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!
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.