Just A Car Guy
Cool things with wheels since 2006
Monday, February 02, 2026
what the hell is this license plate trying to say? It's on a full size GMC truck
If this was on a Jeep Grand Cherokee, it would make sense, "Grand Cherokee, JeeP Jeep Grand Cherokee"
But it's on a GMC
this Power Wagon Dodge is a pretty uncommon sight around here, and rust free
and it's got the spare tire door on the side of the bed. I remember posting about that a couple months ago, but it was a Ford https://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2025/12/f-350-super-camper-special-powered-by.html
Sunday, February 01, 2026
it wouldn't be the first thing I did, but if I had a time machine, eventually I'd go check out the car and motorcycle shows of the newly made stuff in the brass era
https://forums.aaca.org/topic/341211-period-images-to-relieve-some-of-the-stress/page/57/
Cool look at a tire service sidecar business booth display
a couple worked a car theft scam across the Northeast, stealing or attempting to steal high-value cars and pickup trucks by relying on test drives, subtle distractions, and modern key technology to walk away with vehicles worth $2.4M across Ct, NY, and NJ
The investigation, led by the Old Saybrook Police Department, ultimately linked at least 20 vehicles to the same two-person operation.
According to police, the couple followed a consistent pattern when visiting dealerships. They would arrive posing as legitimate buyers, often asking to see or test-drive specific high-dollar trucks, like the Ford F-450 Super Duty. During those visits, investigators believe the male suspect either swapped the vehicle’s original key fob with a decoy or cloned it using the vehicle’s OBDII port, a process that can take less than a minute with the right equipment.
The woman allegedly played a key role in the distraction. In one documented case, police say she acted “playful” with a salesperson, drawing attention away from the vehicle while her partner started it or accessed the electronics. Once the key was cloned or swapped, the pair would leave without incident.
Thank you Doug!
Saturday, January 31, 2026
Top 50 most memorable hot rods and street cars of all time that have made an appearance in a television series, or a memorable television episode. No. 41: Jack Benny’s 1923 The Good Maxwell Tourer
At the turn of the century, industrialist Ben Briscoe hired Jon Maxwell to build a new car.
Jon had worked with Ransom Olds on the famed “curved dash Oldsmobile,” the first car made on an assembly line. A 1910 auto history credited Maxwell with “the unit power plant, multiple-disc clutch, and thermo-syphon system of cooling with the radiator in front of the engine;”
The original 1904 Maxwell was popular, and Briscoe built numerous factories to make it before going on a buying spree which bankrupted the company. Walter Flanders bought the remains, swapped out the aging Maxwell cars for his own (renaming the Flanders to the Maxwell). After Flanders retired, Maxwell again started to fail, and Walter Chrysler stepped in with expert engineers to fix the car’s troubles and to create a car in his own name—the Chrysler. After 1925, the Maxwell was upgraded and sold as the “Chrysler Four” (the original 1924 Chrysler was a six) then upgraded again to be the “new” Plymouth.
In a skit, Rochester called Jack at 11:05 in the morning to tell him the Maxwell had been stolen. Jack asked when it happened, and Rochester said it was taken at 10:30 AM and he let the police know at 10:50 AM. When Jack then asked Rochester why it took so long for him to call the police, Rochester replied that he called them when he stopped laughing.
Because of Jack Benny and Harry Conn, not to mention Mel Blanc, many Americans know Maxwell—if they know it at all—solely as the dilapidated, obsolete, sad car of Jack Benny.
Jack Benny donated his Maxwell for the scrap metal drive in support of the war effort, Oct 18 1942
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