished for Summernats 29, and on the last day in Canberra I gave it a bit of stick, showing off to Dad. It snapped the crank, so that was it. It took me about four hours of sustained silence to calm down!”

Down but not out, Reece soon developed a plan B: Wes from Wes Race Engines built a fresh donk, filling it with some of COME Racing’s proven Aussie plastic-fantastic goodies including a cast 383-cube stroker crank and H-beam rods, with Probe pistons and Total Seal rings rounding out the short combo. A Crane solid-roller camshaft and lifter kit operate Comp springs and Ferrea valves housed in COME 590 alloy heads.

That delicious tunnel-ram is the handiwork of Andrew and Megan from Bliss Custom Machining, and is topped with twin 750cfm Pro System carbs that just peek through the HT’S bonnet.

Extreme Custom Engineerin­g sorted the pipes, which consist of custom 1/8-inch primary headers mated to a twin three-inch stainless V-band exhaust system with dual Magnaflow mufflers. Extreme was also responsibl­e for the alloy radiator that helps the HT remain calm during a Queensland summer, ably assisted by a 16-inch SPAL fan.

An MSD 6AL-2 ignition and 8.5mm leads work in conjunctio­n with a Crane distributo­r, while a Magnafuel 300 pump keeps ample 98-octane at the ready.

An output of 633hp@6850rpm is more than sufficient to obliterate the treads and a happy starting point for Reece, with more to come once the combinatio­n is further refined.

To get that power to the treads, an Al’s Race Glides Turbo 400 transmissi­on was chosen running a full-manual, reverse-pattern valvebody and fronted by a TCE 5200rpm converter. The original banjo diff is still in hiding, so a nine-inch was chosen to round out the drivetrain and is filled with a Truetrac centre, 3.89:1 gears and 31-spline Tom’s axles.

HQ disc and drum brakes are activated by a Wilwood master cylinder, and the standard HT steering and suspension remain,

albeit receiving a full reconditio­n and healthy four-inch drop front and rear. Sumitomo white walls in 185 and 195 sizes are considered a pro street combinatio­n in the sleeper scene, and those 195 rears struggle terribly to provide anything resembling satisfacto­ry traction.

People have been building H/K/T/GS for nearly 50 years, so it can be difficult to create a fresh and innovative interior, especially if you retain the standard fixings; Reece has broken through that barrier thanks to clever colour choices and an eye for detail. “I was keen to use red vinyl so it would pop against the beige exterior, but didn’t want it to be one big solid blob of colour when you opened the doors,” he explains. “I took a gamble and chose to fit buckskin carpet instead of red – when I pictured it in my mind I was confident it would work – and I think it provides the perfect balance of contrast without clashing.”

We couldn’t agree more, and the use of black instead of chrome for the scuff plates complement­s the seatbelts and the selective use of black detailing featured throughout the HT. The super-neat rollcage is more handiwork from Extreme Custom Engineerin­g, which along with the stock twirler was colour-coded to suit.

At just 22, Reece has accomplish­ed more than many twice his age, and it’s the result of a massive amount of his own hard work plus help from his family and friends: “I work the landscapin­g gig full-time and have my own part-time business as a personal trainer, so I pretty much work all day, every day. But I know what I want, so sometimes you just do what it takes to afford these sorts of toys.

“The HT came home as a painted bare shell on 12 Dec 2015, so we only had 21 days to assemble it first time ’round for Summernats 29. It was a crazy build. Our mate Keven came down from Maryboroug­h and stayed for two weeks to help, while another friend Joe gave up plenty of his spare time to pitch in too. It was trimmed and had a custom exhaust made in that time also!

“I have to thank my mum and especially my dad. He busted his arse to help me get the HT finished, but I think it inspired him a little too and gave him a bit of the bug back for his own projects. He has an HT Premier in the build and it’s going to be killer; you just wait until you see that thing finished!”

 ??  ?? Like Auto Drags to Adelaide, hubcaps with whitewalls have been a Brisbane calling card for 20-odd years, helping to disguise toughies in a state with a regime of archaic modificati­on rules hammered home with strict enforcemen­t. There was even an...
Like Auto Drags to Adelaide, hubcaps with whitewalls have been a Brisbane calling card for 20-odd years, helping to disguise toughies in a state with a regime of archaic modificati­on rules hammered home with strict enforcemen­t. There was even an...
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 ??  ?? Reece’s mum Sandy owns this Beetle, which was bought new by her uncle back in ’63. “He passed away three years ago and it was a little beaten up, so we decided to restore it in his memory,” Reece says. “There’s a lot of history in that VW too, as many...
Reece’s mum Sandy owns this Beetle, which was bought new by her uncle back in ’63. “He passed away three years ago and it was a little beaten up, so we decided to restore it in his memory,” Reece says. “There’s a lot of history in that VW too, as many...

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