NikonGear'23
Images => People, Portraits, Street, PJ & Cityscapes => Topic started by: Akira on March 03, 2016, 12:59:02
-
Found this one in Akihabara, Tokyo.
-
Talk about cultivating the difference :D
Must be some experience driving this vehicle in the streets of Tokyo ...
-
Yes, indeed. I wish I had a chance to hear the sound of the engine.
-
It is so cool that they have used an old Ford flathead V8. It's the only engine that suits a Ford hotrod like this. People using modern Chevy engines in cars like this should be punished :-)
Nice find Akira, and lovely presentation as well. Your new D750 at work?
-frank-
-
That would be illegal in the UK!
-
It is so cool that they have used an old Ford flathead V8. It's the only engine that suits a Ford hotrod like this. People using modern Chevy engines in cars like this should be punished :-)
Nice find Akira, and lovely presentation as well. Your new D750 at work?
-frank-
Thanks, Frank, for kind words and the identification of the engine. Strangely I didn't like D750 at all when it hit the market, but I'm in love with it now. ::)
That would be illegal in the UK!
Mike, are you talking about the absence of the fenders? I suspect it could be illegal also in Japan...
-
I love how accessible these old engines are. Today's engines are almost impossible to access for even the simplest of DIY tasks >:(
-
Absolutely Akira. Also it is not allowed to have the engine compartment open which would give access to moving parts!
-
What a beautiful car!
-
What a find !
nice little series Akira
-
Nice road side take!
Fun car with a ton of character.
Do you have an interieur shot?
I assume there would be issues with the non covered wheels in Germany...
-
Thanks, Mikes, there are too many black boxes in today's machines.
Jakov, it surely has a character!
Armando, glad you like the series.
Thomas, unfortunately there was a thick down jacket and the most interesting part of the interior was covered with it. Also, the owner was not present there. I didn't want to be suspected and had to work quickly.
-
Thomas, unfortunately there was a thick down jacket and the most interesting part of the interior was covered with it. Also, the owner was not present there. I didn't want to be suspected and had to work quickly.
No heating :-X ?
Akira, thank you for showing. Here's a youtube sound file that seems to fit. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7NdrkHwBX5U), and another sounding good. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FpoUtzedVWk)
-
No heating :-X ?
Akira, thank you for showing. Here's a youtube sound file that seems to fit. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7NdrkHwBX5U), and another sounding good. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FpoUtzedVWk)
Thomas, I'm not sure. If there is no heating, the owner wants to save the battery power maybe?
Thanks for the links to hear the sound. The engine surely sound nice. I especially like the idling sound. :)
-
Nice bus !!........but so unjapanese. It may be the rarest thing in Japan right now. TFS.
-
Nice bus !!........but so unjapanese. It may be the rarest thing in Japan right now. TFS.
LOL, Mongo! But Akihabara is the place to visit if you want to find something weird or awkward. So, this classic automobile fits rather well with the environment.
I often go there to purchase some electronic parts and tools (it has been geeks' heaven for decades), but the area is now also anime geeks' heaven!
-
Its actually great to know such an interestingly different place exists for the locals. Mongo quite likes the idea of the place/concept you have described. It sounds like, if this hot rod had to exist anywhere in Japan - it is in the right place.
PS - you can tell by the design of the exhaust system and the heads that it is a very, very early V8 motor.
-
Dual carbs- some tune up in place, I think singles were the early basic standard.
-
This looks like an early Ford "flathead" V8 - approx 1937 to 1940. Those engines came out in a couple of configurations. This one had the twin Stomberg carburettors as opposed to the single carb model.
Approx 60 to 85 horsepower if engine is in standard form.
Still, Mongo would love to have it ;D (but this is now getting away from photography and we should return to the original subject)
-
Its actually great to know such an interestingly different place exists for the locals. Mongo quite likes the idea of the place/concept you have described. It sounds like, if this hot rod had to exist anywhere in Japan - it is in the right place.
PS - you can tell by the design of the exhaust system and the heads that it is a very, very early V8 motor.
I think you are right. We are talking about 239cc.
The nightmare is tuning the twin carbs as this has to be done by shoving a pipe to your ear to balance........
It is a cool car but a very far cry from today rods and the screaming melody of the engines.
I very much like engine music and is a factor when purchasing a car which make me avoid cars similar to Audi which sounds like a sewing machine.
You have to give it to the American gaz guzzlers which are the best in the engine melody class and it is so nice to start your day with the silence being awaken by a V8 6300cc 450hp start up......followed by the purrrrrring of the engine at idle. Sheer delight.
Would you like to hear it?
-
(https://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1601/25124460569_2f7ed5e599_o.jpg)
Nissan Figaro
-
Beautiful car well photographed.
I once had the honour of being taken for a drive in an original Ford V8.
-
Fons, how is the reputation of Nissan in Holland?
Peter, thanks! Driving in the Ford V8 should be exciting.
-
Fons, how is the reputation of Nissan in Holland?
Peter, thanks! Driving in the Ford V8 should be exciting.
Akira i didnt know this car thought it was a vintage French car, until i read Nissan, so it supposed to be rare here.
-
Akira i didnt know this car thought it was a vintage French car, until i read Nissan, so it supposed to be rare here.
I see. Your guess was not all that wrong. Nissan has been affiliated with Renault since 1999.
-
Nice find Akira. There are custom car companies here in California which restore and customize old cars for export primarily to Japan. They make a lot of cruisers.
-
Nice find Akira. There are custom car companies here in California which restore and customize old cars for export primarily to Japan. They make a lot of cruisers.
Thanks, Gary. There are stable Japanese fans of old American automobiles from 1970s and older. So, the custom car companies should be making good deals.