Car collector's hobby suits him to a T
Clyde White shakes his head ruefully. He is a "diseased" man, he admits, having succumbed to the fever some 45 years ago.
"It's a progressive disease," he laments. Once it gets hold of you, your life is never the same.
On the other hand, being of sound mind and body could be somewhat overrated especially when you have your very own Model T in the garage out back. Especially when it still runs nearly a hundred years after it rolled out of the Ford Motor Co. factory. Especially when you have looked into the soul of old cars.
White was bit by the classic car virus when he was a newlywed. "My wife, Dale, worked with some people in the Horseless Carriage Club. I saw what a good time they had. It got to where I had to have one."
Being newly married and without a lot of discretionary income, he gravitated toward the Model T. "In those days, you could still find bits and pieces out in the fields. Nowadays, the parts are much harder to come by."
The car he has now is a 1910 T. "It was actually built in the second year of production, and it's almost the same car as the original ones. There were some differences in trim is all." He has restored the car from the wheels up.
Every year, even though the model was essentially the same, there were a few changes which keeps collectors on their toes. The axles, drive shafts and engines were slightly different but all interchangeable, so parts from one could be used in another. If you want authenticity, you have to watch out for that, he says.
A friend of his had found the body of the car in the loft of a barn in Idaho. "He had started getting parts, but only about half of what he had was right. He had the right rear end, but it was a 1912 engine." After buying the car, White wanted his car to have the correct parts, so he has replaced the others bit by bit until this is pretty much they way the car would have been in 1910.
His car is painted green, with shiny brass trim. "The Model T came in two colors until mid-1914. After that you could only get black," he explains.
The brass easily corrodes and has to be covered and protected from air when the car is not in use. And it has to be polished quite regularly. "If you are a polishing fiend, you can do one in a 12-hour day. Mostly, it takes a couple of days, plus."
He has, he says, "what you call a 30-footer. From 30 feet away it looks great. It's getting a little battered, bruised. Still, considering how long it has been on the road 33 years this time around it's held up pretty good."
This Model T is not the first car that White has restored. "I started with a 1915 Runabout. But that only holds two people. When the kids came along, we needed a touring car so the kids could go with us, so I sold the other one and got this."
Over the years, there have also been an '05 Cadillac and a '07 Buick. "But the Model T was about the easiest to find parts for. They were less expensive, and it is the simplest to maintain. That put it in my ballpark."
He has another finished "speedster which is that era's version of a street rod." It is cobbled together of mismatched bits and pieces. He's also in the process of restoring one more T.
"I like the tinkering, the blacksmithing. The driving's fun, but I get as much enjoyment out of the refurbishing as the using it. I like bringing something back to life," he says.
White participates in some of the classic car tours around the country. He's not a big show person, he says, but on the other hand, it's better for the car to be used. "You have to baby-sit it. You can't just shut the door and lock it up."
If he's going any distance, he will trailer the T to the tour locations. There, with other aficionados, he will drive around the back roads. "We've done a lot in Colorado and California. We've done South Dakota and New Mexico. My kids have seen the West through the windows of a Model T. You can't beat that."
Yes, the pace is slower. Just how fast can you go? "Up hill or on the flat?" he asks. His optimal speed is around 30-35 mph. "Some of the later cars can get to around 40. But in the '10 you're not in control if you get going too fast. You also have to consider the brakes. They do not stop well. They are back-wheel brakes."
They "used to require that you looked the part on national tours," he says. Period costumes were kind of fun. But the best thing about the tours were the other drivers. "I've met a lot of interesting people."
It's getting so the Model T-ers are a vanishing breed, he says. "There are a few younger people who go ga-ga over the Model T. But most people unless they are diseased like me tend to relate more to the cars they knew as kids. The big muscle cars of the '60s are what collectors want today," he says.
But for all White jokes about his "condition," his enjoyment and delight in old cars have served him well. You only have to see him brush his hand lovingly across the fender of his 1910 Model T to know that.
E-mail: carma@desnews.com
