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…I don’t want to get all Hemmings on you…

Uh, thanks, Niedermeyer. The list of all the clunkers turned in under CARS has been making some headlines, both over at TTAC and Jalopnik, for some of the decidedly un-clunker cars (a GNX? Really?) that netted somebody $4,500.

But remember, folks, it was worth it. Or, according to two economists at the University of Delaware, it wasn’t.



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Vintage Hemmings, May 1978 – Mercedes, Peerless, Wildfire

Jaguar-based kit

While we have wicked awesome cars for sale in the current issues of Hemmings – as shown by the Maserati A6C54 and Highwayman truck we highlighted here recently – we also have 55 years of back issues of classifieds we can go through for interesting finds, and we even have some of the original photographs from those issues, so we scanned a few from the May 1978 issue for your perusal.

1954 Wildfire. Disassembled and restoration started. Earliest known Wildfire title. $3,100. Cleveland, OHJaguar chassis base conversion to Thirties sports racer. This high-quality British kit available in pieces or complete ready-to-drive away. The advanced engineering of the Jaguar 3.8S coupe is combined with the body style and performance of a previous era. U.S. Rep, UK Ltd. Portland, OR1937 Mercedes 230 roadster. One of a kind. Alpine racer. New paint, black leather upholstery, chrome and tires. Motor is restored. $22,500. CA1961 Peerless Warwick GT. Rot free, exciting bodywork in fiberglass. $2,400. Knutsford, Cheshire, England1970 British Rover 3500S. Beige on beige leather original and absolutely driveaway ready. Loaded and all works. McAllen, TX1960 Studebaker Hawk sport custom roadster. $1,100. Washington, DC

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Save these cars – Sevierville, Tennessee

Tennessee car collection

Zach Bowman over on Autofiends tipped us off to this one: It seems Jeff Horne in Sevierville, Tennessee, had the time, the space and the means to assemble about 75 cars over the last five years – and from the looks of things, he did a good job of saving many from the crusher – but has decided he just can’t run a personal junkyard, so he’s selling ‘em all. Though it’s mostly muscle-era GM stuff, along with some ’70s F-bodies, there’s a few others in the mix as well, including a ‘77 AMX and some Thunderbirds.

Git ‘em while the gittin’s good, boys!



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Pampering a Ridler winner

Best of Show's showroom

I recently made a bonsai one-week run through northern Ohio to attend an auction (more later) and gather a few photo shoots, and one of my stops was Best of Show’s showroom in Mentor. These guys have their act together, and they graciously let me use their in-house photo studio to shoot a couple cars that will appear in upcoming issues of Hemmings Muscle Machines. While in the studio, though, something caught my eye.

To the left, that's the Ridler trophy, given to the best street rod or competition car debuted at the Detroit Autorama. To the right, the trophy for the America's Most Beautiful Hot Rod award, given at the Grand National Roadster Show. Both in the same place? Must be an interesting street rod on the premises.The showroom had plenty of cars to look at - 150 or so - but few street rodsI had to go all the way to the detail shop to find our award winner, the Revolver, which won the Ridler for Dave and Joyce Emery in 1997The Revolver also took the AMBR in 1998, one of only four cars to win both awardsAfter a dozen years, the Revolver still looked like new, aside from a bit of carbon on the tailpipes. Oh, Best of Show has it priced at $169,900

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Bill and Connor in Detroit

Bill and Connor in Detroit

I kinda want Bill and Connor Miles to keep exploring the country. Following their trip has been great, as we’ve already seen, and since we last left them in the desert out West, they’ve made their way across the heartland, across one of the Great Lakes, and into Detroit, where they spent a couple days this week taking in the museums founded by and related to the Ford family. Sure, for two guys rambling about in a GMC, Dearborn is technically enemy ground, but Bill has owned a couple Model As in the past, so they let ‘em in.



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It Came From… Alex Tremulis?

Alex Tremulis hood ornament

The jet-age styling of the 1950s produced some of the most memorable automotive designs ever, but we have a hard time recalling ever seeing a hood ornament such as this, which reader William J. Dubiel recently sent us photos of, hoping to find out a little more about it. He claims that Ford, Cord, and Tucker designer Alex Tremulis designed the ornament, which seems plausible: Tremulis sketched what is considered the first-ever flying saucer conceptual drawing, and he’d presumably take on some filler work such as this to pay the bills between big clients. All we know is that we’d like to see some ’50s car roll up to one of our cruise-ins sporting one of these.

As suspected, it lights up!

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SIA Flashback – Predictor!

Predictor

Packard isn’t really known for its 1950s futuristic show cars, but the company did attempt a few, the last of which, the Predictor, is perhaps the most well-known. Gerald Perschbacher had an opportunity to thoroughly examine the concept car and wrote up his impressions and the history of the Predictor for SIA #47, October 1978.



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Four-Links – pizzaboy searches for Camaro, CJ-6s galore, kustoms in Italy, Stanguellini tour

John Schattner and his 1972 Camaro

* So even though we don’t have a Papa John’s anywhere nearby, we see their commercials on the television around here, and one of the latest commercials features founder John Schnatter tooling around in a gold second-gen Camaro. As it turns out, that car’s a clone of the ‘72 John owned when he started the pizza chain, but was forced to sell to keep the business afloat. Now, John’s on the lookout for the exact car he sold off many years ago and has started a site to follow his search. (via)

CJ6s_resized.jpg

* Though the CJ-8 seems to get all the attention when it comes to collectible CJs nowadays, the CJ-6 certainly has its own dedicated fanbase, and Boyink has a nice blog dedicated not only to his 6, but to all sorts of different CJ-6s. (via)

kustoms in Italy

* There’s something quite incongruous about a kustom show in Italy. While kustom builders and Italians both appreciate aesthetics, the homegrown American aesthetic of the kustoms seems entirely out of place against the backdrop of handsome old-world cities criss-crossed with cobblestone streets. Which makes Lowtech’s photos of last weekend’s kustomweekend near Florence all the more compelling.

Stanguellinis

* We’ve been digging Retro Scene Magazine’s online content lately, and they deliver again with a tour of the Stanguellini family’s dealership, which includes a number of the family’s sports and racing cars from the etceterini period.

Larry Watson's House of Style

* Finally, another kustom post. This time, though, the Transforming the Pickle blog has a boatload of photos of SoCal customs and the shops that churned them out in the 1950s. Perhaps it’s time to create another Google Map to determine the kustom hotspots in SoCal?



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There are a half-dozen or so types of material used in the car’s ashtray, ...

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Remember Miss Belvedere, the ‘57 Plymouth that the fine folks of Tulsa buried when it was new, then unearthed two years ago? Yes, it emerged rusty and crusty, but the effort to preserve the car is ongoing, and for our latest episode of Hemmings Classic Car Radio, David LaChance spoke with Dwight Foster of Ultra One, the company that is working to get Miss Belvedere back into presentable shape.

Also in this episode, a brief overview of cash for clunkers and why it’s a sorry piece of wrongheaded legislation. Yes, familiar territory for constant readers of the Hemmings blog, but it’s worth repeating while the matter remains under consideration.

Click to listen to the latest episode of Hemmings Collector Car Radio now.

As an added bonus, we have exclusive photos of Miss Belvedere and the de-rusting process you may want to peruse while listening to the latest episode.

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For its trip by flatbed back east, the Belvedere was shrink-wrapped. Thoughts of transferring the car to an enclosed trailer were abandoned when it was discovered just how badly the frame had deteriorated.

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Here’s the reason the Plymouth is getting a donor frame. Decades of submersion left the original too weak to support the car.

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Ultra One uses a pump, a hose and a kiddie pool to keep a continuous stream of Safest Rust Remover on one area at a time. The product leaves the 52-year-old paint unharmed.

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If a picture is worth 1,000 words, this one must be worth 1,000 “ughs.” This is the before…

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and this is the after.

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There are a half-dozen or so types of material used in the car’s ashtray, and Safest Rust Remover is safe for every one. With the corrosion gone, it’s possible to see that this is a brand-new, unused part.

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These are the surviving sisters of the late Ray Humbertson, whose 1957 guess of Tulsa’s 2007 population was the closest of all those who entered to win Miss Belvedere. Catherine, on the left, is 94, and Levita is 85.

The official documentary about the car, “Tulsa’s Buried Belvedere,” is available from AVCOM Productions.

If you haven’t heard an episode of Hemmings Collector Car Radio until now, then now’s a good time to listen to all the previous episodes of the podcast - all free, just like the current episode.

And if you have an RSS reader, make sure to subscribe to our RSS podcast feed for notification of future Hemmings Collector Car Radio episodes. You can also subscribe to our podcast feed directly through iTunes.