Street Machine

WEAPON OF CHOICE

SYDNEY’S ANTHONY TERKALAS BUILT HIS TURBO BIG-BLOCK LJ TORANA HIS WAY, BUT HE RACES IT FOR THE MEMORY OF HIS BEST MATE

- STORY IAIN KELLY PHOTOS BEN HOSKING

This huge-horsepower LJ honours Anthony Terkalas’s best mate

WITHOUT mates, not many car builds would happen. Our circle of friends is vital to our projects, whether they merely influence the design or are there in the trenches hurling spanners at the car itself. As a result, so many street machiners feel a sense of duty to their friends. Anthony Terkalas understand­s this perfectly well, with a close-knit crew of mates helping him finish this epic, methanol-guzzling, big-block LJ Torana known as PROWOG. However, the joy of completing an 11-year build is tinged with sadness after Anthony’s best mate, Joe Sabato of Hume Performanc­e, passed away suddenly in September 2020.

“I got into drag racing through Joe,” Anthony explains. “We grew up together through our 20s, mucking around with cars, going racing and to cruises and the like, and, eventually, Joe bought Hume Performanc­e.”

There were plenty of cars that came and went in that time, but Anthony has a particular affinity for early-70s Torries. This build kicked off with modest intentions.

“I’d had a blue LJ street car, but then I got married, so it had to go for the deposit for the house,” Anthony says. “So this one was just going to be a street car like my last one. I found a shell in Melbourne, but it was rough – really rusty and it’d had more hits than Elvis!”

After dragging the LJ carcass to Sydney, work began in earnest.

I FOUND A SHELL IN MELBOURNE, BUT IT WAS ROUGH – REALLY RUSTY AND IT’D HAD MORE HITS THAN ELVIS!

“The build snowballed pretty quickly,” says Anthony, who sent the sad Torry body off for a date with the grinder and a chassis table. What came back is a shadow of what rolled off the lot in 1972, with new rails, a stout sheet-metal nine-inch, custom four-link and anti-roll bar, and all set up to swallow 10.5-inch slicks.

“The whole front end was replaced with fibreglass parts, and only the roof and quarters are left,” Anthony reveals. “It isn’t groundbrea­king, advanced hardware, but it will get the job done.”

Once the chassis work was finished, Anthony got on with sorting all the fabricatio­n for the engine-mounting plates and custom exhaust, before the shell was wired in a dry-assembly stage. Once all the rough-in had been finished, the body was hauled off for paint, and Anthony was clear to sit down with Joe to talk horsepower.

“It was originally going to be an aspirated big-block for APSA racing,” Anthony explains. “This is why it has a 10.5-inch tyre. But after that class ended, I decided to go turbo, because if I want more power, I can put more boost in it. This way, as everyone else goes faster, I can add more power easily.”

Starting with a Dart Big M block, Joe put together a stupendous­ly tough and surprising­ly simple combo for the featherwei­ght coupe. The 9.8in-deck-height fat-block swings a Callies Magnum crank, Oliver steel rods and Diamond pistons for approximat­ely 9.8:1 comp, while Comp lifters work on a secret-spec solid-roller cam from Camtech.

The 357cc Cnc-ported AFR heads run convention­al valve angles and have been kitted out with PAC valve springs, Smith Brothers pushrods and Jesel shaft-mount rockers for a solid, stable valvetrain. Up top, an Edelbrock intake manifold wears a Wilson EFI elbow and throttlebo­dy, while Plazmaman injectors

I DECIDED TO GO TURBO BECAUSE IF I WANT MORE POWER, I CAN PUT MORE BOOST IN IT

fire the methanol in, and a Haltech Elite 2500 ECU controls the chaos provided by that 118mm Precision turbo mounted up front.

“Joe asked me how fast I wanted to go, so I told him and let him go building something to suit that end result,” says Anthony. Running on meth, PROWOG has made a best of 1762hp at the hubs on 26psi of boost so far, and Anthony isn’t in a rush to throw everything at it in one go.

“It’s only gone 8.0@175mph, at 60 per cent throttle,” he says. “It was exciting to get behind the wheel and be back at

the track, but at the same time I was shitting myself as I had to get used to it!”

Wisely, Anthony is taking his time to learn the car’s set-up, with a crew of experience­d hands helping him in the pits, including Michael Baghdadi from Mick’s Motorsport­s, plus his mates Tony and Peter.

“I’m making sure the converter is working, the trans has the right pressure and that I go through all the shakedown progressiv­ely,” says Anthony. “I have to get used to the boost coming in and it pulling me; it’s different to NA cars! It’s only on wastegate pressure at the moment, so there’s another 15psi to throw in it. I just want to try to run a six on this tyre, and then I’ll put a 315 radial tyre under it and go racing.”

IT’S ALL FOR JOE NOW, AND IT IS SOMETHING ALL HIS FRIENDS AND FAMILY CAN RALLY AROUND

Having come through the shock and grief of losing his best mate, suddenly Anthony had to ride a rollercoas­ter of emotion in his finished LJ. Ultimately, the car has helped provide a sense of purpose, both for him and the community around him.

“After Joe passed away, I felt like I didn’t want to go out there with the car without him,” he says. “But at the same time, I wanted to do it for Joe; I want to make Joe proud. He was hanging to go to the track and get the car sorted. It’s all for Joe now, and it is something all his friends and family can rally around.”

We’re sure he’d be cheering you on, mate.

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 ??  ?? DASH: The dash mural has a far cooler back-story than just looking good. “I’m Greek, so the eye is a symbol from my culture to keep the bad spirits away,” Anthony explains. “There is Achilles with the sword and dragon, plus my kids’ names, and then there is also the Orthodox cross on the right-hand side of the dash”
DASH: The dash mural has a far cooler back-story than just looking good. “I’m Greek, so the eye is a symbol from my culture to keep the bad spirits away,” Anthony explains. “There is Achilles with the sword and dragon, plus my kids’ names, and then there is also the Orthodox cross on the right-hand side of the dash”
 ??  ?? INTERIOR: Anthony’s Torana sports only a single Kirkey race seat, as the entire front passenger compartmen­t is filled with the Plazmaman water-to-air intercoole­r. He swings off a Grant tiller and Precision shifter, while the Haltech ic-7 dash displays data from the car in real time
INTERIOR: Anthony’s Torana sports only a single Kirkey race seat, as the entire front passenger compartmen­t is filled with the Plazmaman water-to-air intercoole­r. He swings off a Grant tiller and Precision shifter, while the Haltech ic-7 dash displays data from the car in real time
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 ??  ?? ENGINE: Many racers with methanol-fuelled cars are turning to solid-billet engine blocks, as the lack of cooling passages makes for a stronger product, but Anthony’s Chevy-pattern Dart is a wet set-up. “This is the model with water jackets, just to cool it down between rounds and avoid hot spots,” he explains
ENGINE: Many racers with methanol-fuelled cars are turning to solid-billet engine blocks, as the lack of cooling passages makes for a stronger product, but Anthony’s Chevy-pattern Dart is a wet set-up. “This is the model with water jackets, just to cool it down between rounds and avoid hot spots,” he explains
 ??  ?? ABOVE: Data is the key to making modern cars go fast, so Haltech IGN-1A coils feed high-output, sequential­ly timed charges into the combustion chambers, while pyrometer probe sensors in each header pipe read the exhaust gas temps to let Anthony and the crew keep a handle on the tune
ABOVE: Data is the key to making modern cars go fast, so Haltech IGN-1A coils feed high-output, sequential­ly timed charges into the combustion chambers, while pyrometer probe sensors in each header pipe read the exhaust gas temps to let Anthony and the crew keep a handle on the tune
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 ??  ?? PAINT: While the grey paint looks awesome, it wasn’t Anthony’s first pick, as he explains: “My panel beater picked the grey. Originally, I wanted it done in House of Kolor blue with a lot of flake, which is very expensive, so then I said to find a normal grey with a good amount of Xirallic pearl. He suggested grey as a base colour, and it turned out great!”
PAINT: While the grey paint looks awesome, it wasn’t Anthony’s first pick, as he explains: “My panel beater picked the grey. Originally, I wanted it done in House of Kolor blue with a lot of flake, which is very expensive, so then I said to find a normal grey with a good amount of Xirallic pearl. He suggested grey as a base colour, and it turned out great!”
 ??  ?? ABOVE: Covering the Wilwood disc brakes are Billet Specialtie­s wheels spanning 15x3in up front and supermeaty double-beadlocked 16x16s on the power end. These have been wrapped in Mickey Thompson 25x6.5 front-runners and 33x10.5 slicks respective­ly
ABOVE: Covering the Wilwood disc brakes are Billet Specialtie­s wheels spanning 15x3in up front and supermeaty double-beadlocked 16x16s on the power end. These have been wrapped in Mickey Thompson 25x6.5 front-runners and 33x10.5 slicks respective­ly
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 ??  ?? BELOW: Strange Engineerin­g coil-over struts are responsibl­e for helping the Torry get out of the hole, as the two-speed TH400, bolt-together converter and fabricated 9in handle the horsepower. The diff is filled with all the good gear like full-floating, 40-spline axles and a Strange centre with 3.5:1 gears
BELOW: Strange Engineerin­g coil-over struts are responsibl­e for helping the Torry get out of the hole, as the two-speed TH400, bolt-together converter and fabricated 9in handle the horsepower. The diff is filled with all the good gear like full-floating, 40-spline axles and a Strange centre with 3.5:1 gears
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