This traditional style hot rod was built by me. I used photos from a great book called “The Birth of Hot Rodding”. I wanted the traditional look of a car that would have ran at the salt flats at El Mirage, Muroc, & Bonneville post WW2. I also wanted the reliability of modern components. I built the car for my own enjoyment and driving pleasure (not for sitting at car shows) including a drive from Detroit, MI to Brooklyn, NY and back. The car is comfortable, easy to drive and loves the freeway. The entire car is built from acquired parts, I did not have a car to start with. The 300HP Chevy crate motor (new when installed) is disguised to look like a 331 cid engine from a 1955 Cadillac. Spiral turbo baffles in the lake pipes give the engine a nice throaty rumble but not loud. It’s mated to a T-5 manual trans from a 1987 Camaro w/S10 pick-up tail shaft (gear ratio [1]2.95 [2]1.94 [3]1.34 [4]1.00 [5]0.63) clutch is from a 1989 IROC Z28 w/hydraulic throw-out bearing. Final drive is through a 1990 4x4 Blazer posi rear-end (gear ratio 3.42) supported by fully adjustable coil-over shocks to adjust stance and ride quality. The car weights 2400 lbs. w/300hp, it’s quite fast. The frame is a boxed model A that’s Z’d in the rear. The front axle has a 5” drop and the front cross member has a 2” drop with new front shocks. She rolls on 29” dia. rear tires & 23.5” dia. up front and drum brakes on all 4 corners. The car drives and stops in straight line. The convertible top was custom made to fit the 3” chop of the windscreen. As I mentioned, the car was assembled “one piece at a time”. The body was once on a dragster and only consisted of the sides, the doors were fixed shut when I found it; it is real Henry steel with some patches/extensions in the lower rear wheel walls that look like they were relieved at one time; it looks like some filler was used to skin the doors. There are some “Michigan Louvers” (rust holes) at the bottom of both cowl posts and at the back corners of the car; minor stuff that gives the car a little character like the cars I found in the book. The gas tank and firewall are also real Henry Ford metal. The deck lid and the panels above and below the deck are Brookville parts. I built the driver’s door inner to make it functional again but left the passenger fixed. I have new hinges and a latch if you want to get it swinging again. I tried to leave most of the parts as I found them to preserve their patina for the look I wanted. The windscreen posts are reproduction that I chopped 3" with an original chopped windshield frame. The grill shell is fiberglass with a reproduction grill. I made the seat; it’s comfortable and suitable for long rides. The gauges are 1933 Dodge all rebuilt by Bob’s Speedometer. They’re all accurate except for the fuel gauge that bounces around due to fuel sloshing around in the tank and disturbing the universal/adjustable sending unit. The fuel cell is in the roomy trunk and has a translucent body. It’s very easy to see how much fuel you have and how many gallons she will take because I put graduations on the wall in gallon increments. I found this easier than trying to get the sending unit adjusted precisely. A one-year old battery sits rearward of the rear axle for extra weight along with 100 lbs. of lead (hidden under the frame) to leverage the tires to the pavement. This car’s been on the road since 2005; she originally had a 1950 Mercury w/1937 three speed and a banjo rear. After the scrawny flat head motor tired out, I rebuilt the car to the drive-line you see here. This current set-up has 10,000 miles on it. I learned how to do all this from building concept cars for the North American International Auto Show & SEMA in Vegas. I’ve driven the car on many long trips including, camping at the Rifle River, Relix Riot at the Gilmore Museum, from Detroit, MI to Brooklyn, NY and back, annual day-long road rallies. I even ran it on the track at Michigan International Speedway (NASCAR track). This 4 wheeled thriller has been featured on Motortrend Magazine’s web site, Automotive News Magazine (a weekly automotive industry publication), Hot Rodder History website, and mentioned in a book about the history of the Ford Wyoming Drive-In movie complex. I built the car for fun and adventure. I made the floor so I could remove it without tools, for easy maintenance. I put brackets on the underside of the floor so that it can be turned into a table with the provided legs. There is also a dandy little cooker that attaches to the header to cook hotdogs; great for the drive-in movie or a roadside pick-nic. So, you can see the car has its own kitchen & dining room! This car gets a lot of attention and compliments; somebody is always tooting the horn and saluting with an enthusiastic thumbs up. From 1%er biker to the guy with the Ferrari, to kids screaming in excitement and dogs barking like mad; I always get compliments on this car.
I’ve just greased all the fittings, tuned the brakes, including a new master cylinder, front wheel cylinders and hoses plus a front-end alignment, new front shocks, air filter plus oil & filter change (I always use Brad Penn Oil in this engine). Questions are welcomed, just drop me an email through this auction. I do have a list of the many components I used to build the car and it has a real title; not a builder’s title. You will enjoy this car. Follow this link to Youtube for a short video of the car that a friend filmed for me and put on his youtube channel. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qgHnf0tFRg0&feature=youtu.be Don't miss your opportunity to own this one of a kind driving experience.
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