hot rod - significado y definición. Qué es hot rod
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Qué (quién) es hot rod - definición

TYPICALLY AMERICAN CAR WITH LARGE ENGINE MODIFIED FOR LINEAR SPEED
Hot-rod; Hot Rod; Hot-Rods; Hot rods; Hotrod; Traditional Rods; Street rod (car); Street rod car; Resto rod; Hot Rods; Hot rodding; Five-window
  • ''California Kid'']]
  • 1936 Chevrolet street rod
  • Swedish hot rodders with a 1960s American car at Power Big Meet
  • [[Ford Popular]]
  • Hot-rodded prewar British [[Rover 10]]
  • early hemi]], but aluminum radiator (rather than brass), rectangular headlights, and five-spokes (rather than motorcycle wheels) mark this as a later incarnation.
  • A 1923 Ford [[T-bucket]] in the traditional style with lake headers, dog dish hubcaps, dropped "I" beam axle, narrow rubber, and single 4-barrel, but non-traditional disc brakes
  • shaved]] door handles and disc brakes<!--Is that a four-link rear?-->

hot rod         
(hot rods)
A hot rod is a fast car used for racing, especially an old car fitted with a new engine. (INFORMAL)
N-COUNT
Hot rod         
Hot rods are typically American cars that might be old, classic, or modern and that have been rebuilt or modified with large engines optimised for speed and acceleration. One definition is: "a car that's been stripped down, souped up and made to go much faster.
hot rod         
¦ noun a motor vehicle that has been specially modified to give it extra power and speed.
¦ verb (hot-rod) (hot-rods, hot-rodding, hot-rodded)
1. modify (a vehicle or other device) to make it faster or more powerful.
2. drive a hot rod.
Derivatives
hot-rodder noun

Wikipedia

Hot rod

Hot rods are typically American cars that might be old, classic, or modern and that have been rebuilt or modified with large engines optimized for speed and acceleration. One definition is: "a car that's been stripped down, souped up and made to go much faster." However, there is no definition of the term that is universally accepted and the term is attached to a wide range of vehicles. Most often they are individually designed and constructed using components from many makes of old or new cars, and are most prevalent in the United States and Canada. Many are intended for exhibition rather than for racing or everyday driving.

The origin of the term "hot rod" is unclear. For example, some say that the term "hot" refers to the vehicle's being stolen. Other origin stories include replacing the engine's camshaft or "rod" with a higher performance version. According to the Hot Rod Industry Alliance (HRIA) the term changes in meaning over the years, but "hot rodding has less to do with the vehicle and more to do with an attitude and lifestyle." For example, hot rods were favorites for greasers.

The term has broadened to apply to other items that are modified for a particular purpose, such as "hot-rodded amplifier".

Ejemplos de uso de hot rod
1. Feeling hot: Rod felt the heat in the French Riviera as he enjoyed another break with wife Penny Read more...
2. Petersen, the son of an auto mechanic, founded Hot Rod magazine in 1'48 while trying to promote the custom–designed car show at the Los Angeles Armory.
3. The Army, which joined the National Hot Rod Association in 2000, added Nascar sponsorship in 2003 along with the National Guard.
4. Carrier and Moore also built the Bristol International Dragway and started their own sanctioning body, the International Hot Rod Association, in 1'65.
5. "There‘s something much more romantic about [rat rods], getting on the road and driving 300 miles in this old car," says Kirk Jones, publisher of the Goodguys Goodtime Gazette, a hot–rod magazine in Pleasanton, Calif.