Saturday, May 24, 2025

Jim assembled a nearly complete collection of Hot Rod magazines, from the 1st, to 2014. A couple months ago, he put it up for sale, but of course, didn't say how much he was asking. No one ever does.












I collected nearly all the regulars from mid 1949 and didn't stop holding onto them until about 2019 or so. The quality drastically fell off around 2015 or so. From 2004 to 2014 it was really fun. 

someone got a cool piece of racing legend history here... the damaged hood off Dale Earnhardt's car from the '86 Firecracker 400 at Daytona




 https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=4186741578204110&set=pcb.1061650919332327

When Airwolf, the hit tv show ended in 1986, the helicopter was returned back to a conventional Bell 222 and spent the remainder of its days as an air ambulance.

 

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1282964387164187&set=a.519314683529165

Popular Mechanics has rehashed the Road and Track list of the 50 coolest cars ever made, the ones that are lusted after... and still doesn't make any damn sense. The Shelby Cobra, GT 350 Cobra Mustang, and Jag E Type are at 11, 12, and 13... lower in rank than the Matra #10, the 66 Alfa Spider #9, and the Toronado #8. That's bullshit



Popular Mechanics and Road and Track are both owned by Hearst. But rehashing the same info, that's just lazy


Roger Penske, famous for the "unfair advantage" since the Mark Donohue days, just fired his top 3 execs for getting caught at cheating

As a result of this latest cheating episode, Team Penske has announced the “departure” of:

team president Tim Cindric, who’s had that position since 2006 and has been a part of Team Penske since 1999,
the team’s managing director Ron Ruzewski,

great license plate, thank you Robert!

 

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1154464790057320&set=a.561710525999419

great license plate, thank you Tom!

 

good design on this Volvo dump truck to place an indicator where the operator can use it

 

tech a na lo ja!

 


Don't park in the field during harvest!

 

Friday, May 23, 2025

how damn cool is this guy?! Lots of effort and travel, and getting a toy train just right, to recreate as best as possible, the old photo!

 


https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1148871946996792&set=pcb.1743103126557870

I was born and raised about an hour away from Marquette

The first-ever Wienie 500 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway just went down (the race doesn't start in the video until 15:45 mark)



at 21:30, one of the racers blows a headgasket. That race doesn't end until 24:12. Yeah, 9 minute race





Six Oscar Mayer Wienermobiles—each themed after a regional hot dog—lined up for glory: Chi Dog (Midwest), New York Dog (East), Slaw Dog (Southeast), Chili Dog (South), Seattle Dog (Northwest), and Sonoran Dog (Southwest). 

And in the most American spectacle of the year, they actually raced

The winner? Slaw Dog, edging out Chi Dog in a photo finish


adorable


https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=586097744528368&set=a.324332494038229

Chicago Great Western had McKeen Motor Cars, and one of the cars was later used as storage shed rail-side.


https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1109475547893394&set=pcb.1109478661226416

Pacific Portland Cement No. 301 was made from a McKeen

 https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1109475677893381&set=pcb.1109478661226416

Interesting in addition to the Mckeen, is the Portland cement, I was just discussing that with someone last week. 

When quantities of Portland cement were first imported to the United States in the 1880s, its principal use was in the construction of sidewalks. Its name is derived from its similarity to Portland stone which was quarried on the Isle of Portland in Dorset, England. 

It was named by Joseph Aspdin who obtained a patent for it in 1824. 

 Portland cement is one of the lowest-cost materials widely used over the last century. 

Concrete produced from Portland cement is one of the world's most versatile construction materials.

Portland cement had been imported into the United States, but in the 1870s, was being produced near Kalamazoo, Michigan until the need for importing it disappeared and now it's made domestically



When quantities of Portland cement were first imported to the United States in the 1880s, its principal use was in the construction of sidewalks. Its name is derived from its similarity to Portland stone which was quarried on the Isle of Portland in Dorset, England. It was named by Joseph Aspdin who obtained a patent for it in 1824.

Sidewalks often were made in Ohio as a result of the urban postmasters insisting that before they would deliver mail for free in a city the city had to put in sidewalks.

Before agreeing to establish free city delivery, postmasters could ask that the city's sidewalks be paved, the streets lit, the houses numbered, and that street names be placed at intersections.

Rural postmasters would later demand that roads be easy to travel and free of obstructions before service could begin.

The founding fathers of the United States believed the delivery of mail to be so essential to a healthy democracy that the establishment of Postal Offices and Post Roads was enshrined it in Article 1, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution


so there you are, why Portland cement is important, because of postal delivery, and the side effect is that traffic crashes decreased by 74 percent, and postal delivery was the root cause of it all, because communication over long distances with friends and relatives is crucial to human mental health. 

Yes, I often feel like I'm doing a similar journalistic thing to "Connections" by James Burke, a fantastic show for history and trivia fans

the Martin Mars on it's way through Pima on a flat bed trailer drew a LOT of attention (thank you George! )

Vermont's Lt Governor wants to claim the dirt road in front of his house as his own private driveway... it's been public right of way, for 2 centuries

the Lt Gov isn’t even the only one with property there—there are eight other houses on Rodgers Road, according to a local newspaper. “James and Hella Coe own property on the class four section of the road and don’t want to lose access,” writes The Newport Daily Express.

the town had another selectboard meeting in which “almost 20 neighbors who say they need to access that section of the road signed a petition asking the town to maintain control of the road,” according to WCAX, the CBS affiliate

brilliant way to fly under the radar, just be hidden in plain sight! Too many people are upset by homeless travelers getting by living on the street without a mortgage, simply living on a poverty level income. This is a good way to slide through town, get some sleep at night, and not get bothered by assholes

 


https://www.thedrive.com/news/this-stack-of-pallets-is-actually-a-low-budget-stealth-camper

Congress has passed a measure to overturn California’s phased-in 2035 ban on the sale of new gas cars.

The vote impacts 11 other states and the District of Columbia, which make up 40% of the nation’s car market and adopted California emissions standards.

Because California’s emissions regulations — they were created to combat the state’s notorious smog — predate the EPA, the state was grandfathered in with the ability to set more stringent emissions requirements than the federal standard so long as the EPA grants a waiver for each such requirement.

The ban would have required that 35% of cars in model year 2026 be qualifying zero-emissions vehicles, which allows for a large share of plug-in hybrid models, in addition to the now ubiquitous battery-electric vehicles, and rare hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. In California, which has the nation’s largest EV charging network and highest EV adoption rates, ZEV sales declined from 22% in the last quarter of 2024 to 20.8% in the first quarter of 2025, suggesting buyers are becoming less enthusiastic about purchasing electric vehicles.

Given that the 2026 model year is already under way for many automakers, a ZEV increase from 20.8% to 35% would have required a 68% increase in ZEV market share within the year, leading Toyota to call California’s requirement “impossible to meet.”

Automakers would have had to either restrict the inventory of non-qualifying vehicles, as Jeep has done in the past, purchase costly excess credits from automakers with excess ZEV credits such as Tesla or Rivian, or pay a $10,000 fine for each car they sell that doesn’t meet the requirement.

Pullman observation lounge Hickory Creek and New York Central lounge car 43, are coming to Finger Lakes Railway this summer for a series of public excursions (thanks George!)

 

junkyard interrogation sequence that wasn't developed into Pixar's CARS 2, that features Zil, a Soviet-era race car and the original villain idea for the movie, vs the hero British spy car





Character design of Jay Schuster and painting by Armand Baltazar

the Bright Pioneer Museum in LeGrand, California, a forgotten museum at an almond farm established in 1945, has one superb variety of tractors that will be selling at auction this fall, the whole list of what's for sale won't be available for months, but it has a San Fran street car




A 1926 Rumely Truck! I'm sure you're familiar with their kerosene burning Oil Pull steam powered tractors, but I've never heard of them making trucks until now


I will guess that Euclid don't come to auction very often!

I will also guess that someone has made a coffee table encyclopedia book of tractor seats, just from collections like this


Yes, really, a Buick truck! I've never seen this one before, or even heard of it when I posted about Buick tucks https://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2017/09/buick-made-trucks-1910-1922-and-couple.html 





https://www.facebook.com/aumannvintagepower/posts/pfbid02E8DR9UcNd8CJv4spjDoMpPrUw46Z78WpXxaSbV8fCEkCgwiyUMpPnhkVEUzBNfKvl

Arthur Bright, a lifelong farmer started collecting tractors and ag equipment in the 1960s when he realized he didn’t want to sale or scrap his original Cletrac tractor.

I'm certain I posted about the kidnapping of the Chowchilla busload of kids, in 1976, and the live burial (for ransom) of them inside a moving van, about a decade ago... but I can't find that post. Anyway, the bus? Still around, and in the background of this photo


If you're wondering about the kidnapping (I swear, I posted about that) read about it here: https://www.cityofchowchilla.org/300/1976-Bus-Kidnapping because some MFing rich guys adult kid was pissed daddy wouldn't give him 5 million dollars so he could live the junkie millionaire life where he never would have to work, or worry about more money and drugs, so he figured a kidnapping (sort of the go to instant money maker it seems based on the Patty Hearst and SLA kidnapping/ransom demand) would solve his problems. It was the most historical kidnapping of the 1970s





it can take a decade or more to bridge the gap between seeing something, and learning what it is... there are just SO MANY things to learn in this world, even in the small segment of the world that is tractor focused, but I finally got another, the Fordson with a Rotapet 4 chain drive adapter with caterpillar like tracks


about 10 years ago (serious, the really good days of blogging, when the content was SO FOCUSED on machinery, and barely any news) I came across a similar Fordson with a track conversion that looks a lot like the above, but it had 3 spades per flat  https://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2016/04/this-british-built-square-tracked.html




and the year before that, Martin (super cool incredible artist) posted https://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2015/08/martin-squires-auto-blogger-illustrator.html


So, I'm not saying these are all Rotapet, but the first one is on the blue Fordson, and you can compare for yourself the other two.

I simply amazed that in just 4 days, I've came across this decade gapper of a tractor track drive, and the OTHER tractor with the incredible flip over traction front rims, the Pavesi https://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2025/05/andre-knew-about-these-military-wheels.html