Archive for the ‘Automotive’ Category

July 9 is now Collector Car Appreciation Day

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

Well, it’s about time we classic car owners got a day!

This is great news for all who toil over their classic cars and pay big bucks to keep the aftermarket parts market in the black.

How can government ever pass laws against our hobby now that we actually have a day to commemorate the rich automotive history of the US automakers and we the people – the car owners – who have preserved these prizes?

Here’s the skinny:

  • July 9 is now Collector Car Appreciation Day.
  • SEMA gets U.S. Senate to declare the new day of recognition.
  • The new day will be commemorated by “car cruises, club gatherings, and other educational events” that SEMA will spearhead nationally.

WASHINGTON — Get to the Hallmark store for this one: July 9 is now Collector Car Appreciation Day. The U.S. Senate passed a resolution declaring the new day of recognition, spurred on by the Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA) and its Automotive Restoration Market Organization.

The organizations said they asked for the government resolution “to raise awareness of the vital role automotive restoration and collection plays in American society.” Senators Jon Tester (D-Mt.) and Richard Burr (R-N.C.), both members of the Congressional Automotive Performance and Motorsports Caucus, put Senate Resolution 513 on the docket.

My '72 is somewhere in NY right now and I'm sure she's happy about the news!

My '72 is somewhere in NY right now and I'm sure she's happy about the news!

The new day will be commemorated by “car cruises, club gatherings, and other educational events” on July 9 that SEMA said it will spearhead nationally.

If you own a muscle car, classic Euro touring model, or any old “clunker” (as the Obama administration calls ‘em), be sure to get ‘em out there this July!

Let’s not let this day ever become another “Arbor Day” or other forgotten day on the calendar!

Sorry about the delay since my last post. I had a deadbeat landlord who allowed my home to go into foreclosure! Then I had the fight, the 90-day federal mandated stay (mwaaaah- ha-ha!) but then the necessary move to another house.

macswax_purplered
Here’s the Mac’s Wax product of the week: everything!
Yes, everything on the website is on sale! It’s spring: get out and wax your car!

What We Lost in the Clunkers Program

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

Lot’s of people think it was a total success.

But if you’re an American muscle car enthusiast, the Obama “Cash for Clunkers” program was not a good as it sounded.

First, as you may have read, many new car sales were for imports, in fact, I’ve read it was almost 85%! This means all those profits zipped across the oceans to Germany, Japan, Korea and France. Not good.

Next, recent numbers exposed the sadder part of this wonderful deal: it cost taxpayers $24,000 per car sold! That is absolutely ridiculous! And people are congratulating each other and the president for that?

Finally, let’s take a look at the toll it took on our potential resto projects. What will our kids find and rebuild as we did when we were kids? There are 700,00 old cars out of circulation now, but the list below is the saddest part of all of this:

1,611 Mustangs were crushed – (one of them was an SVT Cobra and many were GTs)
2 Roush-equipped Stage 3 F-150 trucks are gone.
2 Chip Foose resto-mod F-150s. (Are you kidding me???)
3,000 Thunderbirds (some were Super Coupes and Turbos – even an ‘05 2-seater!!!)
107 Ford Taurus SHOs  (Special Vehicle Ops at Ford are probably sick over this!)

But let’s look at the General!
131 Chevy Corvettes! (34 of which were ‘verts. Who could crush a Vette? Are these people NUTS???)
1,000 Camaros (1984-2000 – Think we lost any IROC Zs? I certainly do.)
1 Buick GNX -  A collector’s prize…gone.
1 20th Anniv. Trans Am (plus hundreds more F-body Ponchos!)
61 Fieros

This is really bad: it really saved the planet and juiced our economy didn’t it?
I am so pleased with Obamas performance thus far. (Not.)
1,000 Camaros are crushed… and unemployment is about to hit 9.9% as I write this.

I’ll be back next week!

Modern Survivalist: The world is changing. Maybe we should all prepare for “different times”?

I recommend this site.

I recommend this site.

“Muscle Car Fast”?

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Misguided devotion killed the whole concept.

I remember the first thing I did when I purchased my first muscle car. It was a 1968 Pontiac GTO convertible with a 400 cid, 4-speed Hurst and not much else. It had been repainted in ’69 Carousel Red — the same color you see on most ’69 Judge models. The day I took hold of the title, that poor car was headed for the slaughterhouse. Poor thing.

69pongto

This is a '69 convertible Judge, but you get the idea. Right?

It was in 1974, and we’d just come off a major gas shortage for the first time since WWII. Some of us young people claimed that oil tankers were sitting off the coast of the US, just waiting for the price of gasoline to go up another ten-cents, so they could earn millions more on their deliveries. True or not — we all had to curb our driving for several months and purchase smaller quanities of gas on odd or even days….depending on your IQ.

When I bought this Goat, the seller owned a body shop in Salem, MA. He didn’t do much collision work, but rather spent his days fixing wrecked muscle cars, painting them-up and selling them for profit. I remember he had several mid-60s Vettes in his yard; I wasn’t interested, I wanted a GTO. It may have had a bent frame, but I didn’t care,  nor did I ask — as long as it was a GTO.

But this guy recognized the value of a GTO with better gas mileage, so he bastardized the car with a two-barrel carb and a set of highway gears that were absolutely maddening at best. He advertised it as a gas-saving muscle car and I took it — hook, line and sinker. All for 800 bucks, by the way.

The first thing I did was purchase a set of rear air shocks. I ran the long plastic lines to the rear bumper where I placed the valve stem, making it easier to raise or lower the rake of the GTO. (But who would ever lower a muscle car in 1974???)

Soon, I was cruising town in a jacked-up ’68 GTO — with a set of polyglas, 75-series whitewalls and PMD hubcaps.

Yikes. Did I really do that?

Within a few weeks, I had saved enough to buy a used set of deep-dish Cragar SS chromed wheels and a set of G60-14 tires with raised white letters  – just for the rear, of course. (Ouch again. While this was better than the whitewalls, I still had the steel wheels with PMD hubcaps on the front!)

I forget how long I drove the car that way, but I remember that those front wheels and caps finally gave-way to a set of Rally IIs and two 70-series raised white tires. (Thank God.)

Driving in a jacked-up GTO was not exactly an experiment in Euro-style touring. The front seats were so angled that you’d have to brace your feet against the firewall at hard stops. (Who ever heard of seat belts back then? We used to hide them under our seats!) I cringe when I think of the weight transfer to the front suspension now. No wonder it handled like a tobogan.

All of this did nothing to enhance the performance of this poor, poor GTO. Until I found a set of 4:11 gears. Suddenly, and despite the 2bbl. carb, I had one of the faster muscle cars in town. But those gears weren’t for a kid who enjoyed cruising with his girlfriend on a Saturday night, they were for trucks or weekend warriors at New England Dragway. But I didn’t care….my car was fast and looked fast too.

The police seemed to notice this as well.

If not for the fact that my teenage flame was a police captain’s daughter, I would have lost my license within the first year.

During my first few weeks with the new set-up, I beat some cars that had always beaten me in the past. Word got around – I became respected by my peers. That may have been a total of a dozen kids or so. But the problems outweighed my perceived success. I was getting about 8 MPG, my air hoses kept melting on my exhaust pipes and as such would lower the rear fenders onto my fat rear tires, causing massive amounts of tire smoke and grooves in the tread. Then one day, the two Cragar rims decided to walk home on Rt. 128 — wrong lug nuts. The lug bolts had all sheared off.

But there was so much more to do to the car to make it “right.”

One guy in town had installed a wiper fluid pump in his trunk. At the flip of a switch, he’d pump Clorox onto his tires at a stoplight and smoke his Z28 outa there like nobody’s business. Gee, I needed that too.

Then there was the coveted 4-barrell Holley and Edelbrock intake manifold. I just needed to burn even more gas!

Then I wanted to cut out my blocked scoops, purchase Ram Air intake parts and give the car that 5HP of additional boost from the cooler air.

Luckily, I never accomplished any of the above. I seems the gas expense was guzzling most of my weekly paycheck.

But the funny thing is, it was all fun. I’m glad nobody ever got hurt, because our cars were often pretty unsafe, but it sure was a ton of fun. I’ll never forget cruising in that car…my girl by my side and The Beach Boys or Aerosmith cranking out of 5″ K-Mart speakers.

Later that same year, I went to a Pontiac dealer and ordered a 1975 Trans Am. In those days, Trans Ams were special order only and not stacked on the dealer lots. Mine was ordered on Halloween night 1974 and arrived a few days before the end of 1974.

The Trans Am didn’t have the raw power of my old ’68 GTO, but man did that car hug the road! I had more fun in that T/A than any other car I’ve ever owned.

Euro-style handling is a lot more fun when you’re a cruisin’ idiot like me.

See you next week!

macswetcherry_16ozThis week’s Mac’s Wax of the Week is my Wicked Cherry Wet Wax, available at Macs-wax.com. It smells like cherry…it’s pink…and it’s wet.  Nice, huh? But seriously, my Cherry Wet Wax has pure carnauba wax and some polymers we call WetGloss. The stuff is incredible and inexpensive too!

A New American Car Company Emerges from the Rubble

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

An all-new American car company, backed by Texas billionaire  T. Boone Pickens and headed-up by former Mazda designer Tom Matano plans to build  environmentally friendly vehicles in  Louisiana.

According to their press release, V-Vehicle Company, or VVC,  which is headquartered in San Diego, will begin assembling new cars in Monroe, LA.  The project is slated to create over 1,400 direct jobs at an average annual salary of nearly $40,000, plus benefits, as well as a capital investment of at least $248 million.

At the company’s website, founder and CEO Frank Varasano said production could begin in 15 months.

“VVC will produce a high-quality, environmentally friendly and fuel-efficient car for the U.S. market,” the statement said. “The goal of the company is to provide the American buyer greater product value and a superior automotive experience.”

Louisiana Gov. Bobby  Jindal said, “What we are here to officially announce today is not a typical economic development project.  Most business recruitment projects for the state involve large, long-established companies building another plant similar to one they already have – similar to facilities that other companies in their industry already have. Those are great projects and we appreciate the jobs they provide, but today’s announcement is different.

LA Gov. Bobby Jindal announces the opening of VVC in Monroe.

LA Gov. Bobby Jindal announces the opening of VVC in Monroe.

“Today, we are here to announce that through quick, aggressive action to pursue a transformative opportunity, we have a chance here in Louisiana to re-energize the entire U.S. auto industry. Indeed, this project also has the potential to transform the entire Monroe area, and this project could be a game changer for the economy of Northeast Louisiana.

VVC, as the company is also called, “wants to reestablish American leadership in the global automotive industry,” according to a Louisiana Economic Development (LED) info-sheet.

V-Vehicle was founded by ex Oracle Corp. executive VP Frank Varasano and is definitely not struggling to gather funds; it’s being financed by well-known California venture capitalists—including some also backing Fisker Automotive (Silicon Valley firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers)—along with T. Boone Pickens.

We haven’t yet seen pictures of the vehicle, but we do know that it was designed by Tom Matano, the ‘father’ of the original Mazda Miata. Matano also worked on the RX-7 and 929, and held positions at General Motors and BMW prior to that. He has most recently served as director of the school of Industrial Design at Academy Art San Francisco.

Construction and retooling for the 425,000-square-foot, former GM plant will begin later this summer.

This week’s Mac’s Wax product of the week is Mac’s BANANA CREME WAX! It’s creamy!

Mac's Wax: BANANA WAX with carnauba!

Mac's Wax: BANANA WAX with carnauba!

It’s waxy! It’s yellow! It smells like banana! (Do not drink.)

Classic Car Hobby: Assault of the Clunker Law

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

On Tuesday, June 9, 2009, as horror gripped the classic car restoration hobbyists, our  U.S. House of Representatives passed the Cash for Clunkers Law.  Sadly, this ridiculous bill passed by a margin of, 298-119. The clunker bill offers up to $4,500 for owners of older, less fuel-efficient vehicles (18mpg or less)  to buy new vehicles that get better gas mileage. The bill still has to get through the U.S. Senate, where plans to attach this bill to another law already making its way through the Senate is the most probable plan of attack by the DC morons to destroy older cars that could possibly have historic value and be a perfect resto collector in the future. Basically, this will create problems for aspiring collector car owners who are only kids right now.

Can you imagine ripping a 350 TPI out of this car? The Clunker Law id pure B.S.!

Can you imagine ripping a 350 TPI out of this car? The Clunker Law is pure B.S.!

The Congressional Budget Office estimates this Cash For Clunkers bill might generate approximately 600,000 new vehicle sales. While this may help the auto industry and its independent dealers, but I highly doubt it will  turn around the sagging sales stats they are currently experiencing.

Opponents of this bill fear Cash for Clunkers will take many perfectly good vehicles off the road. This will have a ripple effect on the lower-income sector of our population – i.e. removing their access to inexpensive transportation. Many charitable organizations rely on such cars as donations, which are then resold to bolster their resources. Others actually restore or repair these cars and donate them to those who have a need for a vehicle but can’t afford one. So, these donation programs fear Cash for Clunkers is going to kill this source of vehicles.

The $4,500 voucher will be sent directly to dealers when you bring in your car, truck or SUV for the slaughter. The engine and transmission will have to be removed and the vehicle will not be allowed back on the road once it has been “betrayed.” Thus, a youngster seeking to restore an older car for shows and cruise-ins will not be allowed to register or title these vehicles.

I have to admit that the thought crossed my mind; if I were to trade-in my 2003 Silverado extended cab (I still have the “18 MPG Highway estimated fuel mileage window sticker) and pick up the $4500 stipend, and get another say, $5000 on the actual trade-in, perhaps I could get myself into one of those awesome 2010 Chevy Equinox LTZ’s with the new direct fuel injection 3.0 V6 that generates a nifty 255HP.

But I’ll also admit that the thought of some junkyard rat tearing the 5.3 liter V-8 and trans outa my gorgeous white pick-up truck was too much for me to handle.

I have taken good care of my Silverado, and it warrants another decade of service…or until my kid decides to attack a tree with it.

Ouch.

The Mac’s Wax product of the week is our all-new MUSCLE CAR WAX! Forulated with absolutely no abrasives or solids, it contains a light cleaning agent to further cleanse your paint’s finer pores. It then leave a very hard, deep warm sheen. A light sprinkle of water over the car, with alight buffing will further even-out the wax and create an incredible shine that is as smooth as the exepnsive paint job it’s protecting!

Chevrolet: Muscle Car Factories Live!

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Unless you live in a cave, you have probably heard of – or actually seen – the new, 5th generation Camaro. This car is proof-positive that muscle cars still live!

GM styling still rules!

GM styling still rules!

This new F-body comes with a choice of 400 or 422 horsepower (depending on whether you get the six-speed manual or six-speed automatic transmission), and is the fastest Camaro ever produced. It weighs-in at around 3,750 lbs.,which is a couple of hundred pounds more than a Ford Mustang GT, but still 500 less than the Dodge Challenger SRT8.

Okay, cool,” you say, “but one car does not a muscle car company create.”

True enough, but along comes the Chevy Traverse with 286 horsepower and it’s newest lil’ bro: the 2010 Equinox LTZ – a smaller crossover with an optional V-6 that pumps out 255 ponies under the hood of a fairly small wheelbase. (Be reminded that the 1972 GTO with a 400cid was rated at 250HP…that’s 5 less than the ‘Nox!)

chev-equinox_2010_wallpaper_01I have been seriously looking at these Chevy Equinox’s not just because of the increased HP out of a smaller V-6 (down to 3.0 liters from the ’09′s 3.4 liters), but also because it takes its styling cues from the Traverse, which has looked incredible since Day #1.

Add to the new “Direct Injection” engine tech, a cool, new interior and Chevy has produced a winner from a line-up of cars that were somewhat ho-hum in past years.

Don’t get me wrong, we have an ’06 Equinox in the family, and I spend a ton of time driving it, (because it’s so much fun to cruise in) as well as applying wax, polish and some cool interior coatings to make it look better’n new. (The Equinox has some fabulous metal flake finishes, BTW)

The new interior is said to be constructed of newer, softer-feeling materials and far-less hard molded plastic. It will also have a back-up camera and offers 18″ wheels this year! Amazing.

Anyway, the new camaro is gonna sell like the ;79 Z/28, but you can bet the new Equinox will give it a run for it’s money!

Wait n’ see!

In light of all this talk of new muscle cars, this week’s “Mac’s Wax: Car Wax of the Week” is….Mac’s MUSCLE CAR WAX. This stuff is made especially ofr muscle cars. That meaning: it has a high carnauba content and deep shine, it contains absolutely no polish (abrasives) and it has an amino-functional resin that acts as an emulsifier to bond the wax to your paint! Add a little bit of cleaning agent (we did) and it will remove micro-bits of dirts from your paint’s pores, which can be buffed out when you shine our Muscle car Wax to a deep, glossy sheen!