Monday, April 07, 2025

Do you remember Creem magazine? In the 1970s, Creem magazine featured a popular series called Stars Cars





 https://www.vintag.es/2025/04/stars-cars-1970s.html#google_vignette

Merle Haggard once leased this dome car, the Silver Palace.


Haggard may have leased the thing for his doomed whistle-stop tour, a rolling Farm Aid campaign to drum up support for the country’s struggling farmers. The timing certainly tracks: Haggard took possession of the shiny car in 1985, the same year his train (dubbed the American) was set to take off from Bakersfield, California, with two hundred musicians, including Willie Nelson and Bob Dylan, farm group officials, and members of the press.

some Canada and USA car stats

Canada is the largest importer of U.S. cars and trucks, and the U.S. is the biggest importer of Canadian-made vehicles, with over 90% of the country's inventory ending up in the States. 

 In January 1994, manufacturers produced more than 575,000 vehicles in the States; by January 2025, fewer than 100,000 vehicles were produced in the U.S., according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. 

 Today, about 53% of cars sold in the U.S. are made in the U.S.

A Police Officer And His Dog Riding A Motorcycle, 1930

 

https://www.aol.com/78-fascinating-old-photos-history-062914823.html

Construction on Disney’s new, 22-story New York City headquarters at Hudson Street caused what the city said was nearly $6 million in “significant structural damage” to the neighboring Spring Street NYC Fire Museum, forcing it to close for nearly a year.


“Construction work at the site of the new Disney HQ caused damage to the FDNYs historic building, which is home to the NYC Fire Museum,” a city Law Department spokesman said in a statement. “This filing protects the City’s rights while we work with Disney and its insurers to determine whether we can resolve this matter without further litigation.”

https://nypost.com/2025/04/05/us-news/disney-left-nyc-fire-museum-with-6-million-in-damage-city/

Kawasaki made a robot horse, powered by a hydrogen engine

 

It goes without saying that the video above is almost entirely CGI. The Corleo on display at the Osaka Expo can stand and adjust its posture, but otherwise has very limited mobility. There’s still a long way before it can achieve the kind of agility as shown in the demo video. The concept is primarily a thought exercise, with no plans for production.

Kawasaki is presenting a hydrogen-powered four-legged robot concept at Osaka Expo 2025 providing a glimpse of the future of off-road personal mobility. Resembling a robotic horse – or perhaps a lion, as the name “Corleo” suggests – the concept was developed by the parent company Kawasaki Heavy Industries and not Kawasaki Motors

The Corleo’s four legs are all powered by electricity generated by a 150cc hydrogen-burning engine housed between the two front legs.

https://www.motorcycle.com/bikes/news/save-a-horse-ride-a-kawi-the-kawasaki-corleo-concept-44620192

funniest thing I've read all week.

 

mindin’ my business, when this absolute dumpster fire of a pickup — I’m talkin’ rustier than a stripper pole at a condemned dive bar — comes flying past doing Mach Jesus. The thing sounded like it was held together with hope, half a zip tie, and maybe a whispered apology to Satan. Engine was squealing like it just found out safe words are optional.

Couple minutes later? That same busted-ass truck comes BACK, flying like it caught feelings, and right behind it: three flashing, siren-blaring friends lookin’ to take this whole situation from fast to furious. I mean they were on his tail like a drunk ex lookin’ for closure.

I had front row seats from the lot — pants halfway down, popcorn in one hand, moral compass nowhere to be found. The whole chase had more raw tension than backdoor prom night in a borrowed van.

And then… it happened. The pickup gave one last moan — like a porn star faking it after 45 minutes of missionary — and then silence. I swear the motor blew so hard it probably shot a piston straight through the dashboard and into another dimension. That thing didn’t just leave the group chat… it blocked everyone, deleted the app, and threw the phone in the river. That has to be why the chase ended — because the poor bastard's getaway vehicle literally nutted its last bolt.

in a strange series of circumstances, I've not needed to have brakes turned, rotors or drums, in about 20 or 25 years. So, not that my commuter needs the front discs turned, I find that the action of turning rotors, is obsolete.

I stopped by a garage that does a LOT of repairs, from transmissions to brakes. 

Well... they came highly recommended, so I dropped by to make an appointment, and was told that the steel in rotors is garbage, they just warp if turned, and it's not that much more to install new replacement rotors according to the mechanic. 



So here's what new ones cost. What's the point of turning rotors for the same cost then? 

I think the last time I needed drums, for my 69 Super Bee, I bought them at Worldwide Auto Parts (I don't know if they are even in business anymore). Then I traded for an original 69 Coronet Bee front disc brake set and had those rotors turned. I had a couple used cars around then, and never needed to get brakes done, then in 2011 I finally could afford a car payment and bought my very first new car, 3 years later, traded that in on my 2015 new car, and here it is ten years later and I finally have to deal with the rotors. I did the brake pads at about 50k miles 

Sunday, April 06, 2025

Greek urn with a chariot, from 2500 years ago!

 

https://dailytimewaster.blogspot.com/2025/04/black-figure-lekythos-greece-circa-500.html

it's been 8 years, but I recognized this Starliner... there just aren't that many race inspired 1960 Starliners out there. I posted this one in 2017, now it's up for auction



https://www.hagerty.com/marketplace/auction/1960-Ford-Galaxie/7cea7d71-457d-49bb-a291-33d4949ca8ff  mentions that this was a 2 episode build by Popular Hot Rodding in 2012

flooding at Mammoth Spring State Park derailed an empty coal train that seems to have been left on the bridge over the river as the storm (which was predicted) wiped out a couple bridge supports

 

https://www.4029tv.com/article/train-derails-as-flood-water-rises-in-northern-arkansas/64395666

A Sun brand licensed set of Kal Equip diagnostic meters, and a Sun timing light, is coming to auction


https://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2025/01/kal-equip-co-of-otsego-michigan-maker.html for my recent post on these cool vintage diagnostic pieces

https://www.mecum.com/lots/1144014/vehicle-inspection-kit/ it will likely sell for more than the similar sets you can buy on ebay for around 150 dollars

This 1965 Ford dealership sign from Yockey Friendly Ford dealership in Roselle, Illinois is set to be auctioned off at Mecum’s upcoming Indianapolis, Indiana sale in May

https://fordauthority.com/2025/04/1965-ford-dealership-sign-heading-to-auction/

no one advertises brake pads anymore....

 

https://issuu.com/morphyauctions/docs/flipdoc_feb_21-22_gas?fr=sMDBjOTY0OTU4MTA

1920s card stock and oak frame accordion display for flashlights

 https://issuu.com/morphyauctions/docs/flipdoc_feb_21-22_gas?fr=sMDBjOTY0OTU4MTA

I'd learned of the Rosetta stone, but only just now heard of the similar tri-lingual Behistun Inscription 100 meters above an ancient road connecting the capitals of Babylonia and Media. It's the worlds first roadside billboard, 2500 years ago.




The Behistun Inscription is a multilingual inscription and large rock relief on a cliff in western Iran, made sometime between 522 BC and 486 BC.

The inscription provides a lengthy sequence of events following the death of Cyrus the Great in which King Darius fought nineteen battles in a period of one year to put down multiple rebellions throughout the Persian Empire.

Darius proclaimed himself victorious in all battles during the period of upheaval, attributing his success to the "grace of Ahura Mazda" his god. The inscription includes three versions of the same text, written in three different cuneiform script languages: Old Persian, Elamite, and Babylonian. 

The inscription is to cuneiform what the Rosetta Stone is to Egyptian hieroglyphs: the document most crucial in the deciphering of a forgotten written language.

Although Darius makes it clear in the work that he wanted people to read his words, and even though he placed them on a well-traveled road between Babylon and Media (two of the major administrative centers of his empire), he placed them so high on the cliff that no one on the road would have been able to read the inscriptions or see the images clearly.

Further, once the relief was carved and the inscriptions complete, he had the ledge the workers had stood on removed so no one could get close enough to deface the work. Removal of the ledge, however, also meant no one could get close enough to read it. 

The roadway inscription has the Old Persian text in five columns; the Elamite text in eight columns, and the Babylonian text.  A copy of the text in Aramaic, written during the reign of Darius II, was found in Egypt.

After the fall of the Persian Empire's Achaemenid Dynasty and its successors, and the lapse of Old Persian cuneiform writing into disuse, the nature of the inscription was forgotten

German surveyor Carsten Niebuhr visited in around 1764 for Frederick V of Denmark, publishing a copy of the inscription in the account of his journeys in 1778. Niebuhr's transcriptions were used by Grotefend and others in their efforts to decipher the Old Persian cuneiform script. Grotefend had deciphered ten of the 37 symbols of Old Persian by 1802, after realizing that unlike the Semitic cuneiform scripts, Old Persian text is alphabetic






https://www.worldhistory.org/image/8764/the-behistun-inscription
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behistun_Inscription

Of course, there's a more enjoyable way to learn about this, it's reading pages 115 to 126 of Hendrik Van Loon's book Ancient Man, The Beginning of Civilizations. Written in 1920. 

Van Loon is one of my favorite authors, and he illustrated his own books beautifully, and did an amazing trick of making what he wrote, easy to enjoy. I just learned more about Egyptians, Sumerians, Mesopotamians, Phoenicians, and how writing was invented and how to read some of the hieroglyphics and cuneiform than I would have imagined possible in a single 200 page book. 

an example of why it's enjoyable to watch the old Top Gear episodes

 

a variety of pop up headlight designs

 

robot's on wheels... like this BMX size bicycle, can now do tricks. Skip the first 18 seconds, get right to it. Rai umv

this horse drawn trolley car, the horsecar 76, is believed to be the oldest preserved streetcar in the world, built somewhere between 1853 and 1862.


the incredible private subway car of August Belmont Jr., the financier for the first subway line in New York City at the Shore Line Trolley Museum in Connecticut.

The type of streetcar, known as a reversible horse car, could actually rotate 360 degrees on its undercarriage utilizing a single pin, so when the trolley needed to go in the reverse direction along the rails, the horse and the cab would just rotate around.



(not fact checked) In 1878 Amédée père designed La Mancelle, which is regarded as the first automobile (steam powered, not gas) to be put into series production, 50 being manufactured in all.

 

McKeen Motor Car #2. The First all Steel Railmotor Car, made from legit Carnegie and Bethlehem steel!

 


https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1074654178042198&set=pcb.1074661544708128

Saturday, April 05, 2025

there is a LOT of love for the Harry Potter stories and movies

 

odd faceted camo wrap...


 

Mowed 'em down?

In the '90s Saab introduced a hidden section to the speedometer


interesting license plates... must have inherited dad's truck?



electric tape patchjob repair... really? Who makes electric tape that good?

 

pretty weird for someone to use spray paint to tag their own car, but... Florida plates makes the connection between strange actions and strange people

 


So Cal Native


 

I get a kick out of what people are using as a daily driver when it's a cool old car

this moment of looking at a random bunch of cars in a parking lot, had me wondering.... why the hell aren't car makers making colorful cars anymore?


 

I get a kick out of what people are using as a daily driver when it's a cool old car



I get a kick out of the tiny bike that is secured on the flat bed, when it could just as easy get placed on the passenger seat



I don't recall I have ever seen this many badges on a car

 

Masons, Scottish Rites.. that's a busy person!