Jewell Park, the site for this year's meet, is a one-block green space just off the main drag in Pacific Grove. It has a small activities building in one corner and a bandstand on another - the rest is grass, with big trees on the edges of the park. Club pres. Rick Alexander had worked with the local Chamber of Commerce to get permission for the show and I knew the cars would look great on the grass - like a mini Concours. I rolled up a little before 8AM and waited for everyone to arrive - This will go down as the first time in history that I was the first one there!
Showing posts with label HotShot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HotShot. Show all posts
Saturday, November 4, 2017
Sunday, November 29, 2015
The Crosley Cruise: 2015 West Coast Crosley Club Meet - Part 2
I headed over for the Crosley Cruise kickoff at Thomi's Cafe on Sunday morning. As luck would have it, my station wagon had developed a slight water pump leak over the weekend - I greased the zerk fitting and kept my eye on the temp gauge. Luckily I'd brought a jug of water just in case, and borrowed another from Mike Blackburn who had decided at the last minute not to do the tour. Mike's water jug sprung a leak as soon as I loaded it in the car. So far, so good.
Labels:
2015,
Alpine Rally,
Amador,
Crosley,
Cruise,
gold country,
Hot Shot,
HotShot,
Jackson,
Meet,
microcar,
road trip,
Station Wagon,
Super Sports,
Sutter Creek,
Yoko Ono
Monday, May 4, 2015
2015 Orange Blossom Special - Fillmore Spring Meet
Back in the good old days (in this case the mid-eighties) shortly after the West Coast Crosley Club first got going, the powers that be decided to try having two club meets per year - the big meet in September, plus a smaller, more low key meet in the Spring. Trouble was, there weren't that many members back then, so the Spring Meet never really caught on. No one remembers exactly when they gave up, but sometime before 1990 we were back to one meet per year.
Twenty-five years later (more or less), we decided to try again.
Twenty-five years later (more or less), we decided to try again.
Labels:
1946,
1947,
1948,
1949,
1950,
1951,
1952,
Bob King,
Braje,
Crosley,
dragster,
For Sale,
Hot Shot,
HotShot,
Orange Blossom Special,
pickup,
Roundside,
Station Wagon,
Super Sport,
Super Sports
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Half and Half
After having such a great time at last summer's Great Pacific Northwest Microcar Show I swore that this was the year I'd make it to the OTHER western-state microcar meet, the Southwest Unique Little Car Show. SWULCS has been running for 34 years (!) with locations rotating between Arizona, Nevada and California. With this year's meet scheduled for Pomona - in the parking lot of the NHRA Museum no less - there was no excuse to miss it!
Monday, October 7, 2013
Report: 2013 West Coast Crosley Club Meet in Sutter Creek
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Watkins Glen 1951: Seneca Cup in Color!
The Chicane posted a link to this great 10 minute movie showing the Seneca Cup Race at the 1951 Watkins Glen. Most of the action centers on the duel between George Weaver in his Maserati and John Fitch in one of Briggs Cunningham's Ferraris, but there is plenty of other neat iron out there as well. This originally came from Speed Vision, so you might want to fast forward past their intro... but don't go too far or you'll miss the only good* Crosley sighting: a nice shot of G. Vilardi's #4 Super Sport blasting by at about the two minute mark.
*Pretty sure I saw a black Hotshot in the background about a minute later, but the angle and distance makes it hard to tell for sure...

Labels:
1951 Super Sports,
Car,
Crosley,
G. Vilardi,
Hot Shot,
HotShot,
Seneca Cup,
Watkins Glen
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Update: Another Zero Candy Crosley
Following up on my earlier post about the Zero Candy Crosley, indefatigable Crosley researcher Jolly MacLean sent over this ancient photocopy of a newsclipping showing the Zero Candy car... only this car is a Hotshot, not a Super Sports. That means there were at least two Crosley VCs dedicated to promoting this brand of candy bar.
Hard to tell much else because the image is so degraded. This car appears to have a few less googaws tacked on, although it does look like the rubber cockpit trim has been replaced with diamond tuck upholstery.
Jolly also says that 'Hollywood' was the name of the candy brand, but that the company was actually based in Centralia, Illinois... and if Jolly says it, I believe it.
Thanks Jolly!
Hard to tell much else because the image is so degraded. This car appears to have a few less googaws tacked on, although it does look like the rubber cockpit trim has been replaced with diamond tuck upholstery.
Jolly also says that 'Hollywood' was the name of the candy brand, but that the company was actually based in Centralia, Illinois... and if Jolly says it, I believe it.
Thanks Jolly!
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Zero Crosley Today!
Crosley Auto Club veterans Jim Bollman and Fred Syrdal quickly sent follow ups to my post about the Zero Candy Hot Shot. Apparently the car's current owner had been in touch with the club not too long ago and sent in pics of the car as it sits today.
Sunday, March 18, 2012
Speed Channel: When a Crosley Won Sebring
Just spotted this recent Speed Channel article about the winner of the very first Sebring race back in 1950. The story of Fritz Koster and Ralph DeShon's improbable victory in a stock Crosley Hot Shot is well known to most Crosley fanatics, but the rest of the world continues to catch up.
Labels:
Crosley,
Fritz Koster,
Hot Shot,
HotShot,
Racing,
Ralph DeShon,
Sebring 1950
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Crosley Postcards
I'm a total OCD collector/hoarder type, but I do my best NOT to collect everything with a picture of a Crosley car on it. I do pretty well when it comes to newer stuff, but I can't seem to stop buying old magazines with the occasional Crosley photo. I do manage to pass up most postcards for the simple reason that I can save scans that look almost as good as the originals. I thought I'd share a batch of stuff I've saved up... enjoy!
A Fine Car parked in front of a Superb Motor Hotel.
Sunday, December 18, 2011
NASA Super Sports, 1952
Just came across a neat shot of a JPL (Jet Propulsion Lap) Motorsports Club meet from 1952 on the NASA website. Most of these space pioneers had MGs, but there's a Crosley Super Sports and a Ford Model A (probably a hotrod) nestled in among the brit iron. Plenty of cool stuff in the background including a Willys wagon and a Hudson Hornet.
Here's a blowup of the Super Sports, or click on the main photo to see it bigger.
Here's a blowup of the Super Sports, or click on the main photo to see it bigger.
Labels:
1952,
Caltech,
Crosley Car,
Hillman,
Hot Shot,
HotShot,
JPL Motorsports,
MG,
NASA,
sports car,
sportscar
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Resto Debate: HotShot and Super Sports Floor Covers
There has been a vigorous debate raging over at the Crosley Gang Yahoo Group for the past couple of days, begun when 'Cutworm' posed a seemingly simple query:
"All my Hotshots either have or show signs of carpet being glued to the floorpan. I also have pics from Wauseon showing black carpets used. Is this right? What about the goofy cover over the trans-shifter assemblies?"
Determining what would be factory-correct is easy for almost any other auto of the period, but like so many other details of Crosley build history, there are no stats, no notes in the manuals or parts catalogs, and dang few factory photos. What were the floors of Crosley roadsters covered with when they came from the factory? I'd always believed that they came with rubber mats, but I realized that I didn't really know.
User L. E. Hardee weighed in, saying that he didn't believe any Crosley came from the factory with carpets. "Black rubber mats are what I have seen," he said, and then offered an interesting tidbit: "The drive shaft hump was just paint." Phil Rowland disagreed, noting that while rubber mats were correct, the drive shaft hump was definitely covered. Club prez Dave Anspach and Pete Berard came in on Hardee's side: uncovered hump.
Phil took it to the next level, actually digging out some documentation. Sure enough, Tom McCahill's 1949 Mechanix Illustrated review of the HotShot shows rubber covering the hump. Jim Bollman jumped in with even more detail:
"...no regularly built Crosley ever was delivered from the factory with carpeting. That is not to say someone might have pulled strings to get a one off or a dealer may have added carpeting to get a premium price.
"The June 1951 Mechanics Illustrated shows very clear pictures of the interior and it shows a pebbly surfaces rubber mat that is one piece over the hump and all. I have seen the same material in a very original HS (have 35 mm slides around somewhere showing it). I also managed to salvage a small piece of the material from a mat that was beyond saving, for my files, it has a fiber material attached to the back side to absorb noise and retain moisture to insure a rusted out floor."
Then Phil went even one better, adding personal side to the story. "I looked over a NEW '49 Hotshot in a Crosley dealer showroom and remember it well. It definitely had a rubber mat covering the tunnel. It surprises me that so many people believe otherwise. Must be they're too young to have been there back then. I have advantage being 80 years old." I did a little digging myself, and in a Crosley factory photo it sure looks like the hump is covered with a rubber mat.
Pretty amazing that the conversation started without a consensus and ended with that question definitively solved, details on the exact coverings used, and even including a photo of factory-correct interior from the period.
As if that wasn't enough, the conversation then shifted to a discussion of the material on the storage area behind the seats. 'Brawnybug' quickly responded with a description and then a photo from his very original Super Sports: "Here's a picture of the material covering the floor and fender wells.... It's gray and stipple textured, kind of a linear pattern."
"All my Hotshots either have or show signs of carpet being glued to the floorpan. I also have pics from Wauseon showing black carpets used. Is this right? What about the goofy cover over the trans-shifter assemblies?"
Determining what would be factory-correct is easy for almost any other auto of the period, but like so many other details of Crosley build history, there are no stats, no notes in the manuals or parts catalogs, and dang few factory photos. What were the floors of Crosley roadsters covered with when they came from the factory? I'd always believed that they came with rubber mats, but I realized that I didn't really know.
User L. E. Hardee weighed in, saying that he didn't believe any Crosley came from the factory with carpets. "Black rubber mats are what I have seen," he said, and then offered an interesting tidbit: "The drive shaft hump was just paint." Phil Rowland disagreed, noting that while rubber mats were correct, the drive shaft hump was definitely covered. Club prez Dave Anspach and Pete Berard came in on Hardee's side: uncovered hump.
Phil took it to the next level, actually digging out some documentation. Sure enough, Tom McCahill's 1949 Mechanix Illustrated review of the HotShot shows rubber covering the hump. Jim Bollman jumped in with even more detail:
"...no regularly built Crosley ever was delivered from the factory with carpeting. That is not to say someone might have pulled strings to get a one off or a dealer may have added carpeting to get a premium price.
"The June 1951 Mechanics Illustrated shows very clear pictures of the interior and it shows a pebbly surfaces rubber mat that is one piece over the hump and all. I have seen the same material in a very original HS (have 35 mm slides around somewhere showing it). I also managed to salvage a small piece of the material from a mat that was beyond saving, for my files, it has a fiber material attached to the back side to absorb noise and retain moisture to insure a rusted out floor."
Then Phil went even one better, adding personal side to the story. "I looked over a NEW '49 Hotshot in a Crosley dealer showroom and remember it well. It definitely had a rubber mat covering the tunnel. It surprises me that so many people believe otherwise. Must be they're too young to have been there back then. I have advantage being 80 years old." I did a little digging myself, and in a Crosley factory photo it sure looks like the hump is covered with a rubber mat.
Pretty amazing that the conversation started without a consensus and ended with that question definitively solved, details on the exact coverings used, and even including a photo of factory-correct interior from the period.
As if that wasn't enough, the conversation then shifted to a discussion of the material on the storage area behind the seats. 'Brawnybug' quickly responded with a description and then a photo from his very original Super Sports: "Here's a picture of the material covering the floor and fender wells.... It's gray and stipple textured, kind of a linear pattern."
And there we left it. This is the sort of thing that used to only happen among experts at the annual Crosley Club meets - now it's any time, and all out in a public forum, documented for everyone. This has become THE site for Crosley nuts, and it's really pretty amazing. The Crosley Gang rules!
Labels:
Crosley restoration,
Hot Shot,
HotShot,
interior,
Roadster,
Super Sports,
VC
Sunday, September 19, 2010
2010 West Coast Crosley Club Meet
The 2010 West Coast Crosley Club Meet has come and gone. The meet was last weekend (September 11-12) in Buellton, just north of Santa Barbara. We had about a dozen cars show up this year. That's a bit low for turnout, but the members more than made up for it with quality- the Crosleys on hand included some of the nicest cars in the country.
Heading that list was the latest issue from club treasurer Ronnie Bauman's garage: an immaculate 1947 coupe. Bauman has taken the Crosley resto-biz up at least a couple notches with a series of incredible builds. He always starts with solid cars (cars that most would consider 'finished'!) and then makes everything better than new. He'll spend more on paint and body than most people would have into the entire restoration, and the engines are always fully dressed with period speed equipment.
The end results are stunning. He's decided that this one had to go up for sale - this is the kind of car I could see going for ridiculous $ at Barrett Jackson.
Another car that was new to the meet was Charles Latty's two-tone CC. Latty lives in tiny Pacific Grove, California- also home to founding club member Mike Bainter.. meaning that Pacific Grove probably has more Crosleys per capita than any city in the state!
Not new to the meet, but still a fresh sight, Fred and Robin Dunner finished a beautiful resto of the Hot Shot they picked up at last year's meet. The car was nice, if a little tired, when they bought it- now it looks brand new. The long straight sides on the roadsters can be very wavy... but not on this one. They kept the clean, custom filled-seam look that the car has had for most of its life.
I contributed another rarely-seen, if not so minty, car to the gathering. I ended up buying a 'parts' Super Sport at the Sacramento meet a few years ago when Ed Scanlan made me an offer I couldn't refuse. I already had a '51 SS in boxes and I thought that having one to reference wouldn't be a bad idea since it'd been nearly a decade since I took the other one apart. truth is that I haven't done anything but move this thing around since I bought it, so I knew it needed to go. I also realized that I had spares of a lot of the parts that were missing when I bought it, so I added an engine, transmission, radiator, etc to make it an almost complete car. Apparently I priced it just right because it sold before I even got it off the trailer!
There were plenty of other great cars- Mike and Nancy Bainter brought their 4000 original mile '51 coupe - it looks, runs and drives pretty much like new! I remember when this car went up for sale about 6 years ago - I thought momentarily about buying it, but immediately realized that it had to go to someone with a better garage than me. Mike keeps this baby in a fully-climate controlled environment!
Mike and Robin Stoner brought their funkana-dominating Farm O Road, but had some low-power issues this time out. The collected Crosley brain trust tinkered with the timing, but no immediate solution appeared. Even engine guru Lee Osborn (in the passenger seat) was at a loss. Maybe it was just me, but it seemed like the F-o-R smoked even more than usual, so it may be time for new motor. I asked Mike about it and he doesn't remember where he got the motor that's been in it all these years- just that he dropped it in, fired it up, and off they went!
The West Coast Club has an active racing contingent, including Osborn. As usual, he brought his 1955 Shannon Special, the same car with which he's been eating Porsches and, lately, even a Jaguar C Type! I've been trying to catch one of Lee's races for 5 years and I've still never seen him on the track! I've already got my calendar checked for the Hmod reunion race on October 2, so i'll finally get to see this car in action!Kip Fjeld and Don Baldocchi will also be running at the Hmod reunion, Kip with the Miller special pictured here, Don with the '53 Nardi he's been tearing up tracks with for a couple of decades. Kip inherited this car from Hmod great Joe Puckett who got Kip into racing when he was still a teenager! Kip also scored the buy of the day, picking up an NOS steel stroker crank for probably less than a standard steel crank would go for!
And beyond the actual swap meet vendors, we had several folks show up with motors! Don Rausch showed up with a truckbed full of V Drive and generator motors (pictured above with Ronnie Bauman), and a young microcar collector from LA yanked ANOTHER V Drive motor out of his trunk a few minutes later! I'd never seen a V drive motor until Saturday and suddenly I'm looking at three of them!
Longtime club member Gary Loomer brought a matched Crofton and Cushman. he's trying to break up the set- the Datsun-powered Crofton is currently for sale. if you think a Datsun powered Crofton is unusual, that's nothing... Gary used to have the world's only racing Skorpion!
When the time came for the Funkana, Pat Askren let me be the co pilot in his very-correct CC sedan. We were fighting a wounded clutch but still managed to take second place!
over half the cars at the meet ran in the Funkana, and the post-competition photo underscores what a nice batch of cars were there.
Since the meet is so close to Santa Barbara, my sister and her family drove the 45 minutes up for a visit. I don't get to visit them all that often, so it was a real treat! best of all was the chance to meet my new grand nephew Cash! Here he is risking tetanus in my Super Sport.
After the meet I loaded the SS back up (the new owner wanted to pick it up from my house later) and I got a good round of heckling over my trailer. Yes, its a tiny, rickety POS, but I still managed to haul Frank Bell's wagon all over creation on it last year, and the SS parts car was very secure this year. Hey, what do you want from a $50 trailer?
They're just jealous.
It just so happens that the light is about perfect when we get together for the club Banquet. I'm usually the last one seated because I'm out shooting pics of all the cars at 'magic hour.' Above is the 4000 mile coupe.
This is Ardell Johnson's incredible CD wagon. That interior is original from the factory.. he just touched up the seats with vinyl paint about 20 years ago. We had a great conversation at dinner about legendary Crosley racer Harry Eyerly who was from Ardell's home town, Salem, Oregon.
Here's longtime club member Gary Cochrane's sweet convert. That custom wood job has been on the car since at least 1956!
The banquet was fun as always, even though we ended on a bit of melancholy note... David Brodsky founded the West Coast club over 25 years ago, and has been elected and reelected President ever since. He announced that he wanted to step down a couple of years ago and he made it official on Saturday. He and his wife Aileen have done an amazing job of keeping the club going - and fun - for more than a quarter of a century. I'm sure Rick Alexander and Ronnie Bauman will do a great job, but it will be strange to think of David not being at the head of the table. The Crosley Club is one of the only organizations I've ever belonged to, and is by far the one I'm most attached to. Much of that is thanks to David and Aileen, and I can't thank them enough for everything.
At dinner Shirley Bell reminded me that she had brought some of her late husband Frank's Crosley t shirts for me- we're about the same size and she thought I might like them. That was really sweet, and I'm honored to fly the flag - I honestly can't remember seeing Frank wearing a t shirt that didn't have a Crosley logo on it! After the dinner I had a beer with Rick Alexander and former TBT designer Mike Blackburn who offered me the spare bed in his hotel room. I had spent Friday night cuddling with the Crosley motor in the back of the pickup, so a bed and a shower sounded pretty darn good. And the next day he absolutely refused to let me chip in for the room.
As always: Crosley people; they're the best.
Labels:
1946,
1947,
1948,
1949,
1950,
1951,
1952,
automobile,
Crofton Bug,
Crosley,
Farm O Road,
For Sale,
Hmod,
Hot Shot,
HotShot,
Station Wagon,
Super Sport,
West Coast Crosley Club Meet
Monday, February 15, 2010
Random Photo Surprise
While waiting for Liv to finish the shopping I usually wander into the mag aisle at the supermarket. I flip through Hemmings and Hot Rod and see what's up in the world of cars I can't afford, but I was happily surprised to find Vintage Motorsport in stock last summer. The Javelin cover story didn't light my fire, but I did a double take when I flipped past this pic in the middle of the book...
Ernie McAfee was one of the original California hot rodders- he ran modified Fords at the dry lakes in the thirties and developed into quite a mechanical engineer. Either poor eyesight or his aviation industry work kept him out of the army in WWII- he was busy developing his speed technology while a lot of his buddies had to take a few years off. Post-war he got involved in road racing, engineering a modified MG that became his calling card for bigger and better (and faster) things. He and John Edgar kept tinkering with the car, including adding a cool custom body. (Sadly the car was wrecked for the racing scene in the 1959 film On the Beach -which you need to see if you haven't already!)
Until I saw that photo I hadn't realized that McAfee was ever affiliated with Crosleys. I knew that he raced and sold Siatas, (above he's ready to take off in one in the Carrera Panamericana) but he specifically ordered non-Crosley engined cars. He was getting the largest motors available in those tiny beasts, making what were in essence micro-Cobras now that I think of it. The article doesn't go into any detail about the HotShot other than that the photo was taken at Palm Springs in 1951. McAfee was at one time affiliated with Bill Devin (who got his start racing Crosleys) so that may have been the connection. In any case, it was a happy surprise to find- especially in the grocery store. The bummer part of the story is McAfee's death at age 37 in a nasty wreck at Pebble Beach in 1956.
VM keeps a backstock of most of their back issues- you can order a copy online if you're interested in getting the full story...



VM keeps a backstock of most of their back issues- you can order a copy online if you're interested in getting the full story...

Labels:
Crosley,
Ernie McAfee,
Hot Shot,
HotShot,
Siata,
sports car,
sportscar,
Vintage Motorsport
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