RacingJunk’s Top How-To Stories of the Year
From building high-performance engines to perfecting your paint job, our Top How-To Stories of 2024 showcase the most popular and practical guides of the year.
From building high-performance engines to perfecting your paint job, our Top How-To Stories of 2024 showcase the most popular and practical guides of the year.
Customizing a 2024 Mustang for both sound and performance starts with upgrading the exhaust system, one of the most straightforward and effective modifications available. To help you choose the best option, our friends over at AmericanMuscle has put together a guide to five top exhaust systems for the 2024 Ford Mustang, giving you the insights you need to make an informed decision.
In our last issue we looked at the basics of valve lash. We examined a couple of ways to accomplish the job, ranging from the easy-peasy “Exhaust Opening/Intake Closing” (“EO-IC”) method to the more time consuming OEM method.
Need to check valve lash in a fresh cam or new engine? Part 1 of Wayne Scraba’s new two part series will show you how.
With many of us starting up projects during the pandemic, much time was spent in our garages wrenching the nights away.
Part 3 of Wayne Scraba’s series on Fel-Pro gaskets focuses on the intake gasket.
In this introductory video, Matt from MBE gives us a quick tour of what’s going on in the shop this week.
In a past issue, I explained my personal plight with off-the-shelf header fitment. I’m sure some of you share or have shared in the past some of my frustrations with pipes that hit various “objects” inside the engine compartment (and maybe beyond).
In some car builds, the time comes when you realize there is no way on earth a stock, off-the-shelf header is going to fit. Sure, some can be persuaded to fit by way of modifications (hammer, bigger hammer, moving pipes, etc.), but there are many instances where that won’t even help. Or, the cost of the mods (moving pipes) is more than the cost of the headers.
The pandemic hit everybody hard but with events and car shows being canceled left and right, it allowed us to work on those garage projects. Let’s take a look back at the Top How-To Articles.