Wednesday, October 29, 2014

A Couple of Octogenarian Survivors: Bruce Thompson and His 1930 Model A

Still pretty spry and sharp in his 80s, Bruce Thompson remembers his first ride in a Model A. It would have been 1931 or 1932. He thinks he was four or five years old. A neighbor took him and his brother for a ride. "Fifty miles an hour! I thought that was unbelievable. It was very exciting," he told me, his eyes lighting up as he remembered. In 1967 he bought his own Model A, a 1930 edition, from the original owner for just $750 dollars. That's right, it's a two owner 84 year old car in original condition. It has only about 24,000 miles on the odometer and Bruce still drives it, though not as regularly as he once did.

There's something about survivor cars, cars well driven and well loved, that speaks to me. Sure, restorations are nice, but today's standards mean that a restored car is likely better than it was when it left the factory. Pristine, never registered time capsule cars, with their plastic seat covers and Cosmoline intact, are also fascinating. However, a car that has been driven contains memories of the people who drove it and were driven in it.

Mr. Thompson's Model A is not a perfect car. The upholstery is worn in a couple of places but it's so obviously original equipment that it'd be a shame to do anything but let it wear some more. Everything on the car is original, as it left the Ford Rouge plant: original paint, original  top (many 1920s and early 1930s cars had tops covered with fabric or artificial leather), and that original interior. It still even has the original clutch and brake and their original linings. Even the spare tire is original, though I don't know if it still contains original 1930 vintage air.

Thompson also has the original equipment tool set and Model A "Instruction Book" that came with the car, now housed in a special display case.

There is something, though, that isn't original equipment on the car. Under the hood there's an "Auto Motor Heater" made by the Bunsen Company of Denver. It's a kerosene fired heater that was supposed to keep the engine warm on cold night to help with starting on cold mornings. My first thought was that it was likely to be a rare artifact since it seems to me that more than a couple likely burned up along with the cars they were keeping warm. However, it was advertised to be fireproof and appears to work similarly to flameless catalytic pocket warmers. Apparently enough have survived to now be valued by preppers and subsistence living enthusiasts since they can be used to heat a small space, assuming there's ventilation. I've read that some people also used them to heat the interior of their cars in the days before engine coolant based heaters became standard equipment.

auto_motor_heater

Still it's easy to be concerned about safety when those instructions mention the use of asbestos sheeting.

While the Auto Motor Heater seems to have been sold under a number of different brands, all of them seem to have been made by the Bunsen company. I haven't yet been able to determine if that firm had any connection to Robert Bunsen and his famous laboratory burners.

One thing that the Auto Motor Heater does have nothing to do with, the small, gasoline fueled furnaces best known from their use to heat air-cooled VW products, made by Eberspacher in Germany and Stewart-Warner/South Wind in the U.S. Writer Michael Lamm (without whom we wouldn't be able to enjoy the 24 Hrs of Lemons lo-buck racing series since it was started by his son Jay) covered the history of the South Wind heaters for American Heritage magazine back in 1995. About three million heaters were sold by South Wind, enough so that vintage car enthusiast Larry Lewis remanufactures and refinishes them for folks looking for vintage accessories. Prices start at $200.

Getting back to Mr. Thompson, I found him and his Model A Ford at the 2014 edition of Greenfield Village's Old Car Festival. As is the practice at the Old Car Festival, Thompson was dressed in period clothing and he looked rather jaunty in straw hat and bow tie. He looked proud as Punch with his own old car as he posed next to it. When he bought the car in 1968 I'm sure it looked a bit anachronistic to see a young middle aged man driving such an old car (even though the 1930 Model A and Mr. Thompson are actually close in age). Now that he's got some patina of his own, Thompson and his car are a matching set.

Ronnie Schreiber edits Cars In Depth, a realistic perspective on cars & car culture and the original 3D car site. If you found this post worthwhile, you can get a parallax view at Cars In Depth. If the 3D thing freaks you out, don't worry, all the photo and video players in use at the site have mono options. Thanks for reading – RJS

The post A Couple of Octogenarian Survivors: Bruce Thompson and His 1930 Model A appeared first on The Truth About Cars.



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