Thursday, April 2, 2026

Dellow Automobiles



 Dellow was a niche automobile company near Birmingham, England, in business between 1950 and 1957. The ads above show the final model, all the images I see are of the earlier vertical grill and separate fenders-type bodies. The cars were originally based on a Austin Seven chassis and were intended as a competitive trials car or sporty little road car. The Austin Seven-based cars were not strong enough for the rough world of trials and there was soon a new chassis with 1200 cc Ford engine and Ford axles, each car produced was different than the one before as improvements were incorporated.

More here

Hagerty



Mark V



Chisels and Chipping

Shop Theory, Henry Ford Trade School, McGraw Hill, 1943

 
Oh yeah, this will definitely be on the test.

Metropolitan police


 Dibs on the Harley!

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Radical Software #2



  Seems like a hippie new media project. At the time, the term radical software referred to the content of information rather than to a computer program. The cover image was computer-generated, a novelty at the time. 
  The magazine was an outgrowth of the Raindance Corporation in New York during the summer of 1969. Their intention was to found an alternative media think tank; a source of ideas, publications, videotapes and energy providing a theoretical basis for implementing communication tools in the project of social change. The magazine struggled along to number 6 as the founders were seeing the production was a distraction from their overall mission of the Raindance Corporation. 

The whole story here.

Tatra V8

  A rather unique Czech car built from 1936 to 1950, with a break for WW2.  The rear mounted 3 litre air-cooled V8 could push the car to nearly 160 kph.  3056 units were made.



 

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Renovation solutions

 Here's a hard one. A heritage house comes up for sale and you want it. Price is right but it's rough, nothing is near code... 2nd floor is a bit spongy, etc etc.. and you really don't like the seven foot ceilings. Hmmm So you bite the bullet... and realize its going to need a roof... and floor joists etc. Eight foot ceiling height requires raising the roof.  This of course is going to affect the overall aethetic of the building. you do it.

So, was this a successful solution?




Sidecar Sunday


No, that's not a Zeppelin.  When gasoline got scarce during both world wars, there was a lot of development on wood and coal gas as fuel. These vehicles required a large bag for the gas, previous post here.
 This image is a colorized version of this photo and I bet those smiling passengers are paid actors.                  Thanks, André!

Saturday, March 28, 2026

Armstrong fork, 1955


This fork was presented as an alternative to telescopic or Earles forks as manufacturers moved away from girders. Honda stepthroughs used a variation of this design slightly later.