Street Machine

HISTORY: ARIEL CUSTOMS

WHEN IT COMES TO ICONIC AUSTRALIAN CUSTOMS, THEY WEREN’T BUILT MUCH WILDER THAN NICK VENARDIS’S

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How Nick Venardis turned an unsuspecti­ng HD into one of the wildest Aussie customs ever built

THE GRANDPA look is a street machining mainstay of the new millennium. Born from the days of highpowere­d yet inconspicu­ous street sleepers, builds with grandpa-spec styling have snowballed, as restored-bodied cars – and general intoleranc­e for our modified car history – takes a strangleho­ld of the modern-day hot car scene.

But for the 50 years prior to Y2K, the last thing you wanted was a car that looked like your grandpa’s. Hot rodders chopped roofs and unbolted guards, while our foundation custom and street machine fraterniti­es binned factory chrome, hubcaps and venetians as they aspired to build individual and unique rides that would never blend in at the bowls club or RSL.

These cars ruled supreme throughout the 60s, 70s and 80s, with all manner of home-soil Holdens, Falcons and Valiants treated to myriad body mods and changes. Brand allegiance was snubbed, with builders choosing to source the best parts for their plans regardless of the donor make or model. The craftsmans­hip of many of these builds was mind-blowing, as passionate Aussies dreamed of emulating their hero US builders such as Barris, Winfield and Roth and got busy in their back sheds.

One star-struck young bloke was an Adelaide teen named Nick Venardis.

“In the mid-70s I was working as a trainee design draughtsma­n for a transport company, but I dreamed of building custom cars after watching TV shows like The Munsters, Batman and The Green Hornet,” he says. “George Barris definitely kicked off my passion for customisin­g and treating cars as an art form. I bought an HD Holden from my dad in 1975 for $800 to use as a reliable daily. He was the original owner and it was your typical grey and white Special with a red vinyl interior.”

Nick wasted no time hotting up the HD. The 179 was swapped out for a stout 192-cuber running a steel crank, Yella Terra head and triple Stromberg carbs. He resprayed the car Sudan Beige and added a neat flame job and Tasman mags.

The Holden was looking pretty sweet in this nowperiod-perfect guise, but Nick had grander plans: “I wanted to build something full-custom, and took it on as a personal challenge to completely transform a car body and its engineerin­g. I planned out a design that would be creative, radical and innovative.”

Nick put theory into practice by donning nearly every trade cap imaginable to complete the build. Sheetmetal fabricatio­n, welding, paint, panel, mechanical and the artwork were near-wholly completed by Nick over the duration of the six-year build.

The bodywork was extensive, with the original HD shell converted to a two-door hatchback configurat­ion featuring a steel tilt-front. The front doors were fitted with HQ handles and had their skins extended to match the fabricated rear quarter panels – inspired by the chiselled profile of the XA-XB Falcon hardtop range – and formed to incorporat­e LC Torana side windows and frames. A Perspex rear hatch was made, which tapered down to a boldly styled beaver panel incorporat­ing ZH Fairlane tail-lamps, a Charger fuel cap and a custom-made rear bumper.

Nick’s initial tilt-front design was based around an HJ Statesman nosecone, but he felt it wasn’t radical enough nor in keeping with the unique methodolog­y behind the project. “The overall shape of the car needed to be specific, with bold, defined bodylines,” he says. “I designed a new tilt-front in 1978 based around an HD bonnet and guards but reworked with a custom sheet-steel nosecone, steel tubular grille, FC Holden wheelarche­s and Triumph Herald side latches. A Torana bonnet scoop was added, which was the only fibreglass piece on the car.”

With the mammoth body constructi­on completed it was time to lay down a suitable hue. Jack-of-all-trades Nick wielded the spray gun to the tune of multiple coats of Dulon Burgundy red, which he overlaid with a gold, silver and red flame job intertwine­d with ‘gas’ flames in blue.

The extensive airbrushed murals were more of Nick’s handiwork, inspired by popular fantasy and science fiction artists Frank Frazetta and Boris Vallejo. “It took two weeks per panel to paint the murals, including the one on the roof, which required the use of scaffoldin­g. It was a massive job but once the exterior was sorted I sealed it all with multiple coats of Dulon Super Clear.”

In between the body mods, Nick had been building a full chassis for the HD; a completely separate assembly to the body was constructe­d using RHS rails tied with square tube for diagonal support. “The chassis was born out of my desire to re-engineer the standard Holden platform but also to remove the need for the front subframe,” he says. “There was no point having a tilt-front that opened to reveal ugly inner guards; there had to be open space to show the engine off at its best.”

I TOOK THE PROJECT ON AS A PERSONAL CHALLENGE TO COMPLETELY TRANSFORM A CAR BODY AND ITS ENGINEERIN­G

The donk in question was a stout 327-cube smallblock Chev, rebuilt with TRW forged pistons and a Revmaster solid cam, topped by fuellie heads fitted with an Edelbrock intake and 650 Holley double-pumper carb. The exhaust system started and finished with a set of chromed zoomie pipes that exited under the front guards, but luckily for Nick he never copped any heat about excessive noise. “The police pulled me up occasional­ly, but more out of curiosity for the HD’S looks than anything else. They even gave me a jump-start once and still didn’t bat an eyelid.”

A lightened flywheel with a Zoom clutch assembly transferre­d grunt through to a Saginaw four-speed trans and 4.11-geared Salisbury diff, the latter located by a unique Nick-designed semi-independen­t rear suspension assembly. An HR disc front end was adapted to the custom chassis, with the braking system enhanced using a mix of VH40 and VH44 remote boosters and an auxiliary vacuum tank. Magnum Eliminator rims in 13- and 14-inch diameters were sourced from local Adelaide wheel icon Sampson Engineerin­g.

The interior was treated to the same attention to detail as the exterior and undercarri­age. The now two-seater sported Fairlane Marquis buckets for driver and passenger comfort, while a modified HQ dash assembly was welded in to replace the original. Red carpet and velour were used throughout, with the newly formed hatch section housing a fire suppressio­n system and the aforementi­oned twin brake boosters.

The HD was first displayed at the 1978 Adelaide Hot Rod Spectacula­r as an unfinished project under the name ‘Twisted Insanity’, before returning in ’81 as a completed build. Renamed ‘Strip Tripper’, Nick and the HD attended numerous shows and earned a swag of trophies. It even appeared in the legendary Australian film Freedom starring Jon Blake and Jad Capelja (Fanging Flick,

SM, Oct ’16). “Do you remember the red panel van that got crushed in the film? I did its interior work for the producers and when they saw Strip Tripper in the shed, their jaws dropped. They just had to have it in the movie; if you blink you will miss it though,” he laughs.

As the 80s rolled on, the interest in customs began to taper off and Nick got busy with family and work commitment­s. The chassis and running gear were sold in 1989; the body was kept until 1998, when a bloke spotted it and insisted on buying it – he remembered the car from years earlier. That was the last Nick ever heard of it, and he’d love to know if the body or chassis still exists.

“True story: Not long after I finished the HD I was approached by producers Byron Kennedy and George Miller – yep, the Kennedy-miller of Mad

Max fame. They wanted the car for Mad Max 2 and offered me $30K for it. I was told in no uncertain terms it would be destroyed in the movie, so I declined their offer; sure it was a lot of money, but I’d poured six years of my heart and soul into that build and couldn’t bear to see it wrecked virtually straight away. That is my biggest regret to this day; not because of the dollar value involved, but I should have let it become immortalis­ed like the other Max cars.”

 ??  ?? RIGHT: A very small selection of the cars and bikes Nick built or worked on under the Ariel Customs banner, including the rebuild of the Honda-based Cyclotron trike that was used in Mad Max; the interior work on the doomed panel van from the movie...
RIGHT: A very small selection of the cars and bikes Nick built or worked on under the Ariel Customs banner, including the rebuild of the Honda-based Cyclotron trike that was used in Mad Max; the interior work on the doomed panel van from the movie...
 ??  ?? ABOVE: The HD cuts a wicked profile with its bold body styling matched by the perfect amount of forward rake, and comes from an era when cars were built to personal tastes rather than a trendy formula. The mix of flames and fantasy-inspired murals were...
ABOVE: The HD cuts a wicked profile with its bold body styling matched by the perfect amount of forward rake, and comes from an era when cars were built to personal tastes rather than a trendy formula. The mix of flames and fantasy-inspired murals were...
 ??  ?? BELOW: The wildly chiselled rear quarter panels were based on the lines of the XA-XB Falcon hardtop range. “I just couldn’t get the shape of those Falcon quarters out of my head,” Nick says. “The standard front doors remained but had their skins...
BELOW: The wildly chiselled rear quarter panels were based on the lines of the XA-XB Falcon hardtop range. “I just couldn’t get the shape of those Falcon quarters out of my head,” Nick says. “The standard front doors remained but had their skins...

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