Just A Car Guy
Cool things with wheels since 2006
Sunday, June 28, 2026
JCB has completed testing of its hydrogen-powered land speed record JCB Hydromax car ahead of its attempt to break the land speed record later this summer at Bonneville (thank you George)
The test runs took place at RAF Wittering in Cambridgeshire with Andy Green behind the wheel. The testing saw speeds increase from 177mph to 208mph
The 32-foot Hydromax car is powered by a powertrain developed in-house that combines two engines producing a combined 1,600bhp. The engines are “very similar” to those that feature in JCB’s own production-based hydrogen diggers, but have been enhanced by the need for speed.
Saturday, June 27, 2026
another trucking inspection by police, this time in Wichita Texas shows the same result as all the others... a ridiculously high number of truckers operating in violation of the laws
93 commercial vehicle stops
109 equipment violations issued by DPS
15 truck/trailer combinations impounded
1 cab impounded
24 individuals detained for being unlawfully present in the United States, from Mexico, India, Cuba, Algeria, Venezuela, Tajikistan, and Russia.
A small aircraft crashed into a 108-storey skyscraper in Beijing's central business district.
Police were preventing people from taking pictures and asking others to delete those they had taken while ushering people away from the building,
Friday, June 26, 2026
ever enjoy the song Summertime, by Mungo and Jerry?
The revving engine sound in the middle, is the sound of a Triumph TR6 roadster
coolest thing I saw today
Having served as Vice President of Sales for Stihl America (one of seven serving the United States and Canada) for many years, his last assignment before retiring was as a corporate product liability consultant, where he said he "got paid $50 an hour to educated $100-an-hour lawyers how to use a chain saw," then served as an expert witness in personal injury court cases.
Same with fishing reels. I only knew of Zebco. Snowmobile boots? Sorel. Never saw anything made by any other company.
and I want to let you know that it's the 100th Anniversary of Stihl ! Still family owned !
The partnership started simply, with a 10-by-10-foot STIHL booth at championships, funding for minor improvements and a paintjob for One Moment.
But what Phelps saw at the 2015 championships inspired bigger plans. Participants and spectators numbered upward of 150,000, even though online presence was virtually nonexistent, and the races were untelevised.
When Phelps discovered title sponsors were planning to stepdown in the near future, he pitched STIHL execs on a major sponsorship. They responded with an overwhelming yes. The first STIHL National Championship Air Race was held in Reno in September 2017.
I grew up in the Upper Penisula of Michigan, that's way the hell up there, where it snows every winter, and in the 70s and 80s, going to the forests, to get deadwood, fallen trees, for dry wood to burn, and cutting up live trees (known as green) for drying until the next winter, was almost universal with everyone that lived there.
Sure cuts down on the cost of heating when you only have to pay for a chainsaw, an old truck, and gas and oil for both.
Sure cuts down on the cost of heating when you only have to pay for a chainsaw, an old truck, and gas and oil for both.
And I never saw anyone use any brand of chainsaw, that wasn't a Stihl. Of course, other brands existed. But I didn't know that.
Same with fishing reels. I only knew of Zebco. Snowmobile boots? Sorel. Never saw anything made by any other company.
Thursday, June 25, 2026
thank you Marc for letting me know about Barney Oldfield Day at Museum of Fulton County! I didn't know that he became a movie star and even owned the “Oldfield/Kipper Saloon” in Los Angeles, which previously was the the Old Crow Bar, opened in 1906. They hadn't licensed the name from Old Crow liquor though, and were sued
1913... there's a parking garage there now... I bet Barney would hate the idea of a parking garage instead of a saloon, a race track would probably be fine, btu a parking garage? That's insulting to the memory of a race car driver
His car racing career began in 1902 when fledgling automobile designer Henry Ford hired him to race his model 999 car.
Barney was the first automobile racer to achieve a mile a minute
William Nolan, in his book “The Barney Oldfield” story, states that Oldfield took money earned from barnstorming to form a partnership with a former railroad conductor by the name of Jack Kipper. They took over the location and opened the Oldfield Kipper Saloon in late 1912.
Finally tiring of the saloon trade, Oldfield sold out in 1920 to the Rappaport Brothers, who operated a hattery business out of the building. In 1923 they changed their name to the New York Hat Co., continuing to operate through 1939
By the late 1940s, a Western Union Telegraph Office operated at 534 S. Spring St. Over the next ten years they would be robbed seven times.
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
Greg found a cool innovation of re-using stuff in his grand fathers garage
He graduated high school in 1957,
bought his own farm the same year,
proceeded to erect a barn behind house there.
In 1959 he built a work shop.
In 1960 he bought a sears air compressor it has date on it, and is still in use.
And he made this hose reel!
It has a pipe union in it with a leather washer with grease on it to seal air.
Greg says in his post that he was born in 1971, and has no idea how many times his grandfather, Greg himself, and his 2 sons, and countless neighbors pulled this hose out
His grandfather passed away in 1999 but this thing lives on.
The hub that the hose is rolled up on is a 4 legged John Deere logo, 5 gallon oil can.
Plaistow New Hampshire residents complained enough to police, related to the unsafe operation of commercial trucking, that the New Hampshire State Police and the Plaistow PD conducted a one day operation for “excessive speed, violations of weight restrictions, driving on restricted roads, as well as other unsafe behaviors by commercial drivers.”
that one day enforcement operation resulted in nearly 150 violations being found.
One day.
Obviously police aren't doing code enforcement any more unless it's an "operation" they will get paid over time for.
And the results prove that they haven't been doing inspections in forever
31 commercial vehicles stopped, 146 violations were discovered
5 drivers out-of-service
7 vehicles out-of-service
Multiple summonses and warnings were issued for issues ranging from speeding to drivers operating in violation of federal out-of-service orders
During an April brake day inspection sweep of around 4000 commercial vehicles, 14% failed so bad they were placed out of service
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