Kids today love those damn listicles. For you old people out there–the kind who walk into a place to ask for directions, then argue with the locals that they can’t possibly be right–a listicle is like an article but in list form. It combines our modern obsession with short-attention-span, soundbite media with our natural proclivity to place things in order. It’s win-win.
I had a couple of subjects I wanted to talk about and couldn’t come up with a single, overarching theme. Thus, I present to you this listicle. It’s a mix of the top cars I’ve never owned but always wanted to and the most embarrassing things I’ve done in the shop despite knowing better. Maybe you’ll learn something from one or the other.
1. A Miata
It’s true. I’ve never actually owned a Mazda Miata. Yes, I was the project manager for our 1994 R Package Miata some two decades ago–even won a trophy at Solo Nationals driving it. But my name has never been on a Miata title.
My wife has expressed interest in having a Miata, but she always mentions that she’d like it to be an automatic, and I think I’d rather have a wagon train of bare-knuckle-boxing carnies parked in my yard than an automatic Miata, so that’s not gonna happen.
2. Measure the Work, Not the Waste
Just this past weekend I learned that all 2×4s purporting to be 8 feet long are not, in fact, 8 feet long. I learned this when I measured from the wrong end and cut a few. I needed 90-inch pieces, so I assumed cutting 6 inches off each 96-inch piece would get me where I needed to go. I now have a duck house with a roof that slopes at two different angles. The ducks don’t seem to care, but I learned a valuable lesson about trying to save time by measuring from the wrong end.
3. An Italian Car
Probably the closest I came to owning one was dating a girl in high school who drove a Lancia Beta. That car made a lasting impression with the cool noises it made, its fun demeanor, its quirkiness and its relative rarity. Sadly, many of the things that make Italian cars cool also make them stupid, stupid choices given any rational consideration–just as lots of stuff made perfect sense in high school, but can no longer be justified. Hell, parachute pants made perfect sense in high school.
In the cold, calculating light of reasonable adulthood, maybe a Fiata scratches two items off this list.
4. Sparks and Rubber Don’t Mix
I have, on more than one occasion, welded while wearing Crocs. I’m not sure what the most embarrassing part of that admission is. All I know is that if Crocs decided to make a nice welding clog someday, I could tell them where to get a celebrity endorser cheap.
5. A Pickup Truck
Every time I see a mid-’90s Toyota pickup, no matter how ratty, I get those wistful “I need to get home and check Autotrader” feelings. There’s something about the combination of utility, ubiquity and indestructibility that really draws me to them–and to pickups in general. Pickups are basically cargo shorts you can drive around in. Pickups are a giant man-purse with wheels and an engine. Pickups are a portable hole into which you can throw all your dreams and all your hopes and take them with you on an adventure.
(JG owns one now)
6. “Why Should I Disconnect the Battery? I’m Not Working on the Battery, I’m Working on the Starter.”
I’ll just leave that one there, and someday you can ask me why the thumbprint on my left hand is not the same as it was a few years ago.
7. A Tube-Frame GT Car
I am an utter sucker for 1980s and ’90s tube-frame GT machinery. Impossibly bulged fiberglass bodies. V8s that sound like they’re going to swallow you whole and spit you out on the other side of a black hole. And rudimentary, utilitarian construction that’s just a way to support four wheels, an engine and a driver and shuttle them around a race track as fast as possible.
Mine’s got to be something weird, like a Buick Somerset or Olds Cutlass or something. Anyone can make a Mustang or Camaro look fast, but who knew that a Mercury Cougar could look like the gnarliest thing on the track if you threw enough flare and tire at it?
8. Looks Can Be Deceiving
You know what looks exactly the same as room-temperature steel? Steel that’s 700 degrees.
9. A Car I Don’t Really Care About
Not to be callus or anything, but I just want to experience the freedom of zero expectations. Everything I’ve ever owned–even the stuff that was true crap (cough Mitsubishi Mirage Turbo cough)–I’ve cared about at least inasmuch as I wanted to preserve it enough to get some value back out of it at some point.
But I think it would be remarkably liberating to have a car I’m willing to walk away from at some point with no guilt. Flat tire? Leave it at the side of the road. Bad fuel pump? Roll it into a ravine full of mutants. Needs ball joints? Trebuchet.
10. The Addict’s Shame
Damn you, self-tapping screws. Damn you to hell forever.