Tom cobb, never heard of him. I read the 3 piece article and it is a great story. Thanks michael. How is it that you remember that story, when was it written 2-3years ago? Incredible story. You guys know willie glass? There is a story there too.
I had a chance to crew at bonneville this year, a banger coupe, but they were too late getting the block back from having it reinforced and weren't ready until 2nd week of sept and I had to be in michigan then. Broke my heart too. They said it rained most of the time and didn't get but one miserable pass. Next year for sure.
More o/t, michael I spoke to you a while back about getting you to set up a mess of 1904's for my hemi remember? I just finished up a '32 with a blown 427 for a customer and might have gotten myself addicted to that blower thing. I wanted to ask you if setting those 1904's on top of a blower is a good idea.
And no, I didn't get the voltages on the window today. I replaced a front spring on a nice old coupe that was sagging and the front tire was getting into the fender in a tight turn. I did get the gas tank out yesterday, what a mess in there. It is off to the radiator shop for mucking and I'll be back to work on it tomorrow making new emergancy brake cables.
I kin remember needless and useless crap from many years ago just fine, it's whatever happened twenty minutes ago that is hard!!!!
Robert grew up in the midst of all these oldtimers/heros, they changed his diapers! I just lived it vicariously from far away in tejas. If it hadn'ta been for hot rod magazine and rod and custom, no way I woulda ever made it through high skool!
Hail yes I remember about that six-pak (or wuz it an eight-pak?) of 1904 carbs, I think I really dropped the ball on that since I wuz in the midst of cellphone hell at the time and could not recover the phone number ya left! Let's try that again! Post up about that in carb tech so others can follow along, who knows, we May see a blown 392 sv motor any day now comin' outta Robert's shop with a whole passle of 1904 juicers on top! In fact...yawl work up a bonneville class for that motor when stuck inna chopped/channeled Scout 80, maybe run it on kerosene or lamp oil???
Check that front-mount blower pic Robert put up, that'sa dam 1904 mixer right there...I can even see the Ford-spec I.d. Tag on the fuel bowl screw! But I don't recognize the actual huffer, is that a schorrock?? Edit: now I can see that the flathead huffer appears to be a judson!
Speakin' of huffers and 1904 carbs, heres a link you kidz might find entertaining...another member here who hangs out in switzerland has been corresponding with me backchannel regarding 1904 carb parts and judson superchargers. Remember those??? Quite the hot ticket for british and other eurotrash cars back in the 60's>70's. Here's the link to dominick's site, it's a wonderful place to visit!:
home
And judson marketed one of the first "transistorized" ignition units as an aftermarket add-on, bill bennett here on the board has one on his roundbody t'all iirc:
magneto sales literature
I had one of these onna '59 bugeye sprite and an olds-powered '40 Ford coupe.
This thread has been offishulee hi-jacked!!
By the way...all the above is good info on that really weak-azz roundbody tailgate winder-winder. My '68 had the same issue...if ya greeze up the regulator stuff like robertc suggested (really greezee), and spray silicone on the channels onna daily basis, it really helps. My opinion is, the overall oomph of the lift system is simply not up to the task of movin' that heavy chunk of glass in a vertical motion. And the voltage drop from the engine bay all the way back means ya really need to mount an auxiliary battery in the azzend and charge it from an isolator just to run the winder-winder!