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Tuesday, 3 April 2012

The most outstanding car at the LaJolla Concours de Elegance was the legendary Blitzen Benz, land speed record setting automobile from 1909 that has been raced by Eddie Rickenbocker and Barney Oldfield
















































now here are the incredibly large hi res photos of the engine if you want them for your wallpaper




A gallery of vintage photos of the Blitzen Benz I've posted before: http://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2010/10/galley-of-photos-of-blitzen-benz.html

faster than any contemporary plane, train or automobile.

The first record-breaking outings of the 200-hp Benz provided early indications that this was a model destined to push back the boundaries. Indeed, the speeds which this car was aiming for meant that it quickly outgrew the confines of European race circuits. Benz & Cie. knew that this would not be a problem in the USA and the decision was quickly taken to cross the Atlantic. Achieving further success with the record-breaking car in the States – an important overseas market – would not be bad for business...

And so, after completing a series of trial runs around Mannheim, the car was shipped off to America in January 1910 - new body and all. The plan was for George Robertson to go head-to-head with the car against Ralph de Palma, who held records on a host of American circuits. However, not everything went according to plan.

After discovering that Jesse Froehlich had taken delivery of the car, event manager Ernie Moross proposed a deal with the New York-based Benz importer: his 150-hp grand-prix Benz plus 6,000 dollars in exchange for the record-breaking racer. The wily businessman even had a catchy name in mind – this was a lightning-fast car, so why not call it the "Lightning Benz". The name was painted onto his new purchase.

Moross’ driver Barney Oldfield duly lined up at Daytona Beach in Florida on March 17, 1910 without any kind of specific preparation for his first record attempt – and duly posted a new world best of 211.97 km/h. However, the A.I.A.C.R. (Association Internationale des Automobile Clubs Reconnus), the highest authority in car racing and the precursor to the Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) which governs motor sport today, refused to recognize the record because the Benz had not covered the distance in the opposite direction as well – as specified in the competition guidelines – with the average from the two runs determining the valid speed.

Undeterred, Moross organized a series of show events for the "Lightning Benz". However, the car’s name was soon to lose its sheen in the eyes of its restless owner, who replaced it with the German translation "Blitzen-Benz" – presumably with the aim of further accentuating the car’s roots – and had a small German Imperial Eagle painted onto the right-hand side of the hood.

Excerpted out of context, where the article points out that more than one Blitzen Benz was made and shipped to the US for racing, and promotions, to sell more Benz cars

Benz versus Benz

The first meeting of the Blitzen took place on September 30, 1912 in St. Louis, where the two 200-hp Benz cars came face to face on the starting line. The event captured the imagination of American sports reporters, prompting rather over-the-top references to the new Blitzen as the "300-hp Jumbo-Benz", even though both cars had the same size engine.

 The two cars lined up alongside each other for further record attempts on San Diego beach shortly before Christmas 1912, with the second-generation model now also afforded "Blitzen-Benz" status. During the attempt, a fire broke out on one of the cars, presumably Blitzen-Benz I, prompting the quick-thinking Burman to steer it quickly into the Pacific waters to put out the flames. Moross spent 4,000 dollars on restoring the car to its former glory.

In 1914 the Blitzen-Benz II stretched its legs over the salt lake in Bonneville, Teddy Tetzlaff recording a speed of 229.85 km/h. The car went on to compete in various races up to 1917, after which things become less clear. It is likely that the 200-hp Benz was bought in 1917 by Ralph Hankinson, a dirt-track race organizer. However, with his business subsequently entering into bankruptcy it appears that the car was snapped up by a carnival society sometime around 1919. From there the trail runs cold.
http://autospeed.com/cms/title_The-BlitzenBenz/A_2745/article.html

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Monday, 2 April 2012

Good car I must sell, Chevrolet Cruze Eco, 2011 model year, gets about 40 mpg on the freeway, owned exactly 14 months, 18,500 miles









This Cruze Eco model is the lightweight, no spare tire, lightweight rims, built in aerodynamic variation blades in the grill to vary the amount of air into the radiator and lessen the drag coefficient when at higher speeds.

It's all made to get you better gas mileage than the ridiculously twice as expensive hybrid cars... no joke.

I just spent all Saturday cleaning and detailing the interior, it looks as good as the day I got it from Courtesy Chevrolet here in San Diego's Mission Valley, last April.

It has a dash pad to keep the sun from damaging the dash, and the front seat had covers on til last week... I forgot to take off the seat uppers, so those too are immaculate.

XM/Sirius, all the AC/PS/PB stuff, USB link and Blutooth link from your cell to the car stereo, the back seat has never been used, nothing's ever been spilled in it, and it's got all the paperwork from the dealership since day one. Window sticker, booklets for all the OnStar, XM/Sirius, etc etc.

1.4 liter turbo engine, 6 speed manual with overdrive, front wheel drive with traction control, and here is the PRAISE from Car and Driver magazine http://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/2011-chevrolet-cruze-eco-drive-chevy-cruze-review on a drive from Los Angeles to San Diego in a manual-equipped Eco, the (probably optimistic) trip computer showed an average of 43.8 mpg, with most of our cruising done at 80 mph with the air conditioning on

email me at jbohjkl@yahoo.com if you want to buy it, taking over payments is cool too, this car is financed through GM Financial / Ally whatever they call themselves, and if you have good credit like I do, I'd guess you'd get the 1.9 or 2.9 % I did. No, I don't remember which one it was, it doesn't matter that much to me which one, they are both good, and this isn't a house where the tenths of a % matter. 

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The Robert Lee Museum Collection news source, Taiadablog, has just posted news on the collection's future

 read it in Portugese if you must, but use Google Chrome and it will translate to your language of choice http://taiada-blog.blogspot.com/2012/04/taiadablog-e-museu-roberto-lee-sem.html

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Sunday, 1 April 2012

Presidential motorcade, great way to advertise your business if you can find a photo of a President with your company building in the background




I drive past this place a couple times a month, and never looked too close at this before. I am impressed.

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nice paint design on this gravel moving rig and trailers... but why have the Titleist name on the back... isn't that the logo for the golf equipment company?


It stuck me as a strange thing to write on a construction trailer

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wouldn't these steel plates be more useful if they were bolted down? they are to keep vandals from breaking into this Caterpillar 385b excavator, aren't they?



impressive armor plating for those windows in event of tornadoes too I suppose... but what else would they be on the cab for when it's after work hours, if not to lock out vandals?

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