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Motion Pictures Ride The Curb...

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Ryan, Dec 21, 2021.

  1. Ryan
    Joined: Jan 2, 1995
    Posts: 21,674

    Ryan
    ADMINISTRATOR
    Staff Member

    Ryan submitted a new blog post:

    Ride The Curb...

    [​IMG]

    Continue reading the Original Blog Post
     
  2. slowmotion
    Joined: Nov 21, 2011
    Posts: 3,330

    slowmotion
    Member

    "Let's go Miss Gurdle Buster 1958...."
    That's gold! It was all down hill from there...
     
  3. Kevin Lee
    Joined: Nov 12, 2001
    Posts: 7,584

    Kevin Lee
    Super Moderator
    Staff Member

    50/50 in a roadster – nice.
     
  4. dirt car
    Joined: Jun 26, 2010
    Posts: 1,066

    dirt car
    Member
    from nebraska

    Always wondered if the special movie cars such as these were owned by the studio, or leased from individual owners & what fate they may have met,......like where are they now ?
     
    dana barlow and 41 GMC K-18 like this.

  5. Happydaze
    Joined: Aug 21, 2009
    Posts: 1,933

    Happydaze
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I dont suppose bumping hubcaps was a "thing", outside of Hollywood, was it?

    Chris
     
    Lil32 and dana barlow like this.
  6. The light colored 32 is the McGee/Scritchfield Roadster when it had an SBC.
    400px-Dick-scritchfield-1932-ford-roadster8.jpg 400px-Dick-scritchfield-1932-ford5.jpg
     
  7. I have a stack of these old hot rod B movies on DVD, are they cheesy? you bet they are but it's all about seeing the actual cars. HRP
     
  8. 41 GMC K-18
    Joined: Jun 27, 2019
    Posts: 3,637

    41 GMC K-18
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Great cars! Sub par dialog, a really terrible hat, nice tight sweater, super bad acting! But a lot of fun to watch!
    Have fun over there on the extreme west coast !
     
    hotrodjack33, dana barlow and 5window like this.
  9. Ryan. Cool stuff.

    ... but since when does channeled, full fendered hot rods, or big motored Hawaiian dragstrip projectiles .. ever "wear thin" ?

    Not enough of it. Please saturate.
     
  10. Rickybop
    Joined: May 23, 2008
    Posts: 9,678

    Rickybop
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    As they say these days...
    "I know... right?"
    Never could believe they actually did that with those nice roadsters. So close to the light poles. Yikes. Harder to judge in the McGee/Scritchfield car.

    As far as Hawaii goes...
    Whatever. Some people know how to live. LOL
     
  11. dirt car
    Joined: Jun 26, 2010
    Posts: 1,066

    dirt car
    Member
    from nebraska

    Again...the power of the H.A.M.B. ...at least one 32 identified. Not one to do the T.V. thing unless late night or worth the time to watch, but do get hooked on 'B' grade black/white period flicks for some reason, not so much the usually over done modern day back in the day kind of versions....
     
    chryslerfan55 and dana barlow like this.
  12. catdad49
    Joined: Sep 25, 2005
    Posts: 6,422

    catdad49
    Member

    Once again, the Cars are the Stars!
     
    Just Gary and dana barlow like this.
  13. Rolleiflex
    Joined: Oct 25, 2007
    Posts: 1,252

    Rolleiflex
    Member

    I agree, I'll take the old B movies anytime over the new cheaply made films.
    Because as we all know (according to modern day interpretations) all the guys wore black Converse shoes and black leather motorcycle jackets. ;)
     
  14. Jalopy Joker
    Joined: Sep 3, 2006
    Posts: 31,262

    Jalopy Joker
    Member

    sometimes you have to know when to "curb" your enthusiasm
     
  15. bowie
    Joined: Jul 27, 2011
    Posts: 3,104

    bowie
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    The dark roadster is owned by rodder Mark Conforth from New Jersey, last I knew.
     
  16. oldolds
    Joined: Oct 18, 2010
    Posts: 3,408

    oldolds
    Member

    The old guys in my area said they used to play "boxcar" in the early '60's. At night, lights off, touching bumpers, up and down the mountains, at speed. As many as 10 cars on a good night.
     
  17. belair
    Joined: Jul 10, 2006
    Posts: 9,015

    belair
    Member

    I'm waiting for @kidcampbell71 's avatar to wear thin. When it does, I'm room temperature.
     
    Tman, williebill, Davesblue50 and 2 others like this.
  18. jnaki
    Joined: Jan 1, 2015
    Posts: 9,396

    jnaki

    Hello,

    In our old days, "ride the curb" was only done when there was an emergency underneath the car and we needed access without using the jack. (or get a ticket for loud exhaust and/or removal of the offending modification) Our teenage sedans did ride the curb, but only until there was enough clearance to do some work, like steel wiring up a unbolted down tube exhaust outlet that lost its wing nut coming loose or other maladies.

    On our 58 Impala, we had installed two down tube exhaust outlets welded onto the stock pipes for access to our drag racing performance. Later on, a custom made spot to bolt on a set of dual chromed scavenger pipes that ran all the way under the car past the rear axle.
    upload_2021-12-21_8-57-39.png dual downtube exhaust outlets
    At first, we crawled under to unbolt the caps for the drags. Then we capped them up for the eliminations as required by the stock rules. For the teenage drive-in parking lot conversations, the outlets provided some sounds of high performance sounds to go with “the talk.”


    At the drags, we threw down a canvas tarp and crawled under the Impala to cap them back up. For the scavengers, we finally decided that hand tightening wing nuts were easier than having to use wrenches.

    That made changing the caps on or off simple and fast. But, we forgot that vibrations do wonders to wing nuts and sometimes they fell off at the most inopportune times. So, we used curbs to make one side go up high enough to easily crawl under to put on new ones or just a nut until we got home.

    Jnaki

    Curbs are for emergencies, not joy riding. So, as movies go, it was a Hollywood idea, for lack of a better common sense thing to do for teenagers and 20 somethings. YRMV

    NOTE:
    In other times, "ride the curb" was a time to get our early skateboards to go down the driveway and up the little ramp to fly off into the street. Crazy teens... Somehow, we knew about those mini ramps as smaller kid days and our orange crate/roller skate scooters. But, never used them to jump off the end. The old wooden scooters lived to tell another story, while the early teenage skateboards usually broke.
    Duh!!!
     
  19. dana barlow
    Joined: May 30, 2006
    Posts: 5,126

    dana barlow
    Member
    from Miami Fla.
    1. Y-blocks

    I remember us teens doing a lot of kind of crazy stuff in the late 1950s n early 60's,but "Ride-the-Curb" was not one here.
    Yes,movie stunts were talked about a little,mostly as how they did that or funny BS.
    I was in 3 car clubs,had two show cars that I put in a lot of Florida shows running around Fla.,I did pinstriping an names on cars plus airbrushed Wild Car T-shirts,point being,I was very into what was going on around me 50s n 60s=Maybe a bit more then most: No one ever said they did this on a curb in Florida, it was regarded as a movie stunt.
    Yes ,we Cracker's,thought the west coast was crazyer,but not at all better* in any way then our east coast way of doing things.
    In the over all,a lot of things were the same game,just not every thing though!
    Fun to hear about an see,in the end each desides what was cool or just crazy.
    As always enjoyed,thanks for the fun read.
    Merry Christmas
     
  20. I believe the dark roadster is the Pete Henderson/Ralph Guldahl roadster, owned by Mr. Guldahl at that time.
    It is the roadster made famous by beating a quarter horse in the quarter mile. Has been restored to the Pete Henderson build.

    Mick
     
  21. 5window
    Joined: Jan 29, 2005
    Posts: 9,550

    5window
    Member

    I'll be cold. And buried.
     
    chryslerfan55 likes this.
  22. 5window
    Joined: Jan 29, 2005
    Posts: 9,550

    5window
    Member

    About 36 years ago I had a off-topic car that had an accelerator pedal stick. Couldn't turn it off because the steering would have locked. It was either populated or heavily ditched on the berms. I rode the curb, and a rock wall for a bit until it stopped. I will leave future adventures to the movies.
     
    chryslerfan55 and hotrodjack33 like this.
  23. woodiewagon46
    Joined: Mar 14, 2013
    Posts: 2,277

    woodiewagon46
    Member
    from New York

    I must have missed something. Can someone explain what the riding on the curb is all about? I get the "Miss Girdle Buster", ( not politically correct now a day's), but narrowly missing light poles and denting hubcaps is beyond me. That might be one reason that Mercury hub caps are so rare.
     
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  24. Truckedup
    Joined: Jul 25, 2006
    Posts: 4,660

    Truckedup
    Member

    Bumper pushing at high speed in 1960's NJ...Get up behind a friend in a slow car like 50's 6 cylinder, make contact and push him so fast he could not accelerate to get away. Yes it was dangerous, our cars often had worn suspensions and brakes but no one I knew crashed..Not to say that others didn't wreck...
     
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  25. bowie
    Joined: Jul 27, 2011
    Posts: 3,104

    bowie
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I may be confusing this roadster with the one that was in the Hot Rod girl movie. If so I stand corrected!
     
    HEMI32 likes this.
  26. @dirt car -

    I was about to answer your questions when I read further and saw that @Dan Hay & @lurker mick already beat me to it!

    As for your "where are they now ?" question:
    • The Bob McGee / Dick Scritchfield Roadster was restored to its "McGee configuration" by Pete Chapouris III and his crew at SO-CAL Speed Shop (including @Pete Eastwood) for @Deuce Bruce Meyer:


      The car remains in Bruce Meyer's collection ... either on display at the PETERSEN AUTOMOTIVE MUSEUM in Los Angeles ... or in "Bruce's Garage" in Beverley Hills.
    • The Pete Henderson / Ralph Guldahl Roadster was restored to its "Henderson configuration" by Chuck & @MikeLongley:

      Chuck & Mike Longley with Henderson Roadster @ the 2007 Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance.jpg
      The Longley's "Henderson Roadster" at the 2007 Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance
      image by @A32Flathead

      Ralph (@rodster) Whitworth purchased the car from the Longley's in 2007.

      After Whitworth's death in 2016, the car was purchased by Ross Myers (at the October 2017 RM Auctions Hershey - "The Ralph Whitworth Collection" auction).

      The car currently resides in Ross & Beth Myers’ Boyertown, Pennsylvania "3DOG GARAGE" collection.
     
    Last edited: May 31, 2023
  27. I've been in love with the McGee Roadster for years so I built my own... IMG_2802.jpg IMG_2803.jpg
     
  28. Here's a couple of pics of the "Henderson Roadster" when Ralph “Digger” Guldahl Jr. owned it (circa 1955 - 1957):

    Ralph Guldahl (ex Pete Henderson) Roadster.jpg
    The Pete Henderson roadster when Ralph Guldahl  owned it (1).jpg

    In addition to appearing in the HOT ROD GANG, the "Guldahl Roadster" also appeared in another 1958 B-movie:

    Earth vs. The Spider - 1958.jpg
    Earth vs. The Spider - 1958 (poster).jpg

    Guldahl Roadster in 'Earth vs. The Spider' - 1958.jpg
    Guldahl Roadster in 'Earth vs. The Spider' - 1958 (1).jpg Guldahl Roadster in 'Earth vs. The Spider' - 1958 (2).jpg Guldahl Roadster in 'Earth vs. The Spider' - 1958 (3).jpg Guldahl Roadster in 'Earth vs. The Spider' - 1958 (4).jpg
    Guldahl Roadster in 'Earth vs. The Spider' - 1958 (5).jpg Guldahl Roadster in 'Earth vs. The Spider' - 1958 (6).jpg Guldahl Roadster in 'Earth vs. The Spider' - 1958 (7).jpg Earth vs. The Spider - 1958 (still).jpg
     
    Last edited: Dec 21, 2021
  29. dirt car
    Joined: Jun 26, 2010
    Posts: 1,066

    dirt car
    Member
    from nebraska

    Thanks, have indeed seen the well documented film clip, & to say well done would be an understatement as the vintage black & white footage has created an even deeper appreciation for true hot rodding & the storied history with which each owner played a significant & dedicated part. Correct me if I'm wrong but is this not the drive test vehicle that Jay Leno as well featured ?
     
  30. hotrodlane
    Joined: Oct 18, 2009
    Posts: 371

    hotrodlane
    Member

    Ryan, The "white roadster" as you call it in hot rod gang is actually yellow. Just looks white in the movie. Dick Scritchfield traded for it that way. He was from our area here in Kansas city and it is funny if it had not been for Hawaii fender laws. The roadster most likely would have went with him to Hawaii when he retired there. I think that the Mcgee/ Scritchfield roadster was in almost all those cheesy hot rod movies. It was even the black roadster in Van Nuys Blvd.
     

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