uis40ovgyuc magzus.org

Page 12

BACKFIRE

Send your letters, photos and opinions to tmcgean@hemmings.com

Letter of the Month: Nova, Renewed

Little did I know that my life would be changed in July of 1972, when my friend, Don Carter, and I were on our way to the local swimming hole to celebrate his birthday. Another driver ran a stop sign and totaled the 1965 Chevy Biscayne that my parents had handed down to me. I was 19 years old and had graduated from high school a year prior, in 1971. I had wanted to buy a pickup, but they were more expensive than a car. Worse, my mom insisted on a car due to my enrollment in tech school. The search began. I went to the local Chevrolet dealership, and they guided me to a car that had just debuted — a 1973 Honda Civic. I then went to an outof-town Chevrolet dealership, where they showed me the Rally Nova. The price of Nova and the Civic were about the same, but my friend, Don, said he wouldn’t go anyplace with me if I bought the latter. I put $25 down on the Nova at a total price of $2,795. I was able to make the $85 per month payment on the Nova because the vo-tech school I’d enrolled in had an OJT program. The clutch went out in 1988 and I didn’t have enough money at the time to fix it, so I parked it at my brother’s place. Then, in the spring of 1997, the Snake River flooded at my brother’s home, and the car sat in water up to the top of the tires for weeks. You could even see the water line in the glovebox door. In November of 2005, I pulled the Nova into my garage and started to disassemble it, and then I took the body to have it sandblasted and find out its true condition: Every panel from the rear window back needed replacing. My first sheetmetal order was nearly as much as I paid for the car. I was able to get my hands on a

10

HEMMINGS MUSCLE MACHINES

1970 Nova parts car that came from Phoenix with virtually no rust — this proved invaluable for parts and pieces I couldn’t get anywhere else. I was very lucky that my stepson, Ryan Jensen, was a body man at the local auto body shop. For the next four winters, he would come over two weekends a month to do the body work and accept home-cooked dinner as payment. I took to heart what Wayne Bushey said at the 2005 Nova Nationals Banquet: “Enjoy these cars and drive them.” So that is the advice I used to build this car. We sprayed bedliner on the bottom of the car and in the wheel wells to prevent rock chips. I used seats out of a 1993 Cutlass that were very comfortable. I installed a Vintage Air A/C kit, a ZZ4 crate engine along with a Tremec five-speed so it would be fun to drive. All the restoration work was done in my garage, except for the paint and upholstery. I took the Nova to the 2011 Nova Nationals at Bowling Green, Kentucky to have her judged, and to my amazement, it was recognized as a Gold Class car — 924 points out of 1,000. I take her to two or three car shows a year, and usually try to drive her there. She now has over 7,500 miles on her since the restoration. She still looks as good as ever and I hope to drive her even more. Tye Tomchak Idaho Falls, Idaho


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.