Thu, 23 Jun 2011, 09:12 PM

Station Wagons Rule
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By Bob Frey
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Bob Keister
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I've always loved station wagons. There, I said it. It's out in the open. One of my great secrets
is now public knowledge. While some people like Hemi-powered cars, others like high-winding, small
block Chevys and still others like big block Fords, I like station wagons. It really doesn't make
any difference what kind of engine it has, if it's a wagon, I like it. I guess that goes back to my
childhood days when my dad used to haul our family around in a Rambler station wagon. Honest he
did. Or maybe it was those big, wide, long and very heavy Ford station wagons that we had in later
years, the ones that weighed about 9,000 pounds, give or take a few. Whatever the case, there has
always been something about station wagons that I liked. Even in drag racing the station wagons
always stood out. There was Gene Fulton's' classic Chevy wagon that terrorized the IHRA ranks back
in the 1970's. Then there was the fleet of Wonder Wagons, station wagons that actually ran in the
Funny Car class and were sponsored by Wonder Bread. Ok, so they almost ran, but that's another
story for another day. Heck, George Weiler even ran a station wagon in Pro Stock for a while.
Others, like Richard Charbonneau, the great Stock Eliminator racer from the 1970's, and Chris
Barnes with his "Wagons of Steel" wouldn't run anything but a station wagon. Yeah, I'm a station
wagon fan and maybe that's why I have always enjoyed watching Bob Keister race. His wagon, complete
with luggage rack or surf board on top, always got my attention. It's quick, fast, colorful, and
different and it was a station wagon. What's not to like?

Photo copyright 2011 Auto Imagery, Inc.
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Bob Keister is, by his own admission, "living life large these days. Every day is Saturday and
there are extra Sundays in every week." That's because after thirty-five years of running his own
automotive repair station, Bob has finally retired. So you would think that the avid drag racer
would now be planning on attending more drag races than he did during his working years, but that's
not the case. "No, these days I pretty much stick to the local racing. I'll go to a couple of
divisional races but I've probably been to my last national event." That is, unless the spirit
moves him. "I have to work things around my two to three hour lunches and a nap here and there. You
know, everything has its priority."

Keister in his Camaro.
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Like a lot of other drag racers Bob began racing at a very early age. In 1957 he started out with a
classic 1955 Chevrolet that he ran in the D/X class. "It had a 302 cubic inch engine and it ran
very well," he said. After racing that for a short period of time Bob went into the Navy and
eventually spent two tours of duty in Vietnam. After getting out of the service and spending some
time in California, Bob headed back to his roots in the southern part of New Jersey, and that's
when both his business and his racing careers took off. With the same '55 car that he had before
the Navy, Bob switched over to Modified Production with a car that was just as much at home on the
street as it was on the strip. "Back then you could set a car up so it could be a race car and a
street car," he said. "As competitive as things are now you really couldn't do that anymore." The
venerable '55 eventually gave way to a 1970 Camaro that fit into the E/MP class and Bob was as
competitive as any E/MP car in the country. "It had a 302 engine and we set the national record
with it at Gainesville in 1978." After the success he had with that car Bob sold it and then chose
to sit out for a while, but his layoff was brief. "I missed it and wanted to get back and I wanted
a car that was a little different, and believe it or not all it took was a trip to the junkyard and
that's when I got my first station wagon." Bob didn't know it at the time but a legend, or at least
a really cool car with a great story, was born in that junkyard.

1964 Chevrolet Nova Wagon |
The car Bob got was a 1964 Chevrolet Nova wagon. The first thing he did to turn it into a race car
was get a chassis kit that included everything he needed for the frame, the roll cage and all of
the other required items. "It was a lot of fun putting it together and it immediately got a lot of
attention. The late Steve Collison saw it at the track and wanted to do a story for Super Stock
Magazine." A trip to the defunct Vineland Speedway, a track near Bob's home, was all Steve needed
for the article. "The car always has attracted a lot of attention and Steve had fun doing the story
at the old Vineland track." One of the reasons that fans like the car is not so much the fact that
it's a station wagon, although that often is the first reason they check it out, but what Bob has
painted on it. "In the beginning we had a surf board painted on the roof and folks loved it. After
that we changed it and made it look like a more traditional station wagon and that included two
pieces of luggage and a sleeping bag on the roof. A guy by the name of 'Henry the Brush' painted it
and we still have that on the car today." What he doesn't still have on the car are four doors.
"No, I wanted to make it into a two door car and so we did. The Novas didn't come as a two door
wagon in that year, but we cut it up, changed the body panels, put the bigger doors on it and all
of a sudden it's a two door." And that's the car as it races today. All the while, through the
different paint jobs and door configurations, Bob either ran the car in Super Gas or as a Super Pro
car at his local track, Atco Raceway in New Jersey. "Even when I ran it as a Super Pro car I still
kept the throttle stop on because it would help me learn for when I went Super Gas racing." And
while he never did win a national or divisional event event, he did go rounds with it on several
occasions. "I went six rounds at the Division 1 race at Maple Grove last year and that was a lot of
fun."

Photo copyright 2011 Auto Imagery, Inc.
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When you talk with Bob you'll quickly discover that most of the things he does are a lot of fun.
"I've really enjoyed racing and now my son, BJ, drives the car and I enjoy watching him. He's
putting on a Super Gas race at Numidia later this year and I hope a lot of the East Coast guys come
to support him." As for Bob, the question is will he make his son's race. "I don't know, I've got a
pretty busy schedule. I guess I could skip a lunch and go up there with him. We'll see. I'm pretty
busy you know." Those lunches, by the way, have caused another change in the venerable Nova. "All
the years I ran it the car weighed about 2,650 pounds, but I think it's up to about 2,675 now," he
said with a laugh. Even with the extra weight, if indeed the car is heavier now, Bob and his son
know one thing, wherever they go people will stop by, take a look at the car and tell them how much
they like it. After all, it's a station wagon and what's not to like about a 1964 Nova two-door
station wagon with a 454 cubic inch engine in it, even if Chevrolet never did make such a vehicle.
Come to think of it, after seeing Bob's car, maybe they should have.


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