Hot Rod Deluxe Year 2014 Magazine Back Issues
199920002008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020
- Is This The First GMC-Blown Roadster?
- Wicked! This Coupe Ain't For Chicken
- New England Hot Rod Reunion
- Hurst Recaps-Reborn! Laser-Guided Louver Punching, Ardun-Powered Deuce Roadsters.
- Isky: In His Own Words
- Straight Outta '58 Untouched For 50+ Years!
- California Hot Rod Reunion
- Fuel Ban: The Day Nitro Died
- Bucky Hess: Go-Fast Rods, Old-School Cool
- It's A Gas! Dragstrip Warrior Lives Again
- The Rise-And Fall-Of Gassers New Rubber On Old Mags Remembering STU Hilborn
- Andy Britio In His Own Words Pg 52
- No Boring Motors! Blown 392 Hemi, OHV Ardun, Offy.
- Autorama: 64 Years Of Cool Customs & Hot Rods
- Inside The Ardun Conversion
- New Series: Drag Racing's Golden Years
- Street/Strip Coupe Not Your Typical Hot Rod Lincoln!
- Vintage VS. Modern Metalflake Paint
- Barn-Find '33 Roadster Remembering Tom Medley
- Where Were You? Drag Racing In 1962
- Olds Power Beats The CHP!
- Street Jewel Shines Again 1961 HRM Cover Car Gets Second Chance
- Mechanical Fuel Injection For The Street
199920002008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020
Hot Rod Deluxe was started in 1999 by Petersen Publishing as part of its Auto Anniversary Series. It was originally targeted to readers with interest in the roots of hot rodding by featuring basic, traditional hot rods and customs without billet and high-end paint. The late 1990s saw growing interest in these traditional rods from the 1950s and 1960s.
After two annual issues in 1999 and 2000, EMAP-Petersen cancelled the title. The editor, Aaron Lasky, went on to create Car Kulture Deluxe.
Fast forward to 2008. Petersen decided to revive the title with publisher Jerry Pitt and editor David Freiburger. It began with a bi-monthly publication schedule that lasted through the last print issue in January, 2020. When launched, the editors envisioned their target audience as younger, rat-rodder types and also those interested in drag racing history. But reader feedback suggested the real audience was older guys ("graybeards") who wanted to relive their youth by seeing the treasure trove of rare images from Petersen's archives. Content was originally for pre-1964 vehicles, but as the magazine evolved content included vehicles from the 1960s and 1970s.
A total of 75 issues were printed from Spring 1999 through to January 2020.