Sunday, October 27, 2024

North Carolina officials initially estimated the road to Big Chimney would take several months to almost a year to complete. Blue-collar workers, team of volunteer West Virginia coal miners, prevailed over bureaucracy by rebuilding a road at breakneck speed on their own terms – allowing residents to finally return home, and they accomplished the task in less than a week.


Also thanks to Paul Panson at A&P for donating additional equipment and manpower. 
Left to right: Charles Dunbar Darrell McCune Jimmy Wood Stephen Boone Jeff Barnhouse (with Rock Solid Construction) Ben Harris Derek Butler Bobby Thomas Jon Campbell








“The DOT (North Carolina Department of Transportation) said ‘yeah, we’ll send some engineers down here and assess the situation.’

“The Army Corps of Engineers took a look and said they’d send some surveyors and engineers, I told them you might as well not waste your time because the West Virginia guys will have this road built before you finish your paperwork,” Lewis continued.

“Then the West Virginia boys came in and said, ‘We’ll have this road punched in in about three days.’ No s–t,” he recalled.

Not a final approved DOT road but an access road to get the people in and out with a SxS or a 4x4 truck.

Fun Tech Lab made a variety of sizes of miniature wind tunnel can be fun just to compare the aerodynamics of your diecast cars on your workbench or desk top




https://www.thedrive.com/news/funtech-lab-scaled-down-desktop-toy-car-wind-tunnel-price-specs-pictures
https://www.fun-tech-lab.com/


Pricing for the 1/18-scale, 1/24-scale, and 1/64-scale wind tunnels is set at $429, $339, and $239, respectively, excluding taxes and shipping.

There were two larger models, they instantly sold out with the Kickstarter

I never heard of a 1969 Pontiac Custom S until now, it was a one year only model


Pontiac’s 1969 Custom S was positioned between the lowly Tempest and the LeMans

The Custom S replaced the Tempest Custom, which had been a trim level for the Tempest since its debut in 1961. The Custom was a slightly upmarket version of the Tempest, with creature comforts like an all-Morrokide interior and a convertible body style not available for the base Tempest. A 175-hp, 250-cubic inch inline-six came standard, much like the base Tempest. Those who wanted a bit more visual excitement could opt for the Tempest Custom Sprint, which added a hotter 215-hp inline-six and some GTO-esque styling.

Pontiac didn't change its stance much when it introduced the Custom S in 1969. It was still the cheapest way to get a convertible Tempest, still came with the 175-hp inline-six as standard, and continued to top out at the 300 hp-plus high-output 350-cubic inch V8, albeit with 330 hp for 1969. Essentially identical to the old Tempest Custom,


https://www.slashgear.com/1693706/rare-pontiac-models-might-not-know-about/

art by Jean-Marie Guivarc'h

 



rare all-original 1970 slant-six Barracuda that a woman bought in 1970 as a retirement gift to herself, and she kept it until now, when it's been put on Ebay, for 43k, obo. It's not likely to get more than 25k. It's rusty

 

Must be a strange thing to make better photos with the Corvettes you've rescued, than the best the wrecks you've found will ever become.



I don't think either the 54 or the 76 will ever be worth the trouble they went through to get them out of this property, but the photos are excellent! 

I didn't hear about the new Delorean "Time Capsule" until just now. Well, that's a month past the "open window" for registering to get one. There are only 88 physical time capsules


I just saw the video, whish is ridiculously slow, and only slighlty amusing, but do yourself a favor, set the video speed to at least 1.5x


the new Scout did a really cool promo video for the new reveal, with a CCR 8 track

Finally Nascar has ruled, that the 1971 Bowman Gray race was won by Bobby Allison! Why the contentious omission for decades as to who won? Because of Nascar's preference for Richard Petty!




The race at Bowman Gray was one of six events in the 1971 season in which Grand National and smaller Grand American race cars shared a track. 

Between 1968 and 1971, NASCAR promoted Grand American races for what were known as pony cars. These Mustangs, Camaros, Cougars, Firebirds and Javelins generally ran standalone events but often were invited to help fill Grand National (now, Cup) grids.

Allison was a competitor in both divisions and elected to drive his No. 49 NASCAR Ford Mustang, which was classified as a Grand American race car. Allison led 138 of 200 laps around the quarter-mile oval, and while he was awarded the trophy, the win was never officially recognized and did not count toward his victory tally.


Now that Allison has been officially credited with winning at Bowman Gray in 1971, he has 85 victories to his name, this breaks the long-standing tie with fellow Hall of Famer Darrell Waltrip. Allison moves to having sole possession of fourth on the all-time NASCAR Cup Series win list.

Allison only trails Richard Petty with 200 wins, David Pearson with 105, and Jeff Gordon with 93.


“For 53 years, the Myers Brothers Memorial was the only race run by NASCAR that did not have an official winner,” said Jim France, NASCAR chairman and CEO, in a statement. “As we began preparations for the upcoming Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium, the topic of that August 6, 1971 race returned to the forefront. We felt it was the right thing to officially recognize Bobby’s win and honor him as an 85-time NASCAR Cup Series winner. We are grateful for Bobby’s lifetime contributions to NASCAR.”

Understandably, Petty was unhappy with the grid and the results. “I figured something like this would happen,” he said at the time. “They’ll probably win all these (combination) races. (Cup) racing isn’t supposed to be filled with Mustangs and Camaros.”

Forty-six years later, he felt no different. “Bobby won, but shouldn’t have gotten credit for it,” he insisted at Daytona Beach in July 2017. “The cars weren’t the same; those cars were too different. I shouldn’t have gotten credit, but Bobby shouldn’t have, either. That was a Cup race, and he wasn’t in a Cup car.”

I did a LONG post about this in 2018

and I have no idea why, but I revisited the topic for a SHORT post 2 months ago
I can guess that I forgot I'd posted about it 6 years ago


Saturday, October 26, 2024

I always avoided reading Jalopnik and Hooniverse back when they started so that I wouldn't repost their stuff, because it would uselessly redundant to have their material on my blog, everyone was already reading their blogs.

 I just wondered a moment ago if Hooniverse was still even in business. Not really, it sold out years ago. 

How can a person tell? 

Here's the words from their origin post:

Hooniverse intends to be the dumping ground for everything that’s not going to generate enough traffic at sites where they care about such things. Posts will never be optimized to maximize search results. Word count is irrelevant. Hooniverse does not cover Automotive News in the traditional sense.

and look at it's posts lately, they are some useless garbage




New car reviews for traffic, lots of crap optimized for search results. Damn shame. It began as a fun site. 

It sure as hell was trying to avoid doing car reviews on boring new vehicles from Lexus, Subaru, McLaren, Genesis, Nissan and Honda 

stored since 1974 in a storage locker with only 29,426 miles on its odometer, still wearing FJ6-code Sassy Grass Green, a set of black “billboard” stripes, and still has it's broadcast sheet


In 1975, the owner suffered from a traumatic brain injury that took away his ability to ever drive again. He decided to stow his pride-and-joy Plymouth on his father’s farm long-term; the risk of damage from moisture or other environmental hazards led him to ensure this was done the right way.

That meant draining all the fluids from the ‘Cuda, applying several heavy layers of undercoating all over the chassis and in the trunk and engine bay, and even painting the front and rear lower valances in a protective black finish. Around 1979 or 1980, it was towed from the farm to a U-Haul storage locker. It wouldn’t move again until 2024 when the owner's transfer to long term care earlier this year required his ’71 ’Cuda liquidated to cover those costs.



It was instantly snapped up by muscle-car collector Angelo Riccio, who's current collection includes an original 426 Hemi 1967 Plymouth Satellite convertible four-speed; and a 1971 Plymouth Hemi ‘Cuda


this is a result of sitting in one place, for 5 decades... the rust off the exhaust fell onto the floor and left it's perfect outline

the Military Vehicle Preservation Association had it's 8th convoy to highlight the historic 1918 Jefferson highway from Canada to the convoy’s final stop at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans.

 

Back in 2022 Natilus announced plans to build a blended wing body (BWB) flying machine capable of carrying cargo. About a hundred years ago, the Burnelli airplanes were trying that.


https://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2011/12/burnelli-aircraft-design-cheaper-safer.html

https://www.autoevolution.com/news/step-aside-boeing-737-max-or-the-blended-wing-body-horizon-will-run-you-over-241680.html#

American Airlines was fined $50M by the Department of Transportation (DOT) over breaches of airline passenger disability regulations for wheelchairs complaints made between 2019 and 2023.

The DOT alleged there were instances of "unsafe physical assistance that at times resulted in injuries and undignified treatment of wheelchair users," slow wheelchair assistance and mishandling of "thousands" of wheelchairs at American Airlines.

this is not a Ferrari... it's a Lotus Emira



Back when a commercial flight was still a big deal, a rare , Pan American World Airways commemorated a passenger’s crossing the equator with a little memento. Navy guys will recognize it, it was inspired by the Shellback Certificate

On April 25, 1948, Sylvester “Steve” Wittman was accepted into the “Empyrean Realm of His Exalted Majesty Jupiter Rex,” 

 Pan Am felt that its passengers making the same journey in the air deserved to be celebrated.

 https://inspire.eaa.org/2024/10/24/eaas-attic-steve-wittmans-pan-am-passenger-certificate/

https://inspire.eaa.org/category/history/





a car trailer and jacks were used to get a Miata into a Uhaul, for a 17 hour trip, but it was easier to use a flat bed tow truck to get it out


why does car insurance cost so much? Here's one little reason, they are greedy and corrupt, and don't have to admit it, just pay the fine while hiking rates for failure to conduct reasonable investigations or providing adequate explanation for claims denial

State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. has paid back $5.2-million to Montana policyholders after completing a necessary 18,000 claim reviews as part of a settlement with the Montana Commissioner of Securities and Insurance (CSI).

The settlement, which was concluded in February 2024, addresses unfair claim practices discovered in a two-year review of the company's methods by the state regulator. The carrier was penalized $4 million as part of the settlement with the potential deduction of $2 million in lieu of compliance measures.

CSI alleged failure to conduct reasonable investigations or provide adequate explanation for claims denial in some instances.

The company has now made all its necessary updates in policy and training of its staff as of August, thus achieving a $1 million deduction. A follow-up exam to begin in 2025 will determine the fate of the second $1 million suspension according to CSI, contingent on an error rate below 8%.

“State Farm is cooperating with the Montana Commissioner of Securities & Insurance and actively working to resolve the issues identified in the market conduct examination report.”

The review covers accidents that occurred between November 2018 and April 2022, with State Farm having already paid an additional $1.18 million on 2,436 previously reviewed claims.

Montana Commissioner of Securities and Insurance Troy Downing applauded State Farm for diligently reviewing the claims and working with CSI to make good on the February 2024 consent agreement, ensuring the money is being returned to Montana consumers.

State Farm has the largest market share in Montana's private passenger auto insurance market with 22.63%, while Progressive Insurance Group follows with 19.96%.

how bad do Ferrari depreciate?




a 2021 Ferrari SF90 SF90 Stradale cost $770,000 new, and now is only worth somewhere near $400,000

Call that 50% in 3 years. That's bad. I wish I had a lot of comparison data, but I haven't looked for any

San Berdo Co. Sheriff’s deputies spotted a stolen Corvette in Hespiera, but when they tried to initiate a traffic stop, the 15-year-old driver evaded cops for nearly 70-miles

His 19-year-old passenger was also arrested after the chase, which finally came to an end when the young driver crashed into a fence in El Monte.

a 755 hp 2019 Corvette ZR1 was found stripped of most of its parts on a rural dirt road near Barrie, Ontario, Canada.

 

local resident says two other cars have also been dumped in the area in the past month, explaining: “There was a white car, a shell of a car, just dropped off on the side of the road, and not too long before that, there was another one on the same road.” 

 Niagara police say the ZR1 was stolen from a collector in Grimsby, Ont., on August 15, and they believe the stripped-down car was eventually dumped overnight Tuesday on Sideroad 9/10 Sunnidale near Concession Road 2 in New Lowell.

the Pontiac Parisienne hood ornament. Really damn weird


 https://www.theautopian.com/the-pontiac-parisianne-hood-ornament-kinda-weirds-me-out/

great parts runner for a Chrysler Plymouth dealership, an A100

 

https://www.curbsideclassic.com/vintage-snapshots-and-photography/vintage-dealer-postcards-dodge-dealers-1960s-1970s/

FYI RADwood SoCal Sat, Nov 9th, 2024, 11:00 AM - 3:30 PM Port of LA - 2400 Miner Street, San Pedro




 https://www.showclix.com/tickets/radwood-socal-2024

nice, very nice. a 3 year project



The NHRA Nationals Oct 31 - Nov 03 2024 at at Las Vegas Motor Speedway is the weekend before SEMA, and 75-year-old member of every major auto racing Hall of Fame, John Force, will be there to support his team and family

Las Vegas is close enough to Force’s Yorba Linda, CA home that he can drive over. “I want to show my support for our race teams the fans and all our sponsors,” he said in making the announcement of his return to the community. “They stuck with me during a hard time, and I want them to know that I haven’t forgotten them and I haven’t gone anywhere. I’ve just been doing my rehab, trying to stay strong.”

Force has been treating both his physical injuries, the TBI and the successive effects of many incidents and violent crashes that have been part of his 50-year career. 

“I want to be there for Brittany and that team with (David) Grubnic and John Collins. They’re gonna win a race, and I want to be there when they do. I really can’t wait to see all my guys,” Force continued. “I love them and I’ve missed them and can’t wait to be with them again!”

the Red Baron

https://abpic.co.uk/pictures/view/1858998

On April 28, 1961, Soviet pilot Giorgii Mosolov set a world altitude record of 113,891 feet in a Mikoyan-Gurevich Ye-66, an experimental MiG-21. This did not sit well with Darryl Greenamyer, and he started making plans to use an F-104 to take that record away from the Communists.

 However, there were two problems, 1st was getting an F-104. In the 1960s it was impossible for a civilian to purchase a complete Starfighter, so in 1965 Darryl began collecting F-104 parts to build his own. 

This one-seat F-104G had been written off after a crash. The powerplant was a US NAVY Phantom J79-GE10 engine which was tuned on a tested rate of 19,000 pound of thrust uninstalled. The F-104 engine has exceptionally high compression, which enabled the airplane to set an altitude record of 103,389 feet in 1959.

 Another reason for Greenamyer's choice is that the airframe was a zero-hour, zero-defect condition, no fatigue at all anywhere. It is the kind of opportunity you don't find every day. A stock F-104 weighted 15,000 pounds empty; Greenamyer's weighted only 11,500. Armament was out and also the speed brakes, drag chute, boundary-layer-control system and the leading-edge device actuators. It received the G-model's antiskid system and brakes. Including some compensation weight inside the nose the total weight became 11,800 pounds.

The second problem was funding, because everything in aviation, especially world record attempts, takes money. Darryl says, “I thought if I used the airplane to break the 3km speed record held by the Navy, I could raise a sponsor for the altitude record.” 

At the time the low-altitude 3km Closed Course Speed Record was 902.769mph, which was set on August 28, 1961, by USN Lieutenants Huntington Hardisty and Earl De Esch in a McDonnell Douglas F4H-1 Phantom during Project Sageburner.

Darryl’s hybrid F-104 was registered as N104RB and carried the Lockheed construction number of an F-104G. However, it had built from literally dozens of F-104s of all variants. The tail section, minus horizontal stabilizer, came from a crashed TF-104G that was found in an Ontario, California junkyard. The horizontal stabilizer came from a wrecked F-104G. He obtained the forward fuselage of a discarded F-104A that Lockheed used for static testing. The cockpit side panels came from the first production F-104A that crashed in 1956.

Greenamyer got his throttle quadrant from a Tennesse flying buff he met at the Reno National Air Races who had been using it as an office decoration. The trunnion-mounts for the nose-gear, some of the cooling-system valves and a few relays on the Red Baron were no doubt the most unusual parts of any interceptor plane with front-line capability. To get those items at Eglin AFB, Greenamyer had to pay $7,500 for a 25-ton piles of junk that included ammo-cans, missile cases, several segments of a helicopter, a Continental piston engine and a refrigerator! 

What he got out of all this was a badly dented F-104 fuselage section that he hoped to patch up and smooth out.

Throughout the decade long construction Darryl searched for an engine, and it would eventually take him all the way to the Pentagon in the spring of 1976.  I went to the Pentagon, walked into this room full of Air Force Generals and made my presentation. They said, ‘Are you kidding? Get out of here.’ So I went down the hall to the Navy with the same presentation. Not only did they agree to loan me an engine, they gave me a contact at NAS North Island in San Diego where they apparently overhauled the engines.

I called North Island, and they said they had five engines just out of overhaul and told me to come down, pick the one I wanted, and they’d put it on the engine stand and show me where and how to tweak it to get more power.”


As America’s Bicentennial approached, Ed Browning, owner of the Idaho-based Red Baron Flying Service, came on board to provide Darryl with much needed financial and logistical support. Browning’s sponsorship also gave the F-104 its name, “Red Baron.”

On October 1976, the Red Baron team flew over Mud Lake, a dry lakebed 30 miles south of Tonopah, Nevada to take on the Navy speed record.

Bigfoot was REALLY popular in the mid 80s, so Ford sold a special edition in dealerships, the 460 hp 1987 Bigfoot Cruiser options package, that is now one of the rarest and least-known special edition classic vehicles on the market today.



Ford created its own tribute version with a double Westin roll bars and KC off-road lighting, via a conversion  outsourced to a company called Scherer Truck Equipment. Unfortunately, some of the modifications present on the Bigfoot Cruiser led to a recall and a buyback,

Ford’s recall noted that there were 360 F-150 and F-250 pickups, plus 200 Rangers fitted with the package, but collectors believe that only 300 were purchased by customers in total. Ford has also stated that 660 trucks were modified prior to the recall.

The Bigfoot Cruiser is a unique piece of American history because Ford was one of the few companies in the 1980s to experiment with more extreme lifts and trail-ready suspension packages (with Dodge celebrating its Baja success through the even more rare, also-recalled Rod Hall Signature Edition trucks around the same time).


The origin of it all? Bob Chandler had a successful construction company in the 1970s before being stopped by a motorbike accident. Bob began altering his 1974 Ford F250 4X4 to fit his interests, as he was an off-roading aficionado in the budding field, looking for something to do. So, Bob started with a reinforced axle, a bigger tire, and various motor tweaks & lifts.

Bob’s used his F250 to compete in off-road events with his family. And as the truck increased in size, from the engine to the axles to the tires, curiosity in the beast grew as well. He executed roadside stunts, performed at events, and later appeared in films and television shows. It evolved into the phenomenon that it is today, spawning an entire class of vehicles, an industry, and for some, a way of life.

a proposed rule from the U.S. Commerce Department is aiming to eliminate certain American vehicles produced in China and imported into the U.S., such as the Lincoln Nautilus, because of key Chinese software and hardware

Canadian officials are also asking for a similar ban, Canada’s Finance Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said “We do have real security concerns.”

Freeland added that Canada is “absolutely” considering a similar ban, adding “that is something we talked about in imposing the tariffs on EVs and something that came out very, very clearly in the consultation."

 the Lincoln Nautilus, is built at the Changan Ford Hangzhou Assembly plant