I am a second year Mechanical Engineering Student and a proud member of the . My interest in engineering started when I was quite young and continued all the way throughout high school with my “Ś²¹³¾¾±±ō²āās hobby of restoring old cars. Most of my school holidays involved being in the shed with greasy hands pulling apart old cars with my dad. Every year our family would go to a different Australian destination and tour one of the cars in our collection for a week (usually driving 600-800km per tour) with about 140 other pre-1918 cars. I guess āunique upbringingā is what comes to mind when I think about my childhood.
My family have always joked about ābuilding memoriesā at the car restoration events we attended. At the time these events seemed really horrible but looking back I just laugh. I remember being 9 years old and driving in our windscreen-less and roof-less 1902 Thomas with Dad in Tasmania when it was 10 degrees and pouring down rain. Fast forward to morning tea, I broke down in torrential tears because I donāt think Iāve ever been that cold in my life. After morning tea, I drove in a separate car with a roof while my dad and two others managed to get lost and nearly ran out of fuel. Thatās all the fun of it, right?
The rule with our 1902 Thomas (definitely my favourite car in Dadās collection) always was, if I could crank start it, I could drive it. 15-year-old me was determined to make this happen, so on a rally in Robe, SA I finally started it and drove it the next day. It was awesome! Thereās such a sense of achievement restoring a 100 year + car to its original form and then being able to drive it like a normal car ā with extra quirks and nowhere near as much speed.Ā
At every rally, ¾±³Łās inevitable that something would āb°ł±š²¹°ģā in someoneās car. Usually ¾±³Łās not a big deal and some duct tape or super glue will fix it.But sometimes a motor decides it isnāt happy and BOOM - your car is terminal for the week. I remember using araldite to glue our carburettor back together - I was amazed it held it together because it was literally in two pieces, but it got us through the rest of week, and we fixed it when we got home. I also remember hammering pieces of metal into the wooden spokes of the wheels because they were a little loose for comfort. Engineering on the fly, right? Unfortunately, that fix wasnāt as successful - I think we officially gave up on day five and had the wheels re-spoked that following year.
COVID has been pretty tough for the most part, but for me it gave an unexpected bonus, I had the opportunity to spend 2 months working with my dad on my 1915 Cadillac racer our current restoration projectā I canāt wait to take it to Eastern Creek when ¾±³Łās finished. Pulling apart the motor that had been sitting in a garage for 50 years and finding that somehow it wasnāt completely ruined surprised us both.Ā