Before their relationship turned cold and distant, Art and Walt Arfons created and raced together. Their machines were completely hand built, home engineered, and capable of running with virtually anyone of their day. The Green Monsters from Akron, Ohio evolved from crude, underpowered oddballs to crude, overpowered sledgehammers that lived by the creedo of their being no “replacement for displacement”. The guys slammed war surplus Ranger aircraft engines in their cars and then they started a love affair with the mighty V12, 1,710ci, supercharged Allison that was found in airplanes like the P-38, P-51A, P40, and others. The car you see in the lead photo and all the photos below is Green Monster 5. This is the ORIGINAL Green Monster 5, not a restoration or recreation. There are a couple of elements that are different than the car was in the late 1950s and we will get to those, but let us begin by saying that this is one of the neatest old drag cars in the world. After passing through a few sets of hands since being sold in late 1957, the car is now owned by Jon Rowley who oversaw the process of getting the car back into running and driving condition.
Because Art and Walt were always building or changing things, it is tough to get a really detailed, accurate history on some of the monsters. Some of the fun facts about ol’ number five here include tid bits like the one about this car being raced at every NHRA National event between 1955 and 1958 and it had a 773ci Ranger piston engine in it when first constructed. The Ranger engine was mounted upside down and backwards to drive the rear end. While that combo was neat, the big airplane engine didn’t have the necessary suds to make the car competitive. Enter the Allison. With that Ally making the noise, Green Monster #5 ran over 157 mph during a 1957 meet in Chester, South Carolina. The car was built like an anvil and the huge power produced by the Allison was capable of completely shredding any and all tires of the time, so the Green Monster was a mile per houring machine as opposed to a great elapsed time runner. It would make a tremendous top end charge once the car was rolling and somewhat hooked up.
Both Art and Walt drove Green Monster #5 at one time or another. Outside of the NHRA National event appearances, which did wonders to launch the Arfons name into the collective hot rodding consciousness, the Green Monster could be seen at many small and makeshift drag strips around the country. The guys went wherever they could with this car to collect appearance money and race the wheels off of it. The Allison engine was a great choice for a power plant because they could be had for almost nothing at the time, they were dead nuts reliable, and even on its hardest working pass, that big engine was barely breaking a sweat. The guys with the small displacement, blown, gas burning engines that kept blowing up were doing it wrong in the eyes of Art and Walt. Of course, eventually the NHRA decided that airplane engines weren’t the hot ticket when they were vying for corporate support from auto manufacturers. Seeing a WWII surplus powered race car thumping those powered by motors based on Detroit production mills wasn’t good for business. By the late 1950s, aicraft engines were banned from competition and the Monsters became strictly exhibition machines. By then the brothers were rapidly moving in different directions and the camelot period of their relationship was over. Green Monster #5 is super cool in our eyes because it isn’t a Walt OR Art car, it is a Walt AND Art car. So, let’s take a closer look at this bitchin’ historic race car!
The story continues below with photos and captions….scroll down to read on!
“Monster” is so appropriate.
I wanna hear it run!
A couple of years ago they had it at the Concourse of America in Plymouth Mi. Best part, amount some of the most exotic and rarest cars in the world they fired it up! Awesome sound