Free Updates
Search
Navigation
Links
|
 Monday, January 14, 2008
No Cigar! (A Car Museum Worth Seeing)
Posted by John
So I told you last week that I was going to a racing car trade show at Lefthander Chassis, a business located just across the Wisconsin border in Roscoe, Illinois. And the president of Lefthander, Wayne Lensing, tells me he also has a museum I should see. So I'm thinking of a dusty little pole building with things like Richard Petty's go-kart and Barney Oldfield's goggles (oe maybe Barney's last cigar).
So I get off I90/I39 at the last exit before the Illinois Tollway, turn right and go not too far, and here's this big sign "TRADE SHOW." And at the end of the street is this huge building with a parking lot full of cars and "Historic Auto Attractions" lettered on it. I go inside and see a Ford V-8 chassis, a cut-a-way Stutz display engine and a similar Carterpillar engine and some large tin signs for sale. About what I expected. Then I go to the registration desk and the pretty little gal points me towards a set of doors off to my right. I go through them and I'm like a kid in an old-car candy store.
Here's a list: John Dillinger car, Bonnie & Clyde movie car, Al Capone beer truck (I remember the Chicago auction where this one sold), Conway Twitty's Lincoln, the Johnny Cash one-piece-at-a-time Caddy, an Elvis car, a '53 'Vette, a room full of Presidential cars from Roosevelt up, plus cars from the Royal Family, Peron, King of Siam (ex-Imperial Palace), etc. Then an old ambulance, a room packed with racing cars, a room of Super Hero Cars (including the Ghostbuster wagon), a room of TV cars, Stalin's '37 Packard . . . the list (and the cars) just goes on and on.
Like I said, it's called Historic Auto Attractions. The place is easy to find. I must have driven past it on the highway hundreds of times. It offers you a fantastic journey through time. It's definitely a must for your summer travel list if you live in the Midwest or if you're passing through the Chicago area. Visit www.historicautoattractions.com to get all the other details. It's definitely worth a long visit.
Monday, January 14, 2008 3:29:13 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
|
|
 Friday, January 11, 2008
Fun With Old Car Magazines
Posted by John
One of my first retirement projects is to sort out and organize my car magazines. Over the years I have collected thousands of publications from classic issues of Speed Age to the lastest Old Cars Weekly. Years ago I had nice book cases built by a friend to store my library, but then things slowly got out of hand. I found myself stuffing magazines in file drawers and cabinets. I have plastic bags and canvas bags stuffed with periodicals. I have cardboard boxes full of magazines that publishers handed out at the last three SEMA Shows. I have copies of Auto Trim and Restyling News, Modern Tire Dealer,Undercar Digest, Car Life, DUB, etc. I have just about anything you could imagine in car magazines.
Other folks say "throw them out" or "take them to the pulp factory," but I have been a car magazine lover since I hid Hot Rod in my math text book and read it in Miss Whitney's eighth-grade home room. If old Miss Whitney didn't get my HRM, the pulp factory won't either.
Now that I'm working for myself, I'm trying to get my magazines oranized into 3-drawer plastic storage units that I stack on wire shelves. So far I have filled about 60 of these on seven wire shelves and I figure I might be 20 percent done at best. The magazines will be stored in my car building. They'll be a bit cold, but I don't think that will hurt them. A few bugs will get in the plastic drawers, but the alternative was stacks of magazines all over the house, and I don't think that was better.
The fun thing about this project is re-reading all those great old stories from the '50s, '60s and '70s. The sad thing is looking at the original prices of those cars and thinking how much I could make today if I could buy the same cars for those factory prices. Wow!
My magazines may not stay mint, but at least I'll be using them and enjoying them again.
Friday, January 11, 2008 10:48:48 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
|
|
I Have Written Many Articles About Restoration Work In Which I Tell People To Make Sure They Take Pictures Of
Posted by John
I have written many articles about restoration work in which I tell people to make sure they take pictures of things before they take them apart. But sometimes you also have to THINK BEYOND THE CAMERA.
Tonight we were putting the twin S.U. carbs back on my MG Magnette and we couldn't remember how the float bowls were oriented. Did the fuel line run to the rear carb or the front one? How about the line between the two carbs - how was it routed?
I remembered that I had diligently taken photos of the engine bay the day the car arrived. All I had to do was look at them, right?
Wrong. A few months after getting the car I bought a second engine on eBay. It turned out to be slightly different. When I complained, the seller said it was the correct type of engine. It was then that I realized the car had an MGA engine in it. That was the engine I took photos of. (I never did take photos of the second engine, until after we removed the carbs.)
Bottom line: The photos I had weren't going to help much. I had planned everything so well, but I forgot to think beyond the camera.
Friday, January 11, 2008 4:26:22 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
|
|
 Thursday, January 10, 2008
Hobby Is Heading To A New Level in 2008
Posted by John
My senses tell me the old-car hobby is heading to a new level in 2008. This isn't just corporate hype. In fact, I don't even work for the corporation anymore. I can tell it straight and the worst they can do is take my blog away. And if you give me lots of your comments this year, the computers will tell them this is the most active blog and they'll put up with me. (How's that for a deal?)
Getting back to this "new level" prediction, think of it. We've got some great Arizona auctions to kick start the year. We've got the Great Race folks going around the world for the first time. AROUND THE WORLD! That ain't like around the block, you know! We got a big Impala-in-the-barn auction coming up, plus a Mecum Auction with three serial no. 1 'Vettes. Then we have the 100th Anniversary of the Model T Ford in July and the 105th Anniversary of Harley-Davidson in August. I hear that Bloomington Gold has a special theme planned to shake up Corvette fans in June. And today I got a call from Joe Bortz telling me that his GM Factory Dream Cars are going to be the center of attraction at Pebble Beach. I guess GM is taking the cars there to make its own centennial very special.
The world's got a lot of problems - wars, elections, $100-a-barrel oil, bad weather, global warming, terrorism - you name it. But the old-car world is like the little town of Perfect in the Walgreen's commercials. Only good things lie ahead. And we're taking all the good stuff to a new level!
Thursday, January 10, 2008 4:37:12 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
|
|
 Wednesday, January 09, 2008
One Thing Leads To Another
Posted by John
This is the first "blog" I'm writing as a "civilian." That's right . . . after 29 years, last week I cleaned out my desk and started a new career as a free-lance writer. Not bad for a 60-year-old coot, huh?
Since I'm a little paranoid about making enough money, I have been keeping my nose to the grindstone. One thing seems to lead to another. Today I was calling some talented sheet metal fabricators to get their opinions on tools. Wayne Lensing of Lefthander Chassis in Roscoe, Ill., was on the list. When he heard about my connections to Old Cars Weekly and Iola Old Car Show, it was like talking to my long lost best friend. Wayne invited me to a trade show at his facility. Before very long he had me convinced I should drive a couple of hundred miles to go. I haven't looked it up on the Internet, but it's Friday and Saturday. According to Wayne a lot of big vendors will be there. Wayne has a museum he wants to show me and sheet metal restoration workshops he says I'll enjoy.
So there I was, trying to start my retirement. One thing led to another. Now, Wayne has got me working again. Boy, am I going to give him a piece of my mind!
If you're interested in sheet metal fabrication, you might be able to get in the door this weekend. No promises . . . it ain't up to me. But, you can try calling Wayne at (815) 389-9999 to see what the game plan is.
Wednesday, January 09, 2008 4:20:17 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
|
|
 Thursday, January 03, 2008
Model T Centennial "T Party"
Posted by John
July 2008 will be here shortly after we dig out of the up-to-your-neck snow that's hit Central Wisconsin this year. July is the month that the Model T Ford Club of America has picked to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the "Flivver." It's being promoted Alice-in-Wonderland style as the "T Party" and it takes place July 21-26 in Richmond, Indiana. From what I hear, over 500 cars have already signed up. A comprehensive schedule of events is on the web at www.tparty2008.com.
Thursday, January 03, 2008 9:15:53 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
|
|
 Friday, December 28, 2007
Corvette Pace Car Corvette Pace Car
Posted by John
No, this is isn't the Department of Redundency Department!
The reason I wrote "Corvette Pace Car" twice in my title is that there are going to be not one, but two, Corvette Indy Pace Cars this year. The car pacing the race will be a greenish Z06 that will use E85 ethonal gas similar to what the race cars run on. To me, the color of the car is as ugly as the fuel itself, which tends to eat right throiugh the old rubber hoses on antique cars. Emerson Fittipaldi will be driving the actual pacer and he will also sign all 500 copies of the second Indy Pace Car.
This second car will be a silver-and-black 30th Anniversary Commemorative Edition. The first Corvette Indy Pace Car, in 1978, was a black-and-silver T-Top that became infamous for being an expensive, but lousy, investment. They were supposed to make a limited number of them to make them instantly collectible, but when they began to sell like hot cakes, for above-window-sticker prices, Chevy decided to make more and more of them.
Today a nice '78 Indy Pace Car looks pretty and will probably fetch decent money, but back in the day it came to be considered kind of a joke to pay lots of money to sock away a no-miles, supposedly "limited-edition" car that they kept making more copies of.
This is the fifth year in a row that the Corvette was picked to be pace car. I editorialized on that last year and I'm not going to do it again. Even though I like Corvettes, it gets a little boring to see them selected to be pace car every year. My guess is that they will break the string next year, because 2009 will be the 30th Anniversary of the "houndstooth" Camaro Pace Car. With a new Camaro coming out, it seems pretty easy to predict the future.
Friday, December 28, 2007 4:48:49 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
|
|
 Tuesday, December 25, 2007
Happy Holidays
Posted by John
I was just sitting here waiting for Santa Claus to arrive tonight and it dawned on me that another great year of car collecting is winding to its close.
Recently I had an assignment to write about the "Top 10" this and the "Top 10" that in the old-car business and it's always great fun to debate that type of recognition around this time of year. However, if I had to give an award for the best thing about the car hobby. it would be given out in the name of the hobby's great international appeal.
For the past few years I've been selling car books on eBay auctions. This year I have sold 578 books so far and have 11 more sales pending. In the past two weeks I have sold books to enthusiasts in The Netherlands, Sweden, Canada, Austrailia and France. People all over the globe seem to love old cars and most of them collect/restore old American cars.
In this time when people say "Happy Holidays" 50 times a day and sing of Peace on Earth, I can't help thinking how peaceful it would really be if everyone, everywhere joined the old-car hobby. Then, people would be so busy tuning engines and adjusting brakes (and working to pay their hobby bills) that they wouldn't have time left to shoot guns or set off roadside bombs.
Happy Holidays!
Tuesday, December 25, 2007 1:05:55 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
|
|
 Thursday, December 20, 2007
TV And The Old Car Hobby
Posted by John
Yesterday one of my co-workers told me that she had bought some of her relatives tickets to the Barrett-Jackson Auction as a Christmas gift. It's amazing how many people across the country are aware of the Barrett-Jackson "brand" today. These folks probably have no idea that Tom Barrett was an early Chicago-based collector car dealer who moved to Scottsdale or that Russ and Nellie Jackson were car collectors who operated a car wash thereabouts. To TV watchers, Barrett-Jackson is all black-tie glitz and glamor and $2-million dollar Hemi 'Cudas.
Television has put Barrett-Jackson in the big time and the merging of motorcars with media has helped the old car hobby gain national exposure and grow. That's good, but it sure has changed things. I've noticed that my neighbors -- and even my kids -- know more about the latest big-buck Cobra prices than I do (or care to).
You see, though I work in print media, I raely attend car auctions or watch TV. I may wind up at an auction once or twice a year because it's taking place at a show that I enjoy or plan to write about. As for the "Boob Tube," I have one in my shop that I turn on for "company" when I'm working out there alone. It's nice to hear the voices, but don't ask me what's on on what the plot is! Who cares?
Now that I'm retiring, all I really want to do is drive my cars, tinker with them and write about cars to pay my bills. I do not need to know the latest world record price for a Doosey or which guy spent too much for a Mustang because they flashed his picture on the SPEED Channel. At the same time, I do appreciate what people like Barrett-Jackson, Barry Meguiar, Dennis Gage, Boyd Coddington and others have done to broadcast our hobby to a new audience. Since I first got involved back in 1972, I have always thought that this is the best hobby in the world and I'm always happy to see it growing.
Thursday, December 20, 2007 6:13:07 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
|
|
 Wednesday, December 19, 2007
Winter Garage Time
Posted by John
If you follow my blog, you haven't read anything new in nearly two weeks. Sorry about that. This is the time of year we folks in the "Word Factory" in Iola get tapped on the shoulder and told how much vacation we have left to use by year's end. For some reason, writers and editors always seem to keep their nose to the grindstone all year, then come up for air in December. I had some time to burn up and I had some work to do on my new career as a free-lance writer.
In any case, I haven't visited "Gunner's Garage" in awhile, but I haven't been out to my real garage in awhile either. It's just too cold at this time of year. I'm fortunate enough to have a heated shop, but when it's below zero at night, it takes some serious self-convincing to hike up the icy slope to "Gunner's Garage."
As I said earlier, I'm leaving the daily grind here real soon. My "sentemce" is almost over. Starting Jan. 4, I'll be a free man. That means I'll get to do the things I want when the sun is out and more garage time (at home that is) is in my plan. I've been told I can keep the blog going from home, so I'll keep you up to date on all my winter projects. At the same time, I'd like to hear about some ofthe winter projects your working on.
Wednesday, December 19, 2007 4:19:25 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
|
|
|