Tuesday, April 28, 2026

It's been a long time since I have seen the " Ferrari's Ass Is Mine " on a Cobra

does that Cobra Daytona trailer look way too nose heavy? Or just plain wrong? I got the instant reaction from seeing this that the trailer tongue is too low, the bumper hitch is too low, or something... wrong



But I really am posting this because of the truck towing the trailer

A Factory Five with upgrades



the New York Times reports that the FAA is making a recruiting push aimed at avid video game players to fill a national shortage of air traffic controllers. (or, they could simply off to pay them a lot more money to get more applicants!)

The FAA’s new campaign aims to reach young adults who possess useful skills that are transferable to a career in air traffic control, including:

Demonstrated high cognitive functions
Multitasking
Spatial awareness
Strategy and problem-solving

With only about 25 percent of controllers holding a traditional college degree, this effort is focused on reaching talented young people pursuing alternative career paths, many of whom are active in gaming. Feedback from controller exit interviews reinforces this, with several controllers pointing to gaming as an influence on their ability to think quickly, stay focused, and manage complexity. Approximately 65 percent, more than 200 million, of Americans regularly play video games.

Abandoned Solano Train Ferry located right off the coast of Antioch, California. It was the largest train ferry at the time when it set sail in 1879


https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1581189184014852&set=gm.27198123699794454&idorvanity=120835437949980

Railroad Age Gazette 1912.

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10233495500394323&set=gm.3541699795962153&idorvanity=410016829130481

one step closer to a terminator robot... but - is this also one step closer to robots being used as bomb defusers, deep sea welders, and other high dollar and high danger work (but it's not likely, as human labor is often dirt cheap... robots like this will never clean hotels)



Japan Airlines will introduce the robots for trial run at a Tokyo airport amid country’s surge in inbound tourism and worsening labour shortages, with a view to deploying them permanently as a solution to the country’s chronic labour shortage.

The Chinese-made humanoids will move travelers' luggage and cargo on the tarmac at Haneda, which handles more than 60 million passengers a year.

The president of JAL Ground Service, Yoshiteru Suzuki, said using robots to perform physically demanding work would “inevitably reduce the burden on workers and provide significant benefits to employees”, according to the Kyodo news agency.

This will be the first time No. 4014 has ever steamed east of Chicago




May 30 – Omaha, Nebraska
June 3 – West Chicago, Illinois 
June 10 – Buffalo, New York 
June 15-16 – Scranton, Pennsylvania 
July 4-5 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 
July 9-10 – Altoona, Pennsylvania 
July 14 – Fostoria, Ohio 
July 19 – St. Louis, Missouri

the Union Pacific Museum will be selling tickets for rides in vintage passenger cars pulled by Big Boy through the Poconos Mountains in Pennsylvania on June 14

I bet it's not going to matter to anyone if a corporation does charity work for the free publicity, the tax write off, or the virtue signaling... as long as the charity is a kids or pets type. So, in that context, it's still cool that the Boys and Girls Club benefits!








Bridgestone held a block party at Boys & Girls Clubs of Middle Tennessee’s Andrew Jackson Clubhouse in Nashville, where the company surprised Club kids and families with a new passenger van and a $100,000 unrestricted operation grant.

Bridgestone Retail Operations, a subsidiary of Bridgestone Americas, is marking the10th anniversary of its Driving Great Futures partnership with Boys & Girls Clubs of America (BGCA) with major donations, special giving campaigns and engagement opportunities for Club kids throughout the remainder of the year. 

Passenger vans are among the most vital resources a Boys & Girls Club can have, providing a solution to transportation challenges and enabling safe travel for young people to and from Club locations. These grants also enable Boys & Girls Clubs to provide more learning experiences for youth off site, such as field trips, college tours and other enriching activities.


Bridgestone was recently named one of Forbes’ Best Brands for Social Impact, ranking #20 in the U.S. and rising more than 70 spots from last year.

Plaintiffs who paid John Deere’s authorized dealers for large equipment repairs from January 2018 to now, will recover somewhere between 26% and 53% of overcharge damages, now that JD settled, and agreed to pay $99 millio

The ag manufacturing giant will also make digital diagnostic, maintenance, and repair tools available to third parties for 10 years.

the price of used equipment skyrocketed in response to the infamous service difficulties. Even when the cost of older tractors doubled, farmers reasoned that they were still worth it because repairs were simpler and downtime was minimized. $60,000 for a 40-year-old machine became the norm.

A judge’s approval of the settlement is still required, though it seems likely. Still, John Deere isn’t out of the woods yet. It still faces another lawsuit from the United States Federal Trade Commission, in which the government organization accuses Deere of harmfully locking down the repair process.

nifty... how have I never seen a set of these until now?

 

A tool “The Gas Index,” originally made to track beer prices (It was called the “Guinndex.”) started as a tool to track the price of a pint of beer in Ireland.

The Gas Index factors in your vehicle and location, how far you’ll have to drive, and what octane it requires. 

Monday, April 27, 2026

the Daily Timewaster finds some really cool stuff, the YB-35, YB-49 and the B-2


 https://dailytimewaster.blogspot.com/2026/04/the-yb-35-yb-49-and-b-2-bombers.html

the first volume of A.J. Foyt's biography is 656 pages, and there’s a second volume on the way, Octane Press is taking pre-orders for the book

Foyt is the only driver to win the Indy 500, the Daytona 500, and the 24 Hours of Le Mans. 

https://www.thedrive.com/news/new-aj-foyt-biography-will-have-some-of-the-greatest-racing-stories-ever

1907 Corbin with an interesting simple back seat

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=2512563515862557&set=gm.10162740192397481&idorvanity=119087132480

If I win the lotto, I might not tell anyone, but the mansion I have built and the matching brass era car will be obvious signs. (this is a real 1916 photo, of a Massachusetts home, just pure awesome design, I would certainly get this one recreated!))


Nathaniel Sanders owned Boston Motor Company and was a dealer for Acme Automobiles. This was his home in Haverhill MA built in 1881, designed by Ralph Emerson.

The picture is from 1916, the house had 33 rooms. 

It was torn down in 1946, when the family left Massachusetts and owed taxes on it. The city was having trouble with youths going into the abandoned house, partying and lighting fires.

The family sold the estate and land to the city, used the money to pay the back taxes and the city made the land conservation area.
https://haverhill.pastperfectonline.com/Photo/83456724-64EC-40B3-A716-462470667023

See lots more photos of this place, exterior and interior at https://haverhill.pastperfectonline.com/bysearchterm?keyword=Birchbrow

Rube Goldberg and a Cole


the front clip of a real deal 427 Cobra that was wrecked when it was new


tractor driving immortality has been achieved!

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1504727531025086&set=a.306924777472040

A new bridge in Finland is likely the world's longest car-free bridge and has a planned lifetime of 200 years.


https://www.planetizen.com/news/2026/04/137428-finland-opens-worlds-longest-multimodal-car-free-bridge

A rare Douglas B-23 Dragon, once owned by Howard Hughes, is getting restored at Pearland Regional Airport in Texas. (thank you George!)


A total of 38 B-23s were built, serving initially as U.S. Army Air Forces medium bombers before being relegated to secondary roles during WWII, including reconnaissance, training, transport, and test duties.

 Several aircraft converted for transport use were redesignated UC-67s. Following the war, all surviving examples were declared surplus, and many entered civilian service as cargo and executive transports

After Hughes sold it, other owners included Gar Wood Industries, Rexall Drug Company, and Food Machinery Chemical Corporation.

I just found out I never posted about the Saleen S7, thank you George! Fewer than 100 street-legal S7s were ever built.



When the Twin Turbo arrived in 2005 with 750 hp and a claimed 248 mph top speed, the car entered territory occupied by only one other production vehicle on earth at the time: the Bugatti Veyron. The Veyron cost over $1 million. The S7 Twin Turbo was priced around $585,000, but the Saleen never officially set a top speed record to challenge the Veyron.

If road car performance wasn't enough, Saleen built a racing version to prove the point on track. The S7-R was a purpose-built competition variant, and 14 units were produced. It went up against some of the most powerful factory-backed programs in GT racing and won.

In the FIA GT Championship, the S7-R beat works-supported Ferrari and Maserati teams. These were not private operations, but manufacturer-backed efforts with full factory resources behind them. Saleen beat them anyway.

Thank you George!


a promotion by Healthy Choice Foods in 1999 caught the attention of a civil engineer (now associate vice president of energy and sustainability at University of California) they offered 500 frequent flyer miles for UPC codes mailed in as proof of purchase, double that if mailed in quickly



Phillips ran the math and found that the cheapest qualifying product was Healthy Choice individual pudding cups at Grocery Outlet. 25 cents each. 

That meant $2.50 of pudding bought 1,000 airline miles. The airlines themselves valued those miles at $20.

He drove a van across California, cleaned out 10 different Grocery Outlets around Sacramento, and stacked 12,150 pudding cups from his garage to his living room. When cashiers got suspicious, he told them he was stocking up for Y2K.

There was no way he could peel that many barcodes alone before the deadline, so he called the Salvation Army and proposed a trade. He’d donate every cup if their volunteers peeled the labels first. They agreed. 

The Salvation Army fed people with $3,000 worth of pudding. Phillips got the barcodes, and claimed an $815 federal tax deduction on the donation to the Salvation Army.

He mailed the barcodes in before the early deadline to double the points, and waited. 

Then a giant package arrived. Paper certificates worth 1,253,000 frequent flyer miles. Lifetime AAdvantage Gold status at American Airlines. $150,000 worth of flights.

The Wall Street Journal put him on the front page in January 2000. The London Times followed a week later. Paul Thomas Anderson read the coverage and built a subplot in Punch Drunk Love based on this story in 2002. 

Over the next five years he flew his entire family to 43 countries.
Net cost after the tax write-off: $2,325. That’s $54 per country.

N.R. Dunton ran a pipe to a spring two miles away and established Cool Springs in 1926 on Route 66 west of Kingman, Arizona







The business thrived until the new highway opened in 1952.

Cool Springs became a poultry operation called the Chicken Ranch. It was abandoned in 1964 and then burned down. 

Cool Springs was partly rebuilt in 1991 to be blown up for the film Universal Soldier. Ed Leuchtner bought it in 2002 and resurrected the landmark.

A Monroe County judge dismissed three I-490 speeding tickets—and blasted the traffic court for shifting the burden of proof.

 https://www.roadandtrack.com/news/a71119724/new-york-judge-speed-camera-ticket-appeal-castigates-traffic-court-in-ruling/

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Chinto the Chevy powered Pinto attempts to set the longest wheelstand at the Byron Dragway 2025 wheelstand competition


A superfan of Big Boy 4014 has submitted a motorized, 3,920-piece Big Boy 4014 LEGO kit to the company. If his idea gets 10,000 votes, it will be among designs advanced to LEGO’s review pool for potential production.

Big Boy fans have 500 days to support Dupon's project. 

With nearly 4,000 pieces involved, the model is also complex to put together, requiring 987 pages of instruction.

graffiti went in a new direction... 1960s Bugs Bunny!


just driving on I-84 outside Boise, sunroof wide open... when the unexpected happened.... an eagle dropped a 14" trout right into the car


In 2008, nearly 90 years after it was built, this 1919 gas station in El Paso, Texas was restored



the original 1974 Gone in 60 Seconds was the subject of an extensive article in Hagerty's magazine, and since I haven't seen that original movie in forever, there was a lot of interesting info to read

J.C. Agajanian’s midget racing track Ascot Park was used as a location in the film
His Rolls Royce was used as a car for the thieves to steal

Parnelli Jones loses his Big Oly Bronco to the car thieves crew and offers a tour of his facility to the main character, who plays an insurance adjuster 

Big Oly was winner of the Baja 1000, Baja 500, and Mint 400, and fetched $1.87 million at auction in 2021, but during the movie's filming, was just another race truck close to hand and available for the movie. Only time would reveal it's value to collectors

After the movie, the producer/director/actor and star of the movie went on a promotions tour, and stopped at a car wash in San Leandro, to spiff up Eleanor before the film premiered at the Palace Theater that night.
 An 11-year-old kid was hanging out there because he liked cars. Upon encountering the star, and Eleanor, the kid's life took a fateful turn.
 “I was blown away to meet him. I admired the car, and he said, ‘This is not a car. Her name’s Eleanor, and she’s my co-star.’” The die was cast; mesmerized by the smashed-up Mustang and the flamboyant director, the kid said that he hoped someday to work in films and perform stunts.
 Halicki told him to look him up when he turned 18—and that’s just what he did. Martin got to know Halicki and went on to become an award-winning stunt coordinator. 
He served as stunt coordinator for the 2000 remake of GI60S, produced by action film mogul Jerry Bruckheimer and starring Nicolas Cage and Angelina Jolie

Sammy Davis Jr was given a Duesenberg replica by the owner of Harrah's resorts and casinos. It was built in 1971 by the Duesenberg Corporation of Gardena, California, and patterned after a 1935 Duesenberg SSJ, using templates from the original 1935 SSJ La Grande body. Thank you George

Road & Track magazine founder John Bond featured the Miller SSJ in the magazine’s February 1971 issue and called it “the best replica yet,” a significant endorsement from one of America’s most respected automotive publications.


The car was purchased new by Harrah’s in 1972 through legendary Duesenberg dealer Leo Gephart and made available to Sammy Davis Jr. during his frequent performing engagements at Harrah’s Lake Tahoe and Reno. The title was later formally transferred to Davis as his personal car.

Instead of sourcing a '35 engine from a Duesy, they went with a Mopar 383 and 727 trans, and added a centrifugal supercharger.

The chassis was a Dodge truck




Road & Track magazine founder John Bond featured the Miller SSJ in the magazine’s February 1971 issue and called it “the best replica yet,” a significant endorsement from one of America’s most respected automotive publications.

77 Bronco with a 302, and only 9k original miles, it sold in 2024 for a whopping $97,000, and that owner has listed it on BAT but the bid is only up to 35k




I wouldn't have guessed that anyone would come all the way to Barona drags (in East San Diego) from Santa Barbara ... but Seth Hammond and his friend Chip Foose went home with a 1st place trophy




Gray Baskerville got it right back in 1975 when he wrote, “Seth Hammond is slightly eccentric…”

Running a Pinto four-cylinder he set his first-ever Bonneville record at 140 mph in 1976 and has managed to keep his name in the record book every year since then.

In 1981, Seth bought a Lakester that was built in his hometown of Santa Barbara, California, by Tim Rochlitzer and that was on the cover of HOT ROD in 1962. He ran it until 2003, putting nine people in the 200 MPH Club and three in the 300 MPH Club, including his wife, Tanis (at 305, the first woman above 300 mph)

What's the connection with Chip Foose? Chip's dad Sam had a shop next to Seth, and Chip learned from Seth how to use a lathe and a mill. He's been painting Seth's race cars for decades.

Seth has been drag racing since the late 60s

https://www.museumofamericanspeed.org/77sethhammondlakester.html

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Houston, we have a problem!


this 58 Testarossa photographed pre race back in 59 or 60, hasn't changed much in 6 decades


C.A.M. 2 was a contracted airmail route between Chicago and St.Louis starting April 15,1926. The lead pilot was Charles Lindberg.


https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1978309086111354&set=gm.27511408498461182&idorvanity=164403560255045 

Starting April 15,1926 the lead pilot was Charles Lindberg. 

After his nonstop flight from New York to Paris in 1927, he returned to flying for C.A.M. 2. Every time Lindberg flew the mail they sold you a special envelope and stamp to mark the occasion!

most of the human race will only achieve a longer lasting existence by scratching our names into wet concrete/cement, this is the first time I've seen legends, whose fame will last centuries - had not realized their accomplishments would outlast the cement!


Lagonda (you may not be familiar with it) was a pre WW1 British car that was became part of Aston Martin in '47, named for a Shawnee village in Ohio where the founder, former opera singer, William Gunn was from






In 1907 he launched his first car, the 20 hp, six-cylinder Torpedo, which he used to win the Moscow–St. Petersburg trial of 1910. This success produced a healthy order for exports to Russia, which continued until 1914.

Then, Lagonda famously hired W O Bentley away from Rolls Royce, after his firm was absorbed by Rolls Royce in 1931.

Bentley designed the 180 Hp V12 for Lagonda's large touring cars