Thousands of classic cars, muscle machines and custom hot rods cruised through central Illinois as the 2026 Hot Rod Power Tour joined Route 66 Centennial celebrations along the historic Mother Road.
As part of the historic Route 66 Centennial celebrations, the 2026 Hot Rod Power Tour turned the local pavement into the world’s largest rolling automotive festival. For gearheads and Mother Road purists alike, this morning's leg was nothing short of a religious experience. An estimated 5,000 to 6,000 classic cars, custom hot rods, and high-octane muscle machines filled the horizon, converting a routine Wednesday commute into a living, breathing timeline of American horsepower. The caravan rolled into the county via Route 136, making its unmistakable presence known through Heyworth and into the Village of McLean. Lawns were lined with folding chairs, and local folks stood shoulder-to-shoulder with cameras in hand, watching a relentless stream of rubber and chrome. The real magic, however, sparked when the tour made its turn south onto old Route 66. Cruising past the legendary Dixie Truckers Home, the atmosphere was thick with nostalgia and high-test exhaust. Drivers paused for gas, local greetings, and quick snapshots, their pristine paint jobs reflecting the neon signs of the Mother Road. From there, the massive convoy headed south toward Atlanta and beyond, tracing the historic alignment toward St. Louis. It wasn’t just a drive; it was a pilgrimage of steel and spirit, honoring 100 years of the road that built the American road trip. The Gearhead Verdict: From the aggressive, supercharged whine of modern LS swaps to the deep, rhythmic lope of vintage big-blocks, this morning proved that the love affair between the American driver and the open highway is still firing on all cylinders.
Alan Look is a Central Illinois photographer with more than two and a half decades of experience documenting sports, agriculture, automotive subjects, editorial assignments, and commercial projects across the Midwest. His work blends high‑impact action photography with long‑form documentary coverage, creating a visual record of regional sports history, rural life, and the people and industries that define Central Illinois.
