Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Golden Wedding - Dave's Midwestern Ohio Memories

Series of Guest Blogs by an out-of-state Fish Report reader originally from this area about fond memories of growing up in Midwestern Ohio during the 50’s & 60’s

This Friday will be our 50th wedding anniversary, so to commemorate the milestone, our family is taking a trip to the Rocky Mountains. Enjoy this blog from the past about our 45th anniversary.

Anniversary Surprise

Recently my wife Debby and I celebrated our 45th wedding anniversary, so as a surprise, to commemorate the occasion, we re-enacted some of our wedding photos. The first is shown below of me being "dragged” into the church for the wedding.


This next photo is just after the ceremony on the front steps of St. Remy’s church; the only time I’ve ever looked younger than Debby!


Here we are sneaking a kiss after arriving at the reception hall.


Cutting the wedding cake on game day.


A toast to the newlyweds before a round of golf.


Hand-in-hand on our wedding day!


Incognito with Debby’s grandparents, DJ & Ruth.


Caught by the camera in a tender loving moment!


After all the photo-editing, we capped off our anniversary by going out to dinner at a fancy restaurant. Here’s a photo of us enjoying desert after a nice meal.


Memorable additions to our photo album, wouldn’t you say?


PS: Here’s Debby 45 years ago and today - better than ever!


Same for me!!

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Tuesday, September 20, 2022

2024 Mustang - Dave's Midwestern Ohio Memories

Series of Guest Blogs by an out-of-state Fish Report reader originally from this area about fond memories of growing up in Midwestern Ohio during the 50’s & 60’s

2024 Mustang


The 7th generation Ford Mustang was revealed last week in downtown Detroit to kick off the 2023 Auto Show. Watching the kick-off live-streamed on-line was OK, but I can’t wait to see the vehicle at the show and to check it out in person. In the meantime, I’ll enjoy this video of the car in action. And check out this article about all 7 generations of Mustangs.


The Detroit auto show used to be held during the dead of winter in January, a terrible time for the show, so it was wisely moved to the early fall at the traditional kick off each new model year. Back when my interest in cars began during the 1950’s, the fall introduction of new models was an annual tradition, primarily because car styling literally changed every year, which made things really interesting. For example, check out this series of styling photos of Chevy's during the 1950’s.


And this collage didn’t even include one of my favorites, the 1958 Chevy Impala.


Check out how the Mustang styling has evolved over the 7 generations since its 1965 introduction.


In honor of its heritage, a graphic on the back window of the new Mustang features a silhouette of every generation going back to 1965.


These days, vehicle styling might change only every 5 years or so. But when there is a major changeover like for the 2024 Mustang, interest peaks especially on social media, where the enthusiasts can make their statements like the following:


The new Mustang continues its racing tradition, including NASCAR, GT Series, NHRA , SRO and IMSA to name a few, with its debut at the 24 Hours of LeMans as featured in the movie Ford v Ferrari about the 1966 race.


Some of the more interesting innovative features of the new Mustang include an electronic drift brake to do spin outs like the pros, a key fob that remotely revs the engine, six driving modes, flat bottom steering wheel and higher roofline for taller drivers like me, twin digital touch screen displays, functional front hood scoop and grill vents, Dark Horse performance model, enhanced engine horsepower; bottom line, technology wrapped in tradition.


Ford Engineering retirees are invited to test drive the new vehicles each year on the Dearborn Test track, an event that makes us all feel decades younger as if we were back in our heyday again. Great fun; can’t wait to drive the new Mustang around the track!


Here’s our first Mustang, a 1968 yellow hard top that my wife drove as our second car. She loved it.


Check out these past blogs about Mustangs.

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Tuesday, September 13, 2022

Local eBay Listings - Dave's Midwestern Ohio Memories

Series of Guest Blogs by an out-of-state Fish Report reader originally from this area about fond memories of growing up in Midwestern Ohio during the 50’s & 60’s

Local eBay Listings

eBay sends me email alerts whenever an item is listed related to Ft. Loramie, Minster or Russia. The items are always interesting and typically bring back memories. Some examples follow.

Fort Loramie Listings:


Albers Hardware was a favorite of Dad’s as he was a do-it-yourself person who could build anything from scratch. And John Albers was a good friend as well, so whenever we’d visit his store on Elm Street just west of the church, I’d explore the store why John and Dad kibitzed about anything and everything. As a combo hardware, lumber, building materials and appliance store, it had everything imaginable of interest to me as a budding engineer. Note that the bill of sale being auctioned was for a customer from Piqua, so people came from far and wide to search the offerings of Albers & Co.


Bruckens Cafe was a real favorite, especially after basketball games. They had and probably still have fantastic tenderloin sandwiches the really hit the spot after a tough game. Here’s a past blog for more Brucken's memories.


Borchers store brings back lots of memories, especially buying baseball cards with bubblegum in each pack. What ever happened to all my baseball cards, little brother Luke? The set included a pristine Mickey Mantle rookie card that just sold for $12.6m!


Surprised to find a Loramie Police Cruiser model car for sale. Chief Nate Brown may want this keepsake for his son.

Minster Listings:


Wooden Shoe Brewery Stein for sale just in time for Octoberfest. Buy it for Grand Marshall Jack Buschur, a well deserved honor and an appropriate gift for ole’ Jack. But give it to him after the parade as we don’t want to see him fall off the beer wagon pictured below on this antique post card from the early 1900’s offered on eBay.


My uncle Clarence worked at Streakers and sold Oliver farm equipment to all his 13 brothers and brothers-in-law. After a few beers for lunch at the Wooden Shoe Inn, owner Herman Streaker used to walk diagonally right across the busy intersection of State Routes 66 and 119 to get back to work.


Sure played a lot of basketball in the old Minster high school gym over the years. I recall spray painting graffiti on the cement abutments in front of the main entrance to the school before a big rivalry game.



Had two uncles who worked at Minster Machine and we’d ride our bikes to the gate at quitting time to meet them. They worked hard; that was obvious when we observed the at the end after a long shift. Taught me at a young age the value of a college education.


What a fine book documenting the travels of a woman and her family from Germany to midwestern Ohio in the 1830’s to homestead their new 360 acre farm (that had to be cleared) for $300. This 2016 blog provides more about her adventures.


Seem to remember, Tim Kuehner way back when. His parents owned the bakery if I recall. Now he’s the town banker!

Russia Listings:


There were many items advertising for the Golden Lantern, owned by Russia native Harrold Shep Simon. What a great restaurant that served the best steaks and especially king crab legs. Love that ole sunken long bar as well. The building now houses Hogenkamp Funeral Home!



Many high school yearbooks were were being auctioned from all three communities. Oldest one currently listed is Ft. Loramie’s from 1962. Most are bing offered for around $20.


Unfortunately, most of the alerts for Russia are like the offering below, of no real interest to me. Maybe I should search “Roo-She"


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Tuesday, September 6, 2022

Smog - Dave's Midwestern Ohio Memories

Series of Guest Blogs by an out-of-state Fish Report reader originally from this area about fond memories of growing up in Midwestern Ohio during the 50’s & 60’s

Smog


Recently, California legislated that only electric vehicles will be sold in the state starting in 2035, only 12 years away. Likely other coastal states who typically follow California regarding vehicle emission standards will rule similarly, with the state of Washington already having done so. Midwest states like Ohio will likely not follow the same path. These regulations dramatically pull ahead existing plans by the auto industry for 100% EV’s. This action continues the pattern for decades of California being aggressive at addressing vehicular emission.


The trend started in 1943, when Los Angeles experienced severe smog during WWII when industrial production was ramping up to produce war materials. The word “smog” was coined at the time as a contraction of “smoke” and “fog”, a dangerous combination that has proven harmful to human health. The Los Angeles basin is especially susceptive to the formation of smog because of low winds, lots of sunshine, little rain, high population density and being surrounded by mountains, all contributing to contain and increase the smog over the city. Government officials at the time wrongly concluded that pollution primarily originated from industrial and electrical generating plants, since the dark soot was visually belching from factory smokestacks.


After the war, California’s initial legislation to address the smog problem focused on cleaning industrial sources of pollution. A Cottrell precipitator was the predominant technology used within the smokestack. Fine particles in a a flowing industrial waste gas are filtered by the use an induced electrostatic charge where dust and smoke are attracted towards the positively charged wire electrode. Back in 1965, my high school science fair project was a mini-Cottrell precipitator to clean cigarette smoke. It worked and I got an A from Mr. Tenney, our chemistry teacher. Plus, we could take a few drags on the cigarette while in school without being disciplined.

Cottrell Precipitator Science Project

However, cleaning the smokestacks didn’t clear the smog in LA. An event in the fall of 1949 that occurred hundreds of miles north of L.A., at a Cal Berkley-vs-Washington State football game offered some fairly convincing “cause-and-effect” clues as to the root cause of the pollution. On the day of the game, thousands of fans drove into Berkeley with resulting traffic congestion. Later, during the game, after the “soup” (another nickname for smog) had formed over and around the stadium, the pollution became so bad that “many thousands of persons attending . . . experienced intense eye irritation.” The California General Assembly, investigated the incident, noting that the only unusual occurrence that day “was the concentration of automobiles at the football game in Berkeley, accentuated by the idling of motors, starting and stopping, which occurs in such a traffic jam.” There was no other industrial or other source in the area. It could only be concluded, the committee said, “that the cause of this particular eye irritation was in some way directly related to automobile exhaust.” Although there was little hard science to verify their hunch, the committee concluded that vehicle exhaust from the 2 million cars in LA with internal combustion engines was certainly contributing to the pollution problem.


The hard science eventually evolved when California Institute of Technology professor Dr. Arie Haagen-Smit proved that unburned hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides, coming primarily from automobile exhaust and some industrial sources, were “cooked” by sunlight in a photochemical reaction to form ground-level ozone, later revealed as a respiratory and eye irritant.


So in the early 1950’s, the state approached the auto industry to develop cleaner vehicles. A consortium was formed with all the auto companies where they agreed to share research on emissions technology to develop cleaner vehicles. However, the effort was like “herding cats” according to one California official. The competitive auto companies basically decided they would simply allow the other companies to spend money on the research, then just copy the solution once divulged. But all reacted in the same manner, so nothing was accomplished meaning the smog in LA persisted. I can recall one such trip to California in the early 70’s when visiting a fraternity brother who was going to grad school at the USC and literally choking on the smog. A professor of his, knowing we both worked for the auto industry, my frat brother for GM and me for Ford, invited us on his sail boat to demonstrate first hand how the smog hangs over the city when viewed from offshore in the Pacific Ocean. He failed in his mission because I got violently sea sick on the sailboat and we had to return to shore!


After more than a decade of no action by the auto industry, by 1965, under the leadership of then-governor Ronald Reagan, the state established the California Air Resources Board to regulate vehicular emissions, setting tighter and tighter standards that the auto companies were challenged to implement, because California represented about 15% of their market and could not be abandoned. The state also initiated a lawsuit against the auto companies for the consortium’s delaying tactics over a 10 year period, specifically because catalytic converter technology existed that could have solved the smog problem in LA but was never pursued. The lawsuit was eventually settled with a consent agreement that the car companies would add catalytic converters to all cars sold in California starting with the 1974 model year. The catalytic converter creates a chemical reaction in the exhaust flow to transform the carbon monoxide and nitrous oxide being emitted from internal combustion engines to carbon dioxide, nitrogen and water.



Having worked in the auto industry for over 30 years, including a number of years experience in Ford's powertrain controls area, it was a constant challenge to meet the stringent vehicle emission standards established by California. But the mission was accomplished as car emissions have improved 1000 times since the 1970’s and the smog in LA is history.


However, the carbon dioxide formed by the catalytic converter is now deemed to be contributing to the accumulation of greenhouse gases leading to dramatic climate change. So California again took the recent aggressive action to ban internal combustion engines entirely by dictating only electric or hydrogen powered vehicles be sold after 2035. Concurrently, they also legislated that all fossil-fueled electrical power plants be phased out; using instead renewable solar and wind power to generate the needed electricity for charging electric vehicles. With another round of technical challenges facing the auto industry, if only I was 50 years younger, as I’d relish starting all over again to help meet these new challenges.


Click on this link for my past blog about electrical vehicles and this website for more info on the history of LA’s smog and how it was eliminated.

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