Thirty years of cabover progress, presented in one of the finest color schemes I’ve ever seen. BD Logistics’ pride and joy, a retired 1989 Scania 3-series 6×2 and a 2023 ‘Next Gen’ 6×2/4 tractor in its prime (a prime mover, as the Aussies say). Both were singing the Södertälje Vee Eight ballad. Performed live on stage, of course.
Curbside Classic: 1976 Datsun (620) Double Cab Pickup – Corn Harvest Season
It’s early October and over here, in Central America, rainy season is approaching its end. The time of the year when the last remaining corn crops are harvested and the grains are put to dry for storage. With that reality surrounding me, what better way to check out how those corn plantations are doing than with an old Datsun truck?
So let’s take out this handsome crew cab version to the fields, and let’s have a brief tour through Central America’s corn traditions. And if you’re having some cornbread for breakfast, all the better.
Rallying on the NE 1000 – A Tiger? In New England?
In last week’s post, I listed multiple-day rally competitions as one of the ways in which to enjoy getting behind the wheel of my second (and current) Sunbeam Tiger. During the first few years after getting my driver’s license, my then-girlfriend and I had participated in a number of single-day events organized by like-minded sports-car clubs in northern New Jersey (driving my ’66 Comet Caliente convertible, no sports car by any stretch of the imagination). So I had some experience with so-called “seat of the pants”, or SOP, rallying, in which no timing or calculating equipment was allowed, and just a dab of white shoe polish was applied to obscure your odometer. This time, however, would be different.
Curbside Classic: 1975 Mercedes-Benz L 306 D “Harburger Transporter” – The Matador’s Final Avatar
(first posted 10/5/2018) I was in southern France a few months ago when I caught this “Mercedes 306 D” pickup. I said it before and I’ll say it again: I don’t know the first thing about trucks. But I do know an interesting one when I see one. This one sort of rang a very faint bell, but I don’t think I’d ever seen one in my adult life. The Mercedes grille was tacked on to something decidedly non-Stuttgart, that was for sure.
Curbside Classic: 1970-72 Rambler Hornet – No That Is Not A Typo!
(first posted 10/5/2018) Need I say it, but the Australian car market is quite different from the American? This Rambler Hornet is a very good example of that. “Rambler?” I hear you say. Yes, the Rambler name kept going here well after it was dropped in North America. Let’s take a closer look…
Curbside Outtake: Volvo 240 Wagon, VW Bug, and Daihatsu Mira Moderno – Forlorn Tokyo Trio
It’s somewhat of a large juxtaposition…good friend and fellow Tokyo Expat Tatra87 spends his Sundays perusing the Lamborghinis, Ferraris, and Shoebox Fords of Tokyo’s upscale Gaien district. I, on the other hand, hike the industrial suburbs on the outskirts of the city – and come across finds like these three. I’m not complaining though… Read the rest of this entry »
Curbside Classic: 1956 Ford F350 With 9′ Express Bed – Yes, Express; Not Pickup
Yes, there was a difference between a pickup and a truck with an express bed. It’s pretty irrelevant in the bigger scheme of things, but then we’re all about the irrelevant little anachronisms of automotive history, right? Finding this ’56 F-350 express in Port Orford gives us the perfect opening to delve into this somewhat obscure automotive semantical differentiation.
My 1986 Grand Marquis And 1977 Ford LTD – Going For Broke!
The year was 2000 and we had bought a new home. However, as we came into the 2001 tax season, we found out that the property tax had tripled. It was something the builder knew about but did not disclose the information. Between that and the mortgage, we found ourselves way behind the eight ball. Money was tight.
I called an attorney who told us that we were going to have to declare Chapter 7. At that time, the law stated that we could each have one car since we both worked, but the value of each car was to be $850 or less.
So off I went to search for our prized cars!
Car Show Outtake: 1994 Renault Clio Williams – The Hottest Subcompact Hatch Of The Nineties
(first posted 10/5/2018) From 1989 to 1997, the Williams-Renault F1 team was highly successful in the Formula One World Championship. But the UK based Williams company was not involved in the development or production of the Renault Clio Williams, introduced in 1993. It was a Williams in name only, as this pitbull of a hatchback was entirely the work of Renault Sport.
Automotive History Capsule: Rolls-Royce SX Proposal
(first posted 10/4/2018) Yesterday’s piece on the Camargue garnered a lot of query around a prototype Rolls-Royce it featured. It was hardly familiar to me as well, so I did a bit of digging. This is the SX, an in-house proposal for a downsized sedan prepared in the early 1980s.
Vintage Snapshots: Cars, People And Fashion In The ’60s & ’70s – Part 3
Let’s have a bit of fun with fashions today. One more gallery in this series of folks and their period attires, all displayed near some vintage metal of the era. A showcase of the fads of the time, and this time with quite a few photos that almost seem to tell a story.
Car Museum Report: The Orlando Auto Museum at Dezerland Park, Part 1
This is likely the ultimate daydream for many of us. Think about it…if you own an old shopping mall and have just over 2,000 classic cars (that’s no typo), creation of something like The Orlando Auto Museum is something many of us would aspire to do. Like the tourists coming to Orlando, Florida, these 2,000 cars come from all over the world.
Somehow I managed to take several hundred pictures. There was simply that much to see during my four hour visit. To better enjoy the experience, the cars are (mostly) presented with minimal commentary.
Let’s start with the big, white elephant and go from there…
Curbside Classics: Iconic NYC Taxi Gathering
Despite, or perhaps because I live far away from the Big Apple in New York City, their classic Yellow Cabs hold a certain allure. There are not many vehicles left in this age of globalization that so clearly evoke a specific place, and the image of the New York City taxi perseveres in the public’s psyche even amidst the rise of Uber and Lyft.
So imagine my surprise to find three iconic NYC taxi cabs parked in midtown Atlanta. What are the odds of encountering some of the most recognizable vehicles of all time in one place? Plus the inclusion of a modern also-ran successor.
Curbside Recycling: 1980 Rover 3500 V8 (SD1) – Three And A Half Liters Of Warm Beer
While I’m the guy that happily plunked down money (twice) for what is arguably the most maligned Jaguar model line in history, I draw the line at Rovers, be they of the Land, Range, or just plain Rover Rover variety. A man must have his principles, dontchaknow, otherwise he won’t have ANY money left at the end of the day. However, when I first saw the Human League’s excellent video of “Don’t You Want Me” back in late 1981 that opens with a scene involving a Rover SD1 at night, I was enthralled. Although that only lasted a few seconds after which a black Saab 99 Turbo also entered the scene, and like the American market as a whole, all thoughts of Rover were cast aside.
But forty-something years later, (specifically Thursday), I came across a remnant of that time, one of the 1,200 or Rover 3500 V8s (SD1 in rest of world parlance) that managed to find homes in the United States back in those heady days of 1980-1981. So let’s take a closer look.