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Let’s see, my Grandfather’s Graham has not been on the road in over 50 years. It is buried behind a mountain of junk sleeping till next spring when I had planned on getting it running enough to trailer it down to the 2008 Graham Meet in LaCrosse WI. Something crazy in my head said we can make it….”Sure, I would love to bring the 33 down for the film”….what was I saying? I had to be insane! 5 weeks to do what the last 2 years had not accomplished with the same resources and the outside temperature is like 5 degrees below zero!
First week; unbury the Graham and use the tractor to pull it through the snow banks to the garage. Did I mention I had to do this while my lovely wife is at the store because she did not know she would be losing her garage for the next 5 weeks. In MN that is a big thing. Once I got the Graham defrosted I made the list of things to do, OK I cut the list of things to do down to the absolute minimum. I still had an enormous list, like painting wheels, mounting tires, welding up the frame, repairing holes, installing seats, locating a rear bumper to borrow, just the small stuff.
Week two; I am insane this will never work. I pull off the rear valance and uncover the mess that was the temporary gas tank. I was lucky enough to have a friend from the Graham Club help me locate a replacement tank. After ripping all the old junk
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Week three; someone should have committed me years ago. I am now cutting up old farm equipment for parts but the frame is looking good and after much heating and beating it is the right shape (I think). Wow my part arrived! Those Texas guys are great! I have never seen a 33 Graham frame in person so I make my best guess and it looks great. I proceed with the installation of the gas tank, this is going great, three hours later and trying to get the rear valance on correctly, I think wow these guys spent a lot of time building these cars. I had to solder up a few lines for the gas tank but there is a 48% chance it will hold gas.
Week four, I am running out of time!! Just shoot me! Paint the wheels how hard could that be? Two hours of sanding on each of the six wire wheels. I had built a wheel spinner, wow, that worked great with another 5 hours of painting but the color was worth it. It has been over 50 years since the wheels have looked this good. I start mounting the tires in the living room! I love my wife! I have a great friend that is a sign painter he says he can do the job if I get them there in time. I stay up till 3am but the wheels are done. I deliver them Friday morning at 7am.
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Week five; seriously who was I kidding this will never work. My friend calls I can pick up the wheels, wow that was less then 24 hours! Maybe….The wheels are on the car, wow that looks great. The bumper, I have no rear bumper, my friend in Iowa comes through he will send it today. Tuesday the bumper arrives, the gas tank is holding, the bumper bolts right up. I know I have a battery here somewhere. I order windshield wipers on the way to the doctor my youngest has an ear infection. I spend most of the night trying to get the grill installed (this was supposed to be easy) 3am again.
OK, I have to call them today…. I will never make it! I have three days left. I walk dejected to the garage, what a beautiful day. What the heck, I drop the battery in and turn the Graham over, she starts right up! We are talking 50 year old wires, condenser, coil, points and she is purring like a kitten. A short jaunt, a half-mile to a small town, brakes! They work almost too well, this is awesome! (I had rebuilt them but have not had time to test them). On the way back I figure why not break her here instead of in front of all those camera men? I nudge her up to about seventy miles per hour and hit the brakes hard, she stops fast and straight, the Graham is still idling perfect. Now I know why my Grandfather loved this car. I load her on the trailer.
The trip to Columbus, WI goes off perfect well except the truck runs out of gas on the Interstate (another project on hold, repair fuel gauge in truck). Putting gas in a stalled t
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Tuesday morning filming day 5am, pack up at the motel, load the truck, time to head to the picture car garage…the truck dose not start, the starter is dead! My friend from LaCrosse gives me a pull start and we are off. A 5 min drive to the film garage exposes a fleet of 1930 to 1933 cars, even a 1935 semi truck and a wrecker. What a wonderful sight in the morning dusk as the cars file up to be aged. Aged, interesting term, I would call it getting the car dirty, lots of dust and a black substance to dirty the wheels.
They loaded all of us on a small bus and sent us off to breakfast during the “aging process”. The breakfast was good and we started to meet each other, what wonderful people, most are retired all excited to be involved this experience. Just as we were beginning to bond the hammer fell, the reading of the cars to be used in the day’s production. Suddenly we w
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Just as we get off the bus and start staring at our aged cars, looks like something the kids would have done if left unsupervised. The car coordinator comes running up and says my friend and me are needed immediately on the set! Quick to the Graham! My wife and I scramble to get into the Graham and try to follow this small truck at an unreasonable speed for a 78-year-old car. We are flagged to a spot in the road and instructed to wait for instruction. We are supposed to wait till the car across the street comes half way across the intersection, we then proceed to roll and make a right turn, just as we complete the turn we are instructed to back up and do it again, same sequence. After the second trial run the 1930 Plymouth coupe across from us makes very unhappy sounds and stops dead. He is pushed off the set and a replacement is called, my friend from LaCrosse! He is in too! As I start to settle down I ask my wife where we are on the set? Just then I realize we are across the street from the bank Dillinger (Depp) is robbing! My friend is even closer, better than I could have ever imagined. I should mention the weather now, it is about 30 degrees and misting just enough the car and road are wet, the colds starts to set it, I mean the cold that goes to your bones, and you never get warm. We are in our 1933 outfits and I would really like my parka, boots, and a wool hat. I am blessed with the only car with a heater but the fan is not working, so our car is about 50 degrees, I do not complain about the temperature after all we could be sitting inside with the extras.
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We turn the corner 15 to 20 times in the 3-4 hours the scene take to shoot but it goes by in a flash and it is over. The next scene we are not involved and we have time to visit with other car owners and enjoy the filming. It was an extraordinary day, and an unbelievable opportunity to be in such an undertaking. We met so many wonderful car owners we just wished we had more time to get to know everyone. Grandpa’s Graham ran perfectly, I think she thought it was 1933 all over again.
“Public Enemies” with Johnny Depp and Christian Bale is due out July 1, 2009. Look for the Graham on LaSalle Street and all the bank robberies…but that is the next story.