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12-05-2010 01:50 PM #1
"Well West Coast cars are hip..."
That's a feeble attempt at humor based, on the lyrics of "California Girls". :-)
I grew up in a Midwestern town of about 50K people. The local custom and hot rod car scene was fairly active, but we all knew that the "best" came from California!
One day in the mid sixties, I heard that somebody local had bought a "California car"! All of my friends were buzzing about it... then one day I saw it! It was a beautiful black '57 Nomad with flames and mag wheels. All of those things were somewhat rare at the time. We were all in "awe" of it!!!!!
I have had my hands all over great rods and customs for the last 35 years. I even flamed a black Nomad... but THAT California Nomad will always stand out in my mind as something special!
Anyone else have a similar story???
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12-05-2010 02:02 PM #2
I know what you mean, Jay. I lived in Pennsylvania and the first car I saw from California was a yellow 57 Chevy that showed up at our local hot dog shop one night. It had Rader mags and a Cal Custom hood scoop, and was MINT.
The second one I saw was a 32 Ford coupe that a local body shop guy traded a Corvette for. The vette was worth about $ 2500 in 1970 dollars, and his buddies all told him he was crazy, but the coupe was bitchin'. It had a chopped top, full fendered, and an Olds engine with two fours and a Cad Lasalle transmiision. Every nut, bolt, and washer on the car was chromed, and I had never seen workmanship like that.
The body shop guy wasn't into Olds engines and was "updating it" with a 427 Chevy and four speed. I was into Olds engines and bought the entire engine, from pan to air cleaners, and Cad Lasalle box for $ 175.00. I ended up putting it into my own 32 rpu, and then my 40 Chevy. It ran like stink.
It was obvious from those two cars that the ones from the West Coast were special. I don't know if it was that they had more money than us, or the availability of shops to do special work. But those two cars caused me to finally move to California in the late 70's, just so I could be near that kind of stuff.
Don
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12-05-2010 03:48 PM #3
I was the same as you guys. Being raised in St. Louis, I couldn't wait for the next magazine to hit the rack so I could read more about all those cars.
After getting discharged from the Army I stayed in Colorado springs to finish my education. As I had more time, going to school and working 3 part time jobs, I got to see the car culture there.
Well to my surprise most car guys there didn't have the same respect for California cars. As a matter of fact California was a very unpopular word to use. I remember one speed shop even had bumper stickers that said, I DON'T CARE HOW THEY DO IT IN CALIFORNIA!
Ken
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12-05-2010 04:03 PM #4
Your Uncle Bob, Senior Geezer Curmudgeon
It's much easier to promise someone a "free" ride on the wagon than to urge them to pull it.
Luck occurs when preparation and opportunity converge.
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12-05-2010 04:19 PM #5
I've told this story before, about the day I was smitten with hot rods. I was 13 or 14 and my dad took me with him to visit one of his friends that he worked with at the tool & die shop. Well, the friend had a friend who was visiting at the same time.
This dude was driving a '40 Chevy coupe with an inline six mounting a GMC 6-71 blower and 5 (yeah, count 'em, five) Stromberg carbs. At the time, I knew nothing, so I said nothing. I just stood there with my jaw hanging open and stared.
But that was it. I was done with stockers and it has been that way for the 55 or so years since that day. I never did learn what the motor was out of, but when I tell the story, I like to think that it was a GMC 302, 'cause that was the baddest 6-banger on the planet at that time ('55-'56).Last edited by techinspector1; 12-05-2010 at 04:21 PM.
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12-05-2010 06:55 PM #6
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12-05-2010 09:17 PM #7
That's true about stuff starting in California and years later showing up in the rest of the country. We lived there in the late 70's and moved back East after a while. Things we saw in California finally hit the East Coast a couple or more years after we were back there. I hope some of the vehicle restrictions our West Coast friends are seeing implemented now stay there though, but I fear they will not.
Don
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12-05-2010 04:09 PM #8
there was a guy back in 67-68 down in mcallen texas had a 40 ford that out ran all takers on the street. i was 16-17. i'll never forget that one.
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12-05-2010 04:55 PM #9
I was raised back east and now live in California. The cars back east were just different than what we have here on the west coast. I think that maybe the cars on the east coast are more driver friendly and are used more than on the west coast. I have noticed the quality of the cars coming out of the east coast is starting to compare to that of the west coast. Not that there are not awesome cars back east just my observation.
Keith
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12-05-2010 05:30 PM #10
well i would say here in MI we do better then ok .we have long cold winters to build carswe know how to build them
Irish Diplomacy ..the ability to tell someone to go to Hell ,,So that they will look forward to to the trip
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12-05-2010 05:31 PM #11
what happens in cali happens everywhere else 10 years later.
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12-05-2010 05:34 PM #12
Sorry for your loss of friend Mike McGee, Shine. Great trans men are few and far between, it seems. Sadly, Mike Frade was only 66 and had been talking about retirement for ten years that I know...
We Lost a Good One