Show & Go - Kustomrama's Guide to the Cragar S/S Wheel

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This is the Cragar S/S "Mag" - The newest Dimension in Wheels!! An early ad for the Cragar S/S custom wheel that appeared in Motor Trend November 1964. Within just a few months of launching the wheel on the market, Roy Richter had to move to larger premises, and in a short time, he had 20 employees devoting all their time to the new smash hit wheel. Richter had to expand and move once again in July of 1965. The Cragar S/S was a bonafide success, and it didn't take a long time before there was a worldwide demand for his wheels.
"Show on Saturday. Go on Sunday." A Cragar ad from 1966. Back then, Cragar Industries was located at 5829 East Firestone Blvd. in South Gate, California.
It didn't take a long time before show rods and custom cars started experimenting with the popular Cragar S/S wheel as well. Chromed and reversed wheels had been a favorite for Kansas customizer Darryl Starbird since the late 1950s. From 1963 Starbird changed to wire and mag wheels, and the first customs to roll out of Star Kustom Shop on Cragar S/S wheels was his brand-spanking-new personal 1965 Pontiac Grand Prix. "The Pontiac was the first car he put them on," Donna Starbird told Sondre Kvipt of Kustomrama in 2020. "They became a sponsor for us and Darryl used them on cars after that up to around 1975." Photo from The Darryl Starbird Collection.
Also available for your Volvo! In Sweden, companies such as BoMac Racing started advertising Cragar S/S wheels for sale as early as 1966.
In 1966 Ed Roth was tripping out on bikes, and Captain Pepi's Motorcycle & Zeppelin Repair was his shot at predicting what El Caminos of the 21st century would look like. Dressed up with Cragar S/S wheels, Roth completed the build in 1967. Later on, he would rename it The Mega Cycle.
Ray Farhner's Boothill Express was another wacky show rod that rolled on Cragar S/S wheels. Completed in 1967, many consider the Boothill Express Farhner's signature creation. It was a wooden hearse powered by a fuel-injected 426 cui Hemi. The rear wheels were Cragar S/S with a set of Goodyear blue streak slicks. Photo from The Tom Davison Collection.
"Winners choose CRAGAR..........join 'em!" Nationally known drag racer Dick Landy recommends Cragar wheels in this ad from 1967. "Style and stamina for both strip or street..."
Custom cars quickly started experimenting with the Cragar S/S wheel as well. In Wichita, Kansas, Dave Stuckey installed Cragars on his chopped, channeled, and sectioned 1965 Pontiac Catalina in 1969. Stuckey's radical custom was supposedly one of the very first cars to roll on a set of fully-reversed Cragar S/S wheels. Stuckey ran 15x8 wheels in the rear, and 14x7 wheels up front. Photo courtesy of Larry Wolfe.
"Elegance in Wheels..." a beautiful Cragar catalog from 1969.
Howard Gribble recalls Cragars starting to become popular on customs in the late 1960s. In 1971 the Gypsy Rose, the most famous lowrider of all time, made its debut rolling on a set of Cragars. Owned and built by Jesse Valadez co-founder of East L.A car club the Imperials, the car set the standard amongst lowriders for years to come. Howard Gribble snapped this rare photo of the first Gypsy Rose at an indoor car show in the 1970s. Photo from The Howard Gribble Collection.
The first Gypsy Rose was eventually wrecked, and Jesse Valadez bought a 1964 Chevrolet Impala that he turned into the second Gypsy Rose. The second version of the "Gypsy Rose" is the most famous version of the car as it was on TV and still survives today. Just as the first one, the second Gypsy Rose also rolled on Cragar S/S custom wheels. Photo from The Howard Gribble Collection.
If a late 1960s Chevelle is cruising around on Cragar S/S wheels, you’d expect it to have the muscle car look right? Take another look hotshot, this cat went custom instead with the flamed car he named "Choosey Beggar." It appears to have the front bumper and grille from a 1965 Chevrolet Impala. Rules are for fools, remember?! Looking ever so sharp down on the ground with a set of thin whitewall tires. Don’t follow the crowd. Photo from The Howard Gribble Collection.
The 1967 Buick Riviera has a real slick body to begin with. When you remove some trim and door handles and drape it in this beautiful orange color, give it a custom grille along with a set of hydraulics and diamond pattern tuck'n'roll interior - you are striving for excellence. And, that is what you get with a set of Cragars. The right choice for this car without a doubt, and obviously with the thin whitewall tires. Photo from The Howard Gribble Collection.
As time goes by and cars from the 1950s and 1960s are getting too expensive to build on for many, why not start building on what they already did a long time ago. This dude is eyeballing the 1971 Ford Thunderbird, and rightfully so. With a sparkling flake paint job and lots of popping colors, how could he not? Add those Cragars, covered in that angel hair and dude you’ve got yourself a boss ride. Note the Cragar sign by the bleachers and the very wicked paint job on the VW behind the T-Bird. Let the good times roll! Photo from The Howard Gribble Collection.
The owner of this very tasteful lusciously painted 1966 Chevrolet Impala lowrider went for a very earthy, suburban kind of countryside display to bring attention to his ride. The green paint job with all of its art is truly killer, but the Cragars that are wrapped in thin whitewalls and the tri-bar spinners also look stunning. It's down, down on the ground and we believe this car made a lot of competitors green of envy. Photo from The Howard Gribble Collection.
If there is a will there is a way. Just because you have a 1969 Ford Mustang doesn't mean you have to play by the rules and go all street machine. This absolutely fantastic fastback has suicide doors, flared wheel openings, side pipes, shaved emblems, and door handles and by all accounts a great flake paint job and colors. The Cragars he is running with a very deep offset adds to the look and this is something we’d like to see built today. Photo from The Howard Gribble Collection.
Reseda, California, 1974. Erick Weisman started rolling with his club Reseda Boys in the early 1970s. The wheels were still hot, and most of the guys in the club ran Cragars. "I lowered my 61 Impala and put 5/60 tires and 6 inches deep Cragar rims on it." Weisman didn't have money to buy lifts, so he drove it like this, recalling that it was very bouncy indeed. "I got my first traffic ticket in that car for being too low!" Unfortunately, he crashed the Impala and ended up selling it for $50. Photo from The Eric Weisman Collection.
The Cragar S/S, in similarity with the American Racing Torq-Thrust wheel has always had a strong presence in pop culture. This is very evident in the 1978 cult movie “Up in Smoke” with Cheech & Chong, the smoked up duo is cruising around in L.A with their now legendary 1964 Impala named the Love Machine with hydraulics and Cragar S/S wheels.
The timeless wheels also look great on 1970s vans. A skinny wheel up front and a fat 10” in the rear soon became a trademark of sorts for that culture. Photo from The Art Himsl Collection.
At some point the original Cragars that Dave Stuckey installed on his radically restyled 1965 Pontiac Catalina were stolen. When later owner Larry Wolfe restored the old custom, one of the first things he did was to buy a new set. 15x7 for the back, and 14x7 up front. Photo courtesy of Larry Wolfe.
April 12, 2017, The McGee Roadster, The Hirohata Merc and The Gypsy Rose were announced as the 16th, 17th and 18th vehicles to be added to the National Historic Vehicle Register in recognition of their significance in American automotive history. As part of the exhibition, The Gypsy Rose was showcased in an illuminated glass box in the National Mall from April 12-19, 2017. True to tradition, the iconic lowrider sported a set of elegant Cragar S/S wheels while it was on display. Photo courtesy of Historic vehicle Association.
"Show on Saturday. Go on Sunday." The Cragar S/S has always provided a great look for everything from custom cars to muscle cars of the 1960s. As a matter of fact, on any given muscle car event, you're prone to see more cars rolling on Cragar S/S wheels than on their stock rims. It has become so normal that it feels like the big three should have sold Cragar S/S as an option wheel for their muscle cars in the 1960s and the 1970s. The iconic wheel is still in production today and can be easily ordered through online stores such as Amazon.com. Click here to check price and availability on a set of Cragar S/S wheels for your ride on Amazon.com.
While the 08/61 S/S series sports mag lugs with Cragar washers, the 61C S/S features a conical seat or bulge seat lugs. Click here for price and availability on a set of Cragar 61C S/S wheels for your ride.
It is really hard to go wrong with a set of Cragar S/S. Today they even come as 17-inch wheels. Still made in the US, these wheels look great on latter years Mustangs and Camaros. If you have a retro-looking modern muscle car that pays homage to their 1960s roots, this should also be the wheel of your choice. Click here to check price and availability on 17-inch Cragar S/S wheels for your ride.
With the world being what it is today, you can also buy Cragar S/S wheels for your golf cart. Click here to check price and availability on Cragar S/S wheels for your golf cart.
Double whammy, mammy. For Jay Walding of Sacramento, California it is always crucial with the right set of wheels. This 1962 Chevrolet Biscayne that he built is no exception. "I feel that the wheels and tires will make or break the car. Just as if a hot woman with a little black dress would wear some ugly shoes. Ain't happening." Jay's Biscayne has a set of 14x6 restored 1981 Cragar S/S reversed wheels with rare three-prong American Silver Dollar knock offs. The tires are custom made Diamond Back Classics 170-70-14 with dual thin white walls. Photo by Henrik Forss.
Grounded awareness! Cragar S/S wheels connect this sharp-looking 1953 Chevrolet to its early lowrider roots. Photo by Henrik Forss.
Off to the boulevard! Tom Røine's 1963 Buick of Oslo, Norway. Cragar S/S wheels give the car a mild custom look with roots going back to the Southern California cruising scene of the mid-1960s. Photo by Sondre Kvipt - Kustomrama.
A hi-riding 1956 Chevrolet gasser with a straight axel deserves good wheels for that optimal attitude. A set of vintage Cragars will take you back to where it all started. "Look out baby it's a real wild child." Photo by Henrik Forss.
Victor Bowers of Sacramento, California drives this 1969 Plymouth Super Stock Barracuda with a 478 cui Hemi motor on the streets just for fun, to reminisce of his younger days. Running on Cragars was a no brainer for him. He runs 15x8 and 15x6 wheels on Mickey Thompson E/T slicks and frontrunners. Photo by Henrik Forss.
This Hemi powered 1970 Plymouth GTX got a set of Cragar S/S wheels installed the same year it was purchased new in Washington State. The youngster had no love for the stock wheels what so ever. The GTX was street raced and used as a daily driver for a while but rarely used over the next 40 years. In 2020 it was listed for sale. Hopefully, the new owner will keep the time capsule in the same condition. Photo by Henrik Forss.
Roy Richter: Striving for Excellence - A comprehensive and highly illustrated book about the early days of Southern California hot-rodders: racing drivers, automotive engineers, and racing cars, centered around a man that was pivotal to the era: Roy Richter of Bell Auto Parts. Includes 597 black and white photos representing the very earliest days of Bell Auto Parts and continuing into the modern era. Click here to check price and availability on Amazon.com.

Guides, Reviews & Recommendations


BOOM! In 1964 the Cragar S/S rocket thundered off from the headquarters of Bell Auto Parts in Southern California. It was a major blast, and nobody knew back then how long the mission would last. A year, a season, or maybe a decade?


No shortcuts, please

More than fifty years have passed, and the Cragar S/S rocket is still airborne! Still orbiting around the earth. Purchasing a new set of wheels for your ride can be a fun and exciting moment. Unfortunately, it can also be a bumpy, time consuming, and confusing ride. There is an ocean of models to choose from and picking the right one is not always an easy task.


Seek to understand and don' try to reinvent the wheel

If you find yourself in a situation where you are looking to purchase a new set of wheels it is important not to take a shortcut. It is easy to get in a wild head spin, and simply not know what to buy. First of all, you should determine what look you are trying to achieve. Flip through some magazines from the era you want to tap in to. You will see that there was and still is a huge selection of wheels to choose from. Still uncertain, huh? Well, that's why we made this guide for you. Buckle up and climb aboard our rocket ship and we'll tell you the history behind the iconic Cragar S/S custom wheel. We will also show you some eye-catching and sporty cars that have been dressed up with the popular wheel. A picture is worth a thousand words, after all. It has been said that the Cragar S/S wheels are not only known for its performance and good looks but also for its good times and adventures. What is certain, however, is that they are one of the most successful custom made wheels ever to be manufactured. You don’t want to miss out on this adventure?


Adventure. How it all began

The Cragar Corporation was founded in 1930 by Crane Gartz. Crane originally sold aircraft engines and Ford Model A cylinder heads. The company struggled during the great depression, and in 1935, George Wight, the founder of Bell Auto Parts, purchased Cragar from Gartz. After buying the company, Wight began selling Cragar products trough Bell Auto Parts. In 1945 Wight unexpectedly passed away, and Roy Richter, who had been working for Wight since 1933 purchased Bell Auto Parts. Ten years later, in 1955 Richter was also able to secure Cragar Corporation, which then became known as Cragar Equipment Company. Richter realized there was a need for a stylish wheel amongst the rapidly growing hot rod and custom car scene. Roy was a fantastic visionary in the motor industry, and he owned both Bell Auto Parts and Cragar. Richter had been involved in cars from an early age. He was also a professional auto racer before he realized that his real talent was building race cars and products. (In 1967 he also helped form SEMA for the automotive aftermarket.)[1]


The iconic five-spoke design

The design and development of the now-iconic five-spoke Cragar S/S wheel quietly began in 1962. The marketing started in 1964, and the wheels were officially released on the market in 1965. Back then, you were basically limited to hubcaps or chromed revered wheels if you wanted to dress up your ride with some fancy wheels. The look of the Cragar S/S wheel was to some extent influenced by American Racing's highly successful five-spoked Torq-Thrust wheel. However, Roy felt a great deal of improvement could be done on the wheels available on the market, not only in strength but also in appearance. So they designed their own five-spoke wheel, but it just didn’t take off as they wanted.[1]


"It wasn’t until I sketched down the five-spoke design and handed it to Roy in 1964 things really started happening," Jot Horn, a legendary hot rodder and speed racer told Hot Rod Magazine in a 2010 interview. Jot had worked at Bell Auto Parts from 1946 to 1955 and was at this time running his own shop, Horne Equipment Company, merely 100 yards from the Bell Auto Parts store. (A company Jot later sold to Roy Richter and once again become his employee.) Jot manufactured, today highly sought after, speed equipment in very limited numbers. Speed equipment that he first and foremost sold to Bell. After his wheel design was finalized, things took off with a bang for the Cragar S/S wheel.[1]


The first die-cast aluminum wheel on the market

The S/S (Super Sport) wheel was one of the first production wheels to use a cast aluminum center with a rolled steel rim. In 1957 some Cadillac wheels were actually made the same way. Anyhow, both parts of the Cragar S/S wheel were chrome plated, and it was also the first die-cast aluminum wheel on the market. The wheel was designed with ribs and extra material added near the hub. The result is a wheel that offered a load-carrying capacity that was unmatched in the aftermarket wheel industry. The Cragar S/S proved to be nearly twice as strong as a stock steel wheel, but also considerably stronger than any aftermarket wheel on the market. Its classic styling made it a huge success with drag racers, where they really became a benchmark as well as with hot rodders and custom car builders. People literally stormed in through the doors at Bell Auto Parts in Bell Gardens, southern California to buy this new wheel.[1]


Booming business

Within just a few months of launching the wheel on the market, Roy had to move to larger premises, and in a short time, he had 20 employees devoting all their time to the new smash hit wheel. They had to expand and move once again in July of 1965. The Cragar S/S was a bonafide success, and people all over the world started demanding and using them.[1]


The world's fastest wheel

In 1965, winners in three sanctioned drag racing classes, NHRA, IHRA, and AHRA were using Cragar S/S wheels. The wheels even found their way on to that year’s Pikes Peak winner, driven by Ak Miller. One of many milestones for Cragar was when the pace car at the inaugural California 500 at Ontario Speedway, a Dodge Challenger was riding on Cragar S/S wheels. It was the same thing with pace cars at Riverside Raceway and at the Long Beach Grand Prix. By the end of 1970, Cragar had 300 employees and it was evident that this was not a one-hit-wonder. This at a time where the wheels were becoming even more popular, following the trends of the era. Street machines, dragsters, gassers, vans, muscle cars. They all used the already iconic Cragar S/S wheel. Drag racer Dick Landy with his B/SA 1967 Dodge Coronet being one of them. In 1968 major companies such as J.C. Penney, B.F. Goodrich, and Goodyear were stocking them. The Cragar wheel is also known as the world's fastest wheel, as it helped Gary Gabelich's rocket-powered car, Blue Flame reach a speed of 622 mph on the Bonneville salt flats in 1970.


But, the wheels were not only designed to go fast. Far from it

It didn't take a long time before show rods and custom cars started experimenting with the popular Cragar S/S wheel as well. Chromed and reversed wheels had been a favorite for Kansas customizer Darryl Starbird since the late 1950s. From 1963 Starbird changed to wire and mag wheels, and the first customs to roll out of Star Kustom Shop on Cragar S/S wheels was his brand-spanking-new personal 1965 Pontiac Grand Prix. "The Pontiac was the first car he put them on," Donna Starbird told Sondre Kvipt of Kustomrama in 2020. "They became a sponsor for us and Darryl used them on cars after that up to around 1975."[2]


Ed Roth was tripping out on bikes when Richter released the Cragar S/S wheel, and his first creation rolling on Cragars in 1967 was Captain Pepi's Motorcycle & Zeppelin Repair, a futuristic prediction of what El Caminos of the 21st century would look like. Back in Kansas, Dave Stuckey was another early adaptor, and in 1969 he built a chopped, channeled, and sectioned 1965 Pontiac Catalina that ran Cragars. Stuckey's Catalina was was supposedly one of the very first cars to roll on a set of fully-reversed Cragar S/S wheels. The wheels were 15x8 in the rear, and 14x7 up front.


Lowriders

Cragar wheels started appearing on custom cars and early lowriders around the Los Angeles area in particular, but also in northern California, in the mid-1960s. Custom car and early lowrider historian Howard Gribble recalls Cragars starting to become popular on customs in the late 1960s. In 1971 the Gypsy Rose, the most famous lowrider of all time, made its debut rolling on a set of Cragars. Owned and built by Jesse Valadez, co-founder of East L.A car club Imperials, the Jesse's Impala help set the standard amongst lowriders for years to come. The first Gypsy Rose was eventually wrecked, and Valadez bought a 1964 Chevrolet Impala that he turned into the second Gypsy Rose. The second Gypsy Rose was also dressed up with Cragar S/S wheels, and it rolled on these when it later got inducted into the motoring Hall of Fame. Back in the days, the lowriders often matched the Cragar S/S wheels with skinny 5.60-14 tires and a thin whitewall to look perfect.


...and vans, of course

The timeless wheels also look great on 1970s vans. A skinny wheel up front and a fat 10” in the rear soon became a trademark of sorts for that culture.


Cragar S/S in pop culture

Just as the iconic American Racing Torq-Thrust wheel, the Cragar S/S, has always had a strong presence in pop culture. This is very evident in the 1978 cult movie “Up in Smoke” with Cheech & Chong, the smoked up duo is cruising around in L.A with their now legendary 1964 Impala named the Love Machine with hydraulics and Cragar S/S wheels. Since day one, Cragar's become more than just a wheel, it's somewhat of a cult statement. There is a lot of collectors merchandise out on the market to keep your eyes open for. Key chains, belt buckles, t-shirts, and much more.


Series 08/61 S/S or Series 61C S/S?

This is one of the few things you have to consider before you order a brand new set of Cragar S/S wheels. While the 08/61 S/S series sports mag lugs with Cragar washers, the 61C S/S features a conical seat or bulge seat lugs.


I want to join the fun, and strive for excellence!
But, where can I buy Cragar S/S wheels today?

For the true wheel aficionado, there are many places you can buy your Cragar S/S wheels today. You may be into swap meets and can make great purchases of vintage wheels there. There's obviously also all the online market places where you can buy more or less good wheels from more or less honest people. However, our personal go-to place to purchase wheels these days is Amazon. I know, order online may seem like a lazy option for some people and maybe not hardcore or personal enough. But listen, the selection they have on actually most anything you'd ever want to buy is remarkable. And, you don't risk getting ripped off by some shady character, or end up with a set of used wheels that is out of round. When you finally have decided what size of wheel to buy, you simply just click away on your keyboard and before you know it, they show up at your front door! Wheels and tires. Chances are, you’ll find something else to buy as well and therefore you are also able to celebrate Christmas at any chosen month of the year. Smooth sailing and cool cruising - Click here to check out Cragar's own selection of wheels on Amazon.com.


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