Thursday, June 30, 2011

My Kind Of Bug

Car shows are all about great automobiles and they certainly are the main attraction, but meeting the people behind the cars is what makes being at the show an experience. 

Walking across the lot full of show cars I spotted this bug and made a beeline towards it. As I made my first trip around the back and saw the keg gas tank I exclaimed "that's so awesome" not knowing the owner was standing behind me. He walked over, introduced himself and started to proudly explain the work he had done on this masterpiece.

This was a labor of love that spanned three generations of a local family that owns Stono Body Works. While working on the project with his father while his young boy watched with anticipation,  they turned a 70's era bug into the slammed and stretched monster that would make any custom car lover drool.











Some the guiding influences for this build were pretty cool and unexpected and I loved hearing them all. One of them was  old Fords of the 30's and 40's and he wanted to incorporate that style into the body. The father spent his time on the body and really showed his skill working metal chopping the roof and taking a single rear window and turning into thar classic split window bug look.








He also told the story of Henry Ford shipping the engines in special crates and the recycling the wood to make the floor boards in the old Fords. The wooden floor pays homage to those cars and looks really great too.









The rear stinger was a faux push bar seen on the old  Bonneville salt flat racers and performs a function, the light for the license plate is hidden in it. The copper tubing was a really nice touch as well and hides all the wiring. 

The mounts for the kegger tank were armor plates off a military Humvee, and were pretty tough to work with from what he was telling me, but the look of them was well worth the effort.










There was also a great little picture book he had made chronicling the entire build. There were a lot of great pictures of the car in all stages and the young  boy around the shop. That brought back memories of being that age and loving it when I would get to hang around mechanical shops where things were being taken apart or put back together.








Unfortunately I had to go back to work and did not get to ask nearly as many questions and forgot most of what he told me. One thing is certain, this was a two year labor of love and he was very proud of what he built, and he should be. This was awesome.   

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