Yesterday saw a road trip to a farmstead in Vulcan County, north of Milo, Alberta to fetch a '63 GT Hawk that had languished in a shed there since the late 1970's. It had become a mouse metropolis in the succeeding years. The car had been brought into the shed via the sliding door on one side, and then had the wheels removed, and was skidded sideways, and put on blocks. With the help of fellow Foothills Chapter member Barry Brace, and with the OK of the landowner, we cut a hole in the rear wall of the shed, put roller wheels under the car, and dragged it out backwards. The landowner used his little JD tractor to pull it, which was a huge help.
We got it loaded on my trailer without difficulty, and then put the shed back together, by sistering and splinting studs. It is as solid as it was. Heh.
The tow home was uneventful. Nothing fell off, nothing came loose.
Today, I towed it to the local car wash, and blasted years of dust and raccoon turds off the outside, and blew some of the years of mouse turds and grain hulls out of the interior. This car stinks bad, let me tell you. The I got it home, and dragged it off the trailer. It did not roll backwards readily; had to tug it with another Suburban. It's nice to have more than one of those. I gave it a name: Uncle Fester. It fits, because there is so much there that is festering. There were maggots of some kind under the "carpets". And beetles. I cut the carpeted part off the door panels with a reciprocating saw. They were soggy with mouse pee, anyway.
I got out my own pressure washer, and did the trunk, under the hood, the doors, and the floors. The doors filled up with water, and all this guck then oozed out of them. The pictures tell the story. My yard looks like it has been frequented by an incontinent cow. But smells worse. I had to take a shower after doing all that. The back-splash was nasty.
I'm sure the headliner is full of mouse nests, and also the rear quarter areas where the windows crank down. Most of the seat foam and cushions are GONE.
It is a 4-speed car, 2-barrel carb, manual steering, power brakes (hydrovac), and has a full dash. Also has a model 44 Twin Traction rear axle, ratio undetermined. There was a spare tire, a jack, jack base, and jack handle in the trunk, plus a 4-way wrench, and a bunch of oil filter cartridges that don't belong to a full-flow V8. Which this is.
I don't know if the body shell will be rebuildable. The chassis looks amazingly good. Finned drums all round. Clean-ish oil on the dipstick. I will try to start the engine tomorrow.
Car was sold (new?) by Halford and Valentine, Studebaker dealers in Calgary, back in the day; their sticker is on the back.
The trunk and interior floors were rusted back in the '70's, as evidenced by patches, crude patches, that can be seen in the pictures. There is also a big patch on the inboard side of the left tail fin, by the trunk lid. And the front air scoop is red, not black. So it was less than pristine when put away, but time has been unkind to it.
This one is probably going to be a parts car, but if some masochist wants a really ambitious GT Hawk project car, give me a holler.
I will update this as new information trickles in.
We got it loaded on my trailer without difficulty, and then put the shed back together, by sistering and splinting studs. It is as solid as it was. Heh.
The tow home was uneventful. Nothing fell off, nothing came loose.
Today, I towed it to the local car wash, and blasted years of dust and raccoon turds off the outside, and blew some of the years of mouse turds and grain hulls out of the interior. This car stinks bad, let me tell you. The I got it home, and dragged it off the trailer. It did not roll backwards readily; had to tug it with another Suburban. It's nice to have more than one of those. I gave it a name: Uncle Fester. It fits, because there is so much there that is festering. There were maggots of some kind under the "carpets". And beetles. I cut the carpeted part off the door panels with a reciprocating saw. They were soggy with mouse pee, anyway.
I got out my own pressure washer, and did the trunk, under the hood, the doors, and the floors. The doors filled up with water, and all this guck then oozed out of them. The pictures tell the story. My yard looks like it has been frequented by an incontinent cow. But smells worse. I had to take a shower after doing all that. The back-splash was nasty.
I'm sure the headliner is full of mouse nests, and also the rear quarter areas where the windows crank down. Most of the seat foam and cushions are GONE.
It is a 4-speed car, 2-barrel carb, manual steering, power brakes (hydrovac), and has a full dash. Also has a model 44 Twin Traction rear axle, ratio undetermined. There was a spare tire, a jack, jack base, and jack handle in the trunk, plus a 4-way wrench, and a bunch of oil filter cartridges that don't belong to a full-flow V8. Which this is.
I don't know if the body shell will be rebuildable. The chassis looks amazingly good. Finned drums all round. Clean-ish oil on the dipstick. I will try to start the engine tomorrow.
Car was sold (new?) by Halford and Valentine, Studebaker dealers in Calgary, back in the day; their sticker is on the back.
The trunk and interior floors were rusted back in the '70's, as evidenced by patches, crude patches, that can be seen in the pictures. There is also a big patch on the inboard side of the left tail fin, by the trunk lid. And the front air scoop is red, not black. So it was less than pristine when put away, but time has been unkind to it.
This one is probably going to be a parts car, but if some masochist wants a really ambitious GT Hawk project car, give me a holler.
I will update this as new information trickles in.

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