| When I went to the Brain-Melting Colorado Junkyard to buy a '41 Plymouth Special Deluxe sedan, for the purposes of some unholy engine swap, I did some digging around through stacks of random doors to try to find a handle to fit a friend's elderly Ford COE truck. While navigating the high desert cacti between rich veins of ancient truck doors, I happened to glance up and catch a view of this toasted-but-still-majestic hearse silhouetted against the sunset. What a Junkyard Find! Brush fires are always a danger on the plains east of Colorado Springs, and such a fire ate a few cars last year. Most of the burn victims have since been sent to The Crusher, but this old hearse remains. There's not much usable stuff left on this funeral hauler (unlike the rusty but largely complete '48 Pontiac hearse parked a few hundred yards away), so perhaps it's just here as a sort of sculpture. Yes, that big mountain in the background is Pikes Peak. Mount Evans is a lot closer to where I live and it's 154 feet taller, but the racing is far superior on this mountain. The fire seems to have been quite specific about which areas of this car it felt like ravaging. The windshield glass melted, but some of the nearby paint survived. It's sad to think that this hearse will never be restored and brought to HearseCon (Colorado, for reasons someone is going to have to explain to me, is the Customized Hearse Epicenter of America), but perhaps some of its parts will live on in other Cadillacs.
from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com |
Thanks for taking a lot of snapshots, good angles. Just a darn shame that the car in completely useless now, it was a good make.
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