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Legendary Finds - Hot Rods, Custom Cars, Race Cars, Sports Cars, Classic Cars Legendary Finds 1936 Ford Roadster – Early Style Custom for sale

1936 Ford Custom, with tons of history and tastefully restored. My buddy Eddie Martinez restored the Carson top and It is a thing of Beauty !! He is a genius with Upolstery and Interiors.
Bottom Liine this car is off the Hook and if I did not already ahve my 36 I would snap this thing up Cuzz it is WICKED cool.

 1936 Ford Roadster – Early Style Custom for sale

Continue reading: 1936 Ford Roadster – Early Style Custom for sale

Legendary Finds - Hot Rods, Custom Cars, Race Cars, Sports Cars, Classic Cars Legendary Finds 1936 Ford Roadster – Early Style Custom for sale

- Hot Rods, Custom Cars, Race Cars, Sports Cars, Classic Cars 1929 Ford Model A roadster for sale

Flathead Ford 1929 Roadster for sale with 32 rails and Banjo Steering

gclym9aj 1929 Ford Model A roadster for sale

Find this nice 1929 Ford Roadster for sale on Ebay

Seller states:

Presented for sale is the Retro Rides by Rich personal hot rod. It is the second car built by me and it’s time to find a new home for it.

Retro Rides by Rich creations have been featured and photographed in numerous magazine features and has won major national awards for building many striking hot rods such as the Raker Roadster, Holy Heck, Martini Time, The Killer Bee and others. . If you would like to see more RRbR work visit our web site.  As stated earlier, this is my personal car, I really hate to sell it, but I truly enjoy building and it’s time to get busy building another car for myself.

Next to a ’32 Ford, a 1929 Ford roadster on a 1932 Ford frame with a Ford flathead engine is the quintessential American hot rod.   This little black roadster, which is a driver, is comprised of many original Ford parts. The car is ALL steel. The 1929 body, which looked like it was rodded back in the day, was found in a ditch on a farm in rural North Carolina. The real 1932 chassis rails, K member and front cross member was bought from a friend who found it in northern Pennsylvania and was, at one time, a drag racing chassis that had been abandoned behind a garage. The grill and grill shell are genuine 1932 Ford as well. The windshield frame has been chopped  3 1/4 inches and the stanchions have been raked to give it a more streamlined look. The trunk lid has 110 louvers. Paint is Dupont base coat/clear coat.  Suspension and wheels are red powder coat.

The chassis, is fully boxed and has split front wishbones, a Super Bell dropped I beam axle with 1940 Ford spindles and Posies Super Slide spring. The rear end, which I seem to remember as a 1948 rear,  has 3:54 gears and is suspended by a 1948 spring. The rear cross member is triangulated round tubing and helps give the car its unique stance.  Brakes in all four corners are 40 and 48 Ford drums.  Front tires are Goodrich  5.50 x 16  and rear are 7.00 x 16. The steering box is from a 1940 Ford and the banjo steering wheel is ’39. The engine is a 1941 and runs like a champ. It is basically stock but has Offenhauser cylinder heads and intake manifold. Transmission is a 1939 Ford top loader and the radiator is a US radiator brass and copper unit and keeps the car cool.  The headers have a baffles to quite the car a bit, while still proclaiming to the world that this is a healthy flathead!  Both the headers and the intake manifold are  HPC coated.  The interior, new in March 2011, features a pair of aluminum aircraft seats with snap in upholstery, done a beige color vinyl. The dash board is a Brookville roadster ’32 ford item and features Stewart Warner instruments. The interior also has black rubber mat instead of carpet which gives the car a more simple and utilitarian look. The interior is by Bob Hill Auto Upholstery. Many new parts have been installed in the car in the last couple of months including; new fuel pump, new battery, newly rebuilt generator, new ignition coil, new rebuilt and re-plated Holley 94 carbs, new voltage regulator and new speedometer cable and new fuel sending unit.  The car was rebuilt 4 years ago and since then has only 460 miles on the odometer. The interior was put in March 2011. The car has some wear, but I’ve been accused of being too critical, but I can say with confidence that you’ll be very happy with this car and it will certainly be a great addition to your collection and you’ll enjoy every mile you log on it.  Car was recently shot for a prominent magazine, but I don’t know when it’s scheduled to appear.

 

- Hot Rods, Custom Cars, Race Cars, Sports Cars, Classic Cars 1929 Ford Model A roadster for sale

- Hot Rods, Custom Cars, Race Cars, Sports Cars, Classic Cars 1929 Ford Hot Rod Traditional Hot Rod Survivor built in 1949 for sale

I love this car saw it last year at the GNRS, really cool and the story with it is also very cool.
Brought to you by SAKOWSKI MOTORS, which is a good dealer for hotrods, plus they are cool guys.

29roadster49 1 1929 Ford Hot Rod Traditional Hot Rod Survivor built in 1949 for sale

Find the 1929 Ford Roadster for sale on Ebay

Seller states:

1929 Roadster – Built 1949 – original Pasadena Roadster Club car

This is a chance to own a real piece of Californian and American Hot Rod History.

Below is a history from the previous owner that he has put together over the years. This is a great running driver, but would also be great for a collector of American cars and History. A great museum piece, or drive it like it was intended! A great hot rod and an important piece of hot rod and American Car History. How often is there a chance to own an original hot rod from one of the first and most respected Roadster Clubs? Owned and built by one of it’s founding members? The real deal.

Original 1929 roadster hot rod fabricated in 1949. There is also an account of it being started in 1946, but it is hard to say for sure. It was started with a sport coupe body and customized to a roadster, intent was to

have more room inside as the sport coupe doors are longer so there is more leg room. The body is channeled over a Z’d

29 frame in the front and rear, all parts are original FORD. The car was built by Paul Vander Wetering in 1949 in Los Angeles, California

Paul built the car after WWII with the intent of going to The Bonneville Salt Flats. He was in the Navy, and was involved in

the Bikina Nuclear Testing, which eventually took his life from radiation exposure. Paul was one of the founding

members of the original PASADENA ROADSTER CLUB. His car was one of the original six cars that started the famous club,

and their RELIABILITY RUNS in the late 1940s.

The car had a major portion of the work done by TRI CITY AUTO in downtown LOS ANGELES. Many features of the car

were ahead of its time including the custom track radiator shell, custom grill, seamless 1940 Ford dash,

rolled rear pan and side pans, and a seamless channel modification makes this a unique vehicle. All body modifications

were done with the method of the day, which was lead. The rags were left in the trunk lid as a piece of historical interest for dissipating heat

in the process of smoothing out body needs. The car sat for almost 40 years after his death, not driven for almost forty plus years after his

death. The original design drawings exist and will come with the car. This car is a survivor of historical significance as being one of the original

six PASADENA ROADSTER CLUB cars, having been on the first few reliability runs of the club and others. To our knowledge, this is the only

intact roadster from the club in existence. The car was built with no windshield and I have kept that style. What ever is chrome on the car

now is what was originally chromed with no extra or additional chrome plating done. It has a custom fuel tank in trunk under the floor, the gas

gauge does not work only because it has not been calibrated for 6 volt. The speedometer works.

The 40 ford instrument gauges have not been hooked up. The others do work and are the original period Auburn gauges.

In the spirit of keeping this as original as possible I chose not to change the original paint from the 50s. There has just been a small amount of paintwork done.

Some of the special equipment on the car as listed below:

Original “OKIE ADAMS” front axle

32 Wishbone

1940 ford hydralulic brakes front and rear

1939 ford transmission with a closed drive

1949 ford rear end

1939 kelsey hayes wheels original willys steering box

original custom made to car front and rear chromed Nerf bar bumpers

original 29 Ford bobbed rear fenders

1940 classic Hudson tail lights

original Arrow lights

original chromed Dodge shock mounts

original custom made track nose (made from a 35 Dodge radiator shell) and grill

original custom made hood top and sides, sides having custom louvers

1940 custom installation of a Ford dash and delux steering wheel

original Auburn style 2 3/8″ gauges

original 32 ford radiator tanks with four core

1940 Ford fully sleeved .020 over

original Isky 3/4 cam with original johnson lifters

original Weiand “S” heads

original Weiand 2X2 manifold with Stromberg 97 carburation

new ball bearing water pumps

original to car lakes style headers

original 6 volt system with a Optima gel cell battery

Firestone 450- front tyres and 700 rear tyres

1939 Mercury pedal system

late 40s aircraft bucket seats

We have the correct clear title.

The real deal.

- Hot Rods, Custom Cars, Race Cars, Sports Cars, Classic Cars 1929 Ford Hot Rod Traditional Hot Rod Survivor built in 1949 for sale

- Hot Rods, Custom Cars, Race Cars, Sports Cars, Classic Cars 1953 Tatum Wayne GMC Special for sale

Amazing race Special built in 1953 and raced at Golden Gate Park and Pebble Beach.
A real deal hot rod made road racer. I really am tempted to pick this one up and add it to the garage.

Find the 1953 Tatum Special for sale at Fantasy Junction

Seller states:

1953 Tatum Wayne GMC Special
s/n DRF54952
White with Blue Stripe

In 1952, Check Tatum attended a Sports Car Race in his home town of Stockton, California. That evening in the bar of the local hotel, Chuck and three of his friends, Sam Weiss, Phil Hill and Doug Trotter, were discussing the merits of the cars they saw racing earlier that day and it was noted that the front running cars were “foreign” cars imported from Europe. At one point in this discussion, Chuck made a statement to the effect that he could probably build a car out of American parts that would beat all of that “foreign” stuff. He considered the Allard, which was one of the fastest cars at the races, to be nothing but a big American hot rod in English disguise. The next day, Chuck discussed with Doug Trotter some of the ideas he had on how to build a winning all American road race car. Chuck was young and energetic but had several years of experience with both building and driving stock cars, sprint cars and track roadsters and his ideas for a road race car incorporated features from these types of cars.

Over the winter of 1952-53, construction on the car was started in the shop behind Chuck Tatum’s house. A light but very rigid frame was assembled using thin wall 2 inch diameter seamless tubing. Front suspension was taken from a ’32 Ford, spindles were ’39 Ford. Steering was ’40 Ford with a custom extra long pitman arm to “sharpen the steering”. The rear suspension was ’41 Ford pick-up initially with leaf springs. During the construction, Chuck designed a coil spring suspension with bars to locate the position of the rear axle. For an engine, Chuck considered several options before choosing the six cylinder 270 cubic inch GMC Truck engine. This engine was very strong and when bored out would result in a displacement of 302 cubic inches. The GMC engine was 25 pounds lighter and more reliable than a Ford “Flat Head” V-8, and 200-300 pounds lighter than a Cadillac, or Chrysler engine. GMC engines were being used in sprint cars and some “Speed Equipment” was available. A Mallory distributor was used for the ignition and Chuck designed a special intake manifold to mount three side draft Carter carburetors from a 1953 Corvette. The transmission was from a Lincoln Zephyr, and the brakes were Kinmont “disc” brakes. Both the transmission and brakes proved to be less than satisfactory and were later changed.

The finished chassis was taken to Jack Hagemann of San Leandro, California, for the construction of the aluminum body work. Jack usually designed the bodies he built and didn’t care much for the shape of this body, which was designed by Chuck Tatum’s friend Arden Farey, but he agreed to take on the job anyway. When jack was finished with a body, he would attach a small badge with the inscription “Designed by & Built by Jack Hagemann”. For the Tatum, he made a special badge which only read “Built by Jack Hagemann”. The original design incorporated the use of “cycle” type fenders but after several failures of the attaching brackets which resulted in the fenders falling off and being run over, the car was returned to jack Hagemann for the construction and installation of more conventional fenders.

The “Tatum” was finished in the spring of 1953 and was entered in its first race at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, California. At the time, the Sports Car Club of America was strictly an amateur organization and didn’t allow “professional” drivers. Chuck Tatum had been driving sprint cars professionally and didn’t qualify as an “amateur”, so he asked his friend Chuck Manning to drive the “Tatum Special” in its first race. The car was an immediate success with Chuck Manning driving the car to a First Place finish. The car went on to finish First at Madera, Stockton, and Santa Barbara in the 1953 season.

The opportunity that Chuck Tatum had to drive as an amateur was at a race in his home town of Stockton. He won the race after starting in 33rd position with Cadillac powered Allard’s in the front rows. At the races that day, a very proper English lady was examining the cars in the pits. While she was looking at the open engine compartment of the Tatum, she inquired “I say, is this that beastly car with a lorry engine in it?” After that, the pit crew referred to the “Tatum Special” as “The Beast”.

During the three years that Chuck raced the car, he competed at most of the major races on the west coast such as Pebble Beach, Palm Springs, Torre Pines, Willow Springs, March Field, Buchanan Field, Golden Gate Park, Madera, Stockton, and Santa Barbara.

With his success in 1953, Chuck Tatum was able to secure sponsorship for an engine from Wayne Engineering, manufacturers of speed equipment for six cylinder Chevrolet and GMC engines. For the 1954 season, Wayne sent Chuck a new GMC engine fitted with their famous Wayne 12-Port Cross Flow cylinder head. The ignition system was still Mallory, but the carburetion was changed to three Zenith 2-throat side draft carburetors from a GMC fire truck. The new engine produced considerably more power than the 1953 engine that used a modified truck cylinder head. Chuck took the car to the Bonneville Salt Flats where he drove the car to a top speed of 157 mph. At the end of the 1954 season, the Wayne Engine was sent back to the Wayne Factory for overhaul. When the engine was returned to Chuck in early 1955, the Zenith carburetors had been replaced with Weber Side Draft carburetors. During the 1955 season, while the car was being worked on in a Palo Alto garage, the Wayne engine was stolen and never recovered. Chuck finished the rest of the ’55 season with a borrowed Ford “Flat Head” V-8 engine.

Hot Rod Magazine chose the “Tatum Special” for its feature car for the October 1953 issue. Hot Rod Magazine usually featured Hot Rods, Drag Race cars, or cars that ran on the dry lakes and usually didn’t get involved with Sports Car Racing. The Tatum however was a different type of car. It was a hot rod that just happened to race in Sports Car events. The “Tatum Special” was featured on the cover of the magazine with a four page article inside.

At the Santa Barbara Road Races in 1953, several movie people from Hollywood were in attendance and were looking for some unique sports cars to use in an upcoming production. They wanted to rent the Tatum but Chuck said the only way they could use the car is if he did the driving. Chuck was made a member of the Screen Actors Guild and drove the car in the movie “Johnny Dark” staring Tony Curtis and Piper Laurie. Chuck went on to do more work in the movie industry.

In 1954, Chuck entered the “Tatum Special” in the National Roadster Show at Oakland, California. The car was quite a hit at the shop and won First Place for Best Sports Car.

In 1956, Chuck went to work for a Stockton car dealer as a manager of his sports car operation. His boss was easy to work for but had one hard and fast rule, “his managers could not compete in car racing”. Chuck could no longer race so the “Tatum” was put up for sale. In the next few years, several different engines were installed in the car by several different owners. As Chuck said, “Some of the owners didn’t treat the car with much respect”. After a while, Chuck lost track of the car and assumed it had been scrapped.

In the mid 1980’s, acting on a tip from a friend of his son Chuck Jr., Chuck tracked down the remains of the “Tatum Special” in a small junk yard just a few miles from his Stockton home. The engine and transmission were missing along with a lot of small pieces, but most of the original body work was still there as well as the frame, suspension, and dash. The “Tatum Special” was purchased and with the help of Chuck Jr. and his other son Blake, the car was restored, prepared for competition, and entered in vintage race events. When Chuck restored the car, he used a GMC engine with a production truck cylinder head as was originally used in 1953. Chuck wanted to use a Wayne Engine but very few of the special Wayne 12-port cylinder heads for the GMC engines were manufactured and Wayne engine components are very hard to find.

In 1966 the “Tatum Special” was purchased by Chris Wickersham of Pasadena, California. Chris has a small collection of vintage race cars and had admired the Tatum for several years prior to purchasing it. The car was then restored to the configuration that it was raced in 1955 with much attention paid to details. Chris, like Chuck Tatum, felt that the car should be fitted with a Wayne engine so, after six years of effort and several setbacks, in the spring of 2002 a Wayne engine was finally completed and installed in the Tatum. During the early years, Chuck Tatum painted the car several different colors, the last of which was white with a blue stripe. The car was refinished using this color combination and on the driver’s side you will even find a small badge with the words inscribed “Built by Jack Hagemann”.

Included with the Tatum Special are the following:

• Current Log Books

• Tatum “history” book – Includes copies of original pictures of construction, early racing, events, newspaper and magazine articles, printed material, magazines and misc. materials pertaining to the original and current history of the Tatum Special.

• Personal File – Personal notes and information relating to the building of the GMC/Wayne engine, chassis restoration, brake development, rear axle re-construction using modern day “Push-In” axles and “locker” type differential, etc.

• Spare Parts Inventory

The following is just a portion of the spare parts that are included with the sale of the Tatum Special:

• Extra set of wheels mounted with Dunlop Race Tyres
• Set of Cadillac hub caps for show
• Major engine components to construct a second GMC/Wayne engine:
 GMC 302 ci “Military” Block
 GMC Crank, Rocker Arms, and Misc. Engine Parts
 Weber Carburetors, new in boxes
 Wayne Head Casting, New (finish machining required)
 Wayne Valve and Side Cover
 Wayne Intake Adaptors for Weber Carburetors
• Ignition Tune-up Parts
• Brake Shoes
• Misc. Spares for the races
• Front Axle Assembly with Radius Rods, used
• Body Fixtures to mount the hood, mid-section and rear of the body when removed from the car
• Also included are the spare parts received when the car was purchased in 1996 which include:
 Axle Shafts, Brake Drums, Backing Plates, Fuel Tank, Misc. Engine Parts and lots of misc. stuff

- Hot Rods, Custom Cars, Race Cars, Sports Cars, Classic Cars 1953 Tatum Wayne GMC Special for sale