A Perfect Day For a Tour
The last several weeks have been very busy at work and I have had little
time for working on projects (or posts to this list). I spent this past
Saturday at the shop and was on the verge of doing the same again Sunday when
the lure of a short jaunt in the '29 overcame good sense. The Orange County
Model T Club was having a local tour with a late A.M. start and the weather
promised to be just the sort that the Chamber of Commerce might brag about;
sunny with a light sea breeze to keep away the heat. The Hudson had not been
run in a month and the rockers were no doubt dry, but I had decided to go,
lack of prep or no.
For those of you unfamiliar with the F head setup, the rockers have oil
cups with felt wicks to drip oil on the Hyatt bearings. This was a very
common setup in the early days of overheads and it works very well. I like to
oil them up the night before a tour if it has been longer than a week between
runs.
I oiled them up fired the motor and waited for it to warm while I filled
the radiator with water. It always seems to loose a quart or two on tour,
probably from poor water pump packings that never seem to tighten up as they
should. This '29 has the manifold heat assembly disconnected, and the car is
an undrivable pig until it is completely warm, so I always allow ten minutes
or so to make sure this is done.
The T Club is a fun group, and they always seem quite happy to have the
Hudson along on tour. The tour speeds are typically 30 - 40 mph and the
Hudson is at it's ease at these speeds. Today the tour went from northern
Orange County into Southern L.A. County to a municipal park on an old
historic rancho that has some of the old buildings and a restored steam
locomotive to inspect.
When I was Tour Chairman of our local C.I.C. Chapter, I tried a few tours
out with mixed results. Some of us just wanted to "get there" and then sit,
missing out on the biggest portion of the fun. There is something magical
about being part of a column of antique cars!
For those whose cars are still projects, I can tell you that the view
from the Hudson driver's seat is wonderful. The big long hood tapers toward
the radiator, the fenders swell gracefully towards the sides of the car and
the back of the headlights mirror the sky and the paint colors like an ever
changing Picasso painting. I have a '28 style Hudson Man mascot mounted on a
faceted '29 style cap (cast as one unit) above it all leading the way
forward. Looking past the Hudson man is a Model T, or rather several of them
nattering away ahead of me and certainly a very common sight when the '29 was
new. Some of the roads that we traveled on were through older parts of town,
and with squinted eyes and a little imagination it is possible to go back in
time a bit. Back when the Hudson was new, 30 mph was a good speed and gas
cost a nickel a gallon. Heady stuff for a lazy Sunday afternoon.
This Hudson needs motor work and does not drive as it should, a situation
I hope to address after I finish the Coupe, but for now it is fine at Model T
speeds on a sunny breezy SoCal day. For a time, the pressure of business is
held in abeyance and life is sweet.
Paul O'Neil, Hudson29@aol.com
NEW email list for Hudson Super Six Cars, 1916-1929!
http://www.onelist.com/subscribe/HudsonSuperSix16-29
1926 Hudson Anderson Bodied Coupe
1926 Hudson Parts Car "The Grapes Of Wrath"
1928 Hudson Roadster Project
1929 Hudson Town Sedan
1939 Cadillac Coupe (How'd that get in there?)
Fullerton, California USA
AEROMARK - Need Rubber Stamps or Signs? See:
http://www.aeromark.net
time for working on projects (or posts to this list). I spent this past
Saturday at the shop and was on the verge of doing the same again Sunday when
the lure of a short jaunt in the '29 overcame good sense. The Orange County
Model T Club was having a local tour with a late A.M. start and the weather
promised to be just the sort that the Chamber of Commerce might brag about;
sunny with a light sea breeze to keep away the heat. The Hudson had not been
run in a month and the rockers were no doubt dry, but I had decided to go,
lack of prep or no.
For those of you unfamiliar with the F head setup, the rockers have oil
cups with felt wicks to drip oil on the Hyatt bearings. This was a very
common setup in the early days of overheads and it works very well. I like to
oil them up the night before a tour if it has been longer than a week between
runs.
I oiled them up fired the motor and waited for it to warm while I filled
the radiator with water. It always seems to loose a quart or two on tour,
probably from poor water pump packings that never seem to tighten up as they
should. This '29 has the manifold heat assembly disconnected, and the car is
an undrivable pig until it is completely warm, so I always allow ten minutes
or so to make sure this is done.
The T Club is a fun group, and they always seem quite happy to have the
Hudson along on tour. The tour speeds are typically 30 - 40 mph and the
Hudson is at it's ease at these speeds. Today the tour went from northern
Orange County into Southern L.A. County to a municipal park on an old
historic rancho that has some of the old buildings and a restored steam
locomotive to inspect.
When I was Tour Chairman of our local C.I.C. Chapter, I tried a few tours
out with mixed results. Some of us just wanted to "get there" and then sit,
missing out on the biggest portion of the fun. There is something magical
about being part of a column of antique cars!
For those whose cars are still projects, I can tell you that the view
from the Hudson driver's seat is wonderful. The big long hood tapers toward
the radiator, the fenders swell gracefully towards the sides of the car and
the back of the headlights mirror the sky and the paint colors like an ever
changing Picasso painting. I have a '28 style Hudson Man mascot mounted on a
faceted '29 style cap (cast as one unit) above it all leading the way
forward. Looking past the Hudson man is a Model T, or rather several of them
nattering away ahead of me and certainly a very common sight when the '29 was
new. Some of the roads that we traveled on were through older parts of town,
and with squinted eyes and a little imagination it is possible to go back in
time a bit. Back when the Hudson was new, 30 mph was a good speed and gas
cost a nickel a gallon. Heady stuff for a lazy Sunday afternoon.
This Hudson needs motor work and does not drive as it should, a situation
I hope to address after I finish the Coupe, but for now it is fine at Model T
speeds on a sunny breezy SoCal day. For a time, the pressure of business is
held in abeyance and life is sweet.
Paul O'Neil, Hudson29@aol.com
NEW email list for Hudson Super Six Cars, 1916-1929!
http://www.onelist.com/subscribe/HudsonSuperSix16-29
1926 Hudson Anderson Bodied Coupe
1926 Hudson Parts Car "The Grapes Of Wrath"
1928 Hudson Roadster Project
1929 Hudson Town Sedan
1939 Cadillac Coupe (How'd that get in there?)
Fullerton, California USA
AEROMARK - Need Rubber Stamps or Signs? See:
http://www.aeromark.net
0
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