GM Metric Frames: Car Builders Support New OEM Replacements

GM Metric Frames: Car Builders Support New OEM Replacements

IMCA recently announced that new, OEM-replacement GM Metric frames from Speedway Motors will be legal. These aftermarket frames aim to solve the problem of finding junkyard ones, which have become increasingly scarce. It’s a similar action IMCA took several years ago for the stock front clips on modifieds.

“This is definitely a positive for the chassis builder,” said racer and Shryock Racing Components owner Kelly Shryock. “No longer do we have to deal with bent and rusted frames — sandblasting them and cutting off old pieces. Now, you can stack them in a box until you put them together.”

A faction of racers wanted IMCA to allow more conventional fabricated frames.

“A fab frame would take away from what the stock car class is meant to be about — the stock frame class that so many people are now into,” Shryock said. “The last thing you would want is to have a car with a new fabricated chassis that would be faster than what we already have out there — not everyone can afford a brand-new car. Now they will still be competitive whether they use an original [OEM GM metric] frame or the replacement frame. This program most definitely worked first with the IMCA modified division.”

IMCA considered alternatives to a metric chassis, too.

“They even set up a chassis on a Chevelle frame — but IMCA aborted that,” said Shryock. “The Chevelle frame front end geometry would make that chassis a little better than a metric frame. But that would also have outdated a bunch of cars. Hats off to the IMCA for staying within the boundaries to keep the cars in their classes competitive.”

Paul Burger, of B&B Racing Chassis, helped with the engineering of the IMCA GM Metric frames.

“I can’t express how nice of a piece this is,” Burger said. “I knew the internet blew up with this announcement a few days ago. Why?  Nobody making those comments thought it through. [IMCA’s Brett Root’s] vision is the best one for the sport. The new frame won’t obsolete the cars out there or be faster than them. Someone will always have that perception, though — that’s human nature in racing.”

B&B Racing Chassis has already built one stock car with a Speedway Motors frame.

“We will have a second one built by the end of the week,” said Burger. “In two weeks, they will be on a track being tested. We’ve sold six so far — even though they cannot be in IMCA competition until October 1.”

Car builders can purchase the kits now from Speedway Motors:

Burger believes racers will embrace the OEM-replacement GM Metric frames from Speedway Motors.

“Three years from now, they will be praising Brett and Speedway Motors,” Burger said. “This past week I got a taste of what it is like to be Brett Root — and I can tell you I don’t want his job.”

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