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My work has appeared in a number of major publications either as writer, photographer, or source. I enjoy talking about all things automotive.

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Hudson's Blog

All around the car world there are stories and these are just a few of them. A new blog is posted every Monday. Sometimes more often.

Aug 26, 2007 - Oddballs and Orphans

Walk down the rows of cars at any large car show and you’ll see the same cars. Not usually the actual same cars, but typically the standard models and model years show up at every car show.

Go to a hot rod show and you’ll see Model T Fords and 1930s-era Fords, Chevrolets, Dodges, and Willys coupes. Go to the usual old car show and the usual old cars show up including ’55-57 Chevrolets and ’65-66 Mustangs and early Camaros and Corvettes of all vintages. And even “late-model” cruise nights have the same groups of Fox-bodied Mustangs and third-and fourth-generation Camaros and Firebirds as well as the occasional hopped-up Honda Civic or Acura Integra or Mazda RX7.

It’s oh-so-predictable.

When I go to a car show, I always look for the oddballs. I’ll notice the crowds gathered around better-than-new classic Chevrolets or Fords where the discussion is about “a buddy of mine had one” or “my dad drove one of these.” Reminiscing like that is great and I’m glad they enjoy that.

It doesn’t help that I had a car before any of my buddies did when I was younger. It also doesn’t help that none of my buddies (or my father for that matter) were “car people.” And when my buddies did get their first cars, they were 1967 Ford F-Series pickups or 1978 Chevrolet Monzas or 1979 Chrysler Cordobas…nothing to write home about. Even my first car was not noteworthy.

Over the years, my taste in cars has become more honed. I still like almost anything on four wheels…and sometimes that criterion is not locked in. But to arouse my attention, you need to dangle something different and odd in front of my face.

A few weeks ago, I was walking to my car after a day of car judging when I noticed two guys ogling a car. It was a very nice late model Aston Martin but they were overlooking the Sunbeam Imp sitting right next to it. I asked the guys standing there, “sure it’s a $150,000 Aston Martin, but does it hold a candle to a classic Sunbeam?” They laughed.

Sure, the Aston Martin is very rare, but when was the last time you even saw a picture of a Sunbeam car?

If you go through my photographs, you'll see some oddballs and orphans. The stranger the better is my opinion. And a really good car show, in my view, is one where there are models and brands of cars that I have never seen in person.

Most concours events will have beautiful and rare cars of the Classic era. Duesenbergs and Bugattis and Hispano-Suizas and the like. The engineering on these vehicles can only be rivaled by the spectacular coachwork build atop their large frames. They definitely catch the attention of all attendees, and I am among the people impressed by the craftsmanship that went into them.

But I'm looking for real oddballs.

Ever see an El Morocco? There were 27 built in 1956 and 10 built in 1957. I had read about these in books, but it was a concours event that I attended a number of years ago where I first saw one in person. To most people, it just looks like a 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air, but Chevrolet fanatics will note that the grille has less trim and the tail fins are from a Cadillac. And it's not badged as a Chevrolet...it is an El Morocco.

A friend of mine and I had a discussion about rare vehicles we've seen. He stated that he had worked on or seen at shows a high percentage of the total production of MGA fixed head coupes. His percentage was around 1% of the 1,000 built, which is impressive. My reply was that I had personally seen six of the about 40 Vectors ever built.

That's the kind of thing a fan of oddballs looks for...rarity. During a tour of a restoration shop, I spotted an old chassis. The large car had a milled block straight-eight engine and obviously dated to the 1920s or early 1930s. Since it had no body, I guessed that it was a sports car of the era.

My tour guide filled me in on this rarity. He said it was a Pedroso. I pride myself on knowing many different (and rare) brand names, but this one had me stumped. He continued that Pedrosos were built to race (at LeMans, if memory serves corrrectly). And there were TWO built. One of the two sank with a ship crossing the Atlantic and this was the sole survivor. A few years later, I was part of a tour of the storage room at the Petersen Museum when our tour guide unveiled a car that had everyone (mostly seasoned historians) mystified. The tour guide told us that this was a Pedroso, and it turned out that it was the same car I had seen years before but now with its body attached.

As recently as today, my friend and I were surfing ebay in the "others" category for these types of oddities. He sent me a listing for a Muntz Jet and then wondered how rare it was. According to my research, the numbers are disputed by it seems that fewer than 200 were built and fewer than 50 have been located. And all of this just makes he and I want the car more.

I've snapped pictures of AMC Spirits  and Kaiser Darrins found at car shows, primarily because they stand out as orphans, which makes them stand out among the Ford Thunderbirds and Chevrolet Corvettes that seem to populate most car shows. But when I find a Checker Superba or Zimmer Golden Spirit or a Walter truck, I have found a memorable car show.

Come to a car show with me...let's find some of these treasures!

8:58 pm | Categories: car shows, oddballs, orphans, aston martin, duesenberg, bugatti, hispano-suiza, el morocco, vector, pedroso, checker, zimmer, walter, amc, kaiser
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Comments
kcram - Aug 31, 2007 11:37 am
This is why I love my Dodge Ram... it's distinctive with the dropped headlights, flared fenders, and the crosshair horse-collar grille. I still love the Starsky Ford Gran Torino - not just the stripe, but the double-creased rear fender gave the car some character. There are so few cars today that I'd ever be interested in owning... there's no personality, even with brands that try to create a "company face" with similar looks across their models.
kevinlj182 - Aug 27, 2007 3:54 pm
I really liked your blog about odds and orphans, it was quite well put. I'm glad to have made an automotive buddy who shares some of the same unique thoughts that i do. Im really interested in your car company, I'd like to cheer you on too, maybe we could, collaborate on certian process or something, so we both can meet our goals, quicker. You never do know,, your determination and whitn will surely bring you success so i say good luck Friend!
okko1 - Aug 27, 2007 3:43 pm
i have seen a few sunbeams but only when i was a kid. i like the henry j and the opel gt you don't see a lot of them around the midwest.
aussieboy - Aug 27, 2007 4:36 am
In my neck of the woods, Australia. It is generally Dodge, Plymouth and Chrysler that stand out of the crowd. Our shows are full of Ford Falcons and Holden Kingswoods. While they have their apeal to some, I get that same feeling you do, once you've seen a couple of thousand of these cars they all look they same, BORING!!! This might suprize you but my dream car is the 1967 Dodge Dart with the 440Magnum big block. Hey is your going for performace why make do with anything less? In Australia this car was produced by Chysler Australia under the guise of the Valiant Pacer and generally came with the 225 Hemi. When I mention this car to most car enthusists in Australia their eye's glase over and they start talking about how can you go past the 196whatever Ford Falcon with it's 302 Windsor or the 197whocares Holden HQ Monaro(one of the worlds ugliest cars) with it's "Almighty" 350 small block chevy???????????? While you may get used to seeing the same cars show after show after show, you really need to come down under for the "Summer Nats" held every year in January in Canberra and you while see some very bisarre people who are very narrow minded about cars and do not understand that there is more to cars than just their prefered brand or model. But really i'm sure if you do still enjoy the show circuit, you would enjoy the Summer Nat's. Have a look www.summernats.com.au
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