Sunday, March 22, 2026

1898 Clarkson & Capel Steam Barouche, colorized 1908 photo

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10243000348523521&set=gm.10162607097797481&idorvanity=119087132480

https://www.diomedia.com/stock-photo-early-clarkson-steam-barouche-image20621560.html

the Silver State Challenge is May 14th - 17th, Nevada Highway 318


nice piece of art by the detailed people at American Bank Note company, the Greek God Mercury, symbolic of commerce, negotiation, and speed


Trains, planes, ships, and standing on a winged wheel

a Marine lcpl developed $10 solution to $5,600 antenna problem


A junior Marine’s 3D-printed fix for a fragile communications antenna is saving the Marine Corps hundreds of thousands of dollars and slashing months-long supply delays across the fleet.

When Schule joined the Marine Corps in 2022 as an engineer equipment operator, he was assigned to be an armory custodian. But his superiors quickly realized he had untapped technical skills.

They learned he had previously worked as a computer numerically controlled, or CNC, machine operator at an industrial machining company and had an interest in 3D printing and design.

In April 2025, Schule attended a basic additive manufacturing course at the II Marine Expeditionary Force Innovation Campus, where he learned to reverse engineer and print replacement parts.

The campus, a 3D printing hub focused on solving equipment and supply challenges, recently received a Defense Department award for education and workforce development.

Through trial and error, Schule refined the process and ultimately produced a replacement mast that passed durability testing and held up during a month-long field exercise.

During a joint exercise, Pine observed antenna masts breaking across multiple units. Replacements cost more than $5,600 each and took over 220 days to arrive. He estimated more than $1 million in damaged equipment across the fleet.

Since then, the II MEF Innovation Campus has produced more than 100 replacement masts at roughly $10 a piece, saving an estimated $600,000 while eliminating years of cumulative supply delays.


https://www.militarytimes.com/news/your-military/2026/03/20/marine-lance-corporal-develops-10-solution-to-5600-antenna-problem/

I found a set of streets named after fighter planes


only a couple miles from what was the NAS Miramar airbase, which is now MCAS Miramar

cool packaging

 

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=25837398235960361&set=pcb.25888033677558616

imagine getting a wagon in the 70s... when you were a teen, so you could get all your friends into the drive in movies, haul some band gear, and everything needed for a day's fun at the lake with your friends at a picnic.


Logan found a 68 Coronet for his dad! He pulled it out of a barn, it's got a 383. He's upgrading it to a 4 barrel. If he's gunning for coolest kid on Fathers Day, he'll pop on headers, new pipes and mufflers too, and put in some 3.23s!


The Yenko was likely sold in 6 months after the *I do" for a station wagon.....


https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1465284202274598&set=a.717965483673144

I think this is a funny car


maybe a little bit of both brave and stupid, but for sure he was having a LOT of fun


Interviewing Marty Robbins


https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1467010205435331&set=a.717965483673144

looks like Larry Watson

https://www.facebook.com/bigidolgarage

custom-built 1/16th scale Snowblower-Truck


they put an F-86 back together yesterday at the Planes of Fame Air Museum in Chino Hills Ca

the Treadable, Lando's caterpillar track vehicle in Star Wars "Rise of Skywalker"



You know that commercial where is Jean-Claude Van Damme is doing splits between two semis? Chuck Norris is driving both semi's.


Chuck Norris once pissed into the gas tank of a semi truck on a dare. We now know this truck as Optimus Prime.

Chuck Norris didn't die, he just gave Bruce Lee enough time to prepare for their rematch

The rumor was he was supposed to go on Mount Rushmore after he died but the rock is too soft to hold his face. 

There's no street named after chuck Norris because no one crosses chuck Norris

Chuck Norris didn't die, he got bored of being undefeated on earth

gas prices


trying to prevent bad publicity... the senate passes a measure (that politicians will just ignore) prohibiting preferential airport screening for lawmakers... as they can't arrange for TSA to get paid, it's not a good time to bypass the unpaid screeners

The Senate approved by unanimous consent Thursday a proposal to end the special treatment members of Congress get at airports that allows them to speed through or skip the Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) screening checkpoints.

Saturday, March 21, 2026

A cyberattack on Intoxalock has shut down a nationwide breathalyzer test system found in vehicles of OUI offenders, impacting thousands of drivers


"Anybody that's locked out has remained locked out. There's people that haven't been able to drive since Saturday, if that's their only vehicle," he said.

"Sunday evening, the company put out a notification that they'd been cyber-attacked," a Mainer with an Intoxalock device said.

In online messages, Intoxalock says hackers are flooding its servers to stop them from functioning, and that the nationwide outage has affected installations, removals, calibrations and account access. The company says despite the attack, user data is secure, but it did not say if there was a ransom demand.

the most expensive gas is at the end of the interstate exit ramps...

 yup, the higher octane and diesel is now over 7 a gallon in Carlsbad (near the old Carlsbad NHRA dragstrip location on Palomar Airport Road today, and it was 40 cents more expensive across the street

Louisiana is good on the specialty plates



https://www.pano1544.org/codes-1/c/0/i/81704627/louisiana-specialty-plates5

I guess palm trees have to get delivered somehow


seen in traffic today


that wing is just a cop magnet


seen in traffic. Nice treatment on the lettering

 

this indicates to me that one plate was made that was Pie... 3.1415(n2)


Carroll Shelby himself said "Only the best wear black"

this is a hell of a good looking idea for racing stripe colors on black paint

it would be fascinating to learn which drivers are the best at gauging distance between their cars and the chicanes and walls... Nascar? F1? Rally? SCCA? Indycar? IMSA? Drift? Dirt track? Baja?



This is how close an F1 driver was to the barriers. I'll guess that's a 1/4 to a 1/2 inch 

This home made display is just awesome

I previously posted about this cool stuff, before it was finished https://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2025/12/maybe-its-mopar-thing-but-we-got-lucky.html

the Montana Loophole (thank you Doug!)




Buy a new million-dollar car, boat, or RV in California and you could be looking at another $7,000 in registration fees on top of the tax, adding upwards of $100,000 to the purchase. Montana, meanwhile, charges $217 per year for a new car.

The loophole is simple. Register an LLC in Montana, and claim that it owns the vehicle. Now you've evaded all of that tax. Keep it out of California for 12 months, and you can bring it back home without the sales tax. But prosecutors say that it's not a valid loophole, and that owners aren't waiting a year.

California is also using plate readers and surveillance systems to monitor for Montana license plates and other registration and tax violators.

according to Bloomberg, by 2023 there were more than 2.3 million registered vehicles “in” Montana, a state with a population of a little more than 1 million, and just 879,000 licensed drivers.

just so you know, this is what wasting time in rush hour traffic looks like every day after work



the Schwinn Lemon Peeler is a $3,500 bike today lol


and this was a simple bike rack mounted to the wing and trunk lid

The 996 GT2 Club Sport was the last turbocharged 911 Porsche built without traction control, or stability management. It had 462 hp, ceramic brakes from the factory, carbon fiber door panels, a roll cage, and no carpet. They called them Widowmakers


Al Bahr Shrine, part of the fundraising arm of the Shriners Hospital in San Diego, CA. is looking for a 1931 or older vehicle to use as a parade car


the photos show what they can do as part time volunteers, 

Would you be willing to donate a car to help the kids? 

Any questions you may have can be answered by Bob, by calling 619-550-8849, or email sandogbob@gmail.com

a Marmon, with interesting lettering about a correspondence school for automobile running in Scanton Pz


https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10237914305054809&set=gm.10162583374902481&idorvanity=119087132480

1907 Gobron Brillie

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=2481998852252357&set=gm.10162603895062481&idorvanity=119087132480

Jimmy's Aunt Lurleen deserves recognition for being the only person in Pecos County history to treat a transmission like a suggestion rather than a mechanical necessity.



Lurleen owned a 1961 Oldsmobile Dynamic 88, which was a magnificent automobile in every sense except for the way she operated it.

she drove everywhere with the throttle half pressed and the brake lightly engaged, which caused the Oldsmobile to move through Fort Stockton like a confused tugboat.

The transmission eventually surrendered.

Most people would repair the transmission.

Lurleen simply continued driving the car in second gear for the next four years.

She said it simplified things.

I once asked her why she didn’t get it fixed.

“Well Jimmy Don,” she said, “it still goes forward, and I ain’t planning on racing anybody.”


fun to read movie review, Thanks Doug!


MOVIE REVIEW: It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World 

By Jimmy Don Ventura

The cars in Mad World serve as a metaphor for temptation. Everyone begins the film in a respectable vehicle, driving along with their normal lives. But the moment money enters the conversation, those cars turn into escape pods for human decency. 

The accelerator becomes a moral decision.

compliment of the day from Keith!

 Thank you for the continued work on your site! With the passing of Joe Sherlock, you are and have been the best researcher and presenter of automotive history as well as current events!

You've done a fine job and I'm always impressed by what you find and publish! You work for a living and still "Deliver the goods"! I and many others do appreciate you in the here and now! I think Joe Sherlock would be very proud of you!