The 7th Annual Nitro Revival was a resounding success as veteran drag racers from around the country converged at Irwindale Speedway near Los Angeles. Thousands of fans celebrating the racers and machines who contributed to the legacy of drag racing also made the trip to see these legends take to the track.
Produced by Steve “Big Hook” Gibbs and his daughter, Cindy, the Nitro Revival is an outgrowth of the California Hot Rod Reunion in Bakersfield, which Gibbs was instrumental in launching in 1992. As Gibbs recalled, “We wanted a place —other than a funeral— where racers could get together.”
One of the early CHRR attendees was Bill Pitts, who had restored the innovative “Magicar” fuel dragster built by Kent Fuller and campaigned by Ronnie Winkle and Kaye Trapp (driven by Gerry Glenn and Jeep Hampshire). Pitts would fire the car up periodically and draw big crowds. Soon, other AA/FDs from the ’60s appeared at the CHRR. In 2000, nine fuel cars did push-starts and lined up on the fabled Famosa strip. The first “Cacklefest”, a term coined by then-NHRA Motorsports Museum curator Greg Sharp, was born. The hugely popular spectacle motivated racers from all over the country to seek out and restore many seminal machines, with Cacklefest participants growing precipitously.
But in 2016, everything was disrupted by NHRA’s former in-house legal counsel who deemed the cackle event unsafe and set things in disarray. This prompted Gibbs to resign from his position with NHRA after 48 years. The following year, a major cackle car proponent, the late Ron Johnson and Gibbs staged the inaugural “Nitro Revival” at the 1/8-mile track at Barona, near San Diego in 2017. It has grown each year, which brings us to the 2024 edition.
People are an important part of drag racing history. The honorees for this year included the late Steve Evans, most famously known…
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