Showing posts with label restoration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label restoration. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

What is the difference between a Restoration and a Resto-Mod?

What is a Resto-Mod you ask?

Resto-Mod (restoration + modern parts/technology) draws from all the amazing advancements in automobile technology over the past 40+ years to enhance the performance, comfort and safety of the classic car. A restomod car has the timeless appearance of the original, but the outdated guts of the car have been replaced with the more modern, high-performance parts of today. You achieve the same great look, but your vintage car will be revved up with all the latest bells and whistles to create a much better ride for the owner. 

Below you will find a fine example of a Resto-Mod. This 1957 Corvette has been fitted with LS6  405-hp Z06, a 6 speed transmission and much more.....


For more photos and Details please visit WeBe Autos

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Thursday, December 5, 2013

ALLARD PALM BEACH AT CLASSIC MOTOR SHOW

   

British car manufacturer Allard Sports Cars completes restoration of original Palm Beach Mk2 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

13 November 2013


The ultimate original restoration is on display at the Lancaster Insurance Classic Motor Show on 15-17 November: Allard Sports Cars Ltd, owned by the original Allard family, has completed a full nuts-and-bolts restoration of a very rare (one of only six ever made) prototype 1956 Palm Beach MkII.

With very few British car manufacturers still operating under the original name, this Palm Beach is especially notable for having been restored to its former glory by the same family business and name which launched it as a new car in 1956.

The Palm Beach Mk2 was found in poor condition just a year ago, and has been painstakingly restored by Alan and Lloyd Allard’s team over the last ten months. Carrying chassis number 72/7000Z, it is one of only six ever made, and its restoration has taken over 1,200 hours excluding the body’s preparation and paint; the original chassis houses a fully-rebuilt Ford Zodiac six cylinder in-line engine and gearbox, whilst the aluminium body panels are painted in period
carmine red inspired by the 1961-64 Jaguar E-type colour range.    

The car takes pride of place on the Allard Owners’ Club stand at the Lancaster Insurance Classic Motor Show, NEC Birmingham, together with an original Cadillac 331 engine (used in the Allard JR model) and a range of bespoke Allard Aluminium products.

THE END

For further information and high-res photos contact:

AV PR                                                                 Lloyd Allard    
The Studio                                                         Allard Sports Cars
194a Upper Richmond Road West,                 Stanley Court
London, SW14 8AN                                           Edison Close
tel. 00 44 (0) 203 632 5924                                Gloucester
Mob. 00 44 (0) 7415 095 543                             tel. 00 44 (0) 1452 725666
Email: angie@angievoluti.com                           Email: info@allardsportscars.co.uk
Website: www.angievoluti.com                          Website: www.allardsportscars.co.uk


Note to Editors: the Allard Motor Company ceased manufacturing vehicles in 1958 but its motorsport activities (rallying, racing and drag-racing) continued; Sydney Allard’s son, Alan, took over in 1963 and business, selling components and accessories, is still on-going. Lloyd Allard, Alan’s son, took over from his father in 2008 and a new Allard Sports Cars Company was founded in 2011. The team retains key people from the original Allard company and the business has always stayed wholly under the Allard family. Fewer than 2,000 Allard sportscars were built from 1946 to 1958 and their value as classic cars (especially if with a racing pedigree) has been steadily increasing over the last few years. The 1953 ex-Le Mans, ex-Zora Arkus-Duntov No. 5 JR was sold in January this year for $605,000 by RM Auctions.

Allard Palm Beach Mk2 specs
Original date of manufacture: 15.10.1956
Registration number: 545 EXR Chassis number 72/7000Z
Chassis frame - Twin tube side members, braced with flitch plates and with both tubular and box cross members.
Engine - Fully rebuilt Ford Zodiac six cylinders in-line. Capacity 2553 cc. Carburation by triple SU with six branch fabricated exhaust. Gearbox - Ford four-speed.
Body - All aluminium with steel/aluminium inner panels. Two doors, two-seater.
Trim - Cream and red leather, with black carpeting edged in red leather.
Suspension and axles - telescopic shock absorbers with all-round coil springs, twin trailing arms and Panhard rod at the rear; forward-mounted radius rods at the front. Divided front axle, Salisbury solid axle at the rear.
Steering – Right-hand drive with Marles high-ratio steering box.
Brakes - Lockhead with 12" x 2 1/4" drums front and rear.
Fuel system - Twin tank arrangement with the tanks mounted each side within the rear wing.
Wheels - wire type, mounted on splined hub with centre lock spinner.
Dimensions - wheelbase 8' - track 4'3" - width 5'3" - overall length 12'6"


 


Allard Palm Beach Mk2, outside Allard's workshops 



 Angie Voluti
AV PR
The Studio
194a Upper Richmond Road West,
London
SW14 8AN
tel. 00 44 (0) 203 632 5924
Mob. 00 44 (0) 7415 095 543
Website: www.angievoluti.com  
 

Thursday, May 26, 2011

What do Posies and Classic Cars have to do with each other? While Chasing Classic Cars V

What is Posies? No, I am not talking about flowers. However, these do have pedals. LOL!


While at the Spring Carlisle Show we toured  Poises Rod and Custom Shop in Hummelstown. Amazing!! We viewed  project vehicles that were under construction and restoration. The Kaiser Pickup was my favorite but it was just one of the many different  flowers to choose from. In fact, there was a whole bouquet to admire.  POSIES has been building custom creations for over 40 years. They are an industry standard when building hot looking, smooth riding rods, customs cars and/or trucks.








                    
 
    Kaiser Pickup
 
The best part of the tour was the tour of restoration shop. It was hard to believe that at least 10 projects are being worked at the same time in such a small space. Yet at the same time the place was neat and clean. I thought that they must taken the projects out to another garage when they were working on them.
Shop


Matt, our tour guide officiando, told us that all the work performed, except for sandblasting and painting, was done right where each of the car sat. These cars were close enough together to fit in a tight parking lot. You know the type..suck in your breath to slide through.


Posies has several different operations going on at the same time. They are building their own custom vehicles in the shop. These include the Kaiser Pick Up Truck, 1955-57 Ford Country Wagon, and a vintage 1935 Ford Custom Coupe. Matt says these vehicles and others were likely to be presented at the Sema Car Show in Las Vegas in November. Did we offer to drive one to the show for them? You bet!!!


Posies' operations are also working on project cars for customers. There was an Austin Nash Healey, a 430 Ferrari Clone, something hung in a rotisserie unit and perhaps another 10 cars. 


If that is not enough to keep them busy, they are an experienced leader and supplier for Hot Rod, Street Rod, Ford and Chevrolet specializing in Super Slide Springs. They sure have what it takes to get you a smooth riding hot rod, including the knowledge to help you to get it installed correctly. 

So the next time you are going to pick posies make it one of  Posies Custom Hot Rods and put the petal to the metal.


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Thursday, May 19, 2011

Where would you bring your restored 1932 Roll Royce 20/25 drophead coupe?



Fiennes Restoration at Villa d’Este

Only UK pre-war entry: 10,000+ hours of restoration on show at Concorso d’Eleganza         

Fiennes Restoration, the oldest pre-war Rolls-Royce and Bentley restoration specialist in the UK, is taking the result of its most majestic project, a unique 1932 Rolls-Royce 20/25 drophead coupé, to Villa d’Este for the event’s Concorso d’Eleganza this weekend.

The only UK pre-war entrant at the most prestigious classic car Italian event, the Rolls-Royce 20/25 arrives after completing a twelve-year restoration project, during which more than 10,000 man-hours were spent to return the car to its original splendour.        

Rescued from thirty-five years’ silence and anonymity, the Rolls-Royce which once belonged to HRH Field Marshal Shah Ali Wali Khan, Victor of Kabul (1888-1977), brother to King Shah Nader Khan of Afghanistan, Plenipotentiary Extraordinary to the Court of St James London, Paris, Berne, Warsaw and Rome, and then Prime Minister of Afghanistan, was found in barn-condition in the USA. Shipped back to the UK, Fiennes Restoration’s team used both traditional and modern skills at their disposal to repair, restore, renew a valuable piece of automotive history.

Some parts had to be remade, such as original interior detail, like trim and seats, had been damaged by a fire. Many details had to be recreated: door handles, seat-adjusters, seat-hinge mechanisms, external chrome body trims, but, wherever possible, the restoration route was preferred.

 ‘It has been a labour of love,’ muses Dr Fiennes PhD, Fiennes Restoration’s owner and managing director. ‘However, we are delighted to participate in such an illustrious event as Villa d’Este’s Concorso. Along with the jury’s verdict, the spectators’ vote via ‘public referendum’ is also important. We hope to be worthy contenders for the Trofeo BMW Group, ‘la Coppa d’Oro’, and the Trofeo BMW Group Italia as well as class winners.’    














For more information please contact:
Angie Voluti PR                                                           or                     Fiennes Restoration Ltd
Tel: +44 (0) 1604 863 044                                                                  Clanfield Mill, Little Clanfield,
Mob: +44 7584 306 014                                                                      Bampton, Oxon
E-mail: angie@angievoluti.co.uk                                                     OX18 2RX 


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Friday, April 29, 2011

Pace Car Yellow 1947 Lincoln Zephyr Convertible was a Love Affair

Overseeing the restoration of the has been a labor of love for Ed Avedisian.

It is the last of 11 1940’s V-12 Lincolns that his late friend Craig Watjen had been restoring. Watjen inherited them from his brother Peter who died in 1996. Craig, who mixed a career that included playing the clarinet in orchestras and being one of the first employees hired by Bill Gates at Microsoft, himself passed away in August.

“He never got to see it restored,” said Avedisian in a recent interview at Nick’s Upholstery in Narragansett, adding, “He said it was (Peter’s) favorite convertible.”

The car is just coming off three years’ restoration by artisan Daniel Falco, formerly of Narragansett Reproductions, who has restored about six of the Watjen Lincolns.

“I did most of the work on this one,” he said.  “Mechanical, wiring, windows, everything that makes the car work.”

He said he served as a contractor for other work, notably the paintwork and the upholstery, which he contracted out to Nick Petcu who owns Nick’s Upholstery.

He had the car painted the pale yellow that was the color of the Lincoln Continental that served as the official Pace Car of the 1946 Indianapolis 500.  Proving popular, it was sold the following year as Pace Car Yellow.

“It was copper red with a white vinyl roof,” Falco said of the car when it arrived from Bellevue, Wash., where it had been stored since 1996. “Wrong color, wrong top.”

Petcu installed beige upholstery and replaced the top with beige canvas.

Avedisian said his friendship with Watjen went back more that 60 years.

They grew up in Pawtucket where they worked together on cars, notably Model A Fords. Avadisian’s brother Paul said he could remember going into the garage in the morning and finding them both still at work after a long night.

“I’d stop round to see what they’d been doing all night,” he said.

Both went to college in Boston – Avedisian to Boston University, Watjen to Harvard – and both played the clarinet. Indeed, Avedisian went on to a career playing the clarinet in symphony orchestras, including the Boston Pops Orchestra, as well as ballet and opera orchestras.


But while Watjen went on to earn a degree in clarinet from the Julliard School of Music in Manhattan and a master of music degree form the New England Conservatory or Music in Boston, his career was not so clear cut.  After a number of years playing in orchestras, he switched gears and earned an MBA from Stanford University.

He subsequently became involved with the growing computer programming community in what was to become Silicon Valley.  Most notable, he fell in with Bill Gates and Paul Allen, who went on to establish Microsoft in Seattle. Watjen joined the company in 1981 as the 69th employee and worked there until 1996 when he was assistant head of the company’s treasury team.

“He was a multi-talented guy,” said Avedisian.

Watjen’s first car was a 1929 Model A ford rumble-seat Sport Coupe that he got when he was 12.  Avedisian said he and Watjen had restored six Model A’s in those early years and they formed part of Watjen’s collection at his home in Bellevue, Wash.

Overall, Watjen had 30 cars, mostly Model A’s—he was a long-time member of the Model A Ford Club of America – plus his late brother’s Lincolns, which had been shipped over form Pawtucket where Peter had lived.

Avedisian said he had a 1941 Lincoln Zephyr convertible, which had been a gift from Peter, and a 1941 Ford Model A deluxe roadster, which had been a gift from Craig.

Falco said the 1947 Lincoln had been running but was in poor shape.

“It was a runner shipped from Washington,” he said. “I took it apart, every bolt and nut.”

Avedisian said he did not know what would become of his late friend’s collection in Bellevue.  Watjen had created a private museum for the cars, which he calls “Lincolnshire.”

“He restored it in his brother’s memory,” he said of the 1947 Lincoln Zephyr. “It’s the last one

1947 Lincoln Zephr Convertiblehttp://www.mecum.com/auctions/lot_detail.cfm?LOT_ID=KC1209-87828

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Sunday, April 24, 2011

Operation Ignite!

News - Hagerty (Insurance)

Jay Leno is a fan of Operation Ignite


In a recent video on Jay Leno’s classic car website, Jay’s Garage, Jay had a chat with Hagerty CEO McKeel Hagerty about our youth program, Operation Ignite!, and our Youth Reporter Contest. Turns out, he thinks it’s pretty cool. In fact, he even offered to hang out with the winner. So not only will one lucky kid go to classic car events around the country all expenses paid, the winner (and his parent or guardian) will also get to meet Jay Leno and check out his amazing garage.


Do you know a kid who likes cars and would be great in front of a camera? Make sure they know about the Operation Ignite! Youth Reporter Contest.

In a recent video on Jay Leno’s classic car website, Jay’s Garage, Jay had a chat with Hagerty CEO McKeel Hagerty about our youth program, Operation Ignite!, and our Youth Reporter Contest. Turns out, he thinks it’s pretty cool. In fact, he even offered to hang out with the winner. So not only will one lucky kid go to classic car events around the country all expenses paid, the winner (and his parent or guardian) will also get to meet Jay Leno and check out his amazing garage.


Do you know a kid who likes cars and would be great in front of a camera? Make sure they know about the Operation Ignite! Youth Reporter Contest. Our submission period closes on May 1 – so enter today!


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Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Upholstery Artist restores masterpieces

Submitted By Shirely Page 4/19/2011

Dressed in jeans and sandals with longish hair under beret-like cap,
Nick Petcu looks more like an artist than an artisan.

Indeed, this 50-year old Romanian immigrant is trained as an artist and used to
paint and sculpt.

No more!
“I found another passion”. It is a 1938 Cadillac and a 1947 Packard that underwent
restoration in his workshop.

Petcu, owner of Nick’s Upholstery, restores the interiors of classic collector cars. He can
Transform a car’s beat up and rotting insides—including door panels, carpets and convertible roofs, let alone the seats—into a flawless recreation of the coach builder’s art.

The 1938 Packard 1608 V12 Town Car is unique It was built for tobacco heiress Doris Duke and has a custom coachbuilder Rollston Company, which was founded in 1921
by Romanian immigrant Harry Lonschein.

Time had taken its toll on the interior, which had been “totally destroyed”.  Petcu says that “ much of the wood (frame) was rotten and the roof was (perished)”. Half had to be cut off and replaced.

Petcu’s skill in re-creating the upholstery is matched by Bobby Dwyer’s woodworking skills. While the two are no officially partners, they have on many projects together and a door connects the two workshops.

Dwyer is able to not only re-create the frame but also to refurbish or replace the finely veneered wood that is hallmark of classic cars.

“Hours and hours can go into one tiny piece” he said. You can invest $1,000 into a part you can hold in you hand”.

The Packard is one of a kind.  Not only is the driver separated from the passenger compartment by a glass window, but the rear of the passenger compartment has a convertible roof.

Petcu and Dwyer have refurbished the interior in extreme detail, re-creating the leather and cloth interior in beige and refurbishing (and in some cased re-creating) the fine veneer trim.

A measure of Petcu’s attention to detail is outlined in long strips of cardboard that line both cars’ massive running boards. They are covered in meticulous notes listing every task he undertakes.  He uses the notes both as records of what he has done and for billing purposes.

He had made the new convertible roof out of beige material that matched the interior, but was dissatisfied with the result because it clashed with the black paintwork.  He said that he planned to replace it with black material after a discussion with owner, collector and restorer Dick Shappy.

It would take about 30 hours or two to three days to make the replacement  or two to three days given that he works”12 to 14 hours a day, six day a week.”

He said he also often works on Sundays, breaking only to watch his beloved Celtics on TV.  Overall, he said the Packard has some 700 of work in it.

Just replacing a set of seats requited him to install them three of four time, taking them out each time for retightening or loosening and possible additional stitching.

“It’s like making a suit, you pretty much tailor it ,” he said, adding, “ A major
Aspect of the upholsterer’s art is measuring and re-measuring.”

Petcu said that interior of the massive black 1947 Cadillac 62 Series Convertible was done to the metal when he received it. He re-created the two door panels, all the seats,
the floors, the convertible top and interior of the trunk.

He pointed out the piping along the back of one of the front red leather seats of the Cadillac, which he said was very slightly crooked on one of the seats.

The flaw was invisible to a layman’s eye but he said he would be taking the seat out and tightening it up to bring the piping in line.

Petcu said he left Romania in 1990 as a political refugee from the Communist government.  He had been a foe of President Nicolae Ceausescu, who was captured and executed in 1989 following a general uprising.

“ Why leave now”? he said many of his friends asked him.

“No, no, no, I’m leaving,” he said, noting that the new government was still a Communist one. “ I knew nothing good would come out of it.”

He subsequently spent a month in Italy being processed by the U.S. immigration authorities before coming to the U.S. in 1990.

Petcu said he held a variety of jobs when he first arrived.

“I did everything,” he said, citing breaking asphalt, working at Stop & Shop market and washing dished.

He also started upholstering furniture, a skill he had acquired in Romania.

“ I had a swing machine and fixed couches and chairs,” he said. “One day ( in 1996), a guy comes to me and says, I have an old car, can you do the upholstery?”
He said he had always loved cars and thus the transition into working on collector-car upholstery was a natural fit.

Petcu shares his workshop with another artisan, Brian Sullivan of P&S Upholstery. Sullivan left the corporate life with Merrill Lynch to focus on upholstering, a skill that runs in the family as he said he learned it from his brother who has a shop in East Providence, RI.

Indeed, another Bobby, helped him refurbish the upholstery of a dark blue 1964 Iso Rivolta, a car with an Italian body with a Corvette engine.

He said he had spent some 70 hours re-creating the Rivolta’s dashboard, floor, door panels and seats, noting the work had been eased by the fact that the car was delivered from a paint shop without doors or windows.

“ Restoration is a sequence of events,” he said.

Two years ago, Petcu and his wife Shirley Page, who is Brian and Bobby Sullivan’s sister,
Bought a condo in Tagliolo, Italy, where they spend half the year.

He has established an upholstery business, Autoappezzeria di Nick, but he said he has yet to fully exploit his Italian business.

“ People were concerned that I was leaving,” he said of his American customers.

For more information, check out:  www.nicksupholstery.net

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1951 MG TD Studebaker Special ~ Details

kelly Dietrick Presents: 1951 MG TD STUDEBAKER SPECIAL $37,000 Photo Gallery HERE *Chassis No. TD9514 *US Title *Unique MG TD with Studebake...