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The Crosley Cruise: 2015 West Coast Crosley Club Meet - Part 2

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I headed over for the Crosley Cruise kickoff at Thomi's Cafe on Sunday morning.  As luck would have it, my station wagon had developed a slight water pump leak over the weekend - I greased the zerk fitting and kept my eye on the temp gauge.  Luckily I'd brought a jug of water just in case, and borrowed another from Mike Blackburn who had decided at the last minute not to do the tour.  Mike's water jug sprung a leak as soon as I loaded it in the car.  So far, so good.

Traditionally, the Sunday breakfast is the official end of the annual meet - this was the first time we'd ever tried a full two-day meet, and with the date change due to the fire we'd lost a few members who couldn't make one day, let alone two.  I had no idea what to expect, but hoped I wouldn't be going it alone. In the end, we got five Crosleys signed on for the Cruise - not as many as I'd hoped, but still the largest contingent of Crosleys to make a long-distance endurance run in decades.

We had two wagons (mine and Orv and LeAnn Madden's), two roadsters (Gary Cochrane's Super Sports and Mark Beauchamp driving Don Rauch's Hot Shot, and Gary Loomer in his roundside pickup, plus Marty in his 1969 Porsche, Chuck Latty in his Ford Panel Wagon, and - maybe most important - Mike Kathan and Jen Moe driving the 'breakdown' truck and trailer in case anyone had a problem on the road and needed to be hauled home.  Liv and a few other members followed along in appliance cars.
As hoped, we also had a few members who weren't able to drive their Crosleys join us as passengers. New member Pam Wunderlich started the trip riding shotgun with me, excited to be part of the fun.  Pam proved the rule about the "small world" of Crosley ownership - she and her husband are restoring a CC wagon that I'd hauled out of a shed after 50 years of storage in Oakland in 2002.  I'd eventually sold the car to Dean, and then he sold it to the Wunderliches earlier this year when he bought the wagon I'd picked up in Denver.  Service Motors is probably finishing up the motor for them as I type this.

The original plan had been for me to lead the way and set the pace, but since Marty was the only one who knew the route by heart he had to be the pace car.  I told him to shoot for about 35MPH and that I'd honk if he needed to go faster.  We crossed 49, passed our hotel and wound through old town Jackson, drawing looks and pointing fingers the whole way.  At the end of Main Street we veered to the right, cutting off into a neighborhood of century-old homes that eventually gave way to more rural country.  We passed a big hillside graveyard guarded by the 1894 St. Sava Serbian Church, the first Serbian church built in North America.

A bit past the church Marty pulled into the parking lot of the Kennedy Tailing Wheels Park so we could check them out. The tailing wheels are massive water wheel-looking machines built to haul mine waste - two of the original four wheels have been preserved.  Marty gave us the historical background and we took a short break to enjoy the site.   I greased the water pump.
Pam traded off for Gary's truck and then we headed for Martell, where we hopped on 49 for a brief stint, cutting off toward Pine Grove. Pine Grove is a tiny town with two notable establishments: Giannini's Italian Dinners, one of my favorite destinations in the whole region, and Munnerlyn's Ice Cream - a gourmet ice cream shop that was a hit on our first Gold Country meet.  Neither spot was on the menu today, however - we cruised past and turned on to Pine Grove-Volcano Road, a wonderful winding two-laner through the woods where we encountered the first real hills of the day.

We wound through a beautiful dappled forest setting, sometimes dropping into second gear for some of the steeper hills.  I kept my eye on the cars in my rear view mirror, but no one seemed to be having any troubles.  The wagon sounded good and the temperature gauge stayed right in the pocket, much to my relief.

We started a series of downhill grades as we made the approach to Volcano.  Marty, mindful that the Crosleys had been lagging a bit on the uphill climbs, had dutifully cut his speed.  Unfortunately, he was keeping it equally slow on the downgrade, and I was getting ever closer.  As my following distance declined, I tapped the horn a few times to signal Marty to speed up.  As soon as I hit the horn Marty's brake lights went on and he slowed down even more!  I honked more and employed frantic hand signals and Marty zoomed ahead, message clear. When we pulled into Volcano Marty said, "I thought you told me to slow down if you honked?"
Volcano is like most Gold Country towns: tiny, quaint and old.  Our convoy filled the main street and the tourists wandered over to check out the cars.  I checked the water in my overflow tank and monitored the drip at the water pump: slow but sure. Gary walked over and said we could be going a bit faster, but I told him that I thought we were doing OK.  Marty and Sheri pointed out an amazing bakery on Main Street, but since we'd all just eaten we just looked at the treats - Liv and I made a note to include a stop next time we were in the area.

After a quick leg stretch and pit stop we hopped back in and looped through town to pick up the road for Sutter Creek. I followed Marty, and then watched in my rear view mirror as both Mark and Gary missed a turn and drove straight on down the street.  We pulled over at the edge of town, waiting for them to turn around and catch up with us.  A few minutes later we grouped up and took off on Sutter Creek-Volcano Road.

This stretch of the Cruise was one of the only parts saved from our pre-fire route plan - it's a perfect backcountry two lane mountain road, twisting through the woods, following Sutter Creek the whole way from Volcano to the town of Sutter Creek.  The elevation drops 1200 feet over the twelve mile trip, so we just bombed along, often coasting for long stretches.  The wagon was running perfectly and the scenery was out of a storybook.

I was humming along happily when I started to worry that that I hadn't seen many Crosleys in my rearview mirror  lately.  Gary Loomer was tucked in tight behind me, but I hadn't seen Orv's wagon or the two roadsters in about five minutes.  The road was extremely twisty, and hugged the edge of a canyon, so I couldn't see that far behind me, but it seemed like I should have seen them on some of the less twisty passages.  I looked for a spot to pull over and wait, but since we were driving alongside a sheer mountainside, there weren't many options on my side of the road. After another four or five minutes I found a clearing a pulled over.  The crew caught up in a couple of minutes and we got back on the road for Sutter Creek.


We cruised through old town Sutter Creek, a familiar spot since we had the 2012 and 2013 meets there.  At the edge of town we zigged left and zagged right, and Marty led us off on an unmarked rural road that made me very glad he was leading the way.

We quickly found ourselves in golden rolling hills dotted with old oaks - classic California country.  The road got smaller and smaller and we were soon down to a single lane.  We meandered through the countryside, passing grazing cows, crossing dry creek beds that will be gushing with runoff in the rainy season.  The whole day was amazing, but the herd of us buzzing along on this seemingly secret passage was really hard to top.

We pulled into Amador City about 12:30 and broke for lunch.  Though the whole town is only about a block long with a population of 150 people, there were plenty of dining options.  Most of us ended up at the Buffalo Emporium, a lunch-counter type place with a soda fountain and fresh pie.  The conversation ran heavily toward Crosley - club member Paula Whitney was a convertible convert after getting her first ride in a roadster that day!

Gary decided to head back to the hotel after lunch - his home in Perris is a long haul from Jackson - but before he left we got all the Crosleys lined up for a photo in front of the Imperial Hotel, built in 1879.
From Amador we hopped on 49 and drove north though Plymouth and then cut off on Shenandoah Road, humming along on five miles of smooth country road that took us into the Shenandoah Valley wine country. Meadows gave way to vineyards and the Gold Country vibe started to take on a Napa Valley flavor.  Marty pulled off on the last stop on our tour - the Amador Flower Farm.

The Flower Farm is a big (14 acre) site, with nursery, demonstration gardens, picnic area, and of course, a gift shop.  They were doing a bustling business, and the lot was packed - lucky for us, we managed to fit two Crosleys into a little stone corral area that would have only held one full size car.  The Lattys and a few others did a little sightseeing while the rest of us chatted.  Marty shared some stories about the Butte Fire - just awful.  Hard to believe that the whole region had been under emergency conditions less than a month ago.
I had a passenger for the ride back to Jackson - Pam's husband Al Wunderlich hopped in, eager to see how a stock wagon handled the hills. They live at the top of a long hill, and they still weren't 100% sure that a Crosley would make the climb.

The ride back was altogether different from the trip from Jackson.  We'd really tried to avoid main highways when planning the trip, but unless we'd wanted to simply backtrack over the same roads we'd taken earlier, or take a very long detour, there was no choice but to take Highway 49, which is the main highway in the Gold Country.  I'd taken this stretch of 49 on my trip from Sacramento so I knew my car could do it - I hoped the other cars wouldn't have any troubles.

Al and I chatted as we cruised along.  He's a really interesting guy - he and Pam are both artists and he had worked as an art professor at a great school (the Rhode Island School of Design) for many years.  Liv and I both graduated from art school at UC Davis, and it turned out that he knows a few of the professors there.

Al went to school at Cooper Union, a storied university in New York, where his best friend was another art student named Tony Cox.  I recognized that name immediately - Tony Cox was married to Yoko Ono before she met John Lennon, and had a daughter, Kyoko, with him.  They had collaborated on art projects in the early sixties, and Al had been part of their circle. He'd helped publish Grapefruit, Yoko's first book, and had had a brief fling with her when she and Cox separated. I was spellbound listening to the stories - I'm a pretty big art history nut, and am a huge fan of Yoko's early artwork - in fact, I'd almost packed my Yoko-inspired "this is not here" t shirt for the trip.  My worlds were colliding!
All the while, the Crosley just chugged along on 49.  I'd expected the addition of a passenger to slow me down, but the Crosley putted up the hills at the same speed it had on Friday afternoon when it had been just me. The trip convinced Al that a Crosley could take on his hometown hill easily.  The rest of the Crosleys seemed to be doing just as well - Orv, Mark and Gary Cochrane were spread out behind me, taking the hills at their own pace.  Marty split off for home as we passed through Sutter Creek and I led the troops back to the hotel in Jackson.

All told, we covered 60.2 miles from start to finish, covering rugged hillcountry that ranged from 646 feet to 2100 feet in elevation.  No breakdowns, no emergencies, no real problems at all.  Orv thought we could have taken the Sutter Creek-Volcano Road section more slowly, and I agree - while it was great fun to barrel down that mountain road, it did feel a bit more like a road rally than a cruise.  But, not bad for our first try.  Marty really did a great job putting the route together under very trying circumstances, and I think that anyone who didn't go really missed out. I hope there's enthusiasm to try again next year!


Jen and Mike toted Dean's wagon from Sacto and also followed the Cruise with trailer in case any one broke down - no one did! 


1949 Crosley Craigslist Tilt-Up Funny Car

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Did you buy this crazy tilt-up funny car project?  I missed out on posting this while the CL posting was still active, but I grabbed some of the pictures off the listing because it was too good not to save.

Someone started a VERY ambitious project that could have resulted in one crazy Crosley (OK, this ALREADY IS one crazy Crosley, just an unfinished one.)
Some of the hard work is done- they've fabricated a hefty frame, and a 9" rear axle has been narrowed and is in place.  Seller says that the car had a 350/350 combo at one point, but the engine and tranny are long gone.  That's OK, since you've got to be nuts to take on this project anyway, why not put in a quirkier (and lighter) motor, like a Pontiac Tempest aluminum V8 or a Buick Fireball V6?
I would LOVE to see this thing completed, but I know there are a very limited number of folks out there with the patience - and insanity - to take something like this on.  Heck, I'd love to see it as-is.  I'm really hoping this thing shows up at a West Coast meet one day (it was in Porterville, California), and since the posting is gone, maybe someone really did buy it.

Fingers crossed!


Spring Meet!

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It's mid-May, and that means another Spring Meet for the West Coast Crosley Club. Liv decided that 16 or so hours of driving was too much for a weekend so I headed down solo - just me and a case of old time radio shows on cassette.  As luck would have it, the Spring Meet fell on the same weekend as the SCTA races at the El Mirage Dry Lakes which I'd never been to.  My friend John McKnight was bringing his lakester out from Arizona, so I figured to make it an auto event twofer. I opted to leave the Crosley at home since I'm still enjoying my my trailer holiday. I got to about Fresno before I realized I'd forgotten to pack my sleeping bag... but remembered that I had a heavy packing blanket in the back of the truck and figured that would be fine.


I stopped in Ventura for a quick visit with my sister and family, and then headed east on 126.  As usual, the mid-year meet was held in Fillmore, CA, which is a tiny burg about halfway between Ventura and I5. I got into town around midnight, pulled into the empty lot behind a big grocery store and hunkered down in the back of the pickup for the night.  The packing blanket kept me plenty warm, and the thought that I was saving $80 on a hotel kept me even warmer.
Fillmore is a neat little town. When I woke up the next morning, clouds were straddling the nearby hills and the dampness in the air made everything a little hazy. I drove around a bit, ogling the old neighborhoods and then got breakfast at a tiny diner inside a Chevy dealership.  Fortified with coffee and Texas toast, I headed for the meet.

By the time I rolled up there were already 10 cars on the grass- a better turnout than we've ever had for the Spring meet.  Best of all, nearly half the cars were new to me!  I offered to help with set-up, but pretty much everything was already done and club Pres Rick Alexander was already busy unloading his wares for the swap meet.  I quickly relieved him of two interior windshield brackets and a turn signal switch that I needed for the wagon.
Once I'd stashed my goodies I started checking out the cars I'd never seen before.  Right next to the registration table was a clean Farm-O-Road - nicely preserved, with a full canvas top (my favorite look for that particular model.) Owner Bob Baxter recently finished tidying it up after purchasing it from Arizona club member Dave Potts - nice car!
Across the show field was a new-to-me Super-Sports.  The owner turned out to be Jarl DeBoer, a name I knew well, but whom I'd never met in person.  Jarl is one of THE go-to people on Italian -made Crosley-powered sports cars.  He has a Giaur, a Nardi, and at least one Siata, along with a small fleet of other interesting stuff.  If you've read about a marque on Etceterini.com, odds are that Jarl has owned one at some point or another.
He also has a semi-stock Super Sports - 'semi-stock' because it has a Siata bell housing and Fiat transmission behind the Crosley motor - a nice set up, and a treat for those who know what they are looking at.  Best of all, it runs great and he makes the most of it.  He'd planned to run the Crosley Cruise last fall but couldn't make it when the date changed.
Parked by Jarl's car was another Farm-O-Road, nice, and freshly-painted, with industrial fishplate on the rear.  Turned out that the car belonged to Robert and Carol Brown, who got into Crosleys after restoring her dad's Crosley wagon, which sat disassembled in a Sacto garage for 46 years.  Their wagon won Best of Show their first time out, and this F-O-R looks like it could be a contender, too.
Next to them was a two cylinder pre-war Crosley, one of the very few cars that makes a postwar Crosley look big.  Martha Straube brought the car all the way down from Oregon (in a horse trailer!)  Martha brought her other Crosley to Sutter Creek last fall... proving that she has been bitten bad by the Crosley bug.  Like the Browns, she's discovered that restoring a Crosley only makes you want more Crosleys.
Pick ups are fairly rare, but we had three on the lawn on Saturday, including a bright red '51 or '52, all the way from Arizona.  I had a nice chat with the owner - he's had some neat oddball cars over the years including (if I remember correctly) a custom Edsel pickup (Edchero?)  The other two pick ups were Gary Loomer's yellow '47 roundside and a two-tone orange and cream roundside that had an ever-so-subtle "for sale" penned in the window.
Jarl wasn't the only one with a VC, either - a new-to-me red Super Sports was sandwiched between Fred Dunner's, Ronnie Bauman's and Bob King's wagons on the west side of the park.  Nice car - with a stock Crosley radio in the dash and wide whites on all corners.
I was stoked to see a car I knew, but that has never been to a meet as long as I've been coming: Mike Cleary's homebuilt Devin hmod racecar.  Mike started building the car in high school and got it on the track around 1958.  He competed in many races in the midwest before retiring the car in the mid sixties.  Twenty-five or so years ago he restored it and began running in vintage racing events. The car is a thing of beauty, and roars on the track!
Once I'd ogled all the fresh iron I wandered back over to the swap meet area where Rick, Bob King and Jarl DeBoer had piles of parts on offer.  I picked up some gasket sets and a nice Tillotson carb, and then noticed a big box of Crosley Quarterlies near the check-in table.  Turns out that they had been left to the club by the late Mike Smith to be sold, with the proceeds going to the club's coffers.  It was a near complete set of issues from 1970-2010!  Of course I couldn't resist, so I lightened my wallet and loaded the box in the truck.
We had a total of 16 Crosley-based cars on hand - a record for the Spring Meet, and more than we've had at some of our annual meets!  And that doesn't count the guests - two Metropolitans, an MGA, a Morris Minor and a Morgan three-wheeler.
My sister, brother in law and grandnephews stopped by to check out the fun.  The kids were interested for a few minutes, but were more impressed by the trains that made their way past at regular intervals. It was nice of them to come all the way out from Ventura though.
Lunch was the same delicious BBQ that made such an impression last year - the only bad part was that the arrival of food starts the inevitable wrapping up.  I only see most of these folks once or twice a year, so there is a real bittersweet quality to every meet- especially at the end.
Cars started vacating the show field, after lunch, normally not much of a sight.  I was fascinated, however, by Jarl's transport: he had a Mercedes sprinter van rigged up to accommodate his Crosley (and six of his other small cars, he told me.) He drops ramps out the back, hooks an electric winch to the Crosley and reels it up inside the van!  The whole set-up impressed me immensely.

I helped Rick load up his swap meet junk, said a round of goodbyes and headed toward El Mirage around 3.  I'd gotten about 10 minutes out of town when John called to tell me that they'd finished the races for the day and that he and his crew were heading for their hotel in Victorville.  They were first in line for a 7AM run on Sunday.
That put me in a quandary - I'd planned to spend the afternoon at the dry lakes, but since the races had shut down I decided to poke around Santa Clarita a bit before heading out for El Mirage.  I hit some thrift stores and found a few good records, and while I was in one of the stores someone backed into one of my taillights.  Luckily it just broke the lens but didn't damage the body, not that there aren't enough dents already.  I grabbed a quick dinner and headed for the desert.
Having never been to the Dry Lakes area before I wasn't exactly sure where I could camp.  I drove through Victorville but didn't find anything that looked suitable, so I decided to just go all the way to El Mirage.  I got to the entrance around midnight and opted to crash out in the lot behind the ranger station.  The wind was blowing like crazy but once I got settled under my moving blanket I was pretty comfy.  I set my alarm for 6AM and dropped off to sleep immediately.

To be continued....

















El Mirage SCTA Races - May 2016

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Well, my packing blanket may have done me right in Fillmore, elevation 456, but turned out to be woefully inadequate for camping at the 2900 foot elevation of El Mirage.  I fell asleep pretty quickly, but woke up every hour or so until 5AM when I just said to heck with it and got up.

The first runs weren't scheduled until 7, so I headed back into Victorville to see if I could find a cup of coffee.  The 25 minute ride into town was way different than it had been the night before.  I'd thought I was driving in the middle of nowhere, but there were quite a few patches of houses - small, scrubby desert neighborhoods that looked about like the desert towns I remember riding through as a kid when we went camping back in the '70s.  The dawn light was amazing - it made everything seem like an abandoned set for some Jim Jarmusch film.
I got coffee, a banana and a Clif bar and headed back to the Dry Lakes.  Forty minutes later I was  standing on the lakebed, surrounded by a crazy collection of machinery.

Unlike Bonneville, where each track is set up waaay far apart from the others, the tracks at El Mirage start right next to each other.  This is great for spectators because the racers were all lined up in three or four lines, right by the SCTA trailer, which announced each time (although you could also tune into a hyperlocal radio station for the same broadcast if you were in other parts of the lakes.)  At Bonneville I was sure I'd run into Crosley racer Gerald Davenport, but I never did, because he was running at a track miles away from where I spent most of my time.  That would never happen at El Mirage - everything was pretty tightly condensed.
I looked around for John's car but didn't see anything matching the description he'd given me: a 27-foot-long unpainted aluminum lakester with a big fin.... seems like it would be easy to spot, but I wasn't seeing it.  He called as I was ogling all the other gunk and guided me over to where they were.
I've sorta known John McKnight for almost 20 years, but this was only the second time we'd ever seen each other in person.  I say I 'sorta' knew him because we've been trading emails since the late nineties when I sent him some photos of a Crosley station wagon he'd bought on Ebay.

This was back in the dark ages, when many Ebay listings didn't actually have photos.  A '49 wagon project came up for auction in Guerneville, CA.  I'd emailed the seller for details, but there weren't many; he was selling the car for his friend's widow, and neither knew much about it.  He did say that the car was parked on the side of the house and I could go look at it.

I was mostly interested in the brakes. This was back when I was using my '49 Crosley convertible as a daily driver, and the cable brakes were the bane of my existence.  Swapping to discs (correct for most 1949 Crosleys) was high on my priority list at the time.  Given that the starting bid was something like $150 I figured I couldn't go wrong.  I borrowed someone's 'real' car and drove out to Guerneville, getting good and lost on the way, so I didn't get to the house until just before dark.  I don't remember too much about the car except that it did have discs and seemed fairly straight. I took some polaroids with a flash and headed home.

When the auction ended a couple of days later the car had gone up to about $300.  I bid $350 at the very last second, only to lose the car by $1. I immediately emailed the winner, (you could do that back then - not now) who turned out to be John McKnight. I told him I'd be interested in buying the stock parts if he was planning to hotrod it, and offered to send him pictures of the car since he was in Arizona and had bought it sight-unseen.  He said he wasn't sure what his plans were, but that he'd keep me posted.  Eighteen years later, here we are standing on the dry lakes, still talking about Crosleys.

Crosleys are only a part of John's automotive interest. He's been hotrodding since the sixties, and has been a fan of speed trial racing for a long time.  In fact, the only other time we've met in person was when we were both at Bonneville in 2009.
He's been telling me about this lakester he's been crewing for for a couple of years.  It's a BEAST, powered by a big block Chevy. The car has gone over 225mph at Bonneville, but they are breaking in a new driver so today's goal is just to get some seat-time in and get him familiar with the car.  As a Dry Lakes 'rookie,' the new driver has to raise his times in 25MPH increments, starting at 150.

We stood around, waiting for the racing to start.  I'd heard awful stories about the wind and dust at the Dry Lakes, but it wasn't bad at all.  I knew it would get hot later in the day, but with the wind it was almost brisk, with a bit of moisture in the air, which probably made all the carbureted cars happy.
Around 7:30, an official came out and started making announcements over the loudspeakers, with details about the tracks, notes for drivers, etc.  I got a vivid reminder that SCTA is an organization with roots that go way back: everyone quieted down as a guy in camo shorts offered a solemn Christian prayer, and then they wrapped everything up with an ancient recording of the national anthem.  Took me right back to when I was a kid and it seemed like everything started that way.
People started making runs, and the lines moved along quickly.  There was a wide variety of iron, ranging from streamliners and lakesters, to hotrods, to cars that looked ready for the street.  Plenty of bikes too - neat oddball stuff like stretch bikes, bikes with sidecars and tiny single-cylinder screamers.

John's lakester came up in the rookie line and got the once over from the officials.  The driver was cleared for 175, but no more.  They got him stuffed into the fuselage - a tight fit - sealed the cockpit, and waited for the signal that they were clear to go.  John and the rest of the crew hopped into the push truck and off they went!
Once they faded into the distance I wandered around to check out some of the other machinery.  There was an amazing vintage special parked in the shade of the SCTA box - open wheels, hand-formed body, Merc flathead with header pipes running down the side of the car - just an all-business thing of beauty.  The shift setup alone was just mesmerizing.
I'd never seen the car before, but I guessed it was an original fifties sports car special, built when American racers were obsessed with making American cars to compete with the flashy new Ferraris, Porsches and Jaguars coming over from Europe.  Given that this was an SCTA event, an old sports racer wouldn't be out of place.  I looked it up when I go home, and my guess was correct. The Adler XF/VOT was built in 1952 and was raced at Laguna Seca and Willow Springs back in the day.  (The Gentleman Racer has some good photos and details.)
I poked around a bit more and then headed over to John's pit to see if they were back.  They were just rolling up, surprisingly blasé for guys running a car that had just gone 175MPH.  I guess the excitement happens when you break either the car or a record.

While I've wanted to go to El Mirage for years, there was also an ulterior motive for this trip.  A few years back I'd located and then picked up a Crosley roadster body and frame for John.  After everything had been delivered he realized he didn't need the frame and wanted to run an ad in the club newsletter to sell it - ironically, I'd been ogling the frame when I picked it up, because it had been modified for racing - piquing my interest because that's the plan for my Crosley Super Sports project.  When John found out I was interested, he said I could have it... the question was how to get it back from Arizona.  This trip was a perfect opportunity.
We loaded the frame into my truck and John decided to replace the brakes in his car- he'd noticed a squeal on the way out from AZ and thought it best to replace the rotors before heading back.  It was funny to see someone working on regular street car, completely surrounded by hot rods and full on race cars.

His teammates got word that there wouldn't be time to make another run today, so they started packing up for home.  The wind had picked up and the EZ Ups were flapping - it was time for me to start heading home as well. I said my goodbyes and slowly cruised through the pits on my way to the main road, Super Sports frame hanging out the back of the truck, waving goodbye.












Pete Berard, 1939-2016

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Sad to say that another longtime member of the Crosley fraternity has passed: Pete Berard of Valdosta, GA died June 23 while recovering from a stroke.

I never met Pete in person, but he was an active member of the Crosley Gang, the Yahoo bulletin board that serves as the main online community for the Crosley Auto Club.  Pete bought his first Crosley back in the fifties - that's him and his then-future wife Julie in his Hot Shot circa 1960.

Pete did his military service and then settled in Valdosta, starting a foreign auto shop.  He loved to share tales about the oddball cars he'd worked on in his shop, or had owned himself.  A glutton for punishment, he loved Crosleys AND British sports cars!

Pete kept up his love of Crosleys - and Julie - for the rest of his life. Sure seemed like a great guy, and I'm sorry I never got to hear his stories in person.  Another good man gone.

AMAZING Color Film of Watkins Glen, 1952

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I don't know how I missed this fantastic color footage of the '52 Watkins Glen race when it first made it to the internet at the beginning of the year, but wowzers, I am making up for lost time. Twelve and a half minutes of AMAZING color footage of the last-ever races at the original Watkins Glen course, replete with Cunninghams, Allards, C-Type Jags, and of course, Crosleys! And every time you turn around, there's ANOTHER Siata.  Unbelievable.


Watkins Glen, New York is where American sports car racing began. The first post-war US road race was held in 1948 on a 6.6 mile course in and around the village of Watkins Glen. Like many contemporary European road races, the course was held on public roads, with drivers navigating at speed through the heart of town as thousands of spectators watched from the sidewalks. That first race was a sensation, and helped set off the entire sports car movement in the US.

This stunning footage captures the early days of American road racing, when gentleman "amateurs" ran the latest European iron (with then-new names like Ferrari and OSCA) against a mix of American homebuilts and warmed over pre-war racers.  And Crosleys. The Hot Shot and Super Sports were the only American-built mass-market sports cars available at the time, making them the go-to choice for many racing enthusiasts on a budget.  
You can spy several Crosleys among the higher-end machinery, starting with a blue-grey Super Sports (or maybe just a Hot Shot with doors), #64, piloted by one Hal Stetson according to RacingSportsCars.com - this might have been a late entry since the car isn't listed in the original program, which is posted at Cliff Reuter's Etceterini site.  Stetson's car makes several appearances in the footage, starting with the takeoff of the second race.  Interesting to note the non-stock color - in 1952 that Crosley would have been three years old at most.  Stetson and his Crosley show up a few times in the video, but didn't ultimately fare too well - he's listed as DNF in the results.

Not far behind Stetson's roadster is the #49 car - identified as a Crosley in the program, but sporting an interesting custom body that looks like fiberglass to me.  Reuter's program identifies the owner as Donald Sauvigne, and the driver as Henry Ruskin. Ruskin fared better than Stetson, finishing 27th .
The lowly Crosley Hot Shot may have been the car of choice for budget-conscious racers, but the Crosley engine found its way into the rarified atmosphere usually reserved for marques with names like Porsche and OSCA.  Looking for a small powerplant to compete with Fiat, Italian coachbuilders began experimenting with the 724cc Crosley four cylinder at the beginning of the fifties.  Light, reliable and featuring five main bearings and an overhead cam, the cast iron version of Lloyd Taylor's engine enjoyed a brief vogue among Italian "Etceterini" marques like Giaur, Bandini and Siata.  

No less than NINE Siatas were entered in the '52 event featured here, though not all were Crosley-powered. I'd love to know if #125, a blue and cream 300BC that nearly takes out a wall of hay bales at 2:15, had a Crosley under the hood. Let's hope so!
One Siata that definitely had a Crosley on board was #52, a blue 300BC that makes its first appearance at about the seven minute mark. Seeing this footage was somewhat surreal for me: my friend Marty Stein has owned this car - ST402BC - for nearly 40 years and I've seen it in person many, many times.  It's hard to grok that it's the exact same vehicle in this footage. It's just weird. 
And while its Watkins Glen provenance is amazing, this wasn't ST402BC's only trip to the rodeo. Owner/driver Tom Scatchard also raced the car in the 12 Hour Sebring race in 1953, coming in 20th. All that makes ST402BC the most historic of all the Crosley-powered Siatas, so it's mighty strange to think that it's parked in a garage not that far from my house.  Marty watched the film and noticed something I hadn't: the grill is almost completely blocked off with cardboard - must have been a cool day.  Scatchard came in 25th, just a bit ahead of Donald Sauvigne's custom-bodied Crosley.
There are literally so many Siatas in this footage that I could keep going on and on, but I'll just point out one more: Otto Linton's incredible Fiat 8V-powered 208CS Siata Coupe. If you're wondering why there are so many Siatas at Watkins Glen, Linton is a big part of the answer.  The owner of Speed Craft enterprises,  Linton drove a Crosley-powered Siata prototype in the 1951 Watkins Glen at the behest of importer Tony Pompeo. The Siata made an impression and Linton had orders for three Siatas before the end of the day.  A Crosley dealer, Linton set up the motor in Scatchard's Siata and, likely, many of the other Siatas on hand in this race.

The 6 month old coupe already had quite a pedigree by the time Linton was pitching it around the track at Watkins Glen.  It debuted at the Turin Auto Show in April and was entered, with two identical coupes, in the Mille Miglia in May. The other two cars didn't finish, but the coupe that Linton was to buy finished 11th.  The factory reconditioned the car after the race and Linton bought it at the Turin factory in August, using it to tour Europe before sending it home to the US just in time for this race.

The Siata coupes are - in my eye - some of the loveliest, best-proportioned and sleek cars of their era.   Not from the video, but here's a better photo from the same day, just so you get an idea of those lines. Wow.
There's plenty to gawk at outside the cars, too.  The crowd shots are fascinating: a look at how regular people actually dressed in 1952 - SO much color.  I don't know about you, but the prevalence of black and white photos from the period always gave me an image of a much more drab color scheme... I'd have never pictured drivers' racing suits in fire-engine red!
Also fun to see the racing celebrities: Briggs Cunningham appears throughout, even signing an autograph at one point.  That's John Fitch getting interviewed in the C-Type Jag. Fitch, of course started out in a much-modified Crosley Hot Shot, ignominiously named the "Fitch Bitch.
Cunningham is one of the biggest names in American racing history - he never fulfilled his dream of winning LeMans with an All-American car and team, but he came damned close, several times over.  His namesake cars were on par with the best European machines of the time, but unlike Mercedes or Jaguar - his "factory" support consisted of himself and a hand-picked crew.  Seeing his small fleet of blue and white cars tearing up the track here is something special - if only there were sound!

This was, of course, the last-ever race through the town of Watkins Glen.  During the final race of the day, car #8, a Cadillac-powered Allard driven by Fred Wacker, clipped the crowd as he maneuvered to pass a Cunningham, killing a seven year old boy and injuring 12 other spectators.  The accident happened so quickly that Wacker had no idea what had happened until the race was abruptly cancelled minutes later. It was the end of an era.
The accident sparked national outrage, and there were calls to ban auto racing outright. While sportscar racing survived, competition on city streets did not.  Races were moved to airfields, parking lots or isolated public roads that could be secured.  In 1956, the newly-built Watkins Glen International racetrack opened for business -  it operates to this day.

But, here is a reminder of what racing was 60+ years ago.  Drivers in colorful coveralls, likely secured in their cars by surplus US Army Air Force seat belts.  Pudding-bowl helmets. Spectators in suits, ties and hats - perched perilously close to the track.  Hay bales.  Names like Allard, Cunningham and Siata.  Ferraris being towed to the track on open trailers behind Ford station wagons.  Other racecars arriving under their own power.  Can you imagine?
I have no idea who shot this footage.  There are no credits, no information at all.  The name is even misspelled "Watkins Glenn" in the title. I've watched this probably a dozen times at this point, and I feel like I'm just getting started. To whoever posted this, and to whoever shot it: Thank you.  Thank you, very, very much.



Homebuilt Streamlined Camper Car, 1941

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I picked up a stack of 1940s Popular Science mags at an estate sale this weekend and found this crazy homebuilt car pictured in the letters section of the August 1941 issue.

The builder sent in a photo of his car with a note, explaining: "An article you published about a year ago, on a combined automobile and trailer, gave me an idea. The photograph shows the result, built in spare time over half a year at a cost of $250.  A frame of welded metal tubing over a Ford V8 chassis is covered with sheet metal. Over the engine is a metal framework supporting a table. Where the dashboard was originally, is a place for a stove. Covers over the front wheels make seats for the table.  Back of the driver's seat there is room to install two bunks as in a trailer. Running boards are inclosed and are at the level of the bottom of the body.Windows slide as on a station wagon, and there are doors for oil filler, oil gauge and gasoline pipe filler.  Building the framework over the wheels gives extra room and eliminates fenders.  - M. C. P. Downey, Calif."
This thing is rad, and looks like a bizarro homebrew Multipla.  Now I need to find the article that inspired it!  I'd love to know what happened to this car, and if M. C. P. built any other innovative vehicles - anyone that could build a car like this in six months had to have other stuff up his sleeve.



VOTE!

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Vote, people.

It's Election Day here in the US. We all kvetch and complain about our choices, and most of us take this right for granted, but let's remember that less than half the people in the world have any real say in how they are governed, and less than 20% live in a true democracy. We are lucky.

Photo found somewhere on the web - I believe this was taken at the Hershey Swap Meet a couple of years ago, but don't know more than that.

Almost Here...

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New issue of the Tin Block Times is at the printer - cover story on Crosley Cruise: The Sequel!  Very happy with the great design work from new designer Matt K. Shrugg, who filled the mighty big shoes left by Dean Seavers.  Should be hitting mailboxes sometime next week....

Crosley Club Spring Meet / SWULCS April 2017

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This year, the West Coast Crosley Club decided to do something different for our annual Spring Meet: we opted to combine our event with the Southwest Unique Little Car Show, meaning that in addition to goofing with Crosleys and visiting with my club compatriots, I was able to spend a couple days with hordes of even weirder, even smaller microcars.

Cochrane's swell CD woodie convertible

It didn't take much arm-twisting to convince my pals Dave Smith and Nick Shelley to join me for the trip - Dave has a small fleet of NSUs, and Nick has what is likely the world's only electric Farm-O-Road. Nick and I headed out Friday morning and met up with Dave in Patterson.  We made great time until we hit the afternoon traffic outside Castaic - and then it took us two hours to go the last 50 miles to Upland.  We got to the meet hotel just in time to catch the cars queuing up for the cruise to dinner.

Crofton Bug in the cruise lineup



There were about 20 cars lined up for the trip, including almost a half dozen Crosleys. I was happy to see a bunch of folks I knew, and even spotted a Crofton I'd never seen before. They jockeyed into position and slowly poured out of the lot, following a Messerschmitt which led the way. 

My people

Dave, Nick and I needed to hit the head so we stopped into the hotel when the cruise took off. As luck would have it, the hotel had put out buckets of free beer for some other event - it would have been unAmerican of us to ignore this bit of luck, so our quick pit stop turned into a short break.  Once we'd refreshed ourselves, we headed over to the dinner, which was held at SWULCS meet organizer Greg Hahs' house.

Renault 4CV drove from San Diego

I wasn't sure how this many cars and this many people were supposed to fit into someone's house and neighborhood, but clearly, Greg had done this before. His neighborhood was totally taken over by a swarm of underhorsed, multi-hued auto oddities.  I'd been to SWULCS a few years ago, so I knew what to expect, but it was still amazing to see such a variety of deep weirdness on one street:  multiple Crosleys, Isettas, Amphicars, Minis and Metropolitans, plus tons of solo representatives: Goggomobil, Citroen, Renault 4CV, Morris Minor, Riley, etc. 

More colors than a basket of Easter Eggs

Custom touch on a Met

The Citroen never showed up at the show on Saturday

Once we'd carefully ogled every car on the street we headed in for dinner.  Greg and wife Kiki's house was decked out for the party, and they managed to fit probably 50 people into their backyard, and still had room for the pool AND the large garage.  Unsurprisingly, the garage was jammed full of treasures, including a 1917 Model T, a Bond three wheeler, a couple of Isettas, a Goggomobile Dart, a Berkeley and a Zundapp Janus - all stuffed into what was probably a "three car" garage.

About half the cars in Greg's garage

Greg popped the hood on the Bond, turning the steering wheel to show us how the entire engine assembly moves on the front wheel. The whole crowd froze when a precariously perched model triplane tumbled off the Bond's roof onto an onlooker - but all ended well.

Greg opening up the Bond's bonnet

We killed off the remaining pasta and cookies, and chatted with nice folks who had come for the show.  One guy had come all the way from Texas. Outside, we bumped into Steve Mandell, a friend of Dave's who is perhaps the preeminent French micro-micro car nut in America.... certainly on the West Coast. As we chatted, I realized he had brought the trio of bizarre French "VSP" cars - voitures sans permit, tiny vehicles designed to be driven by people who don't (or can't) have a driver's license* - that had fascinated me at the last SWULCS I went to. 

Dave had gotten to know Steve when he worked a deal to buy three new electric microcars in China and ship them back to the US.  Dave spends most of his time teaching English in countries as far from the US as possible, and then goes off trawling the countryside for oddball native cars and motorcycles.  Once in a while, he buys something that catches his fancy - he crisscrossed India on an Enfield he bought over there.

The microcar Dave eventually didn't buy

One morning last May I was standing on the edge of the track at El Mirage around 7AM, waiting for the races to start, when I got a message from Dave.  He sent me a photo of the completely ridiculous round microcar he'd just found in China.  He was negotiating to buy it for $250.  I sent him a photo of the cars lined up at the track, and marveled at the fact that I was in the middle of the desert, exchanging instant messages with a buddy in China.  It's easy to complain about the modern world, but there are times when I realize that we sort of live in a wonderland.

Anyway, Dave didn't buy that particular car, but did contact the factory and arranged to buy three brand new ones to ship to the US. He posted about his scheme on a microcar web board and Steve asked if he could buy one, and offered to help with customs and shipping arrangements.  Eventually, all three cars landed at the Port of LA; Steve got his, Dave got two, one of which he immediately sold to a friend in the Northwest.  I'm pretty sure Dave is bringing the last one to the Great Pacific Northwest Microcar MiniCar Extravaganza in June. 

Three cars, one trailer

But back to SWULCS... Steve had brought three cars on a trailer that was parked just around the corner since there was no more room near Greg's house. Two were VSP cars, and one was a three wheeler work truck that reminded me of a Vespa Ape (pronounced "Ah pay"). Apes go for big money, and seeing this, it's easy to understand why - itty bitty industrial work trucks are just cool. It turned out that Steve lives just outside of Upland, and he invited us to stop by to see his collection after the show.

We got up early Saturday AM and used Yelp to guide us to breakfast at Stevie Dee's (my review: "meh.") It had rained most of the night and the skies looked grey - but the weather forecast said sun, so we hoped it was right.  The meet was in the center of old Upland, which turned out to be a surprisingly quaint little town.  The show took over the whole center of downtown; four streets that connected at a small bandstand were blocked off, and all sorts of oddball cars were starting to fill in the spaces. 

The Askrens' 1946 Crosley

I found club Pres. Rick Alexander setting up the West Coast Crosley Club table near our contingent of Crosley cars. We had six Crosleys on hand: the Askrens''46 sedan, the Cochranes' woodie convertible, The Kings' resto-rod station wagon, the Dunners' stock yellow wagon, The Brynswolds' Skorpion, and a Crofton bug that was new to me - it turned out to be a newly-finished build owned by Pat Askren's brother in law. Nice car.

Crofton, with a slew of Metropolitans in the back

I was proud to note that Crosleys made up the biggest showing for any marque except Metropolitans; the Southwest Unique Little Car Show was started nearly 25 years ago by some guys in the Metropolitan Club, so they always have a big turnout - there were close to a dozen of them.

'53 IFA F9

As usual for SWULCS, there were a ton of oddball makes on hand... including ultra rarities like Steve's aforementioned VSP cars, a Wartburg convertible and an unrestored 1953 IFA F9, an East German car derived from a prewar DKW.

NSU coupe was like new

There were Amphicars, Isettas, and a couple twin Nissan Figaros - the only ones I've seen in the states. Many of the cars were stunning restorations - there was a Riley sedan that stopped me in my tracks, and an NSU that looked like a new car. Even more impressive - the owners had driven it from San Diego! Dave spent quite a bit of time chatting with the owner - an "NSU NUTT" who had bought it as a meticulously maintained original from an NSU dealer in Fresno who had had it since new.


I talked with the owner of a cool ratty Renault 4CV that had also driven from San Diego for the show. The car is the daily driver for the owner, a retired guy who now makes his living selling 4CV parts. While 4CVs were never common in the US, Renault sold hundreds of thousands of them around the world, and he had chased parts as far as Australia.

Wartburg - looks kinda like a tiny fifties American car

About 10AM an enthusiastic local cover band kicked off a set of oldies from the central bandstand, and anyone set up nearby got an earsplitting taste of Fender Twin Reverb. While I appreciated that the city, or the event organizers, had thought about entertainment, the band had the effect of driving attendance to the farther-flung reaches of the show.  Ah, I've been that band.

Super clean Amphicar

All in all there were about 50 cars; a big drop from the last SWULCS I'd attended. Clearly the organizers expected more - there were spaces for over 100 cars. I suspect the early morning rain scared a lot of people off... Ronnie Bauman had both a Crosley and a Metropolitan loaded in his trailer for the show, but left everything at home in the driveway.  He did come to visit, and loaded up on new Crosley swag from the table, including an extra Crosley hat.

Ronnie Bauman, flying the club colors

Steve and his buddy Muggsy were there with the three French cars, which were the smallest vehicles in the show. While I liked the two VSP cars, I loved the truck trike, which turned out to be a heavily modified Solyto Camping.  Steve has a connection in France who is on the lookout for tiny French microcars - for a nanosecond I wondered if he could find a Solyto Camping for me. I went down a bit of a Solyto wormhole after I got home, and they are neat - especially the stock model with full bodywork. 


It had been overcast in the early morning, but it got hot by the early afternoon.  I spent quite a bit of time with the Crosley Club crew, including Martha Straube, who had come all the way down from Oregon.  Also reconnected with James Dlapa - a member who had brought a very unique kustom to a meet about 15 years ago. These days he makes a living pounding out custom sheet metal for high end Mercedes restorations, but he still has a soft spot for his Crosleys.  I also chatted with two members of the national Crosley Automobile Club who were visiting all the way from Pennsylvania - really nice folks.

Pennsylvania Crosley fans summit with West Coast Pres. Rick Alexander

It was a shame the rain scared people off - it was a really nice event. The show started to close up around 2:30,  which was good for me since I had to be back in Sacramento to sell at a swap meet at 4AM the next morning.  We helped Steve and Muggsy load the French cars on the trailer, and the day nearly took a very unhappy turn when a 1930s Austin American rolled back off its trailer and almost took out a couple of people and a nearby car. Luckily, no damage to any cars or people. Not sure about the Austin driver's shorts, though.  We got in the car and headed for Steve's....

to be continued

Near miss.

Zundapp Janus, Goggomobile Dart and a Berkeley

Glen Brynsvold and his Crosley Skorpion

Nick and Dave ogling the Riley

Skorpion in front of Bob King's Resto-rod wagon

Immaculate Goggomobil


Quite a scene

The Dunners' wagon

Riley 1.5 was NICE

Three cylinder power plant for the IFA

Nicely presented Subaru 360 van- one of a couple at the show

Steve's VSP cars - they look like something out of Woody Allen's Sleeper

Modified Solyto Camping - one of my fave cars at the show

Not sure who manufactured this lil jeep

Very nice Fiat Multipla - I remember this one from the last SWULCS

(Drunks)


A Visit to Steve's Crazy Microcar Hoard

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Dave, Nick and I followed Steve and Muggsy's trailer of French micro-weirdness to Steve's place outside Upland. I wasn't sure what to expect, but a mid sixties ranch house/microcar farm in an upscale neighborhood wasn't it.  The driveway was largely obscured by a handmade tarp and irrigation pipe gate that blocked a carport. In front of the tarp structure, a faded red spaceage something-or-other poked out from under a car cover, hinting. How the neighbors haven't advanced on the compound with pitchforks and torches I'll never know.

What is it?
Steve rolled the "gate" open (the wheel was a circular weight from a barbell set) and started the reveal: six tiny cars JUST on this part of the driveway.  I recognized the Scootacar, Frisky and blue VSP car from my previous visit to the Southwest Unique Little Car Show, back in 2014, but the others were new to me.
Scootacar
I was surprised to see an AC Petite - yes, made by the same AC that is better known for the Cobra. Back in 1953 they were more concerned with building cheap transportation for Britons stuck in a recovering postwar economy than they were in racing trophies... their answer: a three wheel two seater with a single cylinder 350cc engine. Steve's car is straight and original, although it could use a good cleaning. I've never seen another one.
We headed into the house, which indicated clearly that Steve is a bachelor - the disassembled Peel Trident in the living room was a dead giveaway.  The backyard was a bit more restrained... only three microcars, including one in the back garage. Frankly, I was so overwhelmed that I barely took any photos, nor can I remember everything I saw.  Steve's collection is so obscure, and so diverse, that I couldn't mentally catalogue everything he had!
Frisky
As we made our way back out to the street he showed us a Nobel that is slowly being engulfed by foliage outside his bedroom window. I'm not exactly sure of the lineage, but Nobels are connected to Fuldamobils- and they are some of the funkiest-looking cars ever designed. Counting this one, I think Steve has at least three of them. The body is pretty straight, but it has no frame or running gear, so a restoration would be very difficult... but don't think I didn't examine it to see if a Crosley engine could be made to work.
Nobel carcass
We unloaded one of the cars from the trailer and maneuvered it under the carport, careful not to damage the other cars already there. Steve closed everything up and we followed them over to his storage facility - an acre or two of property running along a canal a few blocks from Steve's house.  Again, I really failed on getting pictures, because I can't remember half of what was there, and it was some bizarre stuff, including a life-sized junk metal Tyrannosaurus.  The property has a large metal barn, which, unsurprisingly, is jammed full of bizarro vehicles. The most 'normal' car in the barn is a newish wrecked Bentley, which Steve wanted for the engine.  
Stashed next to that is a three wheeler that he'd been talking about all weekend - the fastest three wheeled vehicle in the world. It was a wedge-shaped '80s thing that had been run on the Indy track at some point long ago. Steve said it had been on the cover or Popular Mechanics, and sure enough, Dave soon found a picture online of the October 1984 issue with Steve's car zooming by at an extreme angle.  I actually had a subscription to PM when that issue came out!
There were of course, several more odd French microcars hidden away - the coolest of which was a tiny square van from the seventies or eighties - he actually had a couple variations of it. There may be someone in the US with more weird French cars than Steve has, but I'd be surprised. 

We went back outside, and Steve gave us a tour of the property as Muggsy boonie-crashed through the weeds on a homemade "whizzer." It hit 5:30 and we had to get going - Steve had a dinner date and I had to be back in Sac and ready to sell at the swap meet by 4AM.  We said our goodbyes - all of our minds boggled by Steve and his crazy collection - and headed north.  Amazing end to a very fun day.  Thanks Steve!
Nick, Steve and Dave - barn in the background

Things I Don't Need (But I Do): Crosley Bus FS on Ebay

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On the long list of things I don't need in my life, a Crosley-powered bus - a PROJECT no less - would be waaaay up there.  But that doesn't mean I'm not going to be dreaming about this tonight.

I've been watching Ebay for oddball Crosley stuff for a long time, and this just might take the cake for the crazyiest Crosley project I've seen there yet: a Crosley-powered bus - like, a Greyhound-style bus. Who thought this was a good idea?
The seller says this was a food service vehicle originally used in The Beverly Park kids amusement park - the tiny theme park in the heart of L.A. that inspired Walt Disney to create Disneyland. The timing fits: Beverly Park opened in 1945, so Crosleys (and Crosley parts) would have been readily available in the early years of the park. The size - five feet tall, four feet wide, also sounds right for something out of a kiddie park.
Hard to tell, but the build quality seems pretty good. The body appears to be all metal, and looks like a tiny school bus, minus seats. The food service equipment is mostly there, but rough.  I'd be sorely tempted to rip out all the catering stuff and install five or six rows of seats... although I'm not at all sure that a Crosley motor could move 10 people and all this metal.  I guess that's when you install a Bearcat.
I can't figure out if the wheelbase is standard Crosley - seems longer, but the custom body could be deceptive. It looks like the driveshaft isn't connected to the transmission which also makes me wonder.
Thank god this is in Illinois, because I'm pretty sure I'd have to at least go look at it if it was still in California.  On the other hand, it would be fun to check out, especially since the seller also has a very cool fiberglass-bodied '50s MG special for sale too - and with eBay handle "Bandini57fo" I wouldn't be surprised if he has other interesting stuff tucked away. 

Price is $12,500 or offer.  

2017 West Coast Crosley Meet Report - Part 1

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Autumn means cooler weather, leaves starting to drop, Halloween decorations making their appearance, and - in my world - the annual West Coast Crosley Club Meet.

This year's meet was the first-ever visit to Pacific Grove, a small coastal community sandwiched between Monterey and Carmel. The whole area is car country - The Monterey Historics and Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance are Mecca for car fanatics... one of the few places in the world where you might see a Pegaso just driving down the street. I passed a Jaguar C Type parked on the street just a few blocks from the Crosley meet. These are folks who appreciate old cars.

I wish I could say that I drove my Crosley wagon from Sacto to the meet (just under 200 miles), but I'm not confident enough yet for a trip of that distance. I got the overheating under control, and the engine runs great, but there other issues (especially the OG wiring) that need to be dealt with before I get too crazy. I have been tinkering and testing - my usual play is to do some work on the car, then take a test drive out to Locke, a tiny old Chinese town in the Sacramento Delta. Locke is on a lightly-travelled two lane levee road, so if necessary, I can vary my speeds between 20 and 50 without making a bunch of other drivers crazy.  And, it's a great drive... about 70 miles round trip. I made that run a few times in the month before the meet, but, big difference between that and a 400 mile trip over several days.  I rented a trailer.
U-Haul says my Toyota is too small to pull their trailers, but as luck would have it, the extended Moe clan had opted to make the trip. My brother in law Mike is a car guy and volunteered to tow the trailer behind his Chevy - and also offered to be the catch truck for the Crosley Cruise on Sunday. All went well loading and hauling, although I have to note that U-Haul's 6X12 trailer has pillars that shrink the entryway down to about 57" - the Crosley fit through, but there's not much room for error.
As any regular readers of this blog know, while the Meet officially starts on Saturday, the Friday night potluck is the real kickoff.  I drove over to the Meet hotel around 4PM and was happy to see a flock of Crosleys already gathered... in fact, there were almost as many cars already in the hotel lot as we had on the show field last year.  Looking good....







2017 West Coast Crosley Meet Report - Part 2

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Jewell Park, the site for this year's meet, is a one-block green space just off the main drag in Pacific Grove. It has a small activities building in one corner and a bandstand on another - the rest is grass, with big trees on the edges of the park. Club pres. Rick Alexander had worked with the local Chamber of Commerce to get permission for the show and I knew the cars would look great on the grass - like a mini Concours. I rolled up a little before 8AM and waited for everyone to arrive - This will go down as the first time in history that I was the first one there!

Crosleys started to arrive about 8:30 and the organizing began. Given that cars aren't generally meant to drive into the park there was no driveway; luckily the Crosleys were easily able to use sidewalk corner dips. Rick turned over the layout/design of the show to Jeffrey Ackerman, the Co-Chair of the national Crosley Auto Club's annual meet, who had come all the way out from East Bethany, New York for the show.  First time he'd ever been West of the Mississippi River!
Jeff jumped into the job, guiding Crosleys around the park as they came in, directing traffic and carefully placing each car.  He opted to avoid parking the cars in rows, sprinkling Crosleys throughout the park at different angles - I think it worked out really well, both filling the area and giving each car plenty of room.  Sure made taking pictures easier for me.

Rick and his crew of helpers set up the Crosley Store and the big raffle.  One of the benefits of raising the club dues a couple of years ago is that we now have cash available to print specialty items, so there was a big variety of t-shirts, sweatshirts, hats and even sunglasses.  I picked up a West Coast Crosley Club tote bag that's already been put into service as my record-shopping bag.
The only drawback to Jewell Park was that, despite the numerous "no dogs" signs,  the local canines had peppered the grass with doggie land mines. I came mighty close to stepping in them several times, but narrowly avoided disaster... others, not so lucky.  On the other hand, lax enforcement allowed the Crosley cur contingent free reign of the park.
I had been volunteered to coordinate the awards process this year - a funny thing, given that I usually forget to even turn in my ballot - so I was in charge of assigning each car a numbered window-card for voting. One benefit was that, for once, I knew exactly how many cars showed up: 24 cards means 24 cars.  Except that I later realized that there was no #21, so there were really only 23 cars on hand... one of the best turnouts we've ever had.

Club founder David Brodsky brought his stellar '47 convertible - a teal resto-custom with a "big block" motor - a modified Bearcat engine that looks more or less like a Crosley, but produces about double the horsepower.  Surprising all of us, he posted a tiny "for sale" sign in the windshield. It generated a lot of interest, with many club members mentally checking their bank accounts - a Pacific Grove local saw it, went to the bank, and drove it home at the end of the show!  David has now joined that rarest of Crosley Clubs: owners who have sold a Crosley for over $10K.  He still seemed to be in shock at the club dinner that night.
Rick Alexander displayed the chassis of the Super Sports he's been restoring for a few years. The work looks great, although there was much debate about whether the angle of the driveshaft was correct - amazingly, the assembled Crosley brain trust was unable to come up with a definitive answer.


 As usual, there were plenty of Hot Shots and Super Sports on hand, ranging from heavily modified to very stock.
Jarl deBoer brought his SS (pale yellow, behind the Dunners' red HS) along with a selection of parts. He and David Brodsky were the only people selling - very unusual for our shows. One of these years I need to go through my garage and thin my herd of spares. I was restrained in my purchases, but I did pick up a beautiful horn button from David. 
Also as usual, we had several fiberglass homebuilts - Glen Brynsvold's black Skorpion is one of my favorite cars in the club. He started building it when he was 17... he's now in his seventies - you do the math!
Another fave is Lee Osborn's 1955 Shannon Special. I suspect that this is the fastest Crosley-powered object on the planet - it is certainly one of the best-looking.
 Marty Stein's 1952 Siata was, without a doubt, the most historic car on hand. It's a veteran of Watkins Glen and Sebring and just might be worth as much as every other car at the meet combined. Marty got it as boxes of parts in the seventies, rebuilt it, and has driven the snot out of it ever since.  By the way, he's got his own car blog, called Drive/Ride/Wrench.
 The most unusual car at the meet is this unassuming Farm-O-Road, owned by fellow Sacramentan Nick Shelley.  Nick's uncle had had this car for decades, stashed in a barn in Oregon. Nick convinced the family to let him take it and he brought it home and got it running. But, the body had been heavily modified and the engine barely ran, so Nick started scheming on converting it to an electric vehicle.
Nick does not mess around when it comes to projects, and he had the F-O-R cleaned up and rebuilt as an EV in about the time than it takes me to do a few blog posts! Here's the electric motor:
 For contrast, here's the mill in Marty's Siata.
The day went by quickly - I chatted with club members, locals, and even a Crosley fan from the midwest who had included the show in a family trip. After lunch, we assembled for the club's biggest annual fundraiser: the GIANT RAFFLE.  This is always a great way to pick up rarities and novelties - club members are very generous with their donations. Last year Don Rauch donated a like-new steel crankshaft! No crankshafts this year, but there was plenty to choose from, including some Braje equipment and a custom Crosley clock.  I didn't win the Braje stuff, but it seemed like I won just about everything else - I made so many trips to the front I started to feel sheepish... I guess it makes up for the times I've bought tickets and won nothing. 
After the raffle, the show wound down, the park cleared out and we got a few hours of R and R before the Banquet. The club dinner had a full house, and the meal was the best I've ever had at a meet - Pacific Grove knows how to treat a car club! Once the business meeting was done, Rick turned the microphone over to me for the Awards.

I am probably the LAST person who should be running a car show award process, but, when the suggestion was made to revamp the awards process no one else jumped to do it, so it went to me. I reached out to some members who are active in showing collector cars and got some ideas about what might work, and eventually came up with a simplified slate of awards, enough to keep it interesting, but not so many that it would be a pain to tabulate/coordinate. Most awards were chosen, as always, by "People's Choice," with a few special awards thrown in for good measure.
I started out with the Best of Show awards, but handed out the trophies countdown-style, so the first award was for Third Place. The trophy went to Service Motors' head honcho Dale Liebherr for his stellar CD wagon. This is a NICE car - beautiful body and paint, and ready to drive anywhere; Dale and his wife Sheri drove this car from Minden, Nevada to the first Jackson meet... for those of you unfamiliar with the area, that's OVER the Sierra Nevada mountain range! Great car, and well-deserving of a trophy.
The competition for awards was strong - most of the cars on display received at least a vote or two; it really speaks to the ever-increasing quality of restorations in the club. Dale's brother Rob Liebherr's beautiful pickup, which won Best of Show at our Nevada meet about 10 years ago, didn't even make the top three this year. And one sad note - Rob and Dale had originally restored the truck for their dad, Joe, a longtime Crosley fanatic; I found out at the meet that both he, and their mom, Connie had passed away this year.  They were super nice people, and I'll miss chatting with them.
Second Place went to an old favorite - Gary Loomer's 1947 pickup truck, which beat out Dale's wagon by a few votes. This is always a popular car, but I think the new mural he added to the back put him over the top this year.  Great driver too.
I don't think anyone was surprised by the choice for "Best of Show."  Bob King always turns out nice work, but this modified Super Sports is a work of art. Featuring a Toyota motor, flawless paint and body, and way too many custom details to get into here, the car is a total stunner.  I was particularly impressed because I knew exactly what he started with: a hacked up junkyard body that came out of my storage yard about five years ago. Adding to the drama, the car was finished two days before the meet!  
 There may have been stiff competition for the "Best of" awards, but there was one clear winner for our new trophy: "Best Work in Progress." President Rick Alexander's chassis made a clean sweep - it was the only project at the show!
My favorite award is the Long Distance Trophy - the "Bob Carson Memorial Award." The Bob Carson goes to the person who drives their Crosley the furthest distance to the meet (20 miles or more); if no one drives a Crosley, the award goes to the person who brings their Crosley the furthest distance to the meet. This award honors the late “Travelin’” Bob Carson, a longtime West Coast Club member who often drove a Crosley from his home in Hollywood to the national Crosley Club meet in Wauseon, Ohio – and back. In some years, Bob probably drove more miles in a Crosley than all other club members combined, and this award honors one of our most dedicated – and eccentric – Crosley brethren.

No Crosleys made it to PG under their own power, so it was a close race between Martha Straube of Jacksonville, Oregon and Mike Blackburn of Lakeside, California. At 466 miles, Martha had Mike beat by about 20 miles, and took the trophy back home with her to the Beaver State.
I started to wrap up the proceedings and almost forgot about our other new award: "Judge's Choice." This award had been suggested at last year's meet as something different: unlike our usual "people's choice" style voting, the Judge's Choice would be chosen by a car nut/expert who is from the meet region, but who is NOT involved in the Crosley Club. The designated Judge sets the parameters for the award that year and has sole decision on which vehicle wins the trophy. I really liked this idea since it could produce varied awards - one judge might award for "Most Original," the next for "Best Restoration," and another for "Best Patina."

Club member John Moulton is very engaged in Monterey-area collector car events (he's the organizer of the Pacific Grove Little Car Show each August), and found us our expert, Mr. Alain Wood. Alain is a longtime restoration/hot rod shop owner who is very involved in Monterey-area car events. He arrived incognito - I was the only member who knew who he was. He spent hours at the show, carefully looking at each car. In the end, he chose Mike and Robin Stoner's steel-blue sedan. He called the car a perfect resto-kustom, citing the car's stellar fit-and-finish and unique, thoughtful custom touches. Mike seemed genuinely shocked when I handed him the trophy.
 After the awards were done I gave a quick rundown for Sunday's Crosley Cruise, and handed out maps with the route. So far, this had been one of the best meets we'd ever had... one day to go!

to be continued....

Back to Part 1

The 1st Annual Jenkem Spank'em 69 Road Rally

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When my buddy Marcos was in town for the Snowball Rally in April, he invited me to drive the Crosley up to the Bay Area for the first annual "Jenkem Spenkem," what he described as a half-assed, ill-planned "shitty car ride" he was organizing for his birthday, 6/9. The idea was to get a bunch of his pals with old cars to meet up in the parking lot of a nearby Grocery Outlet, drive 69 miles on back roads around the bay, and end up at his house in Oakland for an afternoon BBQ. No entry fees, no cut-off dates, no fancy cars... just a goofy fun trip on some less-traveled roads.

I was glad to be invited, but wasn't sure about going.

A) Oakland is almost 100 miles from Sacramento, so I'd be doing 200 miles on top of the 69 mile rally - that's a lotta miles for a Crosley. B) My brother's birthday party was scheduled for 6PM that same day.

I hemmed and hawed and finally decided to drive out to meet up with the Rally as they stopped in Port Costa, a tiny old town in the backwoods near Benicia. I could take the River Road most of the way there and just hop on Highway 4 for the last bit. Then, depending on how the car was running, I could hang out in Port Costa or drive along with them for a ways before heading home for my brother's party.
I got up early Saturday morning and loaded the car with tools, jackstands and work gloves.  By the time I got coffee and was on the road it was about 9AM - I figured that would give me plenty of time to get to Port Costa before the Jenkemz. Taking the route I'd found, Port Costa was 85 miles from Sacramento.

The Delta was beautiful and the weather was perfect.  The Crosley was running great... I'd rebuilt the carb a few months back and had tested it on short drives, but this would be the first real run. I settled in at about 50mph and cruised on the winding levee road. Temp stayed just above the halfway mark and the engine sounded happy.  I zipped through Courtland, Locke, Walnut Grove, Isleton. As I passed the turnoff for Rio Vista I realized that the last time I'd driven this route in a Crosley was when I'd driven my convertible to Morro Bay in 2000.
I headed up the Antioch Bridge, a long, long grade that crests over the San Joaquin River at 135', giving an amazing view of the Delta. Immediately after I got off the bridge the surroundings became more industrial and I soon saw the signs for Highway 4. I couldn't remember being on 4 in this area, but according to the map it was a state highway, not a freeway.

Whatever. As soon as I got on, it was clear that 4 is, for all intents and purposes, a freeway. I stayed in the slow lane as much as I could, but cars entering from onramps blew past me at 70. I nudged the Crosley up close to 60mph. The engine still sounded great and the temp gauge needle stayed at the 3/4 mark. Oil pressure held tough at 60 pounds.

Most drivers gave me a wide berth and I got a lot of honks and waves as they blew past me going 15-20 mph faster than I was. Surprisingly, no one gave me the finger.

I obsessively watch the gauges when I drive, and everything looked good - except the gas gauge. I'd left Sacramento with more than 3/4 tank and had just below half when I'd gotten on the freeway. But driving this hard was really draining the tank - the needle was getting close to the 1/4 mark after 10 miles of freeway. I decided to gas up since I didn't know if there would be gas anywhere near Port Costa.
I hopped off the freeway and made as quick a fill up as I could. The station had no bathroom, so I discreetly watered some of their plants once the car was full of gas. I checked my phone and saw a that Marc had sent a text that the drive was going to leave Oakland around 10AM. I got back on the road about 10:45 and started to wonder if I'd be late to meet the Jenkem.

A few miles down the road I noticed that the Crosley seemed to be "pushing." Where before I could tell that the motor was working hard, but running smooth, now it seemed like it was surging and slowing. It was handling fine and it sounded OK, but I didn't like the feeling. I got off the freeway and pulled over at another gas station. The car was idling fine, gauges looked good -- the only thing I can figure is that I'd hit a windy patch - I've had that exact sensation when driving in high winds. I got back on the road and the car seemed fine, so I suspect my hypothesis was correct.

I saw the sign for Port Costa and exited on to McEwen Road. McEwen is two miles of PERFECT Crosley road: a tiny asphalt strip that wound through golden California hills. It was two lanes, but even in a Crosley I was glad that there was no traffic coming the other way. Houses started to replace ranch buildings as I got closer to the water, and I followed my navigation directly to the "center" of town - an old hotel, a post office, a bar and a couple of shops, all clustered near a gravel parking lot that bordered the bay.

I pulled into the lot, driving past a wide-eyed guy sitting on a Harley. I no sooner had the car parked than he came rushing over, saying, "I haven't seen a Crosley in 40 years! You're not gonna believe this, but I used to race a Crosley!"
His name was Steve, and he told me that he'd bought an old handbuilt special with a Crosley engine back in the late fifties when it was no longer competitive. He told me a bit about it and I asked if he remembered who he had bought it from. "I bought it from a guy named Doc Young."

Doc Young is a little-known but legendary figure in early Crosley racing history - an amateur engineer, he'd designed and built his own twin-cam conversions on modified Crosley blocks. And he won races.  Steve seemed surprised that I knew about Doc Young and even more surprised when I mentioned Doc's stomping grounds, Hanford/Lemoore. We talked a few more minutes and Steve promised to see if he could dig up any more info if I followed up with him, which I plan to do.

After Steve left I got a text from Marcos that they were running late, and that arrival was going to be closer to noon. I got a water at the one coffee shop in town and wandered down to look at the water. The bay is so skinny here that it looks more like a big river - except for the full size cargo ships bearing international markings that slowly made their way out to sea.
The Jenkemz finally pulled into town around 12:15. Marcos and Amy led the way in a white 240 Volvo wagon - Marcos had blown up his '70s Volvo two-door on the Snowball Rally and still didn't have it back on the road.  Also on hand were a Pacer, a '64 Ranchero, a Datsun B210 wagon, a Chevy Mark III van, some Toyota pickups and maybe a couple other cars. Most participants were decked out in "Jenkem Spank'em 69" t shirts.

While administration was kept to a minimum, Marcos is a natural-born event coordinator (his day job is organizing the annual Burger Boogaloo Music Fest) so each participant still got a T Shirt, map/guide and swag bag. I got my swag bag, which included all of the above and two peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, handmade by Marcos' fiancee Amy. Despite all this seeming structure, the slapdash nature of the Jenkem Spank'em 69 was intact: the event name was spelled at least three different ways on the printed materials.
After a quick ogle of the cars we decamped for the bar. There isn't much in Port Costa, and the most imposing structure is an old concrete wheat warehouse that also doubles as the post office. Part of the ground floor is now a rambling cafe/bar, crammed with art, knickknacks and two giant taxidermied bears. Given that the Jenkem was now over an hour behind schedule, all pretenses toward structure were abandoned. We milled around for 45 minutes or so as participants loaded up on carbs of all kinds. Eventually Marcos gathered everyone up for a picture with the bears and then we headed back out to the lot.

By this point it was after 1PM, so I needed to start heading back to Sac soon. The Jenkem clan was continuing to the Marin headlands - I decided to follow them for a few miles and then turn off for home before we got on another freeway.  

We climbed away from Port Costa with me in the middle of the pack. The road was twisty enough that I had no trouble keeping up, although I was doing a lot of shifting between second and third. After a few miles we got to Crockett, and a freeway entrance. I peeled off and doubled back toward Port Costa. 
I'd skipped lunch at the bar so I was getting hungry. I pulled off on the side of the road and dug into the PBJs.  After I polished them off I noticed a deer slowly approaching me. It kept closing in, twitching its tail and taking a few steps at a time, staring at me the whole time.  Just as I thought it was going to get in the car with me it turned and bolted up the hill.

The trip back was uneventful. Highway 4 was busier than before, but the traffic kept the speeds slower. Several times cars pulled just ahead of me, rolled down the passenger window, extended a phone to take a photo, then sped off.

Once I got back on the River Road it was smooth sailing. Car ran great, temp stayed between half and three quarters, oil pressure was good. It felt great to have the car out on a beautiful day, hanging out with friends, driving some of the best back roads in California. I thought about Frank Bell, my old friend who owned the car for half a century before he died. Sometimes I feel bad that I don't drive the car as much as I could, but today I knew Frank would have been proud.

I pulled into Sacramento a little after 3PM... plenty of time to get cleaned up and make it out to my brother's by 6PM. As I put the car away I checked the odometer - the day's trip was 179 miles total. 
That's the most miles I've put on a Crosley in one day since 2003 when I drove from Sacramento to Visalia in a brutal 12 hour marathon. That time I ended the drive exhausted, covered with oil, grease and dirt from multiple roadside repairs, and not sure my Crosley would even make it home the next day (it did). Today's trip could hardly have been more of a contrast. 

This is the kind of Crosley long-distance driving experience I've always hoped for - unique, but not harrowing. It hasn't always been that way. Part of it is my budget, of course - in the old days I was scraping just to keep a car on the road and couldn't afford to improve the niceties... like padding on the seats. And parts availability is better now, too... I once "rebuilt" the brakes on my convertible reusing old cables because there was no production on new ones. But, I also like to hope that I've learned a few things in 21 years of working on Crosleys... these days I'm much less afraid to tear into something that's kinda working; in the old days I was always worried that I'd take something apart and never get it back together again. At this point I've worked on everything on a Crosley except a rear end, so I'm more willing to 'dig' in to a mystery.

And of course, there's the car. Frank poured 50 years of love and attention into this car, and I can tell. It's night and day between this and my old convertible. Not that there aren't some places he skimped or made weird choices... but Frank spent a lot of time working on the car - and DRIVING it. It had been sitting for a while when his family sold it to me, but the underlying essentials were all solid, and it just took a while for me to get it dialed in again.  I can't say I'd just hop in and drive it anywhere, but I'd do the Jenkem Spank'em again in a heartbeat.













Special Collection

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I was happy to learn that the California Auto Museum will be hosting a microcar show next year, from March 15 to August 5, 2019 - especially great news for me, given that CAM is about a mile and a half from my house. A friend of mine is on the Board of the museum was talking about the show and knew I had a microcar (or, uh, four). I told him about the Crosleys and one of the things I mentioned was that my 1950 wagon had been featured in Road and Track Magazine back in 1975.  He couldn't even picture what a Crosley looked like, so I told him I'd send him a few photos.
Courtesy of the Department of Special Collections, Stanford Libraries
As I got the pictures together I looked to see if the R&T article had ever been posted online. I did some googling and found what seemed like it might be an online version of the article. I clicked through to the site and could not believe what I was seeing...

Frank and Shirley Bell had already owned their 1950 Crosley Super Station Wagon for about a decade* when someone from Road and Track contacted them about featuring the car in an article. The concept was to compare a new compact car (a Ford Pinto station wagon) to a compact car from a quarter century beforehand - their Crosley station wagon. Given that Crosley was one of the only American-made compact cars of that era, and certainly the smallest mass-manufactured USA compact of 1950, it was a perfect fit.

Author (and probably photographer) Ron Wakefield met up with Frank and the whole Bell family at their home in Hawthorne for a photoshoot and test drive of the Crosley. Frank shared details about the car and Wakefield gamely took the the 26.5 horsepower beast for a spin in 1974 California traffic. His review was fairly charitable, although the line I always remember best is his comment that a Crosley is not unlike a rolling upright piano.
Courtesy of the Department of Special Collections, Stanford Libraries
I'm not sure when I first learned about the article, but I first read it when it was reprinted in the Crosley and Crosley Specials book in 1998. The story only added to the semi-legendary status I'd already accorded Frank - at that point, he was one of only two guys I'd met who actually drove their Crosleys more than a couple miles at a time. When I went to my first Crosley Club meet in 1997, I was flummoxed to discover that only two members (Frank and Bob Carson) drove their cars to the meet. And, unlike Bob (who had a spectacular DNF rate), Frank usually made it home under his own power too. From the moment I met him, I was a total fan. I've read and re-read Wakefield's article enough that I practically have it memorized. The photos - four shots showing the car in various settings - are equally committed to memory.

So, imagine my shock when I clicked the link and discovered over FIFTY never-before-published photos taken that day in Hawthorne! The site I'd clicked on was the Department of Special Collections at the Stanford Libraries. They have obtained Road and Track's archives from 1947-2012 - a staggering collection of photos and documents, many thousands of which have been scanned and posted at their website - including a priceless-to-me set of photos of the Bell family and their beloved 1950 station wagon, of which I am now the owner. I was blown away.
Courtesy of the Department of Special Collections, Stanford Libraries
Many of the pictures are slightly different variations of the images I know well... multiple shots of the family washing the car in the driveway, slightly different angles of the dashboard, the car parked next to the Pinto, etc..  but there are also plenty of photos that were entirely new to me.
Courtesy of the Department of Special Collections, Stanford Libraries
The biggest revelation were the under the hood shots. There were no pictures of the engine bay in the original article.... and I can kinda see why. Neither of the two photos of the engine are that good, and would have been fairly blah in reproduction.... and, frankly, the engine looks crappy. This was a total surprise to me. Frank was an airplane mechanic, and obviously kept the car running well enough that he trusted it on hundred mile-plus road trips. But, boy, that cam cover looks awful - like it's held together with JB Weld, mud and sheet metal patches. I can't imagine why Frank wouldn't have replaced it - cam covers couldn't have been that hard to find in 1974.
Courtesy of the Department of Special Collections, Stanford Libraries.
The other under the hood surprise was the missing "oh shit" box. By the time I got the car, a metal box had been attached to the fender next to the battery box. It was packed with supplies and parts for a side-of-the-road breakdown: spare points, extra oil and funnel, some screwdrivers, wire, fuses, lightbulbs, etc... I LOVE it; a totally useful modification. What I don't love is that the fender was cut down to create the space for the box - looks like that was already done by 1974 - you can see the flat spot next to the battery that should have a curve matching the other fender. Not sure if the box was removed for the photo or if Frank hadn't fabbed it yet.
Courtesy of the Department of Special Collections, Stanford Libraries.
There are also shots of the interior from the rear. There's the same piece of stained beige carpet and the strangely-painted wheelwells that the car still has, but the rest of the upholstery was replaced at some point after I first saw the car, probably in the mid 2000s. In these photos, many of the interior panels and the headliner are missing altogether - I wonder if Frank ever had the original panels or if the car came without them?

The funnest photos of the whole batch are the dozen shots of the car in Hawthorne traffic. It looks like Frank is driving, with at least two passengers - they are cruising through town, passing the Drug Store, the Texaco station, the State Farm office, etc... a moment in time, captured forever.
Courtesy of the Department of Special Collections, Stanford Libraries.
Almost as neat are the pics of the Crosley parked on Frank and Shirley's lawn in the suburbs. It's so sweet to see the car carefully 'presented' at their house. By the time I met them, Frank and Shirley lived in a beautifully landscaped ranch house set into terraced hills in La Habra Heights... it wasn't fancy, but it was a more unique property than the little house in Hawthorne. You can see their old house a bit in the published photos, but these give a much better view.

I think my very favorite of all the pictures is a shot of Frank crouching in front of the Crosley, back to the camera, looking over his shoulder at the camera. It's an awkward pose (probably designed to show off the logo on the back of Frank's Crosley Club t shirt), but a nice photo and it really shows how small Crosleys are. He's got a funny, skeptical look on his face, which if you knew Frank, was not his typical look - he was a happy guy and I generally picture him with a smile... although maybe that's because I always saw him at Crosley meets. I still can't believe that this treasure trove of photos exists.
Courtesy of the Department of Special Collections, Stanford Libraries.
I am not much of a car show guy, but whenever I do show the wagon, I bring along an oversized reprint of the Road and Track article mounted on poster board and put it up near the car. I look forward to getting a print of the crouching Frank picture made to add to my display. I still think of the Crosley as Frank's car - I guess it will be "mine" when I've had it for 51 years. Until then I look forward to sharing the history of Frank Bell's wagon, and am pretty excited to add this archive to the story.

Thanks very much to the Department of Special Collections, Stanford Libraries for allowing me to share these photos.

*the article says he'd owned the car for eight years at the time of interview - Frank's family told me he got it in 1964.




Goodbye, Lil Garage

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A strange day: the funky little shed that has been my workshop/garage/practice space for 12 and a half years, is gone. 

I've spent uncounted hours in this 18' X 19' plywood shack in my backyard, working on various Crosleys, MoPars and house projects, and almost as many hours playing music with friends or just practicing on my own. It was freezing and damp in the winter, sweltering in the Summer - just plywood and tar paper separating me from the world, but it worked. It was my own little space to clear my head and get things done.
I'd also spent years making it a functional space. By the end it had good lighting, a PA system, plenty of built-in shelves, a custom workbench/cabinet and even a set of heavy brackets that held the body of my disassembled Super Sports six feet off the ground so I could park under it. Not bad for what was basically an upcycled garden shed.
I didn't know what to make of the 'garage' when we bought our house in 2006. It was a simple plywood shed-roofed building, probably built in the '70s, but the previous owners had tried to fancy it up, adding trim and painting wraparound murals of Egyptian hieroglyphics. It was in the far corner of our lot, right on two property lines, with a fenced-off gravel parking area that opened onto the alley. The previous owners used it as an outdoor party pad, but all I focused on was the solid concrete foundation and the barn-style doors that opened wide enough to get a car inside.

I'd lived in a warehouse for about 10 years before we bought our house, so I was used to having tons of space. I could park four cars in the back of the warehouse and not even get into the part we used for living space - and I loved having my car projects just a few steps from my bedroom. Not so good when the 1952 Dodge wagon I dragged out of a barn turned out to be full of wasp nests. This, however, was the opposite end of the shop-space spectrum.
We moved in and I completely filled the garage with parts and tools, plus my 1949 convertible and Super Sports project. That meant that the '52 Dodge and 1947 Crosley wagon had to go outside on the gravel parking area, which was so small that I couldn't open the garage doors if the Dodge was parked there. Then I ended up with a SECOND Super Sports project, which meant the '47 wagon had to move to a dead spot in the front yard. I imagine the neighbors weren't thrilled, but they didn't say anything. Luckily, a friend offered some indoor space to rent, and I quickly moved the two wagons out there and gave myself a little bit of room.
A very little bit. While the concrete slab was 18' X 19', the building only occupied an 18' X 16' section of the foundation - giving me a total working area of 288 square feet. I tried to get a project area set up, and had installed some shelving I'd salvaged from the warehouse, but this was the classic "10 pounds of crap in a 5 pound sack" situation: I just had too much stuff for the space. I was busy with work and with house projects, so it didn't bother me too much at first, but within a year or so, it was driving me bananas.
First order of business was to reclaim that unused space on the slab. Whoever had built this structure on the old foundation hadn't figured out that water would pool on the uncovered concrete and run under the wall - now the South wall of the building was rotting out along the bottom sill. Because the garage was on the property line, I knew I couldn't get away with tearing the whole place down and starting fresh in the same spot, but if I saved three walls I figured I could say I was just doing a repair. I decided to rip off the entire south wall of the building, move it to the edge of the slab where it belonged, giving me a total of 342 sq. feet of garage.  I also decided to 'flip' the roof. The garage had a shed roof that originally sloped down to the south - by reversing the slope I could make the new South wall 10' high and gain quite a bit of space overhead.
My pal Alex and I ripped off the South wall, then the roof, and set to rebuilding everything over a holiday weekend. Since I didn't have any place to put the contents of the garage I just moved everything into the center and covered it with tarps.  I replaced the side door with an odd-sized solid wood 1940s vintage door I'd found in a trash pile. I built a row of clerestory windows in between the rafters on the new wall and it brought a lot of light in, and I drywalled and insulated the new section.
The project took us a little longer than expected, but the end result turned out pretty well - and when I touched up the exterior paint, the new section looked like it had been there as long as the rest of the building. Once the expansion was done I got to work on making it usable space. While working in the yard one day I'd discovered that the cable that provided power to the garage was buried less than 6" deep -  ridiculously dangerous. I dug a 40' long, 30" deep trench from the main box to the garage and ran romex in conduit to a new panel at the garage which my electrician friend Ann hooked up - a big improvement.

I wanted a nice workbench, loosely based on the one my dad had built in our garage in 1973. I used half-inch plywood over a two by four frame that was anchored to the wall studs. For the countertop I used 40 year old Masonite that I'd salvaged from a rehab project at Liv's work - it had aged to a beautiful dark brown that looked amazing. I built light shelving over the bench - perfect for the stereo, power tools and some Crosley sheet metal. Once everything was built I put on a couple coats of amber varnish and was really pleased with the way it turned out.
I tossed the shelves I'd reused from the old warehouse and built a sturdy floor-to-ceiling shelving unit along the whole North wall. The bottom shelf was designed so a Crosley motor could just tuck underneath - I think I had a half dozen motors at that point. The rest was devoted almost entirely to Crosley parts. The best feature was the two brackets that held my Crosley Super Sports body as high as it would go so I could park under it. And I used that headroom I'd gained by flipping the roof angle - my surfboards and the Super Sport frame were hung up in the rafters. Once all that was done, I had a SHOP.
While I never have as much time to work on projects as I'd like, plenty got done in that tiny little garage. The big problem was when I was working on a big job and the car couldn't be moved. The garage still had just the 8' wide barn doors, so if something immobile was in the way of the door, nothing much could be moved in or out.
That also meant that band practice had to accommodate any 'standing' projects. I'd usually park the car outside for our weekly practices but there were many instances where the guys had to tuck in around a Crosley on four jackstands. The PA system was already wired in place, and luckily we use fairly small amplifiers and an old three-piece drum kit.
Slowly, the garage - and the rest of the yard- became much more functional. I put in a 20' X 20' brick patio, and a set of huge redwood garden boxes that Liv used to grow herbs and veggies. We got rid of all the grass and replaced it with gravel, drought-tolerant plants and two redwood trees. The only thing I really didn't like was the unpaved parking area between my garage and the alley.... I wanted to put in a driveway and a carport, but I couldn't figure out exactly how I wanted it, so it got put off.
Then, just over a year ago, we had our contractor friend Rich over to bid on some restoration work on our house. Our place is a simple farmhouse, built in 1913 - it had been a rental for 50 years before we bought it so it has a ton of deferred maintenance. While walking around the property, Rich remarked on how big our yard was and asked if we'd ever thought of building a granny flat. He also mentioned that the city had just changed the rules on Accessory Dwelling Units, bumping up the maximum allowable sq. footage from 850' to 1200'. He suggested building a brand new garage with a rental apartment above it. Hmmmmmmm.....
Two weeks later Rich called back with a better idea: yes, build an ADU, but rent out the original house and WE move into the new house, built to our specifications. Liv and I were a little bit overwhelmed, but the idea made a lot of sense: I could have a real garage/workshop on the ground floor and we could build a house that fit our lifestyle much better than the house we live in. AND we could stay in the neighborhood we've come to know very, very well. It took some sweating on my part. I've never lived in a place built after World War II in my entire adult life, so this would be a huge change. But, Liv and I are both big Mid-Century Modern architecture buffs and the idea of living in a house inspired by that style is pretty exciting. And, Liv's mom is an architect, who offered to help us design the new place. We started the planning last January.
A year later, the plans are done, the permits are approved and the bank has signed the paperwork. Suddenly, I had to get everything out of the garage now. We rented a movable storage locker and I built a frame to hold the Super Sport body. Seven pals came over and helped me heft it into the storage container and then I started filling the rest of box with Crosley parts and other assorted garage gunk. It took about a week to clear everything out. The day after I gave the 'all clear,' Rich sent a crew in, and the garage was... gone.
A few months ago, when I knew the garage was close to the end, my band th' Losin Streaks filmed a video inside. Our label had asked if we'd do some promo videos for our new album, and since we are a 'garage' band so it made sense to catch us in our home turf. My friend Karlos did an amazing and creative job, and I am so happy to have a document of the place I had so many happy times in over the past dozen years.  Here's hoping the new one has even better memories.





















I Hate Trailers

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I hate trailers.

Yet, here I am again, carting a Crosley behind my Toyota, on my way to the annual West Coast Crosley Club meet. This time, at least I have a good excuse...

Shortly after we tore my garage down, I loaned my Crosley wagon to the California Auto Museum to be displayed as part of their temporary Microcar exhibit. The Crosley was there from February to August, which was great since I didn't have anywhere to put it while the new house/garage are being built. While the car was in the museum, I reshuffled some stuff in my storage to make room. I'd been storing a friend's GT6 project for about a year and it was time for that to move along. With that out of the way I had just enough room to squeeze the Crosley in.
I got the Crosley out of the museum at the end of the show and drove it over to West Sac - the battery was nearly dead from sitting so long, and, more unhappily, the brakes were really spongy. I checked the master cylinder - it was full. I checked all the backing plates, hoses and lines, but couldn't find any evidence of a leak. I'd rebuilt the brakes when I got the car from the Bell family about four years ago, so I was surprised to be having issues. Given that there were no leaks and the reservoir was full, I figured that the master cylinder must have gone bad. I ordered a new one from Service Motors.

No big deal, right? Brakes are a pretty simple system, and I've rebuilt Crosley brakes several times. No worries.

But.... most of my tools, including all of my jack stands, my shop lights, my brake pliers, etc... are currently locked in a storage container in the middle of nowhere with the rest of my garage stuff. And, while I could fit my car in my West Sac storage spot, it barely fit. I was knee deep in a couple house projects (getting the old house ready to rent out once we move into the new place) so I couldn't dig in right away. I got to a stopping point a few couple weeks before the meet and figured I could knock the brakes out in a day or two.
First order of business was to pull the carpet up and cut a hole in the floor.

When I first bought the car I was surprised to find that the floors had been repaired - there must have been significant rust, and Frank had welded in new sheet metal in the front floors. One of those repaired areas was directly in front of the driver's seat.  If you are familiar with 1949-52 Crosleys, you know that the master cylinder is located just below the floor in that spot - there is a plug in the floor that covers a 2" hole in the sheet metal that lets you access the reservoir.  Much to my surprise, Frank had welded in replacement floors, but had never cut the hole, so the only way to fill the master cylinder was with a pump and tubing, and you could only check it by sticking your finger in while laying under the car. I had employed some colorful language when I was learning the necessary pump-and-dump system to fill the master cylinder (and splash brake fluid overflow all over myself and the floor) and swore I'd fix it the next time I messed with the brakes.
One tool not in storage was my drill and a two-inch hole saw. I center-punched the floor directly over the master cylinder and cut a neat hole in the proper spot. I used a rounded hand file to get rid of the burrs and sharp edges, and the replacement floor plug I got from Service Motors was a perfect fit.
Before I pulled the master cylinder I needed to be ready to drain the fluid. My drip pans were all in storage, so I walked over to the nearby gas station to see if I could buy something to use; there was no auto parts section in the attached store, but I found some peanut butter cookies in a plastic clamshell box... I cut the lid off and the bottom made a decent small drip pan. I unhooked the hoses and fittings from the master cylinder and pulled it.
That makes the process sound much smoother than it actually was. Without having the car on jackstands I could barely squeeze myself under the car with a bunch of wriggling and scooching, and then, only on my back - I couldn't turn to the side at all. That made wrench and socket handling slow-going, and most of the time I couldn't look directly at what I was doing. Even more inconvenient, I had almost no room for my legs when I was under the Crosley - on one side the car was 15" from the wall, on the other, 15" away from a 1952 Dodge. Everything took waaaaay longer than it should have, and it took me nearly all day to cut the hole in the floor and get the master cylinder out.
After a couple of days I finally got the new master cylinder in place and hooked back up to the rest of the plumbing. I bled the brakes and managed to squirt a bunch of fluid all over the rear axle with a looser-than-expected rear brake valve. From there on, everything seemed like a mess... I used every rag I had cleaning up the fluid and wiping down the axle and backing plates. There was so much fluid I had a hard time knowing if things were leaking or if it was just an old drip from the earlier fluid explosion. I will say that the hole in the floor made filling the reservoir a million times easier than it had been before.

No matter how much I bled the brakes, I couldn't get any more pedal... and with no space/tools to pull the brake drums, I started to think about other options for getting the Crosley to the meet... or even leaving it home.

I have a trailer - a tiny, flimsy, janky Harbor Freight trailer that I bought used for $50 and then hauled Crosleys all over creation with for five years. But, it was never really up to the task, and I've been borrowing trailers anytime I needed to pull my car anywhere for the past few years. I really only use a trailer once every year or two, so it hasn't been much of an issue.  But let's face it - borrowing any tool repeatedly feels kinda lame, and at some point you want to step up and just buy the damned thing.
I'd seen a small used trailer on Craigslist for $450 a week or two back and had noticed that it was plenty big enough for a Crosley, but still small enough to park in the 8-foot-wide driveway that will be poured next to the new house/garage. I drove up to Fiddletown one night after work, kicked the tires, haggled the guy down to $425, and drove back with my "new" trailer. Needs some welding and could use new wood on the deck, but the hauling platform is 10' X 6', so it will haul a Crosley (or even something huge, like a VW Beetle) with ease and it's light enough that I can roll it around by hand when it's empty. Loading the station wagon on it was painless, and the whole assembly pulled perfectly the whole way to Pacific Grove - a far cry from the old Harbor Freight special.

But I still hate trailers.

to be continued...

Duh.

Raffi's Happy Cars

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Raffi Minasian is a car guy of the first order - an automotive designer who got his first car when he was just 11 years old. And WHAT a car: a 1953 Giaur sports car powered by a Crosley 4 cylinder. With a car like that in the stable, the fact that he still speaks fondly of the stock Crosley Super Sports he picked up a few years later tells you a lot about him.

Raffi has had a fascinating career in the auto industry and currently writes for several car magazines... he just published an article in Vintage Road and Racecar about what makes a car fun to drive, starting with his Crosley.  A good read and some nice pics too!
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