A Lesson Learned - Ford Galaxie Club of America
Transcription
A Lesson Learned - Ford Galaxie Club of America
A Lesson Learned by Mark Reynolds - Harrison, Arkansas Time date, Milky Way Galaxie, planet Earth, owners log May 15th, 2012 . . . I’m remembering back when I was living in another part of the world and took my first trip after purchasing a site unseen 1964 Galaxie that I found in Hemmings Motor News. We were staying near Colville, Washington, at the time and I had just recently become a member of our club. This was 1993. Not even thinking about having another member look at this car, I went ahead and sent the owner a down payment for the $6,000 sale price. I was convinced I was getting a good deal. I flew into Louisville, Kentucky, and the owner picked me up and drove me to where the car was stored. A pretty nice looking “Skylight” blue Galaxie was sitting in an enclosed garage. (I call it Smurf blue.) But being the amateur that I was at the time, I missed a lot that might have made me try to figure out another way home than I had planned—which was to drive this car about 2,800 miles back to Washington, AFTER going to Jefferson City, Tennessee; Falling Waters, West Virginia; and Branson, Missouri. Well, what the heck! I really DID like the car, and got to really know it that first two weeks of ownership. So I paid the guy the rest of the price and jumped in and took off! My first stop was Burger King because frankly, I was famished. I came out to take off and well, guess what? Problem #1 . . . I needed a BATTERY. The battery, even after driving 50 miles had not taken a charge. There was an auto parts store next to Burger King and they checked the system and said, yes, you need a battery. So in goes the new battery and off to Jefferson City, Tennessee, I go. When I get to Jefferson City I meet with an old friend at his house. The next day I head up to Falling Waters, West Virginia, where I had been asked to sing at a Gospel gathering. On the way, while passing through Mechanicsburg, Virginia, I decide to stop and have a loud exhaust noise checked out. Seems I had a rather nasty exhaust leak, so much so that it was giving me a headache while driving. What I found out next gave me more than a headache. It gave me the urge to . . . KILL! It seems my so called honest owner was a crook and a liar and he really couldn’t care less about stranding someone close to 3,000 miles from home. Oh, what a surprise! It turned out that the exhaust manifold donut was loose. Not worn, but loose. After he went ahead an tightened up the pipe to the manifold the noise went away and another one that it had been hiding became apparent. A low end ROD KNOCK. Oh goody, here I am 2,500 miles from my home in Washington with a car that has a rod knock. So I managed to make it to Falling Waters, and then back to Jefferson City, Tennessee. My good friend, Joe Kinney, came over and did an oil pressure test. WONDERFUL! 5 POUNDS at IDLE! And 12 pounds running pressure! GREAT! Lots of load going up mountains on the way home and I am supposed to drive to Colville like this? Well, another friend, Bill, who I am staying with says, “let’s drop the bottom end and fix what is wrong.” So for the next four days in his spare time and with me doing what I can when he wasn’t there, we dropped the lower end out and replaced the crank, main bearings, and rod bearings. Put all back together and varoom . . . 50 pounds of pressure. No smoke and now I can head home. I headed out and stopped in Branson for a conference and then drove one good days drive away for the night. The next day I drove straight through to Colville. The last couple hundred miles was Mountain Dew time! It kept me up and pretty alert to say the least. Along the way, I had to replace the drive shaft unions, what Galaxie do they call those things? Oh, yeah, universal joints. I lost a wheel cover and found out that the rear fenders were not steel but rather thick plastic where the wheel cover knocked off a chunk. When I get to Washington and start looking really close I find the trunk pan is really rotted out all over the place, the gas tank was leaking from a hole that was in the top, both inner quarter fenders were toast and both of the rocker panels were rusted out badly from the water that got trapped in them. Both of the outer fenders were solid bondo, at least a gallon would have been my estimate. I guess $6,000 wasn’t such a good deal after all! SURPRISE! So what else was wrong? How about a single speed wiper that was wired to a toggle switch? Why was it wired to a toggle switch? Because the wiring harness was TOAST! How about a carburetor that was shot? Boy was I getting to hate toast. Kept finding one thing after another that was TOAST! So I dragged out the dash board, had it repainted and rewired it. In the meanwhile I painted the heck out of the inside of the trunk area with silver POR 15 and at least kept it from getting any worse. I found a decent gas tank and cleaned and lined it. I made it through a couple of more winters and became the director of our club. That was sixteen years ago. We moved from Washington to Arkansas and dragged along the unrestored 1964. We had managed to squeeze it on a U-haul trailer to get it here. (It did scuff off some paint, by the way) I had left behind a nice 1964 parts car that I had sawed the back off of from the back doors to the bumper area. I guess it was about half the car. And I finally got LUCKY! Can you believe it? Well actually, it was the power of attraction for any of you who have ever read “The Secret.” Yes, I was becoming obsessed with trying to figure out a way to get that half of a ‘64 to Harrison, Arkansas, because I had found a body shop that was reasonable and the guy who owned it was a master at fixing body problems. When I told him what I had back in Washington he said that he could make my convertible look as good as new if I could get it to him. I mean that back half was from a desert and had NO rust at all. It was if it had been in a time capsule. BUT it was sitting 2,300+ miles away in my old back yard up in Colville. One day a friend calls, mentioning he has to go get a trailer load of belongings for another friend who lives in, GUESS WHERE? Would you have guessed COLVILLE, WASHINGTON? Yes, so what are the chances unless Rhonda Byrnes is correct, which by the way I believe she is. He actually went to where the back half was at, put a 2x10 in front of the trailer on the tongue and then strapped the rear of the ‘64 to the front of the trailer resting it on the tongue. I only had to give them $150 to help cover some gas and trailer rental to get it from Colville to here in Harrison. Seriously folks, what are the chances? Now for the good part. I took it to the body shop and for $1,500 he literally cut one big huge piece out of that back half and the same out of my convertible and swapped. If YOU can tell what he did, you are way better than anyone else who ever looked at it! So the next effort was to get it painted. Why didn’t I just let him paint it? Because he said he underbid the body work and so he wanted $4,000 to paint it. I said no way am I going to overpay for the paint because you underbid the body work. Next, I took it to a guy who used to work in body work but was now a postal worker full time. He did body work on the side and did the final finishing and painting for me. I talked to him about pulling the body from the frame and doing everything and thought 35 Gazette all I had done is talked about it. One day I go to his shop and see a Galaxie frame sitting out side. Hmmm . . . that’s strange, I wonder where that came from? WHAT? Here I go inside and there is the body sitting on a homemade contraption with rollers. I guess he thought I said take it off. Oh well, it is now! So I took the frame apart and had every piece of it powder-coated in the correct semi gloss black. Then I had the engine overhauled and found out the factory block was cracked. Fortunately, I had another block so we made it into a 390 wit a standard bore, Edelbrock heads and intake, Edelbrock carburetor, and a few other goodies and here it is all put back together and on the road. The only thing it really needs now is seat covers, carpet, and the elusive 1964 convertible sunvisor brackets. Oh, did I tell you? She is a “swingaway” steering column car with a column shifter, because that is what activates the swing away. With a blank plate on the console. I also had a new top put on which we did an article and video about 10 years or so ago. We drive her around a bit. We call her our “Land Yacht”. I mean she is about as big as one! We had a rocker arm assembly break on the way to the 2008 nationals in Branson last time and had to take it home, but this year we are going to make it! Some folks ask me, “well how much do you have in it?” To which I respond, “as much as was needed.” I really never kept track and really don’t think I want to know myself. I just know that she is beautiful, runs good, still has a Galaxie couple of bugs I need to take care of. She gets lots of thumbs up wherever we go. Did I forget anything? Oh, yes, there is a magnetic “sticker” on the console door. It says: WARNING, DRIVER ONLY CARRIES $20 WORTH OF AMMUNITION! Now if I can only get the seat covers and carpet done she will look like the $10 million dollar car she is. Our Galaxie. The only one like it on the planet. 1986 Ford Taurus blue, custom Cragar Tru Spoke wheels, Goodyear Tires, 390 engine backed up with an Art Caar C-6 transmission. Power steering, power brakes (well sort of—I plan on discs eventually), Edelbrock heads, Edelbrock Performer manifold with the matching carburetor. She’s not much off the line, thanks to the 360 truck timing chain (one of the bugs I need to fix) but she gets up and goes when she is hammered! Oh, and one other thing . . . SPINTECH mufflers. Those are the coolest mufflers you can buy. The faster you go, the quieter they get. I mean who NEEDS a headache? I put her in the centerfold because I think she deserves it. Sorry about all the ‘64 stuff lately, but it seems like everyone else forgot to send some stuff in. I’m using what I get and in this case I figure after having a car in the magazine two other times in 16 years that maybe she deserves her place in Galaxie history. And who knows? Maybe it will give me some incentive to finish the Rum Runner! 36 ~Mark Reynolds Gazette