Thursday, 9 June 2016

Regular Car Reviews: 1960 Ford Falcon (stock)

"Robert MacNamera's love letter to bean counting."

The Vagaond Falcon in stock form, a fitting tribute since the build is now done.




Operation Vagabond Falcon: Part 23

The Vagabond Falcon is running!  The new pushrods work without marring, the brakes and suspension appear to be working, and the wheel give it that classic look.




Thursday, 19 May 2016

Morley Safer dies at 84

From Jalopnik.com: Morley Safer Recorded The Greatest Lamborghini Documentary Ever Shot

Morley Safer, 60 Minutes longest serving correspondent, passed away today at 84.  I remember listening to Car Talk in the late 90's, when he called in to bug Tom and Ray about their jokes about French cars, which consisted of things such as French cars being fine if they stay in France, and to their credit were probably right, but Morely wasn't having it.  Morley had a beloved Peugeot, but was looking to replace it, and since he couldn't get another Peugeot, asked Tom and Ray to give him their next best recommendation.  They suggested the Volvo 850, but he wasn't very impressed.      

Tuesday, 17 May 2016

Operation Vagabond Falcon: Part 17

"Suddenly it felt like a car, and I wanted to drive it."



It's getting close, the Megashifter goes in, along with the driveshaft, battery, and more engine parts.






Monday, 16 May 2016

Regular Car Reviews: 1991 Subaru Loyale

"Au Contraire Mon Capitan, he's back!"

Regular Car Reviews is back with a review, and back in form.  The Loyale was the back bone of Subaru North America in the 90's, before the WRX rally craze, before Crocodile Dundee endorsed Outbacks, and even before the Legacy.  I'll be reeling in the years too.

Tuesday, 10 May 2016

1987 Nissan Maxima

From Jalopnik: For $1,850, This 1987 Nissan Maxima Could Take You To The Max…er, ima

Source: http://jalopnik.com/
This Maxima is definitely nice price, no crack pipe here, as anything in nice shape that's all there and runs well for under $2K is a deal.  The amount of stuff out there for the same or even more, in poor shape, with parts broken or missing, and run poor are abundant and the real crack pipes.    





I used to have a 1992 Maxima SE 5 speed as a daily driver, which was the first 4DSC or "4 Door Sports Car," and while it wasn't a true sports car, it was pretty close for the era.  The VE30DE engine was the same bottom end as the VG but with 4 valve per cylinder heads, variable intake cam, and variable valve timing, putting 190 hp through a limited slip differential to give a fighting chance at traction and torque steer management.  It was in similar condition to the 1987, but higher trim, better options, a stick, less miles, and it sold for similar money back in late 2011.   

 

Electric and Hybrids Pollute!


Source: http://jalopnik.com/
Something I've been a proponent of for some time, that hybrid and electric cars aren't necessarily better for the environment, they're just different. Unfortunately these days that's not a popular opinion, so nice to see some actual numbers on it, and thanks to Jalopnik for covering it. This study doesn't even account for where your electricity comes from, or the increased energy and material use for producing hybrids.

We're so quick as a society to jump on the perception of things, while missing the important details. Until we have energy storage with reasonable charge time, reasonable energy density, and comparable weight, further battery advances will only be part of an engineering exercise, not a solution. 

Monday, 9 May 2016

Operation Vagabond Falcon: Part 16

The 4OD goes in behind the 302 Redeemer!  4 more weeks until Ford Nationals, will they make it?



Much like the engine install, everything seem to go pretty smooth, especially considering they had to cut a hole in the floor and firewall to fit the trans.  

Monday, 2 May 2016

Porsche Front Engine GT

From Autoblog: Porsche Front Engine GT
Source: http://jenniskens.livedsl.nl/
GT cars are practical and comfortable for either the daily commute or cross-country road trips, but have enough performance and handling for most drivers on the street. I'll always like the 928, it was the flagship Porsche when I was a kid in the 80s, I even had a Hot Wheels toy, so for me that was just as much Porsche as the 911, maybe even more because it was "the new."

The mistake then was probably throwing out the history, without factoring in the Porsche purists. Now in the era of the mid engine Boxter/Cayman, the Panamara, and VW based Cayenne and Macan for the soccer mom set, the brand may have been watered down in some respects, but the 911 is better than ever, and Porsche is the most profitable car maker, so keep doing the 911 thing, and keep doing the sedan and SUV thing too if it keeps the profits up, then reinvest some of those profits into a GT car. Ferrari manages nicely with front engine GT cars and mid engine sports/supercars, and the Ferrari purists don't seem to be complaining. After all, Enzo thought all his cars should be front engine.

2000 Honda Prelude - One Take

This takes me back, I learned to drive stick on a 1988 Honda Prelude, and while this is a different car in almost every measurable sense, the sound and feel are similar.  Actually, I really learned to drive stick on an old Ford Fiesta and then a Kubota tractor, but that wasn't on public roads.  






Operation Vagabond Falcon: Part 15

The 302 Redeemer goes in!



Didn't seem to go too bad, just need a different electric fan.  They could have had that thing in and out three times and still be stuck.  Really makes me wonder how they fit that block into 63's.

Operation Vagabond Falcon: Part 14



The operation continues with finishing the steering and GGGHGGG!


So many things aren't quite drop in or bolt on, as mileage really does vary, and this is the stuff that nickle and dimes you, both time and financially.  It makes me wonder if knowing what they know now, would they still continue with a drive line and suspension upgrade, or would they have rebuilt the old 144 inline 6 and Ford-O-Matic.  The suspension was tired though, and the point from the get go wasn't to restore a "regular" car, but to use it for their film shoots and other events.  It should be a nice driver when done and well worth the work!  

Saturday, 23 April 2016

Smurf broke!

But it's okay, just a header leak.  When adding forced induction to a stock engine which didn't have forced induction from the factory, you're bound to have teething issues even with the best of setups.  At least this is relatively minor and serviceable.  

Wednesday, 20 April 2016

Operation Vagabond Falcon: Part 12

The Falcon build continues, with steering and brakes!

Modified Mazdaspeed 'NB' Miata - One Take

The "NB" Mazdaspeed MX-5 was the only factory turbocharged MX-5/Miata, and this is a tastefully modified example.  Mazdaspeed really got the formula right, without ruining the rewarding and balanced driving characteristics.  really fun to drive, with enough power to make it more fun than the naturally aspirated car, but not enough to overpower the chassis or really get out in trouble.

Superformance 1965 Shelby Daytona Coupe - One Take

Matt drives a Superformance 1965 Shelby Daytona Coupe!  This car ticks a lot of the boxes, and makes all the right sounds, even if you can't heel and toe.  Maybe the pedal or master cylinder just needs adjusting?  

Tuesday, 19 April 2016

Welcome to Blog of Cars

Welcome to Blog of Cars.

Source: http://paintref.com/
Some of my earliest memories are of cars, and one of the first was my Dad's C3 Corvette.  I think I even went for rides in that car as a baby, wrapped up in my mom's arms, before seat belt laws and air bags.  I also remember sitting in the driver's seat, while parked in the garage, surrounded by the red interior.  I didn't really know what it was at the time, but would later learn that it was a 1971 Corvette Stingray LS5 454 4 speed, in Steel Cities Grey.  Unfortunately it wasn't to last in the family, being sold to to buy a 1981 Jeep Wagoneer, which was more winter and family friendly.  We were doing the SUV thing before the term was even coined.

In Pre School, the teacher was late one day, so we had a substitute.  Later, the teacher arrived, and told us that her car wouldn't start, which is why she was late.  I suggested that there might be something wrong with the carburetor, which she would later recount to my parents, a story which my Dad still tells today.

Source: http://www.cardomain.com/
In kindergarten, we did a project where we had to draw a picture of something we saw on the way to school, and then the student-teacher we had in our class would help is write the name of whatever it was next to the picture.  My neighbour had a blue Datsun 280 ZX Turbo, which would drive off around the time I'd leave to walk to school, so I specifically remember drawing the car, while the other kids were drawing cats, dogs, whatever typical 5 year old kids see.  I told the student-teacher it was a Datsun 280 ZX Turbo, to which she looked confused, and said I could just call it Datsun, which I begrudgingly accepted.

There was car culture in my early years, building into a passion, which lead me to a career in writing.  Enjoy.