Just A Car Guy
Cool things with wheels since 2006
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
completely out of no where, and with zero words to explain, I was sent two photos, and one is my 69 Super Bee when I drove it from Michigan to California in 1995. The other is sorta what it looked like when I bought it in 94
well, that's twice in about 2 hours, that people told me don't know something about cars, that's VERY fundamental. The 1st was my sister, on the phone, so this 2nd time, in my comment section where I can get a snapshot of it, I can show you
Somehow she could not find enough space between her ears to ponder the wisdom of preventative maintenance, and installing a new water pump at 100000 miles, similar to replacing the timing belt, and clutch, when the engine and trans were torn out and those were easy to replace. Versus 75 thousand miles from now when all the cost or trouble of labor would be at my expense, and not during the warranty work when the engine went bad, and was rebuilt under warranty (the water pump was not replaced at that time).
EMD M-16 power car. One of 68 built between 1954 and 1960, to sell to municipalities as backup generators, and had a 16-567C inside with an AC generator. This one is located north of San Antonio
Monday, January 19, 2026
standing ovation for UPS driver Willy Esquival for running into a burning house to save a 101 year old woman
It's been a couple years, but about not so long ago, I was out walking nearly every day to get enough exercise to lower the blood pressure, the heart rate, and increase my general circulatory health. (It worked) But it's time to get at it again, so, there will be frequent photos, as there were in days of yore, of what I saw on walkabout
the insurance company that didn't bother checking the security of Lockwood Leasing in Canada is learning how expensive it was to not verify that the cars couldn't be driven away by thieves. Some just did. Either the alarm wasn't switched on or there was no alarm of any value installed.
thieves broke into the dealership, pried open a lock box full of keys with a crowbar, then drove away a Ferrari 812 GTS, a Porsche 911 GT3, two Mercedes-Benz S580s and two BMW M4 models.
What the hell was preventing the cars from driving away? Wet noodles? There were no blockers
10 thieves in the crew, simply smashed the glass door to the premises, used a pry bar to open the key safe, moved the furniture, and drove the cars away.
https://carbuzz.com/ferrari-812-gts-porsche-911-gt3-cars-stolen/
Sunday, January 18, 2026
then there was the time when the mayor of Springfield Illinois lost his marbles and used his police department to torment the newsies. All stemming from him not getting 2 cents change back when paying for a paper with a nickel
The short-lived imbroglio began on May 12, 1921, when Mayor Charles Baumann gave a newsboy a nickel to pay for his 3-cent newspaper, but the newsboy stiffed the Mayor out of 2 cents change, so the Mayor retaliated by ordering city police to dismantle every news stand in downtown Springfield.
The next morning, however, Baumann ordered police officers to overturn the news stands. Police, acting on orders of the mayor, this morning forced all newsboys to take their papers from the downtown news-stands and working in pairs overturned every stand.
https://sangamoncountyhistory.org/wp/newsboys-vs-the-mayor-1921
Winton, the topic of the day (so far) came up with a compressed air starter, and the tank of compressed air was able to double as a reservoir for inflating tires
Winton's compressed-air starter enabled advertising of “The Self-Starting Winton Six-Teen-Six”.
That starter system also enabled Winton, from 1911, to offer tire inflation using the same compressed-air reservoir.
Until 1911 there were only a handful of self starting cars that didn't require grabbing a crank handle, and Winton and Chalmers both used compressed air systems. In 1912, 60 manufacturers were including a self starter in their equipment lists, but only two were electric
In the Jan 1912 Automobile Magazine the variety of starters was listed as acetylene gas, electrical, compressed air, spring and lever starters
https://www.delcoremyhistory.com/images/Moments%20in%20Time/Starter%20Types%20Automotive_Industries%20Jan%201912.pdf for the details on how the systems worked
https://www.thesahb.com/snapshot-467-1908-winton-six-teen-six/
For a great article on how the first cars were made, written by the first American car maker, enjoy the information in the Saturday Evening Post article by Alexander Winton, who sold cars in 1898
On radiators:
A few days later I was standing in his barn, looking at the machine, which, he said, wouldn’t run.
I examined the gas tank. It was all right. I looked over the spark plugs. Tested the batteries. Got down under the car and stared up underneath. Everything seemed all right, so I went around in front and spun the motor.
Finally I ran my fingers under the mixer.
Then I broke in on the physician’s sarcastic twitterings with this question: “Why did you plug the hole in the bottom of the mixer?
“To keep the gasoline from leaking.”
I punched another hole in the mixer, drained off the gasoline which had flooded the cylinders, put the fluid back in the tank, turned the crank, and started the motor.
That was one thing we pioneers in automobiles had to do that presidents of companies miss today. We had to give personal service to our customers. Many times I have piled out of bed on a winter’s night to aid a stranded driver. A good many times, too, I left my telephone receiver off the hook so I could get some sleep.
“Next year we are going to equip our cars with starters,” I told an associate, standing with me.
“You mean so cars won’t have to be cranked?”
“Yes.”
I went inside, made a drawing of the idea that had come, built a mechanism that could be operated by pressing down a foot, and we had the starter that took the pressure from the cylinders, stored it in a tank, and kept it ready for use. This air starter was the forerunner, in a sense, of the present electric starter.
the first man to buy a car, Robert Allison, a mechanical engineer of Port Carbon, Pennsylvania. Here's the account of the event, from Winton
We did not know where our customers would come from, but we were sure they would come. We started building four machines, and when one was finished, Robert Allison, hearing that I was manufacturing automobiles, came to Cleveland.
He wanted a ride. I told him to hop in, and then proceeded to give the first of many millions of demonstrations that since have preceded the sale of automobiles.
“One thousand dollars.”
“I’ll buy it.”
Within a short time we sold the other three machines, getting $1,000 apiece. Our profit on each was $400.
the first car tires.... were ordered by Winton, from Goodrich, Here is his account of how getting car tires made, for the first car, went.
I went to the Goodrich Company, in Akron, and told them I wanted something bigger than their biggest bicycle tire, something that would fit the wheels of a horseless carriage.
“That’s a new one on us,” cried a man to whom I had been directed.
“A horseless carriage, eh? Hmph! Will it run?”
“You bet it will.”
“Well, I guess we can make them, although we never have.”
“That’s fine.”
The man hesitated, rubbed his chin, and observed: “We will make them, but you will have to pay for the molds.”
“Do what?”
“Yes, sir. There won’t be enough call for tires for horseless carriages, and we can’t afford to pay for the molds. Also, you will have to pay for them in advance — and the tires too. We’ll have them on our hands if you don’t get them.”
I paid.
They were single-tube affairs, and were pretty expensive. It wasn’t long before I got a puncture, and while I thought of patching the tire I figured out what I considered a better idea. Molasses was heavy and would stop leaks if they weren’t too large, so I began pumping it into the tube. I pumped too hard. The rubber gave way and the molasses came out too quickly to be dodged.
an interview with Thomas A. Edison from the New York World newspaper of November 17, 1895,
“It is only a question of a short time when the carriages and trucks of every large city will be run by motors.
Alexander Winton established the Winton Motor Carriage Company in 1897, among the earliest American automobile manufacturers (Duryea and White were the others)
Alexander's sister, Catherine Winton and her husband, Thomas Henderson, were also in Manhattan at this time. Thomas was some eleven years older than Alexander. Alexander may have followed his sister and brother in law to the US.
His first work was as a machinist with Delameter Ironworks in New York. A year later he left to take up a position as an assistant engineer on a cargo boat plying between New York and South America. He endeavored to learn as much as he could about steam ship engineering.
He left the sea a couple of years later and married Jeanette Muir McGlashan (b. 3rd September 1861, Glasgow) in Manhattan on 18th January 1883. Jeanette had arrived two years earlier but they had known each other from childhood in Scotland. Jeanette was the daughter of foreman engineer's patternmaker William McGlashan and Jean Muir.
In 1884 he was working at the Phoenix Ironworks, and by 1881 was foreman but was again listed as a machinist the following year.
The motorcycle Henderson Brothers, Tom & William, were grandsons of Alexander Winton and their father was a Winton President of some sort.
Henderson made in-line 4-cylinder motorcycles from 1912 until 1931.
Two years later, in 1899, his grandson William Henderson came to work as a designer and draftsman at the factory, helping develop the Winton during its meteoric rise.
Carl Stearns Clancy became the first person to ride around the world on a motorcycle, and he did it aboard a Henderson. The press took note. Riders took notice. Dealers couldn't keep up with demand. The Model B improved braking. The Model C added a two-speed hub. The Model F came with a kick-starter and a tighter wheelbase for nimbleness. Year by year, Henderson machines got better, faster, and smarter.
In 1917, as America entered the Great War and industry shifted gears, the Henderson brothers sold their company to Ignaz Schwinn, the bicycle baron behind one of America's most successful "Big Three" motorcycle manufacturers, Excelsior. Production moved to Chicago, and the bikes were branded Excelsior-Henderson. For a time, it was a golden partnership. William Henderson stayed on as a chief engineer
Kim just shared a fun song with me that I've never heard of.... Dear Dad
Dear Dad, don't get mad,
Is by the next semester
Can I get another car?
This one here is sick'ning
On a wide dual road.
I might as well be walking
As to drive this old Ford.
To go and pass a truck,
If I ain't goin' down hill,
Dad, Im, out of luck.
And even if I get by,
It's still a rugged risk,
The way this old Ford
Keep a hitting and miss.
On my way to school,
I almost got a ticket
'Bout a freeway traffic rule.
It's now a violation
Driving under forty-five,
And if I push to fifty,
This here Ford will nosedive.
Out here trying to drive.
This Ford wiggles
When I'm approaching forty-five/
I have to nurse it along
Like a little suffering pup,
And cars whizzing by me,
Dad, look like I'm backing up.
For gas somehow,
And Dad, I got both carburetors
hooked up on it now.
I tried to hook another
To see if I'd do a little good,
But ain't no place to put it
'Less I perforate the hood.
See what I can see,
Try to find a Cadillac,
Sixty-two or three.
Just something that won't worry us
To keep it on the road.
Sincerely, your loving son,
Henry Junior Ford.
Saturday, January 17, 2026
this is interesting... sueing for mental anguish, distress, and such - because an airline lost his luggage, and like all airlines, won't find it even when you tell them the location via Airtag
On December 28, 2023, American Airlines had a failure to deliver his checked luggage, which caused a severe mental health decline, due to the absence of essential clothing and prolonged stress from the baggage loss
According to the lawsuit, the traveler was exposed to the extreme cold of a Zurich winter without appropriate clothing, as all winter wear and personal items were inside the missing luggage.
He claims this situation directly contributed to a rapid deterioration of his mental health.
During his stay in Switzerland, which lasted several months, KR states that he was admitted to 3 different psychiatric hospitals. He spent more than one month as an inpatient receiving treatment.
Without any form of health or travel insurance, he received medical bills totaling over $50,000 from the Swiss healthcare system.
It would be incredibly interesting if someone found a legal way into getting the airlines, and airports, to be vigilant about taking care of everything they are responsible for, and not losing luggage
1965 Meteor Montcalm, a Canadian car
Joseph Ganz ( editor-in-chief of Motor-Kritik magazine) and his "Standard", in Switzerland in 1935 or 36 ( the air scoop is for the rear engine ) prior to Porsche using his design to make the VW Beetle
this lucky knucklehead spent WW2 riding a Harley around Lake Michigan, I kid you not. LIFE Magazine Archives - Charles Steinheimer Photographer WWP-PDA
Luella Bates, the first female truck driver to receive a New York driver's license.
Luella would undergo several whirlwind tours across America in her trusted Model B truck. Her first tour would take her to approximately 25 towns, beginning in Kansas City, Missouri, and finishing in Bellefontaine, Ohio




















