The X-Files, Built Not Bought Jared Ian The X-Files, Built Not Bought Jared Ian

Built From the Ground Up: Why Summit Racing Still Defines the Spirit of the Garage

Summit Racing didn’t just sell parts — it built a culture. CommonX dives into the legacy of the garage and why Gen-X still turns the wrench their own way.

There’s a sound every Gen-Xer remembers — the deep, metallic symphony of wrenches hitting concrete, the slow hum of a shop light flickering to life, and a record spinning somewhere in the background while an engine idles between rebuilds. Before “add to cart” was a thing, there was a catalog. And before algorithms told you what you needed, there was Summit Racing — the original source of horsepower, dreams, and busted knuckles.

In those days, your garage wasn’t a side project. It was your sanctuary. You didn’t wait for motivation. You waited for the weekend.

The Gen-X Blueprint: Build It Yourself, Break It Again, Build It Better

Our generation didn’t grow up in a world of tutorials and influencer builds. We learned by trial, error, and torque. If something broke, you fixed it — because you had to. If the part didn’t fit, you made it fit. And Summit Racing was there for every late-night brainstorm, every half-finished beer, every moment you realized “Hell yeah, this is gonna work.”

For a lot of us, flipping through that thick Summit catalog was like scrolling through the future. Every page felt like an invitation to try something you weren’t supposed to — a bigger carb, a crazier cam, a louder exhaust. It was rebellion printed in glossy color.

🔥 Summit Racing – Gear Up and Build Yours

Still Running Strong

Fast-forward to now, and Summit Racing hasn’t slowed down — it’s evolved right alongside the generation that made it famous. From carbureted Chevelles to turbocharged Teslas, the gearheads of Gen-X never stopped building. We just started building different.

That same garage culture? Still alive. Still loud. Still covered in grease and glory. And while the world’s moved to subscription boxes and disposable everything, Summit Racing remains a haven for people who still believe in fixing over replacing. You can feel it every time you order a part — that mix of anticipation, pride, and a little nostalgia for the smell of motor oil and gasoline.

⚙️ Check out Summit’s latest performance upgrades

The CommonX Parallel

That’s why this story hits home for us at CommonX. We’ve always been about the same thing — building something real with your own hands. Whether it’s a podcast, a brand, or a machine, there’s no shortcut worth taking.

Just like Summit Racing, we came up from garages, basements, and backyards. No investors, no filters, no “growth hacks.” Just heart and hustle. Even now, you can feel the spirit of that culture in everything we do — whether it’s the topics we cover, the people we bring on, or the partners we align with.

Richard Karn and the Home Improvement Generation

When we think of Richard Karn, we think of that same vibe — tools, laughter, life lessons. He represents a generation that didn’t just “have tools,” but knew how to use them. That was the golden age of garage life. Every dad, uncle, and friend had a project car or a busted lawnmower that needed fixing. The garage was our classroom, and Summit Racing was the textbook.

It wasn’t about money or showing off. It was about pride — the pride of hearing something roar back to life because you made it happen.

🔩 Summit Racing: Parts. Pride. Performance.

The Rebellion Never Idles

Today, most people scroll, tap, or stream their way through projects. But the Gen-X mindset? It’s still out there, alive in garages, workshops, and driveways across America. It’s alive in every man or woman who says, “Yeah, I’ll fix it myself.” We don’t wait for someone to show us how — we figure it out.

That’s the Summit Racing way. That’s the CommonX way. And that’s what separates the doers from the dreamers.

Full Circle

So here we are, a few decades later — still chasing that same sound of an engine finding its rhythm. Still turning wrenches to shake off the noise of a world that forgot what real work feels like. Still holding on to something pure — something mechanical, something human. Because for Gen-X, this was never just about cars. It was about building something that runs.

So if you’ve got that itch — the one that hits around sunset when the day slows down — don’t ignore it. Open the garage door. Throw on some music. And let Summit Racing take care of the rest.

🏁 Start Building with Summit Racing Equipment

Because the dream never idles.

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🏁 Throttle Therapy: The GOAT Never Quit (Ricky Carmichael)

CommonX pays tribute to Ricky Carmichael, the GOAT of grit, and the Gen-X spirit that never learned to coast. Fueled by Summit Racing and Alpinestars — built for the bold.

Illustrated poster of motocross legend Ricky Carmichael mid-air on his dirt bike, wearing Alpinestars gear, surrounded by dust and motion blur. Bold text reads “Throttle Therapy – The GOAT Never Quit,” with Summit Racing and Alpinestars logos beside a graffiti-style CommonX tag. The artwork captures Gen-X rebellion, adrenaline, and the unstoppable spirit of speed.

By Ian Primmer - CommonX

There’s a moment every Gen-X kid remembers — the smell of two-stroke in the air, a dirt trail disappearing into the horizon, and a hand-me-down bike that rattled more than it roared. We didn’t need perfect; we needed fast. Speed wasn’t a sport — it was therapy. It was escape. It was rebellion in motion.

And nobody embodied that more than Ricky Carmichael, the man who turned motocross from a pastime into poetry — wide open, fearless, and all-in.

Ricky Carmichael at motorcrossusa.com

The GOAT of Grit

Ricky wasn’t born into fame — he built it from the ground up, throttle by throttle, crash by crash. He wasn’t chasing luxury or algorithms; he was chasing seconds. Every turn was a war zone, every fall a test of will. That’s what made him the Greatest of All Time — not just his speed, but his refusal to quit. Gen X gets that. We were raised on scraped knees and loud engines — the analog roar that told the world we were alive. While everyone else was learning to play safe, we were learning how to fly.

Carmichael didn’t just win races; he defined the culture. He was the dirt-track philosopher, proving that greatness doesn’t come from polish — it comes from persistence.

From Dirt Tracks to Driveways — The Gen-X Engine

We’re older now. The bikes might be cleaner, the garages more organized, but that itch never went away.
Every Gen-Xer still knows what “wide open” feels like.

It’s that same pulse that drives us — whether it’s building businesses, podcasts, or lives that refuse to idle.
That’s why Summit Racing and Alpinestars hit home for us. They’re not brands — they’re badges of the same rebellion that raised us.

“If you grew up fixing what you broke, you’re one of us.”

Summit Racing — the garage that built a generation. Power, precision, and performance for those who still believe speed is freedom.

Summit Racing keeps the garage sacred — the modern temple of creativity, sweat, and horsepower.
Alpinestars keeps the body safe while the spirit chases chaos.

Together, they represent the new chapter of Gen-X grit — smarter, stronger, and still addicted to the rush.

🏁 Sponsored by Summit Racing & Alpinestars

🛠️ Built for the bold. Fueled by freedom.
Shop Summit Racing
Explore Alpinestars

Alpinestars — engineered for the fearless. From dirt tracks to street legends, they keep the Gen-X spirit of motion alive.

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