
Feature
Images by NotStock Photographyhis story begins some four decades ago when Tim Hampel was an 18-year-old living in Little Rock, Arkansas, and spotted this 1953 Chevy 3100 at a local junkyard. Though it was the owner’s personal truck, a deal was struck and with the help of his dad, Tim hauled the five-window home and so ensued a father-and-son project for the next several years—as well, Tim inherited a newfound love in hot rods.
However, as some stories go, by the 1990s, the Hampel Hauler project had stalled and eventually made its way into storage—where it would remain until 2012.
Enter Killer Hot Rods (KHR), a name most of you should be very familiar with from previous featured builds. Over the course of five years, Nick Ryan and his Killer Krew in Texas took what the Hampels had started and transformed the truck into the modern Pro Street beauty you see here.
All three Hampel generations had a hand in the Chevy’s chassis reconstruction; KHR took the platform to the finish line: fully boxed ’rails with Mustang II front and Pro Street/four-link rear suspension with narrowed 9-inch using Strange 35-spline axles and 4.11 gears (each corner dampened by QA1 coilovers and equipped with Wilwood discs). The engine of choice? Of course a Dyers 8-71 blown 486ci big-block backed by a stout Turbo 400 trans! KHR added a variety of custom touches throughout the engine bay—from the valve covers to the cowl-induced air cleaner and all the sheetmetal surrounding—as well as feeding the fuel with a Holley Sniper system and building a custom Hedman/Flowmaster exhaust.
The Hampel family Silver Ghost has been on the road for a couple years now after making an impressive appearance at the inaugural Grand National Truck Show where we first laid eyes on it, as well as earning a Great 8 finalist award at the Detroit Autorama and becoming a Goodguys Truck of the Year Early Finalist.