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Vintage Tether Cars

Discussion in 'The Antiquated' started by Ryan, Jul 22, 2008.

  1. A Boner
    Joined: Dec 25, 2004
    Posts: 7,437

    A Boner
    Member

    I’m pretty sure the blue paint on mine is factory original...it a little chipped up but sure looks like nice “factory” paint to me. Mine also has a McCoy .60 engine, and I’m guessing McCoy wheels with proper tires. Often get to thinking I should probably sell it...as they are quite rare and therefore pricey! I’ve owned it for over 20 years...and still have it though...HaHaHa, as I know I’ll never find another one!
     
    wicarnut and lothiandon1940 like this.
  2. rotten ron
    Joined: Aug 11, 2018
    Posts: 8,159

    rotten ron
    BANNED

    1946 post war Studebaker. Designed and built by Studebaker engineer living in South Bend Indiana, Orville Frazier. Little is known about these cars as only 10 units were ever cast. Orville assembled two of them and the rest were sold as kits. My car is one of those kits. When I bought the car it had a missing front suspension and Wayne Short cast and machined a front end for it. I know of three other examples and one of those is the top and bottom castings only. As you can see from the pictures it is a rear drive spur gear and is powered by a SuperCyke engine. A lot of detail in the electrical and gas delivery systems. I know its not the best looking car on my shelves but I am very pleased to have it. Ron
    IMG_3789.JPG IMG_3790.JPG IMG_3791.JPG IMG_3792.JPG IMG_3793.JPG IMG_3795.JPG IMG_3796.JPG IMG_3797.JPG
     
  3. Deuces
    Joined: Nov 3, 2009
    Posts: 23,875

    Deuces

  4. Lepus
    Joined: Nov 18, 2016
    Posts: 453

    Lepus
    Member

    Ron, that is a neat and weird looking car.
     
    lothiandon1940, Deuces and rotten ron like this.
  5. 48fordnut
    Joined: Nov 4, 2005
    Posts: 4,215

    48fordnut
    Member Emeritus

    Looks well thought out. Neat car.
     
  6. rotten ron
    Joined: Aug 11, 2018
    Posts: 8,159

    rotten ron
    BANNED

    Post war home built prototype (1950?). Someone built this car using very simple tools and a lot of ingenuity. The frame is made of bar stock and put together with screws. No welding. The rear end is a modified Dooling F car and power comes from a Hornet engine. It has a carved wood top, and the electrics and gas supply are well thought out. Compare it to the prototype (same color) on page 18 of this thread it has similar construction. The car is well used and I'm sure the original owner had a lot of fun with it. Ron
    IMG_3798.JPG IMG_3799.JPG IMG_3801.JPG IMG_3802.JPG IMG_3803.JPG IMG_3804.JPG
     
    Last edited: Nov 14, 2021
  7. Lepus
    Joined: Nov 18, 2016
    Posts: 453

    Lepus
    Member

    I'm finally getting back to work on the Thimble Drome Champion. I've been doing some home improvements, and helping at a Nike missile site in Granite, Maryland, that's being fixed up for educational tours. Here is where I am with the dashboard and steering wheel.I drew the outline of the dash with Mastercam, then printed it to scale, taped the drawing to my engine turned stainless sheet, sheared it close to size, then filed and sanded to size,lost that one, made another, then found the first one. For the gauges, I found a photo on the interwcbs of a group I liked, copied it, then blacked out the odometer on the speedo, and the manufacturer's name, and added my own. I printed them, and made punches to cut them out.I'm going to make stainless bezels for them. The steering wheel is almost done, I just have to cut the spokes to length, end reassemble with Loc-tite. 078.JPG 079.JPG
     
    hotrodjack33, EL MOE, Deuces and 2 others like this.
  8. Lepus, that's going to be the worlds nicest Thimble Drome.
    Great work.

    Mick
     
  9. Rick J
    Joined: Sep 12, 2020
    Posts: 40

    Rick J

    Ron, I knew I'd seen that car before.

    20190315_190139.jpg
     
  10. D type
    Joined: Jul 16, 2010
    Posts: 235

    D type
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Looking for a good source for Thimble drome parts ?
    Thanks for your time
     
    hotrodjack33 and Deuces like this.
  11. Will restoring hurt the value, I have Thimble Drome Champion that I picked up at a yard sale in the '90s for $12, it had been roughly repainted years before, looks like a kid did this to his dad's ol' tether car. Car is complete but could use new tires, found some on line. Thanks guys in advance, Michael
     
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  12. Rick J
    Joined: Sep 12, 2020
    Posts: 40

    Rick J

    Syncro Rocket that I've been working on. When I got it, the body was shaped, but unfinished. I built the grill, hood, exhaust, and installed the electrical components. I left the frame and suspension in the condition I received it in. Paint was done by me. I wanted it to look like it might have been done by a racer, back in the day, meaning I didn't want it "perfect". I'm not a great painter, so that worked out! All in all, I'm pleased with how it turned out.
    11858.jpeg 20210812_124658.jpg 20210823_164948.jpg hood fitment.jpg IMG_1613.JPG image1.jpeg
     

    Attached Files:

  13. rotten ron
    Joined: Aug 11, 2018
    Posts: 8,159

    rotten ron
    BANNED

    Rick nice car. Good job. Ron
     
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  14. Rick J
    Joined: Sep 12, 2020
    Posts: 40

    Rick J

    Deuces and EL MOE like this.
  15. rotten ron
    Joined: Aug 11, 2018
    Posts: 8,159

    rotten ron
    BANNED

    1946 Papina Flat Tail. The first one hundred Papinas were magnesium both top and bottom while the later models had a plastic top and a magnesium bottom. Also, the first model was a flat tail design and the plastic top had a headrest. Only about a hundred of the metal flat tops were made before they went to the plastic making the original somewhat rare. Its reported that about 1,000 plastic cars were sold. The cars share most components other than the top and wheels (the wheels on the later models were simulated knock offs with an initial "P" in the center). Al Papina sold the kit for $27.50 and a complete assembled car with a Hornet engine ready to run for $47.50. A very nice design resembling a race car of that era. Ron
    IMG_3827.JPG IMG_3828.JPG IMG_3829.JPG IMG_3830.JPG IMG_3831.JPG
     
  16. Rick J
    Joined: Sep 12, 2020
    Posts: 40

    Rick J

    My first Dooling Frog. Picked it up at the MECOA swap meet in L.A. last weekend.

    Very original, and very "as run". I love it when they'd use old tin cans to fab up a fuel tank. Very cool.

    (Thanks Ron, for your advice on frogs earlier in this thread).

    20211212_155715.jpg 20211212_155851.jpg 20211212_160028.jpg
     
  17. rotten ron
    Joined: Aug 11, 2018
    Posts: 8,159

    rotten ron
    BANNED

     
    cracked lacquer likes this.
  18. rotten ron
    Joined: Aug 11, 2018
    Posts: 8,159

    rotten ron
    BANNED

    Good for you nice buy. Ron
     
    Deuces likes this.
  19. lippy
    Joined: Sep 27, 2006
    Posts: 6,825

    lippy
    Member
    from Ks

    What is a new in the box Ohlsen and Rice .60 worth. Never run. Saw one for sale for $200. Lippy
     
    Deuces likes this.
  20. Jim Hassad
    Joined: Aug 9, 2015
    Posts: 59

    Jim Hassad
    Member

    Hi Ron, curious as to the engine in the #61 car by Harry Lightfoot. Are you leaving the Alexander car as is? Does the H/S engine turn over? Thanks, Jim
     
  21. A Boner
    Joined: Dec 25, 2004
    Posts: 7,437

    A Boner
    Member

    Some inspiration to go down in your basement and build something! Just tilt the grill shell back a little.
    FYI: Start by acquiring the appropriate size wheels and tires, then scale the build to them!
    F7E05332-4D2C-4542-9945-D6639F147D2E.png
     
    Last edited: Jan 19, 2022
    cracked lacquer and Deuces like this.
  22. A Boner
    Joined: Dec 25, 2004
    Posts: 7,437

    A Boner
    Member

    ^^^^
    Too primitive for you...just a little more time and lots more skill, here ya go! DC900BD5-D85D-4E86-97FE-D5267BEF88DF.png
     
  23. E0B06E15-CDE0-407D-88BA-7C6429FC4D81.jpeg BF708AA0-9A97-4063-9803-BDED0141B9D5.jpeg CBA1E4D1-57A5-4D9A-AAA6-8B0B6AD5B740.png DB7557A0-826D-4B2A-B250-D972FF85E4AB.jpeg 589F3715-0465-4889-AD23-7AB87200BCF0.jpeg 15675DC1-4218-4D9A-A48E-110475ADF196.jpeg 234B4B9B-E595-4B80-86C7-DD66CAAE814C.jpeg 45BAFCC5-B0D3-42A3-9B14-74BF92065D1C.jpeg 619A5A0C-67AF-4C94-9D59-6ACE3618B2CC.jpeg 4D9ED060-EAF6-42D8-A2E9-05A69A00C0A1.jpeg 9A2E96EC-2D6A-4B3A-949F-9F705068D134.jpeg Just part of the addiction….lol… great page fellas, good to see the interest in tether cars …
     
  24. A Boner
    Joined: Dec 25, 2004
    Posts: 7,437

    A Boner
    Member

    ^^^^
    WOW!
     
    Deuces likes this.
  25. A Boner
    Joined: Dec 25, 2004
    Posts: 7,437

    A Boner
    Member

    Some good ideas if you might be thinking of building a homebuilt tether car:
    Just do a google search of:
    “Homebuilt tether car pictures“............ Click view all
    Have fun!
     
    Deuces likes this.
  26. A Boner
    Joined: Dec 25, 2004
    Posts: 7,437

    A Boner
    Member

    Pics from his profile page:
    922BDB63-4504-47AB-8FEA-44E7453C95ED.jpeg FC9E08A4-ED79-4AF8-9EC2-187BD1384764.jpeg
     
    Last edited: Jan 20, 2022
  27. Lepus
    Joined: Nov 18, 2016
    Posts: 453

    Lepus
    Member

    I finally finished the dash and steering wheel for my Thimble Drome Champion. I should have planned better, the steering wheel will have to be about a quarter inch larger diameter to look right. Oh well, I'll use this one on another car. 016.JPG 019.JPG 020.JPG 002.JPG 004.JPG
     
  28. Lepus
    Joined: Nov 18, 2016
    Posts: 453

    Lepus
    Member

    The parts of a gauge: stainless housing, print of gauge face, spacer made from .006 stainless shim, P lexiglas lens with small taper on outside diameter. I stack the parts in the housing, then put it in a piece of aluminum with a shallow hole bored to fit the diameter of the gauge, and a 1/8" through hole for the thread. a nut holds it in, and it goes in the lathe, where I run the o.d. of a bearing mounted on a block, and held at an angle in the tool holder, against the edge to bend it in. 021.JPG
     
  29. A Boner
    Joined: Dec 25, 2004
    Posts: 7,437

    A Boner
    Member

    Another one I completed...to the roller stage anyway, based “loosely”, on these 1939 plans from Model Craftsman Magazine.
    76775B8D-B744-4344-BCC5-43C1372A1C81.png A034949D-186B-42AA-A284-F4A12D0B1966.jpeg 1ED90AF6-4550-4438-A6A1-B09D09666AEA.jpeg
     
  30. A Boner
    Joined: Dec 25, 2004
    Posts: 7,437

    A Boner
    Member

    As long as I had it down off the shelf, I decided to stain the frame and put a couple coats of brush on lacquer on it. Here is a pic with the body off, and a couple pics of some basic “display only“ type wheels. They consist of wood, (or whatever) centers, fender washers painted red (can use stainless), and some hardware store 3/8” rivets that are drilled out for the 1/4” spindles. The rivets are then peened over to assemble. The hole has to be re-drilled out after the peening.
    4D5DBAE2-570F-4307-906E-096EA80784D0.jpeg 04CF4AEC-02AA-4F46-A7F7-BF36B0C5CF2E.jpeg E5AE2B26-2D20-49CB-9D30-87FB16BF2E9B.jpeg F0706C86-AFAA-429E-AD41-51D2BB2E2247.jpeg
     
    Last edited: Jan 25, 2022

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