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re: Smoke Magazine

To: morgans@Autox.Team.Net
Subject: re: Smoke Magazine
From: RRCANOE13 <RRCANOE13@aol.com>
Date: Tue, 23 Dec 1997 21:07:54 EST
The following was published last year in Smoke Magazine and may be of
interest:


TEA WITH THE TERMITES


        Its shape is perfect:  the elegant fly yellow curves flow into one 
another
with such smooth synchronicity that sometimes I just sit there and look at it
- a piece of modern sculpture.  From the 72-spoke wire wheels to the leather
strap across the bonnet, this is a car you wear when you drive it.  This is a
Morgan.
        To the cognoscenti, the beautifully rounded chrome radiator grill 
immediately
distinguishes it from its flat-grilled cousins, the MG-TC, TD and TF that the
uninitiated often confuse the Morgan with, but in terms of pure performance
and "sportifness", there is just no comparison.
        Although there are only three models to choose from, the Plus 4 with a
Triumph TR-3  engine, the 4/4 with a Ford Cortina engine and the Plus 8 with
an aluminum Rover  V-8,  with all three you'll need a termite protection plan,
because this is the only automobile still made with a wooden frame and plywood
floorboards.
        I had flirted with buying a Morgan once before, in 1971, just after my
graduation from college.  Pooling together some money  from the three
different jobs I held while finishing school and from the sale of a Rover
2000TC that had nearly disintegrated from the harsh New England winters, I
visited the Elm Street Horseless Carriage Company in Charlestown, run by a
former Harvard doctor who specialized in buying and selling classic sports
cars.  
        There, a beautiful 1962 drophead coupe caught my eye, but a dark-haired
California girl had previously captured my affections and she voted for a
faded red 1965 Porsche 356 Cabriolet.  Both relationships turned out to be
remarkably short-lived -- and both broke my heart. 
        However, in 1979, flush with cash from the sale of a B-movie script, I
spotted a yellow Morgan sitting on a used car lot in Santa Monica.  The car
smiled at me and I did more than smile back.  I stopped and made an offer and
I've had the car ever since.    I paid $2200 in cash for my Morgan.  Seventeen
years later, I've been told my car would bring between $13,000 and $15,000 as
is, and maybe as much as $22,000 - ten times my original investment - if I
spruced it up a little.
        But you don't buy a Morgan for its capital appreciation.  You buy it 
because
it drives like no other car in the world - when it drives.  Sure, there are
faster sportscars; cars that don't creak and rattle and groan over
imperfections in the road.  But there are few cars you can actually feel
hunker down and come alive 
when they hit their stride.   
        I guess automobiles have been in my family's blood for several 
generations -
ever since Grandpa Mike - my father's father - owned one of the first
automobiles in Winnipeg, Canada - a Stanley Steamer.  One day he decided to
figure out how his car worked, so he took it apart.  When he finished putting
it back together, there were three parts left over.  The car, however, ran
like a top.  
        Later on, Grandpa Mike also owned two Stutz Bearcats, two Will St. 
Claires
(both stolen) and a LaSalle.
        My father, too, was a car aficionado.  Growing up, the first family car 
I can
remember was a black 1953 Buick Roadmaster convertible followed by a beautiful
silver grey 1954 Olds convertible with red leather upholstery.  Then in 1955,
my father took delivery of the very first T-Bird on the East Coast, a stunning
black 
2-seater with wire wheels, a Continental mount and snazzy black and white
genuine leather upholstery.
        Unfortunately, my father's enthusiasm for the car was short-lived.  The 
roof
leaked incessantly, despite the best efforts of the local Ford dealer to fix
it and this, coupled with a series of other small annoyances, caused my father
to write a series of searing letters to the head of the Ford Motor Co. - maybe
even Henry himself - and in 1959 Ford capitulated, offering my father a brand
new 1960 4-seater T-Bird free of charge - if he would just stop writing them
and, of course, he needed to turn in his '55.  
        Even though I was only 10 at the time, I argued long and bitterly for 
the '55
to remain in the family.  I said it was destined to become a classic, that a
little leak was a small inconvenience to pay for such beauty and - most of all
- I had been counting on driving the car when I turned sixteen.  "Wear a
raincoat," I suggested.  But one morning in late 1959, a FoMoCo representative
pulled up in front of our driveway in a boxy, metallic gold 4-seater T-bird
and drove away with "my" classic black 2-seater.
        My father's luck with cars changed irrevocably after that.  He even 
ended up
buying a Corvair in 1964, just before the Mustang was introduced to America
and Ford had another classic hit on its hands while we had one of the all-time
clunkers.
        Owning and driving a Morgan takes you back to another era:  motoring.  
Owning
and driving a Morgan labels you:  a bit of a rebel.  And owning and 
driving a Morgan can take you on a journey to another dimension when it comes
time for servicing.  
        My latest servicing saga has to do with the dreaded "Morgan death 
rattle".
This affliction occurs at a certain speed - in my case 45 mph - whereby the
car begins to buck and shake severely, threatening to come apart at the
joints.  
        After calling around to a number of sources, I found a restoration shop 
just
north of San Diego that claimed to have the remedy.  So down the Interstate 5
my car was trailered with explicit instructions to my newest mechanic to make
the eradication of the "death rattle" his highest priority.
        A month later, the mechanic called and assured me my car had been 
cured.  I
drove down to San Marcos with a friend who had volunteered to follow me back
up to LA - just in case.  No sooner had we pulled onto Route 78, than my
beautiful yellow Morgan started shaking and bucking all over again.
        As of this writing, the "death rattle" still lives and the cure is still
unknown...

     *              *               *             *             *            *
*

        Sometimes when I get fed up with the frustrations and inconveniences of
servicing and parts and finding an honest mechanic, I begin to think seriously
about selling my car -- and then I hear the words of my seven year-old son -
"Dad, take me for a ride in the Yellow Morgan" - and I think of a ten year old
boy watching a black 1955 T-Bird disappear down the driveway and I am
determined not to make the same mistake.

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