A fake 356?

I was out running an errand today and stumbled across this car. It is a psuedo-porsche built from a VW… which in a way is ironic because Porsches are just Psuedo-Volkswagens right? =)

Anyway, while I pull on the asbestos pajamas in preparation for the flames from Porschephiles, have a look at this:


Sorry for the crappy phone-cam images… I literally snapped it from my car as I drove by and did not have time to pull my camera out of my bag. Like so many repro-cars, it gets enough of the detail wrong to throw the whole thing off. It is obviously based on a VW beetle or ghia (likely the latter.) Note the 70’s style 911 wheels. I always liked those “flower petal” wheels on 911s, but they sure look funny on a “356”!

The weirdest of all is the roofline in the back. How hard would it have been to get it to consistently slope? That sedan-notch-thing going on is just bizarre.

I can see building a Speedster, or a Spyder from a VW, but a 356 Coupe? Oh well. Let me know what you think.

BTW: for reference, here is a real one (a hastily edited photo from my own collection… Dr. Fisher’s Porsche from the Forza Amelia… I beat this car on our track day driving a 450sl. 😉 )

New Section: “Weird Seen”

I carry a camera with me at all times… a habit I started 20-some years ago. It has allowed me to capture some interesting images. Being a “car guy” one of the things I try and photograph is interesting cars. I have a collection of photos to share and today I stumbled across yet another “weird car” and came up with the idea of populating my web log with this kind of thing. So here it is… “weird seen”… I hope you like it.

I have enough photos, and run into enough vehicular oddities in life to present several a week, but if you have something of your own, feel free to contact me via email or a comment and even you can contribute to the madness.

Arlington Show & Shine

The Arlington downtown merchants put on a car show the first weekend of June every year. I’m not a big fan of car shows… I’d prefer to DRIVE the car… but this is a hometown event, and I feel it is important to attend. Besides, they need to see something different. These shows are made up almost exclusively of old American cars. Classics, customs, muscle, hot rods, etc. In some years I’ve had the only foreign car there. This year it was a bit different. For one, the turnout was incredible. I showed up an hour after the official start, and they were almost out of room… every block of Olympic Avenue was filled except the northernmost, which is where my car ended up.

Above: The 65E at the north end of Olypmic Ave.

Unfortunately I had to help my son Nicholas do a school project, so I parked it, erected my “it is OK to touch this car” sign, and caught a ride home. Four hours later Nick and I returned to have some lunch, and walk around to check out the cars. Like all car shows, they hand out prizes, but since there is no category for “foreign cars” or “sports cars” or the like, I have no illusions that I’ll win anything… this car is just too different. I do enjoy walking around and looking… and chatting with people about their cars. This year there were quite a few non-US cars. I saw a Triumph TR3A, a Hillman, two Datsun Z cars (though one was “lumped” with an American V8 engine, and the other was chromed beyond belief in the engine bay), a Porsche 911, and an Austin-Healey bugeye Sprite. But the remaining few hundred cars were all out of Detroit.

Here are some of my favorites:

I like this sort of chopped salt-flat racer looking pickup truck.

I love that Datsun Z cars are now coming into “classic” status. The 240s and 260s of course… the less said about the later ones the better… but they were the last of the “affordable sports cars” until the Miata/MX-5 changed the world 20 years later. This is the ‘stock” example at the show today. The “lumped” one was next to it.

Above: Count the sparkplug wires

This was probably the most unique and rare vehicle at the show today, and it quite deservedly won “Best of Show”. It is a 1941 Lincoln, but not your every day Lincoln. It was a custom built factory car of which less than 20 were built, and NOT sold to the general public. These cars were given to Ford family members and company executives. It is a phaeton, with a flathead/sidevalve V-12 engine driving it. It is owned by a guy down in Marysville, the next town south of Arlington, and has been shown at major concours such as Pebble Beach. Here is another photo… of Nick checking it out:

It was certainly cool to see this unique machine here today. MY favorite however was this one:


It is a 1952 Packard. I’ve always loved the pre-war Packards, but this one really drew me in. First of all, it was immense. The proportions of the body and the styling do not really show it, but this car is huge… in that overconfident post-war American way that captures that era so well. It has styling that predicts the future (at least until the early 60s), while paying homage to the past… specifically Packard’s past. The owner was not around, but I would have loved to talk to them about this car. I had to get shots of the pre-war styling cues; the swan hood ornament (above), and the perfect whitewalls and stunning classic Packard wheel hub design:

As I predicted, the Jag won no prizes, but I did have several people complement the car, and a couple tell me it was their favorite. The gearheads all stared in wonder at the XK engine, which to the average American car guy appears to be technology from another planet… everything is there, but it is all shaped differently and in different places!

Nicholas & I went home and finished his school project, then I spent some time on my car project, the new (old) air intake system. I’ve finished sanding the plenum, and was able to hit its bottom with the first shot of hammerite tonight:

Still looking for the filter cannister…

Finally… it is June!

So we can flip our KZOK calendars over to that shapely gorgeous thing. Too bad the girl is in the way! 😉

Henry Ngan (photog) and Dave Webber (A.D.) did an awesome job with that photo. The car looks way better in that shot than in real life!

The Arlington “Show & Shine” is this weekend, time to wash the car.