My First Car
What kind of memories do you have of your first car: good, bad, indifferent? Would you like to have it back again? Was it a good car?
My first car was less than a piece of crap!
It was a '36 Chev coupe I found in a farmer's pasture (in 1951). I talked to the owner who told me that I could have it, if I got him a front axle so he could make a trailer. My neighbor gave me a '37 Nash front axle; alas, my first car became a reality. The car only had three tires, so I borrowed a wheel and tire from the farmer, so dad could tow me home. The wheel and tire I put on wouldn't turn, so when we got out to the road, there was one long, loud squeal of burning rubber. Sure got the attention of the farmer and his cows! I was fearing what the farmer was going to say about the new flat spot on the tire that he had loaned me. I brought the wheel and tire back the same day on my bicycle. To my surprise, he didn't say anything (luckily, he wasn't home).
Picture this...a car on a jack with only three wheels. It didn't run. The windshield was delaminated and clouded over like they used to get. Mom and dad made me park it behind the garage. Life was good. I HAD MY FIRST CAR!!!
My first job was to fix the wheel. I cleaned up the brake so the wheel would turn free. The next thing was to get a tire for the spare wheel. The wheel was 17". I had a 16" inner tube, but no problem, it should stretch out just fine. I got a discarded tire from a junk pile. It was a 16" tire, but like the tube, it was made of rubber, so it should stretch out just fine, too. At that age, I was persistent and bull-headed. I worked for two days trying to get that tire stretched out onto that wheel. I used soap, grease, pry bars, a sledge hammer--everything I could think of. NO LUCK.
That same junk pile had a 17" tire that at one time had blown out the sidewall. Well, I took the 16" tire and cut out a hunk of the side wall to make a boot. I glued it to the side of the blowout in the 17" tire using some of dad's tar. I can still remember the tar oozing out of the tear from the blowout, but it held air. At last, I could take the car off the jack. It was beautiful.
I showed dad what I had done, thinking he would approve. All he said was something about not ever taking that @#$$% car out with that tire!
Now that I had the car on four tires, I wanted to start the engine. I installed an old, discarded battery and hooked up an electric motor to the generator. It was cool to see the ampmeter showing a charge. My car was coming to life. As the battery began to charge, I checked the lights, horn, heater, etc. Things seemed to work. After the battery was charged, I poured a little fuel down the carburetor and tried it. Surprise! It started, but did it ever smoke--and I mean a lot. It looked like someone was pouring Bardahl down the carburetor, except it never cleared up.
Even though I knew little about what I was doing, things were looking promising. I took out the windshield so I could see, and started driving it around our pasture. I would get a gallon or two of gas now and then with my lunch money from school. The sacrifice was worth it. With my total income of lunch money (mom never knew), I finally replaced that blown tire with a bald one from a junk yard. Then I started saving for the biggy: an engine rebuild. I read the Sears & Roebuck and Montgomery Ward catalogs (We had an outhouse in those days which always had catalogs for reading and other things). Montgomery Ward had piston rings for $3.50 and gaskets for $4.00. I ordered the parts, hand-lapped the valves, and filed down the rod caps. The engine ran surprisingly well.
By this time, I was 15. Mom would let me take the back roads to a small store for bread and milk. I still didn't have a windshield, so as you may suspect, the upholstery blew in the 40 mph breeze, and the gravel road dust was a problem. There was one asphalt road to cross, so I would pop the clutch in the gravel and hit the asphalt, and thrill to the sound of the squeal. I'll bet a lot of you did that. Another thing I remember was the seat was worn out and had broken springs, so I used a gunny sack full of rags to sit on. (Maybe that's why nice upholstery is important to me now.)
As my 16th birthday was approaching, I got a windshield from a junk yard for 50 cents. That job, as I remember, was only "a little bit" easier than putting a 16" tire on a 17" wheel. Now the car was ready to take up to Washington State Patrol so I could get my driver's license. The written test went fine. They did a vehicle exam, and then I had to take a patrolman out for a driving test. I was nervous, but things went fine, and I got my license. My INDEPENDENCE had arrived. On the way home, dad congratulated me and treated me to a full tan of gas--the first and last full tank I was to have for a long time.
With my newfound independence, Friday nights became a lot more exciting than watching TV with mom, dad, and my little brother.
Even though the car was a coupe, we could easily get a double date foursome into the front seat. The car would pop out of high gear, so I had my date sit on the gear shifter. One time I got up to max speed of 60 mph. When I let up on the throttle, the gear shifter popped out of high gear, and the grinding gears vibrated through the shifter that my date was sitting on. It startled and scared her so much, that all she could do was scream!
Now I had another problem--the radiator leaked. On the tractor we had at home, dad would fix this by putting in some cornmeal. Why not? I will try it in my car. This worked for two or three weeks to start with, but each time, it took less time to leak out. Towards the end, the radiator was starting to plug up with cornmeal, and the water leaked out almost as fast as I put it in. My trips became "from gas station to gas station" for radiator fill-ups. The battery I'd put in the car had a bad cell, so I carried a crank with me. More than once, I got out in the middle of a busy intersection and hand-cranked that thing.
One day, I was backing out of the garage and caught the open passenger door against the wall. It broke a hinge and destroyed the rotted wood frame that those old Chevys had. The only thing that held it shut was one hinge and the door latch. I had to load passengers from the driver's side.
The first day I took the car to school, two classmates came over for a ride. Before I could say anything, they opened the door. It fell into their hands. We shut the door and went around the block. Trying to impress them, I wound up in low gear, and about that time, the heater hose blew off. It was a chilly autumn morning, so the inside was filled with steam.
That morning, all I heard people talking about was my two classmates nearly getting scalded, and how my car fell apart in their hands. That's when I started disliking my car.
That next Friday night, some friends and I were cruising between gas stations, and we decided to go for an all-out speed run. It was a little bit down hill, and I buried the throttle and unleashed all 60 horsepower. The fastest I had the car before was about 60 mph. We were now flying 40...50...55...60...62...63...63.5...64... then at nearly 65 mph, a piston blew. Nothing but sparks and smoke behind me; then the engine locked up. I'd blown a rod.
That ended my independence. The most humiliating part was that next Friday. I had a date to a dance. Can you imagine my feelings--going to a dance and having to sit in the back seat, next to my date, with my dad driving the family car? How un-cool!!!
Anonymous on Dec 6, 2006 said:
Great story Dick! Sue wants to know if this car could make it to the top of the hill in your old alfalfa field.
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