Last week I told you about Custom Rides in Hastings, Nebraska. The owner, Pat Brubaker, is doing his part to keep the metal shaping profession alive by holding classes approximately once a month. Brubaker describes the skills needed for metal shaping as ranging from finesse to controlled violence, and I don’t think these classes are for the faint of heart. Each class consists of four 12-hour days with a maximum of only four people in each class. The emphasis varies and may include basic fender repair, the use of tools (like the English wheel and power hammer) and the creation of entire body panels from flat sheets. Brubaker likes to have participants build entire bodies because something that seems initially overwhelming becomes less intimidating when taken piece by piece. Class participants leave armed with knowledge and fired up about tackling their own projects. Check out these pictures from some recent classes, and then see the Custom Rides facebook page for more information.
Harley Earl is frequently described as a pioneer, but even that term seems inadequate when talking about a man of artistry and vision who literally shaped American automotive styling. Born in 1893, Earl started out working in his father’s carriage works shop in Los Angeles. While there, he began customizing cars for movie celebrities on the side. Earl was part of the transitioning of the automotive industry from its buggy and wagon roots by bringing cars down off their high wheels and enclosing the tops. What started out as a side business quickly made the Earls the biggest builder of high-grade custom bodies in the west.
The Earls’ going concern was purchased by Don Lee in 1917 and he kept Harley Earl on as chief designer. Lee sent Earl to the eastern part of the country and also to Europe to study the trends. As one paper put it, Earl was soon making the cars designed in the east “look like something the cat dragged in.” Lee also owned a Cadillac dealership, and Earl’s skills caught the attention of Cadillac executives who gave him the task of designing the 1927 LaSalle.
At the time,
Earl said that the main advantage in designing the LaSalle was that “there was
not a tool or die waiting to be used for its manufacture. That permitted us to begin building this car
from the ground up. It placed us in a
position where we were dared to execute something distinctly different – and
that is exactly what we set out to do.” The design was heavily influenced by
the streamlined bodies of the racing industry and, interestingly, Earl called
the LaSalle distinctly “American in its lines, appearance and atmosphere.”
This idea of
American versus European design was revisited by Earl the following year. He noted that some American carmakers that
were offering “European design” were making two very big mistakes. First, they were failing to capture the more
outstanding trends in the design of European car bodies and second, they were
failing to differentiate between engineering and body design and therefore were
copying undesirable European engineering.
According to Earl, “Europe today offers nothing comparable with the
surging power, sturdy construction and roomy comfort of American motor cars,
three characteristics that seem reflections of our country’s own vastness.”
Earl knew
what he was talking about, and the new LaSalle was a hit with the public. General Motors put Earl in charge of their
new art and color section, and he remained with General Motors until his
retirement in 1958. When he died in
1969, the papers referred to an interview in which Earl had said, “My primary
purpose for years has been to lengthen and lower the American automobile, at
times in reality and always, at least, in appearance.” He is credited with
curved-glass rear windows, two-tone paint, wrap-around windshields, the first
Corvette and, best of all, tail fins.
Many of us who appreciate the old iron think that Earl’s way of thinking is sadly lacking in today’s cookie cutter auto industry, but, thankfully, the spirit of Harley Earl appears to be alive and well in custom shops scattered along the backroads of this great country. One such shop is located not far from me in Hastings, Nebraska. The shop is called Custom Rides, and the man swinging the hammer is Pat Brubaker.
My better
half and I were introduced to Brubaker by a mutual friend and spent an
afternoon at his shop. We walked away
very impressed with both the skills and the work product at Custom Rides, and
if you have a need for metal shaping or fabrication, this shop should be your
first call. Brubaker makes everything
from trim to fenders to entire car bodies and works with steel, aluminum,
stainless, copper and brass. He has found a niche making odd and unique parts
such as part of a Reo grille shroud and a Tucker trim piece for, get this,
customers in California who were disappointed in the results from some local
shops they tried in the Golden State.
Welcome to the Cornhusker State.
Brubaker
credits his racing background for his education and approach to problem
solving. He says while racing midgets
and mini-sprints, he was around smart people all the time and learned much from
them, including how to make all the odd and unique parts needed. He jokes that, in racing, when you change one
thing that means you are going to change everything but the paint color. This background has clearly served him well
because he isn’t afraid to “re-invent the wheel”, even when that wheel is an
English wheel (a metal-working tool). If
he needs to make the tools that make the tools that make the tools in order to
finish a job, that’s exactly what he does.
Some of the
projects in the shop now include this chassis for a 1950 Henry J . . .
. . . as well these dually truck fenders. The first picture shows the original that the customer wanted replicated, left and right. Brubaker started by creating an edge band and a buck for it to rest on. That is a smooth finish!
Brubaker would like people to know that the things they want are not out of reach. Whether you are looking for a rolling chassis or complete car body, this shop can produce it. He has a healthy respect for tradition but still looks for a better way to get the job done, and that is an approach that Harley Earl himself would likely approve of. If you want to see if Brubaker can assist you with your project, this is how you reach him:
This blog post is my honest and independent opinion and not sponsored in any way.
Sources:
“Big Automobile Factory and Top Factory Now Property of Cadillac Distributer Here.” Los Angeles Evening Express, 12 June 1919, p. 2.
“Designer of Cadillac and LaSalle New Bodies Visits Home Town With Other Executives.” Los Angeles Evening Express, 15 February 1928, p. 3.
“Don Lee Builds Another Special Classic.” San Francisco Chronicle, 21 November 1920, p. 4A.
“GM Stylist Harley Earl Dies.” Detroit Free Press, 11 April 1969, p. 3.
“Harley Earl, Of Car Factor in Los Angeles Home Again.” “Los Angeles Sunday Times, 15 May 1927, p. 9.
Henry, Bill. “Alumni of Auto Row.” Los Angeles Times, 30 March 1930, p. 5.
Ivory Roadster Especially For Bay City Show.” Los Angeles Times, 17 February 1924, p.13.
“Stylist Traces Auto From Whipsocket Age.” The Indianapolis Sunday Star, 28 October 1928, p. 2.
$25,000 Dazzler of Roscoe Arbuckle Makes Motorists Gasp in Amazement.” Los Angeles Evening Express, 1 May 1920, p. 7.