Photography by Luke Munnellome builds take a weekend. Some take a few years. Greg Zulim’s jaw-dropping 1931 Ford five-window coupe? Try six decades.
Greg first got his hands on this steel Model A back in 1964 as a high schooler, driving it daily for five years straight through college. But like any true hot rodder, he never stopped tinkering. After 42 years of blood, sweat, and plenty of late nights in the shop, Greg finally called it “done” in 2006. Greg works with his son, Russell, who is a bodyman, painter, and fabricator, which is the nucleus of Double Z Rods. A well-built hot rod is timeless and ageless—and this Model A proves that.
The result? Pure perfection. This year alone, his 1931 Ford coupe earned First Place at the Grand National Roadster Show for Best 1926-1936 Chopped Coupe. Not bad for a car that’s been hauling “backside” to Pleasanton (California), Bakersfield (California), and the Famoso Dragstrip for decades.
The real party piece? A hefty 6-71 blower sitting on a Don Hampton manifold, force-feeding a pair of 500-cfm Edelbrock AVS2 four-barrel carbs. A Holley electric pump keeps the fuel flowing, while MSD ignition and Mallory wires make sure every drop of gas gets burned. The exhaust? Greg put together the custom 1-7/8-inch tube headers, which dump into four exhaust pipes with four glasspacks—because sometimes you need to wake the neighbors.
The chassis is mounted on a Total Cost Involved Model A frame with an extended wheelbase, and the front crossmember is moved forward 1-1/2 inches for better proportions and to match the 1932 wheelbase. At the front, a Super Bell 4-inch drop I-beam axle along with a Vega steering box handles steering plus traditional chrome-plated tube shocks, while a pair of Total Cost Involved four-bars locates the front suspension.
Rolling stock is pure old-school cool: polished American mags measuring 15×4.5 in the front and 15×8.5 in the rear, wrapped in skinny Firestone 145SR15s up front and fat M/T Radir 8.20×15 slicks out back.
The front fenders lost their body line and had the bead moved forward for a Deuce-like look, while the rears were shortened by 1-1/2 inches and kicked up 2 inches at the back. Rootlieb crafted a killer hood with the fold line tucked under the body bead for that clean 1932 Ford vibe.
The entire package features a stunning DuPont Fast Red paintjob applied by Greg, who also did the outstanding bodywork, with traditional pinstriping by Jimmy the Striper.
After 60 years of ownership and countless miles of pure driving pleasure, Greg’s 1931 shows that the best builds aren’t just about the destination—they’re about enjoying every mile of the journey.