Hot Rod Year 2011 Magazine Back Issues
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- Inside The Life Of A Hot Rod Mag Photographer Of The '50s
- Our Latest Project Car Disco Z28
- Man Vs. Metal True Stories Of Speed Roadside Survival And A Fight To The Finish
- How To Run Your First Open Track Day And Not Look Like An Idiot!
- She's 22, She's Hot, She's A Nitro Funny Car Champ
- 25 Recipes For LS V8 Power America's Hottest Engine Swap!
- 830 LB-FT ZR1 Motor
- Mustang With A GM LS1
- How Bogus Is Your Local Chassis Dyno?
- How To Hop Up Any Oddball Engine
- How To Get Perfect Paint
- Project Z28 Complete Transformation
- How To Buy Your First Welder - Easy Turbo Hemi
- 520ci Boss Can Til Ever Suspension!
- This Is War Ford Vs. Chevy 2012 Muscle
- Where's The Z28? Tell GM What You Want
- Nascar Racer Clint Bowyer Drives A Retro Rod
- These Guys Are Nuts 2,000HP Street Cars Exposed
- Hot Rod Top Speed Challenge
- Corvette Abs For Your Pro Touring Car
19481949195019511952195319541955195619571958195919601961196219631964196519661967196819691970197119721973197419751976197719781979198019811982198319841985198619871988198919901991199219931994199519961997199819992000201120122014201520162017201820192020202120222023
Robert E. Petersen launched Hot Rod magazine in 1948 to coincide with the first Southern California Timing Association (SCTA) Exposition in Los Angeles. This magazine closed a needed gap in hot rod coverage after the demise of Throttle magazine at the start of World War II. It gained success quickly, and many imitators followed. Petersen's success allowed him to launch Motor Trend and many other titles.
The first magazines were 9" by 12" and were bigger than the popular pocket- or digest-sized magazines that came later. The size was reduced to 8-1/2" by 11" with the October, 1949 issue. This magazine marks the beginning of a golden age in automotive publications, and it set the style for much more to come.
Hot Rod has always been a generalist rodding magazine, successfully covering all aspects in the world of wheels from hot rods, customs, muscle cars, drag racing, dune buggies, vans, etc. Like other Petersen titles like Car Craft, in the mid-1960s content began slowly shifting away from pre-1948 vehicles and instead embraced Detroit classics from the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s. This fact is represented by the re-grouping of the title into the performance & muscle genre for all issues from 1965 forward.
Rod & Custom was a sister magazine in the Petersen empire. When it ended for a second time in May 1974, it was folded into Hot Rod magazine.