Author Topic: How Cool is This ?  (Read 3099 times)

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Offline gerhed

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How Cool is This ?
« on: March 04, 2007, 08:27:43 AM »
One of Leno's machines--3-Wheeled Indian 4 !!
Rides: 75 CB750F, 48 Indian Chief, 67 Triumph TR6, 63Honda CA95
          83 XL600R in CB360 Frame
          3-wheel electric tilting cycle

Offline bill440cars

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #1 on: March 04, 2007, 09:18:10 AM »
 
   

             Whoa!! :o 8)   Phil, that is so cool!! Is there anywhere a person could find out more about that
        one?? I, for one, would like to see and hear more. That's how cool I think it is.

                                                   Later on, Bill :) ;)
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PRAYERS ALWAYS FOR: Bre, Jeff & Virginia, Bear, Trevor & Brianna ( Close Friend's Daughter)
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Offline physician

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #2 on: March 04, 2007, 10:14:40 AM »
looks cool to me!

k2 chassis k7 engine resto mod
k7 cafe/fighter/brat

Offline gerhed

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #3 on: March 04, 2007, 11:26:35 AM »
A little more info:

 A peice written by Jay Leno, from www.JayLenosGarage.com


Ten years ago, I received a letter from a man named Bob Shotwell who lived in a small town in Minnesota. He knew that I liked old cars from watching me on television. And he wanted to give me one.

He recalled that he asked his father for a car as he was about to graduate from high school in the early 1930s. But his dad replied that if he wanted a car, he should build one. So, 17-year-old Bob scrounged parts and made his own car. It was a little three-wheeled coupe powered by a 77.2-cu.-in. four-cylinder 1931 Indian motorcycle engine. Bob called it Philbert the Puddle Jumper. He and his brother, Edward, made headlines in local newspapers in the Northwest when they drove it on a 6000-plus-mile jaunt. He told me that he eventually racked up 150,000 miles on it.

Bob Shotwell went on to a career as a pilot for Northwest Airlines, retiring in 1975. He married and raised two children--and his little coupe was always an important part of the family’s life.

But at age 82, he was afraid that the car would end up being torn apart by motorcycle guys for its precious Indian engine. He didn’t want that to happen. So, he said he’d give me Philbert as long as I promised that I wouldn’t break it up.

Interestingly, the editors at Popular Mechanics sent me a copy of The Boy Mechanic, a book the magazine originally published in the 1930s and republished this year. It was aimed at boys age 8 and up. I looked at a lot of the projects. No kid today could build them. I don’t think guys in their 20s could tackle some of them. But back in the ’30s, there was no TV, no video games--some people didn’t even have a radio. So, kids developed the skills to create their own neat stuff. Bob Shotwell was obviously a child of that era.

He took a front end from a Model A Ford, cut it down a little bit and used the hubs from a ’32 Ford. But at the little coupe’s heart is the Indian four-cylinder engine with its integral three-speed transmission driving the single rear wheel via a chain. There’s no Reverse. And there were two little electric blowers for cooling everything in the engine compartment.

Bob made a frame with chromemoly steel tubing and angle iron. He hammered the body panels by hand out of flat stock steel at his father’s radiator repair shop. He even designed a pair of little outrigger rear wheels, probably taken from shopping carts, to keep Philbert from flipping if the rear tire blew. Bob took two years to build the car and he spent about $300 on the project.

I was really impressed with Bob’s ingenuity and resourcefulness. As we began restoring the car, I felt a real kinship to the man. Simply by looking at what he had done, I knew I liked Bob Shotwell. As with musicians who admire each other’s music, I felt a bond with this mechanically minded man.

But the decades had taken their toll on Philbert. The engine wasn’t just worn out; it was exhausted. We replaced the original gravity-feed carburetor with an SU carb--modern compared to what was there--and an electric fuel pump. We saved the block and crank but put in new pistons and rods, and replaced all the valves. Everything we did on the car was difficult, since it all had to be hand-fitted.

We also had to upgrade things for California’s climate. First, we replaced Bob’s oil cooler with a larger one. But on my first test run, I smelled acid. Driving in the Los Angeles heat had melted the battery. So, we put air scoops on the roof to feed a more powerful fan. We also removed his fender-mounted spare tires and smoothed the fenders to give the car a sleeker look.

As we were working, I checked in with Bob from time to time. When I first got the car, I think he thought that we'd have it in shape and running over a weekend. But it was an overwhelming project and took a few years.

I never did meet Bob Shotwell. He died in 2004. But I know he was thrilled that his car was not simply broken up and salvaged for parts. I think he'd appreciate the modifications we made to modernize the car without changing it much. I keep in touch with his wife, Peggy. She still lives in Minnesota, and since her husband's car is in Hollywood now, it's of interest to people back there who've known about it for years.

Maybe the best thing about Philbert the Puddle Jumper is that it is a driveable and vital link to a very different time. A kid building a three-wheeled car and driving it for decades is something that could have happened once, but that world is lost forever.

Just think: In those days a 17-year-old could go to the motor vehicle bureau to get license plates for a homebuilt, motorcycle-powered vehicle. The folks at the office would say, "What kind of car is that?"

"Oh, I made it myself."

"Lights work? Horn work? Okay, here are your tags."

Can you imagine?



    
 
           
   



 
           
   
Rides: 75 CB750F, 48 Indian Chief, 67 Triumph TR6, 63Honda CA95
          83 XL600R in CB360 Frame
          3-wheel electric tilting cycle

Offline bill440cars

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #4 on: March 04, 2007, 12:15:43 PM »


           Thanks for posting that Phil. That is cool that he built that back then. Too bad that he never got to see it finished though. It is cool that Jay Leno went through it and restored it. That's about the neatest thing though, along with the story that goes with it.

                                                   Later on, Bill :) ;)
Member # 1969
PRAYERS ALWAYS FOR: Bre, Jeff & Virginia, Bear, Trevor & Brianna ( Close Friend's Daughter)
"Because HE lives, I can Face Tomorrow"                  
 You CAN Teach An Old Dog New Tricks, Just Takes A Little Bit Longer & A Lot More Patience!! 
             
Main Rides: '02 Durango, '71 Swinger & Dad's '93
                  Dakota LE 4x4 '66 CB77 & '72 SL350K2
Watch What You Step Into, It Could  End Up A Mess!

Offline Tim.

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #5 on: March 20, 2007, 03:32:46 AM »
Hmmmm...

Roule comme dans les années 70...   Roll as in the Seventies...

Offline bill440cars

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #6 on: March 20, 2007, 08:57:18 AM »
Hmmmm...




         Hey tintin,

                   Ya gonna leave it like that or would ya like to give some details? ??? That is pretty cool BTW 8)                                        Later on, Bill :) ;)
Member # 1969
PRAYERS ALWAYS FOR: Bre, Jeff & Virginia, Bear, Trevor & Brianna ( Close Friend's Daughter)
"Because HE lives, I can Face Tomorrow"                  
 You CAN Teach An Old Dog New Tricks, Just Takes A Little Bit Longer & A Lot More Patience!! 
             
Main Rides: '02 Durango, '71 Swinger & Dad's '93
                  Dakota LE 4x4 '66 CB77 & '72 SL350K2
Watch What You Step Into, It Could  End Up A Mess!

Offline gerhed

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #7 on: March 21, 2007, 07:15:35 AM »
It's called a Sparrow.--all electric.
Built by Corbin--the aftermarket seat guys.
I visited the factory in Hollister, California in 2000.
Took a test drive.--very fast --60-70 easy--felt a little top heavy, though.
They went out of production in 2003 I think.
Rides: 75 CB750F, 48 Indian Chief, 67 Triumph TR6, 63Honda CA95
          83 XL600R in CB360 Frame
          3-wheel electric tilting cycle

Offline gerhed

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #8 on: March 21, 2007, 07:16:59 AM »
144 volts
Rides: 75 CB750F, 48 Indian Chief, 67 Triumph TR6, 63Honda CA95
          83 XL600R in CB360 Frame
          3-wheel electric tilting cycle

Offline gerhed

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #9 on: March 21, 2007, 07:18:20 AM »
Showroom !
Rides: 75 CB750F, 48 Indian Chief, 67 Triumph TR6, 63Honda CA95
          83 XL600R in CB360 Frame
          3-wheel electric tilting cycle

Offline gerhed

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #10 on: March 21, 2007, 07:19:35 AM »
Your corespondent.
Rides: 75 CB750F, 48 Indian Chief, 67 Triumph TR6, 63Honda CA95
          83 XL600R in CB360 Frame
          3-wheel electric tilting cycle

Offline Uncle Ernie

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #11 on: March 21, 2007, 11:15:44 AM »
They use them to harvest garlic?!
Dude- your 8 layers are showing!

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #12 on: March 21, 2007, 01:43:31 PM »
They used one as the base for Goldmembers car in austin powers.  ;D
 

« Last Edit: March 21, 2007, 01:47:04 PM by Andoo »

Offline gerhed

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #13 on: March 21, 2007, 01:45:04 PM »
They use them to harvest garlic?!

They have a huge building right in the middle of the fields--(garlic?)
They also have a retro style diner/cafe--It's a real destination.
Corbin still make the seats there.
And of course it is Hollister !  "Johnny, what are you rebelling against?"
The main inspiration for some people I know to get into bikes in the first place !!
Rides: 75 CB750F, 48 Indian Chief, 67 Triumph TR6, 63Honda CA95
          83 XL600R in CB360 Frame
          3-wheel electric tilting cycle

Offline loonymoon

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #14 on: March 21, 2007, 03:40:16 PM »
Not a three wheeler I know but we see a few of these tiny electric cars in London these days:



No road tax and no congestion charge, £6999 though... ouch and I had one following me the other day in the traffic, and although there are two seats in them, the guy driving wasn't particulary big but his shoulder was overlapping the passenger seat!! Most surprising to me is that they were designed in California - a region that I'd associate with big gas-guzzlers.

« Last Edit: March 21, 2007, 03:45:23 PM by loonymoon »

Offline Tim.

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Re: How Cool is This ?
« Reply #15 on: March 21, 2007, 05:13:11 PM »
Funny - I thought everyone knew about the Corbin Sparrow  ;)

Of course this modern Canadian T-Rex (dumb name) take on the Leno model is much much more interesting:



Or the recently announced Bombardier (Canadian) Can-Am:



http://spyder.brp.com/en-CA/
Roule comme dans les années 70...   Roll as in the Seventies...