The Richmond Nats will be here on August 28 and I am looking forward to it since I am only a few miles from the RIR complex. In past years it has been neat to see a bunch of cars drive in from all over and hear some modified exhaust systems and see cars with blowers running on the street. I am of course one of those dastardly folks with a SBC in a 'glass car but the basic reason is that metal cars started to get really rare until Brookville production got going. Anyway there are enough local Friday night meets for drivers that I can just enjoy the car and go to an occasional meet where often the parking lot is as interesting as the cars in the meet. I am attaching a very nice local car that is a repaired roll-over wreck of a Shay model A and it is in the parking lot of last year's Richmond NSRA Nats. It is a 'glass replica with a Pinto engine but still a mighty fine car. If you have a real steel car that is great but I like any early replica with nice paint and an inspection sticker. It will be interesting to see what modern cars show up this year. It may be worth mentioning that about ten years ago I did find a metal '29 Ford roadster body and a rusty Model A frame but the body was total archaeology and after sand blastingl the frame I ended up with metal lace! To me my Brookville frame looks VERY GOOD! The Brookville cars are now available for even a very nice Three-window '32 but once again my pocket book limited my project. I once lost out buying a running '30 Ford roadster for a mere $700 because I did not have the money. The roadster goal always seemed beyond my means so when I got a little ahead by paying off the house finally I chose the Bebops 'glass body as cheaper than the Brookville. It is a catch-22 thing, my wife asked me whether I did not want an all steel Brookville roadster (like IC2 has) on the one hand but then everytime she sees a bill for parts on the cheaper Bebops-based option she asks why it is so expensive! So we have these mental obsessions and the Nats renew our images but time moves on and when you talk to some of the younger folks a Dodge sedan with a 440 engine is the ultimate and they never had a ride in a '30s car because those cars were few when the kids of today were not even born. I am still waiting for a show car Prius with a bigger motor, more batteries and flames, but it may come yet! So the whole hobby is based on nostalgia. If I had my wish I would want a 1940 Ford convertible with a flathead Merc engine but how many of those have you seen lately? Maybe there will be one at the Richmond Nats? So check out the Parked Cars for the modern stuff but maybe this year they will be inside?
Don Shillady
Retired Scientist/Teen Rodder