In the May 2010 Hot Rod, the Editor, Doug Glad, wrote this awesome tribute... enjoy!
The first time I spotted a nomadic mechanic was during my brief tenure at Loper Service Center, a fast food-style carb and intake installation center in Pheonix. He appeared one day dressed in linen-truck work blues with battered hands showing the burns and cuts of a guy who could spin a wrench. For most of the morning, he stood in the corner and smoked, and observed, and smoked. He was like a gunslinger, his movements slow and easy, waiting for your move.
His box appeared in the afternoon on the back of a chromed and flamed flatbed truck that looked like it could handle a car show or 50-car pileup with aplomb. The box was the big Snap-on roll cab, spotless, with a bulk section and 54-inch workstation riser in classic red. Its mass dwarfed all other boxes in the shop, including that of the boss, as a group of tatted mercenaries eased off the bedwith chains like a captured animal. It carried enough tools to work the heavy line, the tune-up bays, and maybe even the machine shop. He took every job and made twice as much cash as we did. A month later, he was gone.
These are my people. And if you've spent enough time under hoods and in the engine room and really know what you are doing, you become recognizeable as a clan member in any environment. I'm not talking about tattooed and faux-speed-shop Dickies -wearing guys; I'm talking about night-shift heavy liners with maybe some diesel truck experience and a serious handbuildt monster in the garage back home. They're easy to spot at the racetrack- it's tougher at the car show or cruise night. They show up later, and their cars make the horsepower sound that isn't all cam and Flowmasters. They can weld the top side of a muffler upside down with a smoke dangling out of their mouths, eat a sandwich with a black hand without tasting grease, and know that nut is 9/16 with a glance.
Along with engineering and manufacturing, this thing we do is supported by the professional, bread-and-butter mechanic; the serious veteran from aircraft, freight train, or shipyard work; the guy in the pit working the wrenches. The pit snipes with air-powered grease guns waiting to get a swat at your brand new boots, the heavyweight fromt he transmission bay shambling out of the back like the recently exhumed when the roach coach arrives, and the perfectionist front-line tune-up guy have all earned their places. If they choose to, they can help the clean-hands guy on the side of the road with his flat-tired import, or not, and they'll run across four lanes of traffic to help a girl in trouble.
These guys are the warriors behind the lines who do the jobs to keep the trucks, heavy gear, and maybe even your commuter running so you don't have to. Even if you aren't from the clan of the wrench, appreciate what they do every day to keep this industry going. They are the backbone, and they deserve your respect.
Give that man a hand, bravo! Email him at CarCraft@CarCraft.com and let him know how much you enjoy that tribute!
Wednesday, June 1, 2011
Blog Archive
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2011
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June
- The motorcycle gods invoked karma on this Honda. L...
- Why doesn't El Cajon have a "Jimmie Johnson Street"?
- NYPD detectives parking illegally, and getting towed!
- Some unusual vehicles I came across this afternoon
- Speedtrap on the 805 southbound at the south end o...
- 1937 Hudson Terraplane, without the body, still re...
- Hemi Bee, so what if it ididn't come from the fact...
- that cool Corvette I photographed last year at El ...
- On a scale of one to ten (flikr pool)
- Mickey Thompson Dec 7th 1928 Mar 16th 1988
- I'm still trying to get a photo of this hood ornam...
- the military discount that only worked if you were...
- Black and white and cool all over
- Been a long time since I posted a train
- San Diego Roadster Club entries at El Mirage
- In a matter of months, these 3 subscription cards ...
- Looks like El Mirage in 1948, the photos weren't l...
- Great advertising photo of the optional record pla...
- 1904 New York New York electric tour busses
- Power Tour 2004's all first gen Camaro photo shoot...
- Annual Paddy Ride at Dublin Mob on Federal in San ...
- probably the oldest vehicle at the races, a 1923 M...
- 1930 International Harvester (model SA cab) truck ...
- Nice
- That truck that I photographed last year at El Mir...
- back to 1948 and El Mirage! I'm excited as hell to...
- The race cars have returned! They'll be racing on ...
- 1929 Durant renting out for weddings in LaJolla
- The famous Bean Bandits were at El Mirage with a b...
- 1904 Cadillac Model B runabout with cool rear tire...
- The green Hornet... cool use of the term for a rac...
- SCCA meetings at Qulacomm bring out a variety of s...
- Modern version of the classic London taxi... in La...
- Marlene Dietrich was a tough one... she brought a ...
- Some weedburner exhaust outlets would look great o...
- The Rollaway Motor Company made the Lokwel "fat ma...
- Power to weight ratio of a Z06 vettte, at half the...
- abandoned
- Bizarre variety of photos from 5window tumbler, a ...
- Some people have great Flikr sets, but don't post ...
- Hitchcock drove a 300sl convertible ... huh
- The Ford Mainline I photographed at El Mirage last...
- Speedometer I've never come across before, a winds...
- Troy Brumbalow's Franken'cuda, design by Pfaff Design
- fantastic "made" fire pits at El Mirage... awesome...
- Hood ornament identification guide
- The first "National" rental car company rented car...
- A museum exhibit you won't want to miss if you're ...
- Bean Bandits 57 Chev station wagon
- 1906 Altantic City boardwalk stollers, for kids vs...
- The Wild 57 of Ken and Darlene Wallace
- Pal Joey's benefit car show in Allied Gardens
- the Swamp Rat edition of the Dodge Ram, well, mayb...
- A Crosley on the lake, El Mirage, May 15 2010
- CITY car club did something at the Xman's Cruise t...
- Spin off car manufacturer companies that failed to...
- 1966 Chrysler Imperial, just like the one "The Old...
- Von Dutch still lives!
- The SD Fire Dept training area has this cool old f...
- Spitzler's Auto Supply with curbside gas pumps
- What is so hard to understand about the " No Parki...
- Cool steering wheel centers that grabbed my attent...
- The tv show Top Gear had a great advertising gimmi...
- Anyone seen a bicyclist pushed by a minicycle with...
- Jascrushinator .. .. odd but interesting
- JC Penny used to sell drag racing slicks
- There were 2 of the 1950 Taylor Tot stollers at th...
- Very cool redesigning of vehicles as if they are a...
- You won't see many '64-'66 Imperials in So cal for...
- Remembering veterans (I'm a 10 year Navy submarine...
- Cool custom Pontiac from Muldoon's Kustoms
- These must be fun for anyone who's snowbound
- the '56 Buick, about 3600 to rechrome... wow
- a pair of great photos, from Philscarblog
- Mike Herman from H&H Flatheads, and new owner of N...
- Lowrider old Mopars from the 30's and 40's at the ...
- Sleeping beauty blog posted a couple incredibly lo...
- Love those fantastic painted intake butterfly valv...
- two good ideas I'd like to see in the world of str...
- Not doing it right, not even close
- National City Train Depot's retired electric train...
- backstreetwheels.blogspot.com Richard (Yo! Eastsid...
- Pink custom El Camino
- A variety from Tumblers
- 1949 Hudson Brougham
- Windshield repair, quite remarkable results!
- Grills from a Ford COE, and 2 Pontiacs, at Goodguy...
- the Beatles in 1963
- GMC Universalle
- GM in San Paulo, early 1920's perhaps
- the Olympian Hiawatha railroad observation cars
- Here is a quick sample of what you'll see in the p...
- The person in the gold colored Honda fled the scen...
- Another abandoned car collection! This time found ...
- Closetworld has invaded the camping world, and the...
- Airstream, the USS Hornet, and NASA , Quite a comb...
- Check your rental car for bumper scratches before ...
- A couple photos of Watson's work
- Cool pair of small block Mopars at the Temecula Ro...
- Somethings just shouldn't be done to vehicles
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June