[DeTomaso] A haircut for Hugh....
Tom Shinrock
tmshinro at aol.com
Sun Jan 3 11:27:10 EST 2016
Very inspirational story. Now I'm feeling guilty for not driving my Pantera for close to 3 months...and it doesn't need anything fixed. Just been too busy with moving to a new house, getting ready for the holidays, welcoming the new addition to the family (Superformance Cobra) and more honey-dos than I can count.
Now that winter is officially arrived with a major snow/ice storm and below freezing temperatures, I won't be able to enjoy any of the cars until next spring. So keep the driving stories coming.
Tom
5186
-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Drew via DeTomaso <detomaso at poca.com>
To: detomaso <detomaso at POCA.com>
Sent: Sat, Jan 2, 2016 11:36 pm
Subject: [DeTomaso] A haircut for Hugh....
Hi guys,
Today was a day intended for errands and small chores. Among the
things I had to do was to drive to Travis Air Force Base (about 20-25
minutes away) and get a haircut. The easy thing to do would be to just
jump in one of my Sciroccos and zip out there. But I was thinking
about Hugh, how much he appreciated his family's strong military
heritage, and how much he enjoyed driving his Pantera, and decided that
I would attempt to honor him in a very small way by taking my Pantera
out there.
The clutch is slipping pretty badly and I haven't had time to fix it
yet (although I do have a new clutch disc in a box) so I have only
driven the car a handful of times this year. Getting it out involved
moving several cars, motorcycles, tools and debris, and a bunch of
boxes (including the new clutch disc). It took some cranking but the
engine fired up, initially running on only five or six cylinders, but
after a few seconds it cleared its throat and idled at an impatient
1500 rpm.
I slowly backed out of the garage, kicked it down to its normal 1000
rpm idle and set off. The skies were leaden, although the rain that's
supposed to happen for a full week isn't due to start until tomorrow. I
revelled in the sound of the roller valvetrain thrashing away, the
tactile feel of the Momo steering wheel, and the expansive view through
the windscreen. After driving normal cars for a long time, one forgets
how fantastic the view is to the front (and similarly, how challenging
it is to back out of a tight space to the rear).
I can't give the car more than about 15-20% throttle before the clutch
slips, so it was a fairly ginger drive. However, it's amazing how fast
you can go in a Pantera with almost no throttle application if you're
just patient. Let it slowly gain revs and you can be moving along at
quite a rate of knots before you know it, and because you aren't
mashing the throttle to the mat, the acceleration is subtle and
deceiving.
My drive consists of a straight road alongside the edge of town for the
first half, and then totally barren farm roads for the second half,
arrow-straight with 15 mph 90-degree corners and formidable drainage
ditches on each side, so this isn't the place for any sort of antics.
Before long, I got to the base, and the young airman manning the gate
had eyes sticking out on stalks--he'd never seen me or my Pantera (or
any Pantera) before. So we had a brief conversation where I gave him a
30-second synopsis of the car, and he nodded with admiration.
I parked in a distant spot, conveniently near an old WWII/Korean
War-vintage C-54 that's on display in the middle of a roundabout, and
took the opportunity to shoot a quick photo. (attached)
When I emerged from the barber shop, it had become dark. There was no
traffic on the country roads between the base and my town, and even
driving gently so as to avoid clutch slippage, I was able to wick it up
and cruise at 80-90 mph for a few minutes at a time. Once I hit town I
settled down and just burbled back home.
It's easy to become complacent about the Pantera in the garage, and to
find excuses NOT to drive it. After all, it's almost always easier to
take something else if you just have to get from point A to point B.
And as often as not, there is some little thing wrong with the car that
really 'needs' to be fixed, that can discourage you from taking it
somewhere.
But driving a Pantera is one of the most life-affirming things you can
do, and even if it takes a little effort, it's always, always worth
it. Each Pantera drive is a little special in its own way.
This one was for you, Hugha|.
Mike
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-------------- next part --------------
Very inspirational story. Now I'm feeling guilty for not driving my
Pantera for close to 3 months...and it doesn't need anything fixed.
Just been too busy with moving to a new house, getting ready for the
holidays, welcoming the new addition to the family (Superformance
Cobra) and more honey-dos than I can count.
Now that winter is officially arrived with a major snow/ice storm and
below freezing temperatures, I won't be able to enjoy any of the cars
until next spring. So keep the driving stories coming.
Tom
5186
-----Original Message-----
From: Mike Drew via DeTomaso <detomaso at poca.com>
To: detomaso <detomaso at POCA.com>
Sent: Sat, Jan 2, 2016 11:36 pm
Subject: [DeTomaso] A haircut for Hugh....
Hi guys,
Today was a day intended for errands and small chores. Among the
things I had to do was to drive to Travis Air Force Base (about 20-25
minutes away) and get a haircut. The easy thing to do would be to just
jump in one of my Sciroccos and zip out there. But I was thinking
about Hugh, how much he appreciated his family's strong military
heritage, and how much he enjoyed driving his Pantera, and decided that
I would attempt to honor him in a very small way by taking my Pantera
out there.
The clutch is slipping pretty badly and I haven't had time to fix it
yet (although I do have a new clutch disc in a box) so I have only
driven the car a handful of times this year. Getting it out involved
moving several cars, motorcycles, tools and debris, and a bunch of
boxes (including the new clutch disc). It took some cranking but the
engine fired up, initially running on only five or six cylinders, but
after a few seconds it cleared its throat and idled at an impatient
1500 rpm.
I slowly backed out of the garage, kicked it down to its normal 1000
rpm idle and set off. The skies were leaden, although the rain that's
supposed to happen for a full week isn't due to start until tomorrow. I
revelled in the sound of the roller valvetrain thrashing away, the
tactile feel of the Momo steering wheel, and the expansive view through
the windscreen. After driving normal cars for a long time, one forgets
how fantastic the view is to the front (and similarly, how challenging
it is to back out of a tight space to the rear).
I can't give the car more than about 15-20% throttle before the clutch
slips, so it was a fairly ginger drive. However, it's amazing how fast
you can go in a Pantera with almost no throttle application if you're
just patient. Let it slowly gain revs and you can be moving along at
quite a rate of knots before you know it, and because you aren't
mashing the throttle to the mat, the acceleration is subtle and
deceiving.
My drive consists of a straight road alongside the edge of town for the
first half, and then totally barren farm roads for the second half,
arrow-straight with 15 mph 90-degree corners and formidable drainage
ditches on each side, so this isn't the place for any sort of antics.
Before long, I got to the base, and the young airman manning the gate
had eyes sticking out on stalks--he'd never seen me or my Pantera (or
any Pantera) before. So we had a brief conversation where I gave him a
30-second synopsis of the car, and he nodded with admiration.
I parked in a distant spot, conveniently near an old WWII/Korean
War-vintage C-54 that's on display in the middle of a roundabout, and
took the opportunity to shoot a quick photo. (attached)
When I emerged from the barber shop, it had become dark. There was no
traffic on the country roads between the base and my town, and even
driving gently so as to avoid clutch slippage, I was able to wick it up
and cruise at 80-90 mph for a few minutes at a time. Once I hit town I
settled down and just burbled back home.
It's easy to become complacent about the Pantera in the garage, and to
find excuses NOT to drive it. After all, it's almost always easier to
take something else if you just have to get from point A to point B.
And as often as not, there is some little thing wrong with the car that
really 'needs' to be fixed, that can discourage you from taking it
somewhere.
But driving a Pantera is one of the most life-affirming things you can
do, and even if it takes a little effort, it's always, always worth
it. Each Pantera drive is a little special in its own way.
This one was for you, Hugha|.
Mike
_______________________________________________
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