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03-17-2014 12:15 AM #1
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Just wondering what is most interesting to you...
I know when I first started in rodding thousands of years ago I was really into the driving my rides. Things went a million different directions and I can honestly say I really don't like explaining everything about my car every time I stop, so I tend not to take it out very often. I really enjoy building them and wrenching and that is kinda where I'm at in my Hot Rod life right now. It doesn't help things that it is also how I make my living so I really do get my fill of this stuff but I was curious where your passion lays in regards to hot rods?Last edited by M.T.; 03-17-2014 at 10:54 AM.
Bob, Bob, & Bob
Change is Opportunity!
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03-17-2014 04:56 AM #2
For me it isn't really about Hot Rods. A 30's style is still among the most beautiful for me so I decided I had enough of the muscle car era and wanted to build a rod.
Like you I don't have any desire to explain my decisions to folks I don't even know and I refuse to even think about entering a show! I'll stick to attending a cruise night or two a season.. that's enough for me!
Like I said, it isn't about the car it really is about all the little challenges to build a car. And this one I can honestly say I touched everything and did it all, paint / body work / chassis / interior is all me... yeah theres parts I don't like and will redo but that's the fun for me!
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03-17-2014 07:06 AM #3
Bob,
I was a fringe, wanna-be hot rodder for many years but with the demands of work, business travel, family, kids, and life in general I never focused on really getting into a build. When I retired I said, "why not now?" and bought a fiberglass roller. Like Mike, I pretty much did all of the fabrication myself, but it's pretty much a mail order hot rod - Summit, Speedway, JEGS (and others!) recognized my customer number and I became well acquainted with my UPS man!!
I love driving the '33, but I really enjoy the build. I'm not the sheet metal craftsman like some of the guys here, and I aspire to learn more as time goes by, but I enjoy making and modifying "stuff" as the need arises, and figuring out how to do things I've not done before. I admire the ingenuity of builders, re-purposing some obscure piece or part into something useful and functional on their hot rod.
I'm getting less enthused about the weekend shows like Goodguys, NSRA, etc, and enjoy local cruises, parking lot "show & shine's", the "Ford Show" at the local dealership, over driving to another city and doing the weekend motel thing. We still go to some, but not all that come up. I have nothing against trailering cars to events, but it's not for me. I'm just having fun!Last edited by rspears; 03-17-2014 at 07:19 AM.
Roger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
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03-17-2014 07:49 AM #4
Count me in on the thousand years of playing & working on cars. I love them all and really like the chalenge of taking one apart and reassembling it to my standards, fixing things that others say can't be done. I used to go to all the big shows back in the early 90s (Vett fest and the ISAC shows) but out grew them. Now its local (if I have one to take) right near home. I spend all my time building and trying to figure out why things don't fit where I want them to. Enjoy the hobby the way you like it.Charlie
Lovin' what I do and doing what I love
Some guys can fix broken NO ONE can fix STUPID
W8AMR
http://fishertrains94.webs.com/
Christian in training
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03-17-2014 07:51 AM #5
Anything that goes fast and makes noise, still building and enjoying it. Love my trailer, hate all the inattentive drivers on the road today!!! Did all my long distance cruizin' in coupes, sedans, roadsters years ago anyway... Really bored with the "1-800-HOT-RODS" cars these days, takes something unique in engine, drivetrain, suspension, or all of the above to trip my trigger. Hot Rods are still about competition for me!Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, Live for Today!
Carroll Shelby
Learning must be difficult for those who already know it all!!!!
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03-17-2014 08:46 AM #6
Mine is a lot like yours Dave. I grew up in the late 50s-60s. I lived in Ca. between Fresno and Bakersfield. I along with a friend a couple years older then me built a old chev pick-up. We put a olds engine and trans in it. He was in auto shop in HS so he knew all about it. Later I got a 55 chev heated the front springs to drop the front, put a 57 olds j2 in it and was a hot little car that didn't handle all that good. But the thrill was draging main on saturday nites in Visalia. It would be bumper to bumper with cars. A lot of stop light to light runs, or heading to palm drive. Sun to drags at Famosa or Raisin city. My joy has always been the smell of gas, and most of all driving. They were fun to drive. I have always had hot rods but they began to ride and handle more like my family car. The ones I'm building now are as close to the cars as I had in the 60's. Forgot to mention about the 2nd greatest place on earth was the wrecking yard. As is was shopping headquarters for parts., staying up all nite putting a clutch or trans in to get it ready for school on monday.
Hank
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03-17-2014 10:22 AM #7
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Very interesting, I think we all go through an evolution of sorts with these rides. Back when I was very young I remember my Dad chopping cars and selling them to get another and do it again. Kind of odd behavior for a Coroner. LOL My first car was a sweet little Model A Ford coupe that I took from him and never gave back. I'm still borrowing it by the way. I have worked on so many of the local cars I really have no desire to go to shows and sit in circles and talk about a subject that has been beat into the ground. Specially when I probably know their cars better than many of them.
Now on Friday nights I discovered a bunch of new young guns that love the old tin but all live in condos or associations where wrenching is not possible. I open the shop so they can wrench and do their thing. I'm finding a lot of satisfaction in what they are doing and encouraging them to stretch the envelope. Instead of following the old school ideas I'm helping them to build their own hot rod identitys. Kinda cool to see what they find cool. I hear things like "wouldnt it be cool if" then helping that become reality is fun to watch. Then to here them showing others what they have accomplished is pretty sweet. At times its hard to keep an open mind after seeing decades of the same hot rod patterns but it is fun and creative what these guys are doing. They are taking cars that are almost given to them because they are 4 doors and not 2 doors and doing all kinds of nice things to them to bring them back to life. I think it just shows that hot rodding still has a ways to stretch and its taught me to be more open minded and less criticle on the changes these guys are making. Good Hot Rod stuff is still going on out there guys...
Where are you at mentally in your Hot Rod World? Expanding, Ideling, Creating, Watching, Reflecting, Driving, or ?Last edited by M.T.; 03-17-2014 at 10:53 AM.
Bob, Bob, & Bob
Change is Opportunity!
Instagram=metaltwister
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03-17-2014 10:54 AM #8
HMmm.. now we go introspective...
expanding? = I hope so!
Idling? = NEVER!
Creating? = Always!
Watching? = With the highest interest!
Reflecting? = Not so much... only when you've asked!
Driving? = Once in a while.. it isn't my end goal tho'..
Good thread! Thanks for returning and participating!!
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03-17-2014 11:02 AM #9
Good question MT, I have always been one looking at the future, and excited about something new. But for some reason after I retired a few years ago I find myself thinking more about yesterday and remembering those days growing up. Not a depressing type of reminisce but I sometimes just start laughing to myself about things that happened back then. It is funny that I remember a particular car or race or event that happened 50 years ago and can't remember what I did last week. It sounds goofy but it is like it encourages me to get these hot rods done, like it's a race to the past. I love it.
Hank
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03-17-2014 01:13 PM #10
I think, as we grow older, we tend to think more of our yesterdays than we do of our to-morrows because we've got more yesterdays behind us than we have to-morrows in front of us.johnboy
Mountain man. (Retired.)
Some mistakes are too much fun to be made only once.
I don't know everything about anything, and I don't know anything about lots of things.
'47 Ford sedan. 350 -- 350, Jaguar irs + ifs.
'49 Morris Minor. Datsun 1500cc, 5sp manual, Marina front axle, Nissan rear axle.
'51 Ford school bus. Chev 400 ci Vortec 5 sp manual + Gearvendors 2sp, 2000 Chev lwb dually chassis and axles.
'64 A.C. Cobra replica. Ford 429, C6 auto, Torana ifs, Jaguar irs.
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03-17-2014 01:23 PM #11
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I agree and all the more reason to play this thing called the "Hot Rod Lifestyle" out to the very end. The memories are remembered because they were unique times in some way, Extra effort was invested in those times thus being remembered. My goal is to put in as much extra and unique effort into as many days ahead as possible. Then when I absolutly cant do it any more I will have a full and running over plate to reflect on. The mind is still 20 and the body is 60... Think I'm going to put things into hyper drive and follow the mind! LOL Thats the plan anyway... unless life gets in the way again!Last edited by M.T.; 03-17-2014 at 02:01 PM.
Bob, Bob, & Bob
Change is Opportunity!
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03-17-2014 08:04 PM #12
Hey, I resemble that remark!! Sorry to bore you, Dave.
My daughter posted this picture on FB, pointing to me. She knows me too well!!
nursing home.jpgLast edited by rspears; 03-17-2014 at 08:12 PM.
Roger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
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03-18-2014 03:30 PM #13
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Thanks for posting that up.... I needed a chuckle today.Bob, Bob, & Bob
Change is Opportunity!
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03-18-2014 03:32 PM #14
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please remove....
Please remove... Duplicate postLast edited by M.T.; 03-18-2014 at 03:42 PM.
Bob, Bob, & Bob
Change is Opportunity!
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03-18-2014 04:57 PM #15
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I started out at a really young age liking old hot rods. I had a couple before I was old enough to drive, but never could afford to finish one as the ones I had then were prety rough. I then got into pick ups and by the time I graduated high school I was into muscle cars as well. I'm still in the same stuff, but I like doing things differently. Haha I have had a side business working on diesels the last 8 years and it has really made me not like dealing with other people lately. Right now I'm more on the path of building vehicles for others and I'd like to keep it this way. I enjoy going to some out of town shows but we have a real young family so things are limited as to what we can do. I really like to hear that guys as your self are helping out the young guns and keeping them in this hobby. I'm not real old, but I see it fading faster each year.Ryan
1940 Ford Deluxe Tudor 354 Hemi 46RH Electric Blue w/multi-color flames, Ford 9" Residing in multiple pieces
1968 Corvette Coupe 5.9 Cummins Drag Car 11.43@130mph No stall leaving the line with 1250 rpm's and poor 2.2 60'
1972 Chevy K30 Longhorn P-pumped 24v Compound Turbos 47RH Just another money pit
1971 Camaro RS 5.3 BTR Stage 3 cam, SuperT10
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Yep. And I seem to move 1 thing and it displaces something else with 1/2 of that landing on the workbench and then I forgot where I was going with this other thing and I'll see something else that...
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