Listed as a retractable hardtop
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#144
Since this seems to be a thread about more than just cars:
http://www.historicaerials.com
A2Resource
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#145
Very nice thread.![]()
Do you enjoy old cars and long-winded stories about them? If your answer is "yes", then you might enjoy my blogpage. Try it here: http://vwlarry.blogspot.com . Leave a comment, too; I love feedback! Thanx for reading.
“To avoid criticism say nothing, do nothing, be nothing.” - Aristotle
#146
NEK-West This door is locked. Walk around.
FS: Work Meister S1 2pc 18x8.5 Falken 912 215/35
FS: Accuair VU4 $375 shipped
#147
Hungarian Pajtas (Buddy), which featured gullwing doors and all sorts of visibility. Which may or may not be a good thing.
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#148
I scanned a few older car-related photos. These do not go back nearly as far as many that have been posted, though.
First, this photo is from about 1976. The car is the 1964 Ford Galaxie 500 Country Sedan my dad grew up with. This car was the beater by this point, as you can see from the condition.
This photo is from 1981 and it is of my maternal grandparents' new house. Yeah, they picked an awful year to build a house. I think their mortgage rate was something like 17%. The blue car in the garage is my grandpa's ~1980 LeSabre. In the driveway are my grandma's 1976 Grand Prix and my uncle's Monza. There is another car in the garage; I am not sure if it is my mom's car or my grandpa's Rabbit.
My mom's first car was also her first new car, a 1981 Pontiac T1000, the lesser known cousin of the Chevette.
Here is a picture from about 1983 with my dad in the foreground. He grew up with that aluminum trailer. The car is my grandpa's 1972 Pontiac Grand Safari. He bought it new in 1972 and kept it until 1991. In all that time, he only put about 25,000 miles on it.
These last two are my dad washing his brand new Ramcharger in 1986.
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2007 Mazda 3 s Grand Touring
#149
Need more information on the be-finned, retractable hardtop streamliner above, please. I've never seen this before. It looks to be built on a Ford V8 chassis, judging by the wheels.
Do you enjoy old cars and long-winded stories about them? If your answer is "yes", then you might enjoy my blogpage. Try it here: http://vwlarry.blogspot.com . Leave a comment, too; I love feedback! Thanx for reading.
“To avoid criticism say nothing, do nothing, be nothing.” - Aristotle
#150
Fall River Mills, August 1968. I tried to only include pictures with cars.
Metacomet Mill
Borden Mills, destroyed by fire in 1981 (Shell gas station is still there though not nearly as retro!):
Locals will know this area as where McDonald's and Sullivan Tire are.
These are the tenaments for the above mill, which are now demolished and filled with a plumbing supply warehouse:
Durfee Mills on Plymouth Ave, the Pacific Oil station is now a Glaser Glass.
Durfee Mills: any local will recognize this.
Aerial photo of almost all of the above. Just south of the highway overpass is the Borden Mill, just north is Durfee and Union. West of the Borden Mill is the Davol. Most are demolished now.
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Last edited by VDub2625; 01-15-2011 at 01:47 PM.
A2Resource
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#152
sure...
Dan LaLee
1938
Hemmings Blog
http://blog.hemmings.com/index.php/2...p-convertible/
http://blog.hemmings.com/?s=retractable+hardtopBut both Otakar and I were stumped when Richard Kales sent us these photos of a mystery hardtop convertible from around about 1938. As Richard wrote:
It is a sequential still of a retractable hardtop car that was – according to WBGH (PBS) – shot on May 11,1938 in Reseda, CA and shows up in the film “The World of Tomorrow” – an excellent documentary about the 1939 World’s Fair in New York.
Nothing about the styling of the car gives us any hints, and that fin’s throwing us all for a loop. Seems like something that would have appeared in the pages of Popular Mechanics and then promptly disappeared. So we’re sending the call out to identify this car, or at least point us in the right direction.
First up, a retractable hardtop car that we’ve seen here before, the Dan LaLee car , but in much better resolution than the grainy photos from three years ago. The photos all date from February 10, 1938, and depict LaLee, along with Jack Knight of United Air Lines and model Betty Bryant, showing off the retractable in or around Dearborn, Michigan. A couple of the photo descriptions include the word “rebuilt” and those wheels appear to come from an earlier Ford, so we can presume LaLee used a chassis from a wrecked car on which to base his retractable.
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#153
Hey, Larry
How's your Hungarian?
video at speed included (couldn't embed) but if you open the link , it's there
http://belsoseg.blog.hu/2007/05/06/mysterycar
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Last edited by Terandyne; 01-15-2011 at 02:12 PM.
#154
Aurel Persu’s Automobilul Aerodinamic Perfect, the rear-engined vehicle on which he refined his aerodynamic principles.
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#157
^^^Wow, that is beyond cool.
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NEK-West This door is locked. Walk around.
FS: Work Meister S1 2pc 18x8.5 Falken 912 215/35
FS: Accuair VU4 $375 shipped
#158
NEK-West This door is locked. Walk around.
FS: Work Meister S1 2pc 18x8.5 Falken 912 215/35
FS: Accuair VU4 $375 shipped
#159
NEK-West This door is locked. Walk around.
FS: Work Meister S1 2pc 18x8.5 Falken 912 215/35
FS: Accuair VU4 $375 shipped
#160
heh
An unidentified rural letter carrier poses next to a Model-T Ford vehicle with a snowmobile attachment. The vehicle is fitted with a kit advertised as the “Mailman’s Special” from the manufacturer, Farm Specialty Manufacturing Company of New Holstein, Wisconsin. It included skis that replaced the front tires and caterpillar treads that wrapped around the back tires. Rural carriers are responsible for providing their own transportation. At a time when automobiles were not yet equal to the demands of icy or snowy roads, the skis and tread kit saved carriers the expense of purchasing and maintaining a horse and sled for winter deliveries.
And then there is this
#161
The funny thing is I'm actually a mailman.![]()
NEK-West This door is locked. Walk around.
FS: Work Meister S1 2pc 18x8.5 Falken 912 215/35
FS: Accuair VU4 $375 shipped
#162
fantastic.An unidentified rural letter carrier poses next to a Model-T Ford vehicle with a snowmobile attachment. The vehicle is fitted with a kit advertised as the “Mailman’s Special” from the manufacturer,
here's shots from the National Postal Museum
!!
http://www.postalmuseum.si.edu/museum/1d_Snowbird.htmlSnowbird
Not long after automobiles and horsepower began to replace horses, the need for a way to use automobiles year round followed. The snow across which horses could jauntily pull a sleigh was often too much of a challenge for automobiles. Foremost among those who needed to find a way to use their cars and trucks all year long were America’s rural letter carriers. After all, even if “neither snow nor rain or heat nor gloom of night” has never been an official postal motto, it certainly reflects the expectation that letter carriers and the mail will make the trip to our mailboxes, regardless of the weather.
This 1921 Ford Model-T was owned by rural carrier Harold Crabtree of Central Square, New York. While Crabtree was able to use the car for his daily rounds most of the year, snowy days were an annual challenge. While many carriers held onto their horses and sleds for winter deliveries, Crabtree decided to try something new. After suffering through a few winters of using his back-up horses and sled instead of the car, he decided to buy the Model-T snowmobile attachment kit advertised as the “mailman’s special.” The kit included skis that replaced the front tires and caterpillar treads that wrapped around the back tires.
The attachment manufactured by Farm Specialty Manufacturing Company of New Holstein, Wisconsin, had its history in a series of designs and adaptations dating to the first decade of the 20th century. One of the most successful transformation kits was a direct descendent of Crabtree’s purchase. It was work of inventor Virgil White. In 1906 White began trying to convert automobiles into snowmobiles using a Buick Model G. After the Model-T’s popularity made it the go-to car of the early 20th century, White turned his attention to creating a kit for that vehicle, devising a series of designs that he patented over the next few years.
By 1922 White was sure enough of his latest design to begin marketing it to the public and sold just over 70 kits in the next year. White sold the kits for $250 to $400 each, depending on size and complexity, from his new Snowmobile Company in West Ossipee, New Hampshire. A few years later White sold his snowmobile patents to the Farm Specialty Manufacturing Company which quickly recognized the kits’ appeal to rural carriers and advertised the attachment kit in postal association publications. Rural carriers across the northern United States were able to keep their cars on the road through the year thanks to the “mailman’s special.”
#169
Plastic car from Ford 1941
It’s a good guess that the man on the left is Robert A. Boyer, who headed Ford’s soybean and plastics research from 1930 to 1945, and who later invented soy protein-based synthetic meat, an indirect result of experiments (cut short by World War II) in creating synthetic wool out of soybeans while he was still at Ford. “We tested the wool fabric for salt content and other factors and one day – I’ll never forget it – it occurred to me that if we could make something for the outside of man, why not for the inside,” Boyer told Ralston Purina Magazine in 1970.
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Originally Posted by cartalk
#174
1998 VW Golf Mk.III 5dr/1960 Porsche 356B T5
/1980 Honda CM400E
"I drive an '81 Jetta with a Scirocco engine, Rabbit front fenders and multi-colored doors. There's a spiderweb fracture in the driver's side windshield, and a dented bumper sticker that says 'praised are the lowered'"