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Thursday, May 31, 2018

Stoddard Porsche Literature Fair and Swap Meet, June 1 and 2, Cleveland, Ohio

I'll be there offering a few Porsche parts the I have accumulated over the years at the swap meet.

Here is the link to the event:

http://www.stoddard.com/Werkstatte/2018swapmeetsave/

I will be located at space 62!



Among the things I am selling:

a complete targa top from a 1971 Porsche 911, including 2 latches.

an air conditioning under dash unit

Porsche books

Miscellaneous rubber gaskets

Emergency brake shoes

A CV rear Lobro axle

a dash ventilation control

Driver's door glass and regulator

Bosch coil and Marechal regulator

Monday, May 28, 2018

SUVs, the present and the near future: a comment in the India Times

SUVs have become classier. But here is the big bump on the road: Rising fuel prices

Was interviewed quite some time ago and thought the article was never written. But I got a email from Linked In this morning that notified me that indeed it finally came out!


Sunday, May 27, 2018

1956 DeSoto -- do you restore or just drive?






Saw this car at the the Cars & Parts swap meet and car show at the Clark County Fairgrounds in Springfield Ohio this morning. Plenty of Patina here. Not an especially special model. Drive it or work on it in a big way? Or something in between?

Saturday, May 26, 2018

Family Photographs Taken Beside the Car -- a Ford Model A


Another contribution from Ed --

These are some people gathered around what I believe to be either a 1928 Model A (some of the first ones were released in 1927 but titled as 1928 vehicles).  I have no idea who the people are but they are from Summers County, West Virginia, where I grew up.  We frequently see photos of family members standing near or by their automobiles -- clearly a major purchase and a point of pride.  Every family has such photos.

But this photo provides ample illustration of "pride of ownership" given that when the photo was snapped each member of the family was shown cleaning the vehicle.

Perhaps they were thinking: "We love our car..........and this photo is a reflection of our desire to care for this important purchase."

Our cars often reflect how we want others to see us. What does this photo say about the family members  seeming to love and care for what is really just a material object? 

A West Virginia "No-Tell Motel" -- A contribution from Ed



Attached is a photo of the motel that my grandfather Garten built circa 1953.  It is located on the Greenbrier River in Summers County, West Virginia, and was, early on, a place where out-of-state fishermen (and perhaps fisherwomen) would "overnight" during a few days of fishing.  

Nonetheless by 1955 or so my grandfather's motel had become known as the local "no-tell" motel.  It was located on the highway that led to the village where we lived and when my mother would drive by the motel on the way home (with me in the passenger seat) she would "speed up" the car past the Greenbrier Motel. 

I would say to her: "Mother, why do you speed up the car past grandfather's motel?"  She would reply: "God knows what the people staying in those rooms are doing."  

As an innocent young boy my reply was: "the people in the rooms are probably sleeping, right?"  ðŸ˜‚

I stopped there a few years ago and found the place abandoned.  No more fishermen and no more folks registering as "Mr. and Mrs. Smith" at the front desk. ðŸ˜‹  Small town and rural motels are mostly a thing of the past. But during their time they served their purpose for the traveling motorist, the criminal (think Bonnie & Clyde), and the place of meeting for the adulterous man and woman.

Ed

Thursday, May 24, 2018

Pastor Jesse Deplantis Losing His Temper at a Car Dealership





I love Louisiana's  Jesse Duplantis! He is not a religious phony, although his theology may be questioned.



This reminded me of my temper tantrum at a Omni/Horizon dealership around 1982. One of my grad student friends, Tom Cornell, got a job at Rochester Institute of Technology and needed a car. He had never owned a car previously, getting around Baltimore on a bicycle. (Tom was a history of physics guy and that explains a lot.) He asked me for help after he somehow was bamboozled into signing a contract for a car he never wanted. So I threw such a loud fit on the showroom floor that the sales manager ultimately raised  a white flag and gave back the contract. Sometimes one has to be nasty on the sales floor to get personal social justice! 


Primer Cups on Old Automobile Engines: Their Use





Below was taken from an AACA discussion post. Yes, these cups inject raw gas into a cylinder. The cup opening is the process that primes the engine. But I heard let night another function of doing this. Especially in the winter, when engine oil is very thick, it was very difficult to turn over an engine. The priming process was really to use the gasoline to wash down the cylinder walls of oil, thus making it easier to turn over the engine! 

You can see the priming cups on this 1918 Cadillac we sold a few years ago. They're the little brass fittings next to the spark plugs, and as described, you put a few drops of fuel in them, turn the valve, and the fuel drips into the cylinder. Close the valve or else you'll be blowing combustion out through the cup (note that the priming cup nearest the firewall has been replaced with an exhaust whistle). I've never used them, as most of the cars start pretty readily today and aren't used in the winter, but I can imagine some of those massive 800 cubic inch road monsters needing it simply because the distance between the valves and spark plug is massive.

Tuesday, May 22, 2018

June 9 -- Don Capps on the Mercedes-Benz "Silver Arrows" at Watkins Glen International Motor Racing Center

The Great "Mercedes-Benz Silver Arrow Controversy" to be Discussed at 
IMRRC June 9

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (May. 21, 2018) - Don Capps, one of the foremost experts on the topic, will present "The Silver Arrows: The 1934 Eifelrennen and Neubaurer's Dilemma?" at the International Motor Racing Research Center on Saturday, June 9.
The discussion will focus on the creation tale of the Mercedes-Benz racing cars, the "Silver Arrows" at the June 1934 Eifelrennen by then team manager, Alfred Neubauer. The talk will use photographs and materials directly from the Daimler-Benz archives that are contemporary to the time period.
Part of the IMRRC's ongoing Center Conversations Series, the discussion will be an open forum in which audience participation is encouraged. The talk, sponsored in part by the Watkins Glen Area Chamber of Commerce, will begin at 1 p.m. and is open to all. The Racing Research Center is located at 610 S. Decatur St., Watkins Glen.
The talk will be live-streamed on the Center's YouTube channel or via the Center's live-stream page on the website. The talk also will be archived on the Center's YouTube channel to watch in the future.
"The legend of the Silver Arrows has been propagated for decades," Capps said. "And with all due respect to the immediate success of the cars and thoroughbred lineage that Mercedes-Benz racing has achieved, it may not be all based in fact. Essentially, we take on the legend and correct the tale."
Capps, who has been associated with motorsport activities for more than 50 years, is a member and on the board of directors of the Society of Automotive Historians. He is Chair of its International Motor Sports History Section. The retired US Army Colonel also serves on the IMRRC Historians Council.
"The presentation encourages open discussion and an insider's look at the cars that truly revolutionized the sport of motor racing." Capps added, "Was the story of how Mercedes-Benz achieved unparalleled success an accurate depiction of innovation, selective memory or simply a tall tale for fun? Or a combination of all of these things? That's what we will be there to discuss."
It is historical fact that the Mercedes Benz "Silver Arrows" dominated Grand Prix racing from 1934-39 and again from 1945-55. 
The original W25 race car, which was partially funded by the pre-war Nazi government, debuted at the 1934 Eiifelrennen. At the time, a new formula for the class limited Grand Prix cars to 750kg. Neubauer recounted in later interviews that he demanded that the paint be striped from the car to help meet the weight requirement. The car met the weight requirement and driver Manfred von Brauchitsch won the race. 
The legend was born.


The Racing Research Center is an archival library dedicated to the preservation and sharing of the history of motorsports, of all series and all venues, through its collections of books, periodicals, films, photographs, fine art and other materials.
For more information about the Center's work and its programs, visit www.racingarchives.org or call (607) 535-9044. The Center also is on Facebook at "International Motor Racing Research Center" and on Twitter at "@IMRRCatWG.

Ken W. Purdy on Robert Daley's "The Cruel Sport"

This quote is taken from Purdy and Baumann's The New Matadors (1965), pp. 33-4:

The British journal Motor Sport, one of the best, reviews a book: 'Robert Daley does for motor-racing, in his much-publicized and admittedly magnificently-illustrated 'the Cruel Sport" what Hemmingway [sic] did for bull fighting in "Death in the Afternoon", but the presentation will be too lurid and in places too exaggerated for our more discerning readers....' The curious spelling and syntax aside this is typical. Daley broke the convention: he spoke of the risk of the profession, he treated at length of the personalities of the drivers, and he included photographs of crashes, and far worse, photographs of injured drivers. Every attempt must be made, therefore, to keep the book from coming to public attention.

Purdy goes on ...

I think it is sad -- the question of ethics aside -- that this convention should obtain, for these men, the drivers, are not automata, they are almost without exception, extraordinarily interesting human beings. They are men, like other men, except that they have been sorted out, sifted, fined, so that only 15 or 20 first-class hard-hat deep sea divers, or free balloonists, or savers, or matadors, or espionage agents, or only a handful of men in 67 other categories who have chosen to separate themselves form the crowd, from the clerks, the broom pushers, the plebs, and elect to live, shortly perhaps, but fully, at the whistling, blue pointed top of the stack, where there is so little room, and the view so rewarding. Some, a few, pretend, or seem to pretend, that they do not know where they're standing, and don't care. They point is, I think, that they do not care to talk about it. Like most men in high-risk enedeavors, they are not usually highly articulate, although they are almost invariably intelligent. In personality and outlook they vary as widely as other men; in motivation they are usually fascinating and it is a pity, and a loss, that the branch of journalism specializing in their doings, should picture them with blank white faces. It is a disservice,....

Ken W. Purdy







Sunday, May 20, 2018

Women in Design Event: June 8, 2018 -- Sponsored by the Leland Chapter, SAH

WOMEN IN DESIGN: A CONVERSATION WITH AUTHOR CONSTANCE SMITH AND GM DESIGNER (1950) MARYELLEN GREEN, MODERATED BY GM'S DIRECTOR OF DESIGN USER EXPERIENCE, LIZ WETZEL.

Friday, June 8, 2018.  3:00 - 5:00 pm.
This event is produced is conjunction with The Society of Automotive Historians Leland Chapter.
Registration is not required, but letting us know that you expect to attend will assist in our planning. Seating for 50 will be provided. Additional standing room space will be available.

A minimum contribution of $25 will be accepted at the door for this event, with all proceeds benefitting EyesOn Design and the Detroit Institute of Ophthalmology. Society of Automotive Historians members may attend at no charge.

The Peacock Room is located inside the Fisher Building, at 3011 W. Grand Boulevard, Detroit, MI 48202
Arrive early for some of Detroit's finest vintage-inspired shopping in a breathtaking venue.
Questions about the event or EyesOn Design? Call 313.824.4710

Friday, May 18, 2018

Rohrl, Geistendorfer, a 1956 Porsche 356A 1500 GS Carrera Coupe, and the Mille Miglia Rally: May 16, 2018





He beat them all up. Anyone who made fun of his red hair. “I didn’t let them get away with anything. That gave me strength for the rest of my life,” says Walter Röhrl, who was usually allowed to leave school in the Bavarian city of Regensburg ten minutes before class was over at the end of the day. His teachers were too concerned that he would be teased and respond by landing some well-placed blows. And he’s kept that boldness into adulthood. “At the Monte Carlo Rally I showed them who’s boss!” There’s only one person who’s ever been able to dictate his course—codriver Christian Geistdörfer, with whom he entered rallies from 1977 to 1987.
The two men could not be more different. One is defiant, the other diplomatic. One of them curses up and down the alphabet at the slightest hint of injustice—“and you can hear it a hundred meters away,” says the seventy-one-year-old Röhrl. And the other prefers to reflect until he finds a thoughtful solution. What they share is an unconditional trust in each other. “In the cockpit, we’ve each placed our lives in the other’s hands,” says the sixty-five-year-old Geistdörfer.

Mille Miglia was considered the toughest race in the world

Today’s Mille Miglia is no longer a matter of life and death. From 1927 to 1957 it was considered the toughest race in the world. But now “the Mille,” as Röhrl calls it, is one of the most high-profile rallies for vintage cars. The winner is not the vehicle with the fastest time but rather the team that collects the fewest penalty points over the course of more than eighty special trials as well as passage and time controls. A contest of consistency.
356 A 1500 GS Carrera Coupé, 2018, Porsche AG
When the Mille Miglia was launched ninety-one years ago on March 26, 1927, the aim was to drive at top speed from Brescia to Rome and back—in a single day on what was then a figure-eight-shaped course. Today the 450 teams have four days to cover the route, and a road book to guide them through the countryside. On May 16 Röhrl and Geistdörfer will enter the event in Brescia in a 1956 Porsche 356 A 1500 GS Carrera Coupé. A few weeks beforehand, they meet near the route in Tuscany to get in the mood for the rally with their Sahara Beige vintage automobile. And they begin to reminisce.
Röhrl carefully opens the door of the car and bends down to stick his head inside. He strokes the burgundy driver’s seat and the beige interior lining. Then he folds his 1.96 meter frame and climbs in. After closing the door he crosses his arms in front of his chest as if seeking to prevent himself from driving off right away. He enjoys the stillness for a few minutes. And smiles.

“230“ –  starting number for race-car driver Carel Godin de Beaufort in 1957

Meanwhile, Geistdörfer walks around the restored vintage car and takes a photo of the stickers on his side of it. They show “C. Geistdörfer” holding a stopwatch and “W. Röhrl” with a steering wheel underneath. The hood and the doors display the number 230. That was the starting number for Dutch race-car driver Carel Godin de Beaufort at the Mille Miglia in 1957. Seven years later he died in an accident on the Nürburgring. The owner of this Porsche 356 A 1500 GS Carrera Coupé is Hans Hulsbergen, a native of Switzerland with Dutch roots. He’s a friend of the de Beaufort family and wanted to commemorate Carel in this way. “The car has matching numbers, is beautifully restored, and it’s an honor for us to drive it,” says Geistdörfer, putting his excitement into words.
Christian Geistdörfer, Walter Röhrl, l-r, 356 A 1500 GS Carrera Coupé, 2018, Porsche AG

Röhrl: “We’re extremely good at being silent together.”

Röhrl places his big hands on the slender wooden steering wheel and slides his thumbs up and down. His left hand is at the ten o’clock position and his right hand at two o’clock. Although he’s driven nearly every Porsche model, this is the first time he’s ever sat in a 356 A 1500 GS Carrera Coupé. Geistdörfer has now circled the car four times, opened the luggage compartment, coiled up a battery charging cable, lifted the hood, and peered into the fuel tank with a flashlight. He’s a professional codriver who takes care of everything, while Röhrl “only” has to drive. That’s the way it’s always been. And the way it should be.
They exchange nods and Geistdörfer gets in. “We’re extremely good at being silent together,” says Röhrl. “We might be in the car for twelve hours and spend hardly ten minutes in conversation. Christian gives directions the whole time. When he’s not doing that, it’s just good to hear the sounds of the car.” They’ve never quarreled. And Geistdörfer has never misread the route. “I’ve always told Christian that a codriver is only allowed to misread the route twice—the first time and the last time,” says Röhrl with a grin.

Geistdörfer: “A codriver has to (...) possess unusual presence of mind”

After entering rallies, Geistdörfer would often spend a few days of vacation in the country where they were held. Röhrl, by contrast, “always wanted to go straight home.” They don’t share much personal information with each other. “When Walter wanted to tell me something, he did. I never pried,” says Geistdörfer. “I have great respect for Christian, and that’s why I’ve always been reserved,” says Röhrl, who learned a number of things he had never known about his codriver upon reading the latter’s recently published biography. And although they still greet each other with a handshake instead of a warm hug, each describes the other as a friend, not just a business partner. “A codriver has to not only read maps correctly but also be quick on the uptake and possess unusual presence of mind,” says Geistdörfer. “But the most important thing is to have unshakable confidence that the person sitting at the wheel next to you also wants to survive the whole crazy endeavor. I’ve always admired Walter’s singleness of purpose. And if it crossed over into stubbornness, I could see where he was coming from. My job was always to prevent problematic situations from arising in the first place.”
Walter Röhrl, Christian Geistdörfer, l-r, 2018, Porsche AG
They used to go skiing together, but “since Walter started insisting on walking up the slopes, I don’t join him anymore,” says Geistdörfer with a laugh. Röhrl, whose fans call him der Lange (the tall one), hasn’t used a lift in years. He tells the following anecdote, punctuating it with a raised index finger: “In Portugal at the Arganil stage in 1980 I left everyone way behind in thick fog. Visibility was less than five meters. No one could believe it was possible to drive 4:58 minutes faster than the next car. I was able to do that because of my photographic memory, but also because I was fit.” He never takes escalators and swims laps every morning in his own pool. “Otherwise I feel like I’m a hundred years old,” he remarks. He steps on the scale every day. “If my weight ever goes up by 450 grams, I swim longer or walk faster up the slopes.” Röhrl, who’s known for his ascetic tendencies, has never indulged in a Coke or a coffee.
In the 1980s it wasn’t unusual for Geistdörfer to pull out the fuses for the rear lights on foggy nights to prevent the drivers following them from using their path. “I prepared the fuses beforehand with aluminum foil so I could just barely reach them without removing my seat belt,” he recalls with the steely will to win still evident in his eyes. Were they ever afraid? “At the beginning of every race I was always sure that nothing would go wrong and that we were invincible. In retrospect that was totally stupid,” says Röhrl, shaking his head. What was the most dangerous course? “Pikes Peak. Back then it was all gravel. There wasn’t anything you could use for orientation, just a few trees at the beginning that was it.”

Humorous situation during the Monte Carlo Rally in 1983

The duo encountered one dangerous yet also humorous situation during the Monte Carlo Rally in 1983. “Someone handed us a few oranges at a time check. I put them on the back seat and promptly forgot about them. But then later I tried to brake only to find that they had rolled under my pedals, right in the middle of the twenty-minute special stage from Le Moulinon to Antraigues! I managed to collect all of them after about seven minutes. At full speed. And we won the stage by three seconds.”
Röhrl, who’s a qualified ski instructor, reflects back on his driving style. “I’ve always steered very little. That doesn’t put on a great show for the spectators, but it made me the fastest. It’s similar to skiing. When you throw up a lot of powder it looks great, but you can be sure it’s not the best line.”
Walter Röhrl, 2018, Porsche AG
In September Röhrl will celebrate fifty years of racing. He started his career at the Rally Bavaria at the urging of a good friend. Shortly thereafter he quit his job as an administrative assistant for the Diocese of Regensburg—“no, I was never the personal chauffeur for the bishop and have no idea how a rumor like that can stick around for decades”—to focus on a single aim: “I wanted to win the Monte Carlo Rally.” He did so four times in the five-year period from 1980 to 1984, because of his ability to drive equally well on snow, gravel, and asphalt. “Every surface has pros who specialize in it, but I was the only one to master the racing line for all of them,” he recalls. Röhrl leans back and closes his eyes. “My first win in Monte Carlo was in 1980, and that was the most beautiful moment of my career.”

Geistdörfer is looking forward to the fun atmosphere

Geistdörfer has entered the Mille Miglia five times without Röhrl, and Röhrl once without Geistdörfer. What do the two of them expect from their first Mille Miglia together? “We’re driving in one of our favorite countries,” says Röhrl. “Not least of all because the Italians are so wonderfully crazy about cars. They love their Mille.” Geistdörfer is looking forward to the fun atmosphere and the scenery. He’ll arrive a day earlier than Röhrl in order to be there for the technical inspection and the traditional sealing ceremony. They already know that they won’t win, because their sixty-two-year-old Porsche is too young. “Prewar cars are assigned a coefficient that improves their chances—although they’re also harder to handle,” says Geistdörfer. And Röhrl adds, “The slow windshield wipers on the 356 are the first step toward deceleration.”
How long will Röhrl go on driving? “Until they pull the plug,” he says with a laugh as he drives the Porsche under the stone archway in the old city wall of Monteriggioni. For a moment it appears that nothing in this world could keep him from racing. “Oh look, a cat!” he cries. He pulls the car to a stop and climbs out to stroke the purring animal at the side of the road.

Thursday, May 17, 2018

A 1970s Subaru Advertisement: "She'll carry you away as she peaks to the red line...."



The connection between the automobile and sexuality has been well explored many times. What is so interesting here is the absurdity of it all. This GL coupe is strictly utilitarian, even with the tachometer and rack and pinion steering. Perhaps a rally car in the day? You can do only so much with trim to turn this car into a silk purse.




Wednesday, May 16, 2018

A Brief Review of Stirling Moss Face to Face with Ken W. Purdy, "All But My Life."






New York: E.P. Dutton & Co,, 1963.

Recently I have been on a Ken Purdy reading kick and got a copy of All But My Life. Rarely do I encounter a book that I can hardly put down, but that was certainly the case of this one! Based on as series of interviews with Moss after his near fatal and catastrophic Goodwood accident in 1962, the material is enormously engaging. There are interesting facts about Moss' life, including early years and his emergence as a very good driver on the GP circuit by the mid-1950s.  There are plenty of bits about driving a race car at a high level, including matters of adhesion and dealing with corners. There are glimpses into the personalities of other drivers and owners, including Fangio, Hawthorne, Collins, Hill, Ginther and others. And there is a rather in-depth initimate glimpse into Moss as a person, including his love life.  What motivates a driver who was one of the very best of his generation?

I heartily recommend this book to anyone wanting to learn more about post-war GP history. It is one of those reads that can potentially change how you look at the world and yourself. I  am sorry I waited so long to read it!

My Mercedes-Benz 1982 380 SL: When an inexpensive part makes a big difference! -- Oxygen Sensor Replacement

I bought my 1982 M-B 380 SL several years ago off of Ebay, and it has been a great car.  Except for one shortcoming -- gas consumption was quite high. I replaced the fuel injectors a few years ago, and that made a difference in terms of engine smoothness. But gosh, I could almost watch the fuel gauge go down.  So I read where the oxygen sensor should be replaced every 30,000 miles.  I ordered one for only $10 -- a close-out -- at Rockauto.com, and replaced the one on the car about a week ago.

The old one came off very easily.  But what I noticed was that the connector wire was in bad shape -- actually I think the person who replaced the last one did a very bad job and did not connect the wire up properly.  Maybe there was no connection!  That could be considering the sensor on this car is a single wire.

I will report soon what mpg I am currently getting in the near future. But my sense from driving with half a tank its that things have changed!





Monday, May 14, 2018

Michael Avenatti -- Stormy Daniels lawyer -- an accomplished automobile race car driver

Anyone who finishes 7th in class at LeMans has to be considered as a fair race driver! Another example of his competitive personality. I certainly would want him in my corner in a fight.


https://www.speedsport-magazine.com/race-driver-database/biography/michael-avenatti_-_5180.

Michael Avenatti - Career and Success:

Saturday, May 12, 2018

a 1991 Nissan Figaro: Dayton Cars & Coffee, May 12, 2019






I never saw a car like this before.   A 1991Nissan Figaro. Turbocharged! The owner imported it from Japan only after it had reached the 25-year threshold to bring a car like this in the US.


From Wiki:

The Nissan Figaro is a two-door 2+2 retro-styled fixed-profile convertible manufactured by Nissan for model year 1991, and originally marketed solely in Japan at their Nissan Cherry Stores.
With its design variously attributed to Naoki Sakai[ and/or Shoji Takahashi, twenty thousand examples were marketed by Nissan in the convertible's single year of production — all with right hand drive.]

The Figaro was introduced at the 1989 Tokyo Motor Show under the slogan "Back to the Future". The name references the title character in the play The Marriage of Figaro by Pierre Beaumarchais.
Based on the Nissan Micra, the Figaro was built at Aichi Machine Industry,[1] a special projects group which Nissan would later call "Pike Factory," which also produced three other niche automobiles: the Be-1Pao, and S-Cargo.
As a fixed-profile convertible, the upper side elements of the Figaro's bodywork remain fixed, while its fabric soft top retracts to provide a less fully open experience than a typical convertible. The fixed-profile concept is seen on other convertibles, including the Citroën 2CV (1948–1990), the Nash Rambler Convertible "Landau" Coupe (1950), and the 1957 Fiat 500 — as well its 2007 Fiat 500 successor.
The Figaro was marketed in four colors representing the four seasons: Lapis Grey (Winter), Emerald Green (Spring), Pale Aqua (Summer) and Topaz Mist (Autumn), listed in order of number produced, highest first. Two additional cars were also painted in different colors.
The Figaro was equipped with leather seats, air conditioningCD player and a fixed-profile slide-back open roof.
8000 were originally available with an additional 12,000 added to production numbers to meet demand. Total production of the Figaro finished at 20,073 units.[5] Prospective purchasers entered a lottery to purchase a Figaro. Limited edition cars came with passenger side baskets and cup holders.
In 2011, design critic Phil Patton called the four Pike cars "the height of postmodernism"[2] and "unabashedly retro, promiscuously combining elements of the Panhard Dyna JuniorCitroën 2CVRenault 4Mini [and] Fiat 500."]