It’s one thing to see a perfect, gleaming car on a museum floor, and quite another to see it all disassembled in the shop, and both have value. – JT]
1938 Tatra T-97
Jeff Lane returned from a 1,000-mile drive in the Hagerty California Mille vintage car rally a couple of weeks ago, and the T-97 performed flawlessly…almost. Jeff had to fix a torn fuel line along the way. After a roadside repair, it was good to go. It’s now safe at home, back on the museum floor.
[Editor’s Note: This is an especially interesting car because it was essentially killed by Adolf Hitler. Tatra had been building advanced cars with air-cooled rear engines since the early 1930s, and this one, the T97, was the smallest of their cars so far, one that was intended to be a mass-market vehicle, and featured an air-cooled flat-four engine at the back. A rear-engined, flat-four, air-cooled, sort-of-scarab-shaped car may remind you of something else: the Volkswagen Beetle. When the T97 was shown at the 1939 Berlin Autosalon, Hitler ordered the car to be removed from the floor, and later forced production to stop, as it was just too damn close to the Beetle.]
1995 Futura/Waimea
In case you missed the earlier article, this car’s builder pulled out a concept drawing from a 1960s Kaiser Aluminum catalog in the 1990s and decided to build it, because sometimes boredom is the mother of invention. Anyway, there has been good progress on this car that we acquired from car media personality Wayne Carini. We’ve sent off the gauge cluster to be repaired. While the staff could restore it, there are shops out there that can do this nitty-gritty specialty work, and that allows us to work on the major issues. It has a new shift cable, has a new brake fluid reservoir, and all of the electrical is fixed. It still needs its power windows fixed, and there is a bit of trim that needs attention. The Futura is still not running that smoothly, however, but there is light at the end of this tunnel.
1964 Amphicar 770
The Amphicar is one of the cars that gets used more often. The museum gives bi-annual rides to our members out a local lake.
A few weeks ago, as Jeff Lane was taking the first car load of folks into the water, the car wouldn’t start at the top of the boat ramp. He had driven the car from the museum to the lake just fine. Jeff and our Manager David Yando figured out the throttle cable was binding up somewhere. A little oil from the dipstick for lube, a little exercising of the cable’s demons, and it started fine. The day was saved, and there was much rejoicing. Jeff drove it at half throttle the rest of the day just to keep it from binding up again.
Speaking of amphibious cars, this 1992 Hobbycar B612:
We used to gives rides on the lake concurrently in both the Amphicar and this amphibious French prototype vehicle from the 1990s. That is, until it sank.
Jeff was captaining this car, and I was piloting the Amphicar, which quickly became a rescue vehicle. Everyone was ok, and we got them back to shore safely, but the Hobbycar remained at the bottom of Percy Priest Lake from Saturday to Monday, when we went back with a scuba crew. They found it, and we pulled it in. We think it sank because the foam that helped it stay buoyant was totally waterlogged, and may have been overcome. It does have a working bilge pump, but it also may not have been able to keep up.
It’s now running fine, and the box on the seat there contains the last part we need: the instrument cluster. Being a prototype, the gauge cluster came out of another European car of the time, but I forget which one. I will let you know once they are installed. Once the Hobbycar is buttoned up, there is discussion of taking it back out on the water…while still tethered to our truck. It probably won’t be giving rides to the public anytime soon, though.
1969 Fascination
This prototype aerodynamic car was designed by Paul Lewis of Airomobile fame [Editor’s Note: The Airomobile was one of the many drivable airplane experiments – JT], itself an aerodynamic car from the 1930s. You can read our version of the Fascination story here. Its 1493cc VW engine is running rough. It needs new fuel injectors, and the fuel pump needs to be resealed. The rubber fuel lines are pretty dried out as well. It’s a hodge-podge concept car that will definitely get an in-depth article in the future.
1938 Adler Type 10
This Art Deco gem was recently taken on a different vintage car rally out west, the Copperstate 1000. Its modern mechanical fuel pump went out while on the route. The shop has had many complaints that modern reproduction fuel pumps just aren’t durable, and they will be rebuilding old fuel pumps going forward. Some of that issue is ethanol-blended fuel, but we seem to be blowing through fuel pumps as of late.
The Adler is also getting its starter rebuilt. Not only is it beautiful, but it’s a great cruiser, Jeff says. It’s straight-six engine only produced 58 hp, but thanks to its aerodynamic body, was able to reach a top speed of 78 mph out on the autobahn.
1985 Renault R5 Turbo 2
This R5 Turbo 2 is awaiting a transmission fluid shipment. While waiting, its carpet is getting a thorough scrubbing, along with a full detail, and its tired seats are getting new padding and a restitching. [Editor’s Note: The R5 Turbo is a legendary car for hot hatch lovers, as it was one of the first examples of a truly bonkers race car built by taking a little cheap hatchback and shoving a big (well, for France) engine in the center, making a little mid-engine monster. This formula has been repeated for rally cars like the MG Metro Group B rally car, among others. – JT]
[Editor’s Note: This image reminds me of a Vermeer, if Vermeer was painting still lives in French auto upholstery shops in the 1980s – JT] In the revolving door that is the museum’s restoration shop, there will be plenty to cover in the future. In addition to profiles of some these cars, I’ll try to do a shop tour sometime. I wonder what the drag coefficient of the 1969 Fascination is? In the spirit of Torchinsky I must know where the tail lights of the Hobbycar B612 came from. I want to say Alfa Romeo SZ or possibly even the Subaru XT, but I’m not sure. Does anybody know? The best quote I heard from a person with a classic car “For every hour on the road, you spend two hours fixing it.” Side note: Did David get the “There was much rejoicing reference”?