Ah, Those Were The Days

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His first car was not a normal car.
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Ah, those were the days.

My first car was not a normal car.

It was a 1970 Chrysler New Yorker with a 440 Magnum TNT police interceptor pursuit engine that put out 418 horsepower and more than 500 pound feet of torque. It had a passing gear at 95, no shit. The carburetor would open up and the sound of a tingling bell could be heard inside the car. No fuel injection for me, back then.

When all my friends were buying Corvettes, Mustangs, Camaros, and Olds 442's, I had my sedate, four door black sedan with the gold vinyl roof. Yeah, it looked a bit like a Mafia car, especially when driving it slow around the old neighborhood at dusk.

I bought it used with 11,000 miles on it for $3,000, a lot of money to me back then in 1972. Okay, there was an unexplained big blood stain on the dashboard that the salesman ignored, but I didn't ask any questions. It was a good deal. What can you buy today for $3,000? Motorcycles cost more. Gees, the Temper-Pedic mattress that I just bought cost more than one and a half times that.

Those were the days of cheap gasoline. I remember filling up my 26 1/2 gallon tank for less than ten bucks and I didn't have to get out of the car to pump my own gas.

"That will be $9.75."

"Did you check my oil?"

"Yeah, you're full."

"Did you clean my windshield?"

"I did when while you were talking to your friends."

"Did you put air in all four tires?"

"I did as you asked."

"Great. Thanks a lot." I handed him a ten. "Keep the change," I said as I pulled out of the gas station.

"Hey, thanks a lot. Now, I can afford to put my kids through college, you cheap bastard," he yelled after me as I drove off.

People always thought that I had money when they saw my big car. If they only knew that I had to take a collection to buy gas from my friends.

After my friends tired of driving their two door cars, they would hop in my car and we'd go for a ride. My car was so big that I could fit 5 skinny teenagers comfortably in the back seat. It was a great car for the drive-in movies because the trunk was big enough to fit three of my friends and we didn't have to pay the full admission price.

The only cars that were bigger than my car were the Chrysler Imperial, Lincoln Continental, and the Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham.

So, why was my car so special? It was just a big boat, after all, like all the other dinosaurs that traveled the highways back then, Chevrolet Caprice, Ford Galaxies, Mercury Marauders, Pontiac Bonnevilles, and Oldsmobile 88's and 98's. It was fast. It was sleeper fast.

I used to love when someone pulled up beside me in their sports car, a Datsun 240Z or a pony car. I'd nail the gas when the light turned green. They never suspected that my Chrysler would blow their doors off. They never suspected that I had a 440 Magnum in there. All they saw was my tail lights and the dust that I blew up on their windshields.

My friend, Ralph, had a '69 Corvette convertible that his parents bought him for graduating high school. My parents bought me a Timex wristwatch. Anyway, Ralph was always bragging about how fast his car was, and it was. Definitely, it was a chick magnet. He had a different good looking girl with him every time I saw him. And Ralph was not the best looking guy. He was okay, but he looked nothing like yours truly.

We were all going down to Cape Cod one summer. We rented a house in Provincetown for a week. There were 8 of us chipping in to rent this place. Ralph followed me down while I had five of my friends in the New Yorker with all the cases of beer in the trunk.

"Hey, Ralph," I said, "I bet you that I can blow your doors off."

"No way," he said. He had a 350 in his 'Vette and he knew that I had a 440, five friends, and cases of beer.

"I'll bet you a double sawbuck," I said hoping that he would go for it and he did."

"Okay, you're on. When we get to a stretch, where there's no cars, pull along beside me and we can do a mile." I knew he would beat me in the quarter mile, but not in the straight mile.

Finally, the traffic cleared and I booted it and pulled up beside him. Crazy, I know, but we stopped on the highway before nailing it. Quickly, he pulled away a few car lengths ahead. I stomped on the gas. I could feel the engine bolts' struggling against the engine mounts.

At 95mph, I heard the little bell and I knew my four barrel carburetor was wide open. I passed him at 120mph and kept going. Yeah, his car was fast, but it was unable to hold the road like my car did. At speed, his car bounced and rattled over every undulation and rough service in the road. His 'Vette was a handful.

My friends thought that I was doing 80mph and were shocked when they looked over at the speedometer and it was pegged past the 120 mark.

Ralph made excuses, but my 4,400 pound car, loaded down with five friends and beer, blew his doors off.

Ah, those were the days.

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  • COMMENTS
7 Comments
chytownchytown9 months ago

*****Those were the days of great cars. Thanks for sharing.

SongslingerSongslingerabout 10 years ago
Sunday's giving witness

I loved the story, so easily accurate in description to Oklahoma's version, we had lakes...a riverside commune of spiritualists was all good, but I know a farmin family outside Wichita that ourfamily used to travel together around Oklahoma as daddies were construction foremen back then, but, at any rate, in my 14th year, I got out of the city and went up there for some 'Green Acres' living, and that Chrysler hemi was Daddy's family car.. Well , I thought nothin of it at the time..sure, Kansas can abide that all day long, flat as it is. Sunday mornin meant risin just as early for church as for the plawin and balein, so huge buffet breakfast, followed by Church..about 10 miles with a 2 mile jog south...All was purty much the usual Catholic mass-type affair..small..more informal but the ride bach put a whole new meaning on being prayerfully solemn in your faith, cause. ole 'Urb' (daddy) got to cruisin on that 2 lane straight shot but the next thing I knew, Urb was tellin us to sit tight and hold on, flooring it...

His foot stayed to the floor as we began to realize he was serious. one of us boys leaned over the front seat and reported, ''115'' back to us, and my gawwd...Urb shouted out, ''125!!''.....''26...''.....''27''.......twennntyyyyyeight!! ...and that went on right on up to ''135''... I'd not prayed like I was prayin at one tricky point because waaay off along our path, just shy of a section line mile away, was another car, meeting up with OUR path so far away, yet so close...if that driver is half-asleep..we're goin to Heaven today, and the relief was eenormous, and ole Urb just busted out laughin, wantin to check our seat for wetness, for chrisake... 135...my fastest car ride..

Those were some good times, ehh? I lived..that's alway gonna be good, you ask me.. You know, I don't remember goin to church again that year up there...lol

gperry2843gperry2843about 11 years ago
Loved the story and the times.

It was more fun back when you could tell the difference between cars when you saw them. Today the cars all look so much alike you have to see the title to be sure what you are looking at.

shoeslayershoeslayerabout 13 years ago
watch out

I used to live on Cape cod, West Falmouth, Hyannis. and I know parts of rte.6 were very dangerous. 2 lanes 1 west 1 east guess u made it all right. Did you find Ptown full of gays ? pretty much what it is now.

Good story, brings back lotsa memories.

John_the_AuthorJohn_the_Authorover 15 years ago
Love the oldies!

My first car was a 1966 Chevy BelAir station wagon! :-( We're talking oil-burning 283 V8, whiny Powerglide, rust, dents and a $100 price tage back in 1976. I could've gotten a 1967 Ford Fairlane two-door hardtop for just $125, but my overprotective parents lied and said the oil stain under it showed mechanical trouble. They just didn't want me to have a cool car! Thanks for the look at what fun I could have had.

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