A Packard Dual Cowl Phaeton? Very nice! You must be a bootlegger or something.
Teamster and racketeer actually!
A Packard Dual Cowl Phaeton? Very nice! You must be a bootlegger or something.
Teamster and racketeer actually!
After more than 20 years (and a couple thousand dollars more than I had planned to spend to get it back running), my dear aunt Hazel's '61 Chevy Bel Air is finally home. I parked the car in the same spot where my aunt always kept it parked.
On the way back from the shop this afternoon, I took the same route my aunt always took when she picked me up from school on Friday afternoons and drove me back to my grandmother's house. Driving along at the blistering speed of about 45 mph (I don't think my aunt ever drove over 45 mph), I found myself reminiscing of those old days in the 1960's when we made this same trip just about every weekend. I always rode in the front with my dog in the floorboard at my feet. My aunt Hazel would drive with both hands on the wheel and her left foot hovering over the brake. When we arrived at the house, she would pull in the driveway, go to the top of the hill, then back down the last part of the drive so she would always be "headed out in case we needed to go somewhere after dark."
As I backed the car down the driveway today, I could almost see my grandmother sitting in her chair by the kitchen window waiting on Hazel and me to come home. That old '61 Chevy has a lot of good memories for me. I spent the remainder of the afternoon and evening cleaning it up as best I could. I need to drive it around a lot to make sure we've got "all the bugs out", then it will be time to take it to the body shop for some rust repair and a paint job. Now that the car is in good running condition and once the body is "stabilized" from rusting away, I've got a long list of things I want to do, most of which I can do myself over time, to get the car close to back to where it was when my aunt was driving us around.
I had a 1960 Chevrolet Corvair with a gas heater. Fantastic in the winter, it heated the car and defrosted the front screen in 30 seconds. The downside was you had to keep an eye on the fuel as it drastically reduced the driving range compared to summer.It happens to the best of us. One of my cars didn't have a fuel gage originally and I ran it out of fuel a few times. The dual Weber carbs were thirsty suckers. Glad you arent in for any repairs. $$$$
:eeek:
[video=youtube;mR7IQxfl3OE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mR7IQxfl3OE&feature=player_embedded#![/video]
It's a side glass. The strap is used to raise/lower the window. Not sure of the age, but early for sure (1920's ?). The window is upside down in the picture (your hand is on the bottom of the window). It was raised by pulling up on the strap.