While there’s no denying that in the past the Street Machine Summernats in the ACT has made headlines for the wrong reasons, the ‘Nats has grown up. It’s boisterous, but it’s a family affair, supporting a hobby that is often equally family-based.
Photo Credit: Thomas Wielecki
The numbers for 2013 event show that 101,486 paying fans strolled through the gates and 1767 cars were ‘entered’ for the four-day extravaganza.
Photo Credit: Thomas Wielecki
The dress code at Summernats is casual and tattoos are a common sight.
Photo Credit: Thomas Wielecki
Burnout Masters reign at Summernats. These men and women are performance artists. Their cars are perfectly finished showpieces, while their engines are as highly tuned as a V8 Supercar’s.
Photo Credit: Thomas Wielecki
While everyone else parties, some people are here to work. Ricky Caton and Anthony Operoek have the job of burnout pad preparation.
Photo Credit: Thomas Wielecki
‘Coupé utilities’, or ‘utes’ for short, were developed for Australian farmers. But who knows who invented the ute pool?
Photo Credit: Thomas Wielecki
It’s not a batmobile, but this car art helps this vehicle stand out among the other cars. Car artists are sometimes known as ‘cartists’.
Photo Credit: Thomas Wielecki
The ACT police reportedly made no arrests in 2013 and weren’t called on to intervene in any incidents, underlining the family-friendly nature of the event.
Photo Credit: Thomas Wielecki
Dirty Pierre and Moondog are fixtures, hitting up the Summernats crowd with rude T-shirts and even dirtier jokes.
Photo Credit: Thomas Wielecki
Outside, those who mock the ‘show ponies’ and ‘trailer queens’ tucked away in the hall declare their loyalties via a popular bumper sticker, “Driven, Not Hidden”.
Photo Credit: Thomas Wielecki
Summernats 26 created an official Guinness World Record, with 69 cars doing simultaneous burnouts. It would have been 70 cars but show creator Chic Henry made smoke from the transmission rather than the tyres.
Hot rods, rat rods, customs and muscle cars; show cars, cruisers, burnout monsters and drag cars, they all rub shoulders at EPIC — Exhibition Park in Canberra.