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I know this one has been around before but it is worth
a rerun.
When was the last time you saw a 6 volt battery? You’ll LOVE this one.
What got me were the seats… Remember?
The oil filter is the blue can with yellow top. You could stick a roll
of toilet paper in there. The air filter is the oil bath type, the
bottom portion is filled with oil and when you cleaned it you replaced
the oil and clean the sump and mesh wire filter.
1950 Chevrolet Club Coupe, 437 original miles, only three owners. Check
out the dealer installed “oil filter”, the rusty carb, and you can even
see the spark plugs if they need to be changed. [more
1950 Chevrolet Club Coupe] - via "Spin
Giard"
Which reminded me ...
There was excitement in our house when dad came home with the family's
first NEW car, a 1952 Chevy. The engine looked identical (in my
mind's
eye) to that 1950. Our model was black, and so stripped
down that it lacked an ash tray, and a radio. Ergo, on trips mom
had a
beanbag ashtray sitting on the dash, and she bought a battery powered
radio
that was next to useless in the car.
About 4 years later dad did allow me to customize it— to this extent.
I "bull-nosed" (removed the
hood
ornament) and "decked" (removed the Chevy badge from the trunk
lid) .
Finally, I applied a red pinstripe decal
over the holes.
My friends agreed that these improvement were neat, but to complete the
job I'd need Oldsmobile Spinner: hubcaps, and Merc skirts,
but no way I could come by those on my own (without lifting
them). Oh, I also installed a suicide knob on
the
steering wheel, but the old man went bonkers ("why do you think
it's
called a suicide knob?!?), and made me remove it. I think I was
around 11 at the time. Later, when I bought my own first car ('50
Ford), I put a suicide knob on it, and almost killed myself the first
day. Took it off. He was right. About everything.
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My Dad always had a 'suicide knob' on all of his pickup trucks. But that was because he was an amputee (he rolled a car in his wild youth and lost his left arm) and the knob helped him spin the wheel when there was no power steering.
ReplyDeleteMy first ride in a car, on the way home from the hospital, was in a '49 Chevy.
ReplyDeleteI have a coffee table book of crash/crime scene photo's (i know , but i couldn't resist) All of the photos were taken during the 40's , and 50's by an official police photographer . Looking through the images gives a strong argument for shoulder style seat belts , because nearly every victim looks like a "pez" dispenser ! ; ) > SMIBSID
ReplyDeleteRoger, Thank you for this post. I was one year old when this car was made and it made me think of my Dad.
ReplyDeleteBuzz D.
I clicked and I saw. I tried and tried, but, that´s one ugly ass car.
ReplyDeleteWhen Dad Died in 08, he still had his first car, a '38 Olds, 2 door coupe. Brother got it and I got his Ruger.
ReplyDeletethoR~
BTW, Happy Father's day!
ReplyDeleteTim
We refered to them as "necker knobs" and in Ohio they we illegal to use except for amputees.
ReplyDelete-Steve_in_CA
I would frame the speedometer!
ReplyDelete