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Category: Classics

Much like Enzo Ferrari a generation later, Louis Chevrolet had ambitions of turning his prewar Frontenac race team into a producer of road-going automobiles. This venture, undertaken with younger brothers Arthur and Gaston, was a victim of the postwar recession of 1920-'21 and retired from the business of building automobiles before it started.

The Frontenac automobile company's most significant accomplishments were when Louis captured seventh place at the 1919 Indianapolis 500 and when Gaston took the checkered flag at the 1920 Indianapolis 500 in a Monroe-Frontenac. Gaston, unfortunately, died in a board-track race in Los Angeles only seven months later.

With the economy at large in crisis, Arthur and Louis were looking for quick cash. Harry Miller might famously have dismissed Ford speed fans as having no money, but with more than half of all cars on the road being Ford Model Ts and the proportion of low-budget racing cars being closer to 99 percent, Louis and Arthur recognized an opportunity.

The brothers enlisted C.W. Van Ranst, chief engineer of their road-car effort, to design an overhead-valve conversion for the Ford engine. Van Ranst's engineering talent, which would later gain him distinction with the Cord L-29 front-wheel-drive system, yielded a cylinder head that was both powerful and durable. Coupled with the brothers' reputation, the Frontenac cylinder head was a winning formula.

The "Fronty," as it was dubbed, was hardly the first overhead-valve conversion for Fords on the market, nor was it necessarily the most powerful, but it was the most successful, with around 10,000 Frontenac cylinder heads of all types sold. The original Frontenac head design featured a single intake port and triple exhaust ports arranged in a crossflow design. It came in three varieties: the R, intended for race cars; the S, for road-going speedster use; and the T, designed for touring cars and trucks. The cylinder head castings were differentiated only by their compression ratio. All three types used the same 1:1.5 rocker-arm ratio to actuate two 17⁄8-inch valves per cylinder.

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The addition of a Type T to a standard Ford automobile would increase horsepower from 20 to 33. Naturally, these proved a popular addition to many mostly stock cars and trucks and drove the bulk of production.

The single intake port of the Frontenac cylinder head must have seemed like a step backward compared with the two ports of the stock Ford. While buyers of the original praised its power and reliability, those on the hotly contested dirt-track circuit demanded more power. Once again, the brothers called on Van Ranst, and he produced a revised design: The Frontenac S-R.

The S-R was largely similar to the R but for the inclusion of two intake ports and spark-plug provisions on both sides of the head. This cylinder head would receive its baptism by fire in the 1923 Indianapolis 500. This was not the first time a Fronty-Ford had taken a shot at Indy, with a pair equipped with the Type R head entered in 1922, one of which finished 14th.

The 1923 effort sported the new and improved S-R cylinder head but was otherwise mostly Ford. Its 85 MPH average speed was sufficient to finish "in the money," with the Ford taking fifth place behind four handcrafted Miller 122 racing cars and ahead of Bugatti, Duesenberg, Packard and Mercedes entries, among others.

The original R/S/T heads continued to sell alongside the new S-R cylinder head, and the brothers conceived something even better to enter at Indianapolis in 1924. A 16-valve, DOHC cylinder head was devised. The new head, dubbed the Model D-O, gave a good performance at Indy, averaging over 88 MPH for the last 300 miles of the race--sufficient to outpace the fifth-place, S-R equipped car in 1923.

As the 1920s wore on, Louis began to pull back from the racing business somewhat in favor of consulting with auto and aircraft manufacturers, leaving Arthur to run things. By 1929, the brothers had formally parted ways, and the company once known as The Chevrolet Brothers Manufacturing Company was now the Arthur Chevrolet Aviation Motors Corporation to reflect Arthur's own interest in producing aircraft components.

Arthur did not neglect his speed parts business, however, introducing more equipment for the Model T, which had now been replaced on the market by the Model A but was still the dominant platform on American racing circuits. Ford owners could adapt the transmission of the new Model A to their T with a "Special Fronty Crankcase for Sliding Gear Transmission," and those with R/S/T and S-R heads could obtain a new SOHC conversion for those units.

By 1930--in addition to the Model T cylinder heads, speed parts and even complete racing cars that had been the company's staple throughout the 1920s--Arthur had even introduced heads for the Chevrolet four-cylinder, the new Chevrolet six-cylinder and the Ford Model A four-cylinder. The last of which is widely considered to be among the most powerful aftermarket cylinder heads for the Model A, though only five were produced.

The economic troubles that began in 1929, would sadly prove far more severe than those that had spawned the original Frontenac cylinder head business in 1920. Arthur's company quietly folded around 1931.

Arthur and Louis Chevrolet never found lasting financial success pursuing their passion for speed, but they left an indelible mark on the American automotive scene. So sought after were the Frontenac cylinder heads that in their time that, "Fronty Ford" became virtually synonymous with a hopped-up Model T, whether equipped with a Frontenac head or not. Even today, estimates place the number of OHV-equipped Model T speedsters on the road at around 500, and enthusiasts continue to seek out, restore and place these cylinder heads back into service whenever possible. That is the real Chevrolet legacy.

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