Ray,

That was just wonderful...even several days after Christmas!

Cheers, dave

On Sat, 25 Dec 2010, [email protected] wrote:


Merry Christmas to All.  Not sure how this will work, but I am pasting Bob 
Hoover's Christmas Story once again for your reading pleasure.  Sorry we lost 
him this year, but his legacy lives on.

Ray






Midnight Repairs

 He came down the back drive just before midnight  on Christmas Eve. I
 was out in the shop, about to call it a night when I heard the
 unmistakable sound of a Volkswagen running on three cylinders. Bad
 valve.

 It was an early model high-roof delivery van. Bright red with white
 trim. He pulled up behind the shop. As he shut down the engine it made
 that unmistakable tinny rattle of a dropped valve seat. Good thing he
 shut it off when he did.

 There was a barber pole logo painted on the door: "NicEx" A young
 old-guy jumped out, came toward me offering his hand. He was wearing a
 snowmobile suit, red & white like the van. I could smell the engine.
 It was running 'way too hot.

 "Fred Dremmer," he said. We shook. He was about my age, mebbe a
 little more, but young, if you know what I mean - alive. Phony beard
 though. It was his own but too shiny and perfectly white to be
 natural. I eyed the get-up he was wearing, took another gander at the
 door. "Nice ex?"

 "NICK ex," he corrected me.  "I've got the franchise for this area."
 He looked around, noted the tumbledown appearance of the shop, victim
 of an earthquake that never happened, thanks to politics. "Are you
 still building engines?" he asked.

 "Not so's you'd notice." It was pushing on toward midnight and colder
 than a well- diggers knee. His shoulders slumped down.

 "But you used to build engines," he said hopefully. I didn't deny  it.
 "They said you offered a lifetime warranty."

 Actually, I didn't offer ANY warranty. Most of the engines I built
 were high- output big- bore strokers. A firecracker doesn't carry any
 warranty either. And for the same reason. But if I built it, I
 promised to fix it if they could get it back to the shop. And if the
 problem was my fault, there was never any charge. So I told him,
 "Something like that."

 "My van has one of your engines," he said. "In fact, I think  all the
 franchisees use them."

 "This I gotta see," I laughed. He ran around to get the church-key  but
 I'd popped the engine hatch with my pocketknife by the time he got
 back. I twisted on my mini-maglite and sure enough, there was 'HVX'
 stamped right where I'd stamped it. It was one of the lower numbers, a
 bone stock 1600 I'd built back in the seventies. Big sigh.

 "Can't you fix it?"

 I gave him a look and he shut up. It had just gone midnight, clear and
 cold and silent. The on-shore flow had increased, bringing with it the
 charred smell of disaster. About a mile to the west of me a family's
 house had caught fire and burned to the ground only hours before.
 Merry Christmas indeed. I straightened up, knees creaking, and went
 to fetch the floor jack. As I moved away from the vehicle the guy got
 all excited, plucked at my arm. "Really, it's very important... " I
 snarled something appropriate and he let me go, stood like a dejected
 lump in his idiotic outfit. He brightened up when I came back towing
 the floor jack, a pair of jackstands in my other hand.

 "You're going to fix it?" If he was a puppy he would have been  licking
 my face.

 "Nope. You got a bad valve." I got the jack under the tranny  support
 and started pumping. "Which ain't my fault, by the way. I built this
 engine nearly thirty years ago. You've gotten your money's worth and
 then some." I got the jackstands under the torsion bar housing, went
 around and chocked the front wheels.

 "I wasn't complaining... " he began.

 "Well I was," I shut him off. Veedub valves don't last thirty  years,
 especially when they're pushing a van around.

 "It always ran perfectly." His tone was placating. And it was
 Christmas Eve. Or rather, 0015 Christmas Day. "And it never gets
 driven very much, or so I was told." I gave a snort of disgust. Thirty
 years is thirty years and every salesman always sez the thing was only
 used to take the family to church on Sundays. I got a tarp and my
 small tool bag, rolled the tarp out under the back of the high-roof,
 dug out my head lamp, checked the batteries. Dead, of course. Began
 taking the battery case apart.

 "Need some batteries?" He was right there, offering me a 4-pak of  new
 Ray-O- Vac's. Right size, too. I put the thing back together, tested
 it. "What are you doing, exactly."

 "Swapping engines," I grunted. I handed him a ratchet with a 13mm
 socket and pointed at the rear apron bolts. "Whip'em outta there. And
 don't lose the washers."

 I skivvied under and got the surprise of my life. The thing was CLEAN.
 As in showroom new. No road rash. No oily residue. Original factory
 axle boots so clean and new they gave a tiny squeak when I touched
 them. But no heater ducts. In fact, no heat exchangers, which
 explained why the guy was wearing a snowsuit.

 "Does this mean I can finish my route?" He was bent over, peering  at
 me upside down.

 "Not unless you get those damn bolts out, it don't." I was running  my
 hand over the paintwork. It had been treated with some sort of
 surfactant. It felt oily smooth but left no residue on my fingers and
 didn't seem to attract dirt. There were steel rails re-enforcing the
 frame on each side. They ran as far aft as the bumper mount. I
 couldn't tell how far forward they went. "You do all this?" I  shouted
 as I crimped-off the fuel line. The breast tin had one of my early
 bulkhead fittings, the ones I made out of brass before discovering lamp
 parts worked just as well. I popped off the hose. No dribble but I
 plugged it anyway.

 "I don't maintain the vehicle," the fellow shouted back. "They  do all
 that at headquarters. What should I do with the bolts?"

 "Put them in your pocket." I skivvied back out, popped loose the
 battery ground strap, removed the rear apron, disconnected the
 electrics and removed the barrel nut holding the accelerator wire. I
 gave it to him. "Keep this with them." I put the little plywood
 pallet on the floor jack, got it positioned under the engine, jacked it
 up and pulled that puppy outta there.

 Fred Dremmer was impressed. He even told me so. "I'm impressed," he
 said. Then he said "Happy Christmas." It was 0030 and I was tired.
 "Balance that," I told him, tapping the top of the blower housing.  I
 grabbed the handle of the jack and used it as a trolley to pull the
 engine into the shop.

 He stood looking around while I dug the spare engine out from under the
 bench. It was already on a scooter. "What happened?" he asked  softly.

 "Look down," I snarled. "You'll figure it out."

 He looked down, toed the gaping crack that ran across the floor like a
 lightning bolt, saw the way the shop was sloping. "Earthquake?"

 "Northridge. Popped the foundation like a pane of glass." I pulled
 the engine out into the open, keeping it on the level part of the floor.

 "Don't they offer special loans... "

 "Only if you're in the 'official' earthquake zone," I laughed. He
 started making apologetic sounds. "Balance that," I told him. We
 scootered the spare engine out of the shop.

 I had to swap mufflers. His came away okay, thanks to the lavish
 amounts of anti-seize someone had swabbed on the fittings. It was one
 of those lifetime stainless steel bus mufflers from Germany  or England
 or some damn place. Cost the earth. He looked around, sat down on the
 workbench when I nodded toward it. We were out back of the shop, under
 the shed roof. Plenty of light.

 "So what are you getting for Christmas," he asked, smiling.

 I just looked at him, shook my head. I work best without an audience.
 "You want some coffee or something? This is going to take me a few
 minutes."

 He said No; he had a thermos of tea in the van. "Seriously, what do
 you want for Christmas?" he smiled.

 "Not being pestered in the middle of the night would be nice," I
 muttered.

 He just laughed, as if I was joking. "Seriously," he said again.

 "You want 'seriously'? Howabout a new house for those folks down the
 hill?"

 He gave me a blank look and I realized he didn't know about the fire.
 So I told him. He ended up looking as sad as I felt. "What do you
 think they'd like for Christmas?" I goaded him. I shook my head,
 "It's mostly bullshit anyway. A birthday party that's gotten outta
 hand." And the best evidence of that was right there in front of me,
 some yuppie asshole Yuletide delivery service running around on
 Christmas Eve in an antique bus. He stood gazing off toward where the
 fire was. It had been a huge blaze, you could see it good from the
 house. Hopes and dreams and Christmas trees are all highly combustible.

 I finished transferring the J-tubes and muffler to the spare engine and
 he helped me shift it on to the jack. We pulled it out to his bus and
 I started putting it in.

 "It's unusual to find someone who doesn't want anything for  Christmas,"
 he said. I'd given him a pair of vise grips to hold. I didn't need
 them but I figured it would make him feel useful, mebbe shut him up.
 Wrong.









Part 2




"I've got everything I want." I'd checked the  splines. Things were
 lining up good. His seals looked new. I gave them a spray of glycerin
 so they wouldn't grab the engine.

 "That's even more unusual," he said. He was smiling, acting a  little
 antsy but working hard to keep me happy so he could get the hell out of
 there. About the worst thing that could happen to him would be for me
 to slow down. So I did.

 "People spend too much time wishing for things they don't need." I
 patted the red high- roof. "I'll bet this thing is chock full of
 yuppie junk, eh?" He looked uncomfortable, passed the pair of vise
 grips from hand to hand. "And what about you? I'll bet you're some
 sort of retired executive, working a little Christmas-time tax dodge to
 supplement your retirement, eh? Bleached beard with a platinum rinse,
 funny suit and this oh-so-cute Santa's Helper delivery van, popping up
 in the middle of the night to trade on an implied warranty almost
 thirty years old?"

 "What are you saying?" He looked kinda angry. The sight was as  silly
 as his costume.

 "You wouldn't understand," I sighed. I fished the throttle wire  thru
 the blower housing, plugged the engine back in, started the upper nuts
 and shanghaied him into holding the wrench while I skivvied back under.
 Did the nuts, torqued to spec, did the fuel line, checked things
 over, skivvied back out. With everything installed underneath, I began
 putting the engine compartment to rights.

 "You mean the religious aspect," he said.

 "You heard about that, eh?" I kept working.

 "Are you a religious man?" he asked softly.

 I was connecting the generator leads. I wanted to ignore him but
 couldn't. I stopped, rocked back so I could see his face. "Yeah," I
 told him. "I'm religious as hell. And so are you. But the difference
 is you worship money and I don't."

 "And you can tell all that just by working on my van?" He was  smiling.
 He was no longer angry but really cheerful.

 "Yeah, I can. You've had some sort of anti-stick powder-coating
 process applied to the whole undercarriage. That must of set you back
 some major bucks. But it's not a car- show kinda van otherwise it
 would be all original underneath. That tells me you did it so you
 could impress your customers with your shiny, never dirty ride and THAT
 tells me you probably charge some big bucks for your Christmas Eve
 delivery service gig."

 That wiped the grin off his face. "Very astute," he muttered. Then
 frowned. "But if you knew it was all just another Christmas-biz scheme,
 why are we standing out here in the middle of the night while you
 repair the engine?"

 I laughed at him. "See? I said you wouldn't understand."

 I finished the hook-ups, connected the battery, replaced the rear
 apron, connected the throttle wire, wiped everything down. "Go run the
 starter for a minute. We gotta prime the carb." He clumped around to
 the front and got in. I hadn't noticed the boots until then. Or the
 buckles. Ridiculous.

 I held the throttle open while he ran the starter. He held it down for
 about thirty seconds then came clumping back. "Won't it start?"

 "It'll start."

 "Shall I do it some more?"

 "Not right now." I sat there, loaded a pipe, got it going. He  turned
 out to be a pipe man too. Some foreign smelling crap. I've got Prince
   Albert in the can. I mentioned that fact but he  didn't get the joke.
 Or mebbe he did. It was about a quarter after one.

 "What are we waiting for?"

 "For the starter to cool. It'll start now." And it did. Nice steady
 idle.

 I took his credit card and driver's license, did the paper work. He
 balanced the clipboard on the steering wheel, signed both slips without
 question. "This is just a deposit," I explained. "Bring back  my
 engine, you can tear it up." But right then I had a premonition I
 wouldn't see him or my engine again.

 "What was it I didn't understand?" he asked softly. It sounded like  he
 really wanted to know.

 "Christmas presents?" I motioned toward the back of the van. There
 was a partition behind the driver's seat that blocked my view. He
 nodded. "That's what you don't understand." He looked blank.  "I get
 mine all year 'round," I laughed.

 "Like what?"

 "Like my family." He gave me that frown again and I laughed.  "See?
 You haven't got a clue. A smile from my wife is a better thing to have
 than any of the crap you've got back there."

 The dawn of understanding began to break across his brows. "That's...
 that's pretty old fashioned."

 "Old as the hills," I agreed. "Older than Christmas,  too."

 Now he got it. "I'm sorry," he stammered. "I assumed you were  a
 Christian... "

 "I am," I laughed. "Of a sort. And a Muslim, if it comes right  down
 to it. And a Buddhist and a Jew and Inuit too." And maybe a touch of
 White Buffalo.

 Now he was laughing and nodding. "Okay, I get it. I think." But I
 didn't think he did. He cocked his head, gave me a thoughtful look.
 "Yours must be an interesting wish-list."

 I smiled back at him. Maybe he really did get it. "Sunsets are nice.
 A good sunset is a thing to be thankful for."

 "Good health..." he offered. I nodded. He was clearly getting it.
 "Good friends..."

 "That's the idea. All that..." I gestured toward the back of the  van,
 "...is just... stuff."

 "It's the thought that counts..."

 "Yeah, but only if the thought is there all year 'round. Christmas
 dinner for the homeless followed by 364 hungry days? Gimme a break."

 He nodded again, slower this time. "What about the engine?"

 "Because I said I would."

 That one took him a minute. Then he got it. "Trust..."

 "And honor... yeah, stuff like that. Telling someone you'll do
 something then actually doing it... That's a present of sorts in
 today's world."

 "But... thirty years later..."

 "Doesn't matter. What got me pissed was you showing up in the middle
 of the night. And that silly suit! Do you know you look like Santa
 Claus?" This time we both laughed.

 "But haven't you ever wished for something at Christmas?" he asked
 softly.

 "You mean, like world peace or wishing no one's house would ever burn
 down on Christmas Eve..."

 He interrupted me with a gesture. "No, I meant something personal. A
 tool, perhaps?"

 "I've got all the tools I need."

 He kept looking at me. "Never wished for anything? Not even once?"

 "Sure," I laughed. "When I was a kid."

 "What was it?"

 Time sucked me back more than half a century. "A wagon," I  admitted.
 "A 'Radio Flyer' wagon. It was about the same color as your van.
 Roller bearing wheels. It was the most beautiful thing I'd ever seen."
 I was five years old. I can still smell the oiled wooden floor of the
 Montgomery Ward store in the little California town as I knelt to
 worship the marvelous machine. They had it propped up so you could
 spin the wheels, listen to the oily purr of the roller bearings. I
 was sure it could go at least a hundred miles an hour and carry me any
 place I wanted to go, a magic carpet disguised in steel.

 "Did you get it?" The soft question drew me back. Overhead the  stars
 snapped back into focus on the velvet cape of night.

 "Take care of my engine," I ordered as I shut his door, stepped  away
 from the vehicle.

 He slid back the glass. "Did you?"

 "You're going to be late. Wouldn't want to upset all those  yuppies."
 He considered that, conceded the point with a nod. He fired it up and
 backed cautiously up the drive then went rolling down the hill toward
 the road.

 I slept late. When I stepped out of the shower there was a steaming
 cup of coffee in my favorite mug. Someone had laid out my shaving
 tackle.

 The kitchen was full of smiles and good smells of things to eat as the
 women prepared our Christmas dinner. My wife gave me a big kiss and a
 bigger smile. "I almost tripped over it when the kids arrived," she
 laughed. I had no idea what she meant, gave her a blank stare. She
 gave me a playful punch. "Fool. It's perfect. I can use it for moving
 flower pots and carrying potting mix... " Something exploded in the
 microwave and she joined the fire brigade. I took my coffee out to the
 patio.

 It was parked on the walk under the hibiscus, just inside the redwood
 gate. A coaster wagon agleam in red. It looked brand new. It even
 smelled new. 'Radio Flyer' in white script along the side of the bed.
 The handle was black. The wheels white with thick black rubber tires.

 My wife came out, slipped her arm around my waist, leaned her head on
 my shoulder. "It's beautiful. Where did you ever find it?"

 In the kitchen, my daughter overhead her. "He probably MADE it!"
 Everyone laughed. Even me.

 "Is this what you've been working on? You came to bed awfully  late."

 I shook my head, sipped my coffee. My great-grandmother was Kiowa.
 Coffee was 'burnt-bean-soup'. And still is, to me. "No. I think
 it's a gift."

 My wife gave me an odd look. "Who would give us something like  that?"

 "I don't know. Maybe a white buffalo."

 She laughed, hugged me a little harder. "You're crazy."

 "Yep," I agreed.

 © Bob Hoover -Christmas, 1998












-----Original Message-----
From: Bert Knupp <[email protected]>
To: 'Air-Cooled Volkswagen Discussion List' <[email protected]>
Sent: Sat, Dec 25, 2010 1:43 pm
Subject:  [vintagvw] Fröhliche Weihnachten


Volks,



Hoping that your bugs and you are having a beautiful Christmas holiday.

I've enjoyed being "aboard" this list this year despite the slow traffic,

and meeting several of you at some regional shows.  Hope to make one or two

Midwestern shows in 2011.



Glückliches Neues Jahr --



Bert Knupp

Nashville, Tennessee



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Polizeikäfer '70





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