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 Monday, June 11, 2007
Buck the Magic Truck
Posted by Angelo


They say there’s no rest for the wicked, and if that’s true, I must be pretty bad.

I took advantage of the long holiday weekend over Memorial Day to get my family’s ’55 Cadillac Series 62 coupe ready for the Classic Car Club of America’s Grand Experience on June 3. This event at the Classic Car Museum/Gilmore Car Museum in Hickory Corners, Mich., was for Classic-era cars (V-12 Packard, Cord, Duesenberg, Marmon,  Cadillac, and others) manufactured during the “Classic Era.”

At this year’s Grand Experience event, the CCCA featured Cadillacs, so the club welcomed all Cadillacs built through 1970. So, the old yellow Caddy stretched its 133,000-mile legs to make the trek across the Lake Michigan ferry for the show. It was quite an adventure, but you'll have to read about that in Old Cars Weekly!

Since my family’s 1955 Cadillac is unrestored, I’ve put a lot of elbow grease into the original paint to get it to shine. Since the deadline for the show is looming, I spent the weekend touching up the paint chips, polishing the paint, and then applying a second coat of wax. If you drive big cars and take proper care of their paint, then you don’t look forward to waxing them, either. In the end, I applied two coats of wax. My elbow is out of grease, but the car looks great.

As if waxing a Cadillac twice in one day wasn’t enough, Keith Mathiowetz and I went to work preparing Buck, the Old Cars Weekly 1954 Chevrolet panel truck, for the Tulsarama event in mid June. Buck hasn’t been very well taken care of lately, but Keith and I made up for it by washing it, waxing it and cleaning out the interior. Keith even touched up the paint so Buck looks its best during the Tulsarama festivities.



Waxing the ‘55 Cadillac took a while, but waxing the sides of Buck truly felt like waxing the planks on an old barn. The paint was dry, and there was almost as much surface to wax on buck as there is on a barn. Regardless, Buck is looking pretty for a heavy-duty truck with more than 200,000 miles since its rebuild!

If you’re at Tulsarama or Back to the 50’s, be sure to keep your eyes peeled for the freshly waxed “Buck the magic truck!”





6/11/2007 7:27:11 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2]
 Tuesday, June 05, 2007
Moving the '56 Imperial convertible
Posted by Angelo

The owner of the 1-of-3 1956 Imperial convertible covered in Old Cars Weekly in 2005 finally removed his car from its 30-year resting place. He intends to restore the car after he tracks down a couple parts cars. (He expects to start the restoration in a year.) In the meantime, it will be stored inside, thankfully slowing the decay process started in the late 1970s.

A couple weekends ago, coworker Matt Gergeni and I helped remove the car from its resting place in the side of a hill in Amherst, Wis., and from what we could see, the rear frame rail on the buried driver's side was pretty far gone. The bottom half of the quarters are rusty, as are the rockers, and the front clip needs to be replaced. Because of the surrounding trees, a come-along had to be used to move the car back and forth to get it out of the woods. With the first yank, the cowl or rear half of the body shifted enough to make it impossible to open the driver's door. However, the car remained intact enough to keep the passenger side door capable of opening through the whole ordeal, and the car didn't suffer any more damage. It's going to be a big job, but the car is certainly restorable. Happily, the owner seems excited to dig into the project. You can bet I'll be staying on top of him to finish the car. The owner will also be getting motivation from Adam Harder, a restorer who plans on tearing into the car. Harder is heaving into Kaisers (especially Darrins), and he supplied the Kaiser wheels pictured on the front of the car.

In order to unearth the Imperial, it had to be brought down the hill, around some treess, and the towed back to its top near the road.

While talking to the owner in person for the first time, I learned a bit more about the car. It seems the Imperial convertible was used in several Milwaukee-area parades to carry dignitaries, so there's a chance a reader may be sitting on a photo of it. Also, the owner said the car originally had wire wheels. Following the accident that damaged the front end in the early 1970s, the current owner's father-in-law planned to junk the car, and removed the wire wheels at that time. Unfortunately, the wheels are gone, but it will look sharp to see it restored to its original black color with whitewalls and wires again. As the car's restoration begins, we'll keep you posted with the car's progress. In the meantime, enjoy these photos of the car's retrieval.

(FYI, the images are in order of the car's retrieval. The gentleman in the top photo is the car's owner, Bob. The restorer, Adam Harder, is pictured at the far right of the third photo from the top, and Matt Gergeni is in the middle of this photo. I couldn't resist getting a picture of my family's '55 Cadillac next to the rare car, so you'll spot "Ol Yeller" in the fifth photo, as the Imperial was pulled to the top of the hill. The last photo shows the back side of Roger Dudley who, along with his wife Merna, stored the car on their Amherst, Wis., property since 1977. Merna is a longtime F+W Publications employee -- she was once responsible for helping enter the pricing information in Old Cars Price Guide. Her daughter, Merry, is the editor of Toy Cars & Models magazine. And don't bother calling about the cars in the background of these photos - they are not for sale!)













6/5/2007 6:40:02 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [3]