Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Michael Furman is still publishing excellent photos




very COOL game of chance for car events! Thank you Nitto for this !!






bumper stickers spotted in traffic

 

So, I had to look that up

spotted in a garage parking lot while it's engine is getting rebuilt at an engine shop



“Cotton” Owens — with help from family, friends and a team of highly qualified craftsmen from the Spartanburg, S.C., racing community — built this 1964 Dodge Polara to replicate his original Polara race car.



But until you see a close up, you won't get a kick out of the headlight covers, maybe the coolest ones I've seen 


I think you'll agree, bitchin' spare parts use! 

the trailer for the upcoming Coyote vs Acme movie (once shelved for a tax write off) starring John Cena and Will Forte (I wanted to post it, and with both a dozer and a stationary bike, it's fair game)





Bitchin' Plymouth Savoy (I think) was minding it's own business, when some young punk Mustang smacked it up alongside the back bumper. Things got UGLY fast.


So, the camera didn't get an image of what the nose of the Mustang looked like, but, since he was the dumb ass running into someone who was parked, and obviously large enough to see over the dash board, no sympathy here.



The hit was not recorded, just the yelling afterward. I bet someone out there did record this from another angle, if you see that, send me a link please


in October 1976, an Oshkosh, Wisconsin newspaper first said, " You have to kiss a lot of frogs " and that must have been after trying to find a good garage to get some work done

my brakes are overdue for replacement, I'm talking grinding of course, but instead of tossing some new brake pads on, and getting the rotors turned, the way we've been doing it since 1969 when disc brakes started becoming a part of day to day life, I learned (and posted about it) last summer that no one wants to turn rotors anymore. 

And the price of rotors has dropped, so damn low for the basics ones, that it's just cheaper to bolt on new ones. Of course, I hadn't needed to do brakes in decades to any step past pads or shoes. So that was a surprise to me. 

Then problems with jobs and income made brakes something that would have to wait until the last minute, and a payday not already spoken for rent. 

So, for the past couple days I've stopped into 4 garages (wanting to get the shocks and struts done too, as the car has 105,000 miles, and why the hell not replace them too? And since I don't have a spring compressor... )  

The 1st one would only get parts from O'Reillys. What the hell is that about? the next one wanted to get paid 100 to "inspect" my car. 

I don't need to waste 100 on an inspection that is unnecessary. I know that I want the rotors replaced, the pads replaced, and the shocks/struts replaced. I don't need the rest of the car "inspected" to waste my time and money. 

They, and the next place, REALLY want to get rid of the customer, and have the car dropped off. The less time the owner is nearby seems to be the entire direction... of them making money by getting the cars dropped off, and the owner to pay by credit card when they pick it up, with zero interest in what was done, how, or with what parts. 

Yeah, I don't operate that way. I tell my barber what I want, I tell a waiter what I want (if I could afford a sit down restaurant) and I tell an rental car place assistant what I want. 

That's how things go in the Merry ol Land of Oz, am I right? 

So, since I'm not in jail, and no longer in the military, I don't get told what to do. I don't work for them, they are in business to work for whoever walks onto the lot. When that's me, and my paycheck, I expect that any business that wants my money, and "please give us a review on Yelp" has to ask me what I want, and then (referring to a brake job) give me a written estimate 

California law (BPC § 9884.9, CCR § 3353) requires automotive repair dealers to provide a written, itemized estimate for parts and labor before beginning any work.

So I emailed on Saturday, they ignored that. I stopped by on Monday, asked for an estimate, didn't get one, stopped by on tuesday, got a verbal and a look at the computer screen, but nothing in writing. 
So I called and texted, and got an estimate without part numbers, and asked for the part numbers to verify those would be what I asked for, rotors that are drilled (hopefully giving better braking, shorter stopping distance) and got those on the drive over today to visually check the rotors they got. 

They didn't get what I told them to. 


How can any shop be so inept when they've achieved this many customer voted awards? 

So, failure to respond to email, failure to come through on the 1st request for an estimate, failure to put in part numbers when 1)requested 2) after saying they'd email me the estimate with the part numbers and failure to get the parts I requested. 

Oh, yeah, and they spelled my name lower case, and misspelled it. How do you take that

THEN when I pushed the issue, the young guy in the office, who I doubt knows a Haynes from a Rand McNally, a socket from a paper weight, and I know has never used a pickle fork on a vehicle and wouldn't recognize a strap wrench if it would save his life. If he's not a nepo baby I don't know what he is. 

Anywho, he proceeded to tell me to get lost, and I told him that where he was working wasn't one I expect to last long enough to see 2030. Then he confessed that it was a horrible place. Well, I wasn't looking to contradict that. I left. 

I had another place in mind, over close enough to my garage that I can walk over and putter around, also walking distance to a Starbucks, Denny's etc. 

I stopped in, and this guy was FRIENDLY. I'll keep you posted, I'll be there at 730 am tomorrow, and already plan to get them breakfast/coffee and lunch. Yeah, I do that. I did pizza for the shop that upgraded my 69 R/T

Mike wants to know if anyone can ID this dashboard, it's 40" wide

 

Found in Maine, near the city of Presque Isle, and that is a LONG way from anywhere else, nearly on the northern Eastern most corner of the state, and the country! 


truth

 https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=3572115206274980&set=gm.2509906602803262&idorvanity=259565571170721

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

how much it actually costs to pay an experienced professional to build a mile of mountain bike trail in 2026


10 to 15 a foot, or about 60-80k per mile, but it all depends on many factors specific to each individual trail

everything really depends on the type of trail that you’re building and the type of environment that you’re building through, and then permitting and environmental approvals and assessments definitely factor into all of this

I pulled 3 socket wrenches out of a tool box I got at an estate sale last year, it's amazing how many Craftsman tools were in it. And I found something interesting I'd never noticed about 3/8th wrenches before. An oil fitting



does anyone remember what is needed to inject oil in that spring loaded ball orifice? Some special oil can? 

Whoa... armored truck heists still happen? Effectively?


A pair of armed men stole $1.8 million from an armored truck in Philadelphia on Tuesday morning

classic American made carb brands, were there fewer than I thought, or just not many got contracts to be factory equipment on production cars?


Holley, Carter, Edelbrock, Rochester, Autolite, Stromberg, and Winfield are the ones that I can name by memory

Carter made the 1st 4 barrel, in 1952 for a Buick - and produced Rochesters and Webers

Autolite would place a Ford tag on carburetors purchased from Carter, Holley, and Rochester; so many carburetors with a Motorcraft tag actually were made by other companies

Carters foundry was so contaminated with PCBs it was turned into a EPA Superfund site a year later. 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carter_Carburetor

The Carb Shop has an online database to share the carbs and information that they had gathered in 5 decades of operation

Autolite, Carter, Detroit, Ensign, Holley, Kingston, Linkert, Marvel, Motorcraft, Rayfield, Rochester, Schebler, Stromberg, Tillotson, Winfield, Zenith

https://www.thecarburetorshop.com/Carbshop_virtual_museum.htm

The Sunderman Carburetor Company offered a replacement carb for Model Ts, which had a trap-door similar to the design of some early mouse-traps. While early advertisements do not show the "Mouse Trap" data plate, at some time the name was given to this carburetor.

Today's trivia that I've never heard of before, and only just learned of:

In the early days of motoring in the USA, one of the most popular cars was the Ford Model T. As were so many T's in comparison to other vehicles, the aftermarket manufacturers concentrated on accessories and "improvements" for the Model T. 

In fact, because of the vastness of this market, a new phrase was born: "fits to a T"

When was the last time you bought your wife a conversation piece for the living room coffee table?


 https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10234099940020340&set=gm.4635905140020061&idorvanity=2695731877370740

a very impressive custom waterfall!

Monday, April 20, 2026

because it's 4/20 day. Click the link for the story, but I've posted it before

 

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1502452328002298&set=a.568782714702602

Raymond Loewy's 1966 E-type

a unique rumble seat design on a 1926 Rolls, that I've never seen before; a two panel seat, where one lifts up for the seat back, and the panel between that and the cabin, pivots upside down to be the seat of the ruble seat, and seat arms.


A couple more Calvin and Hobbes



1950 Willys-Overland Alcoa Coupé Prototype (thank you George!)


How fast does one have to be going in a truck stop to pull this off?