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Here is the L.A. Tub as it looks in Steve Stanford's Concept illustration. Well show the finished car on the next page, and you can judge for yourself how well the concept transferred into reality. With the brookville rear fenders, running boards , and splash aprons mocked up in place, the rolling chassis is already starting to look like the L.A. Tub. Eight inches or so were removed form teh rear fenders.
When the Al kart, built in 1957 at Barris Kustoms in Lynwood, California, made its first appearance at the 1958 Grand National Roadster Show, people went nuts. As one of the first vehicles to take teh distinctive styles of hot rods and custom cars and blend them in a single ride, the Ala Kart helped kick off the whole new category that is still soemtimes referred to as custom rods. The innovative new stylewas a big hit with teh public and with GNRS judges. The Ala Kart won teh AMerica's Most Beautiful Roadster award at its debut even and grabbed an unprecedented second cosecutive AMBR win in 1959.

Tommy Otis has created a noticeably different custom rod with a style right out os the '50s, but with the 21st century technology and taste. That car is the L.A. Tub, which made a pretty big splash of its own at the 2006 Grand National Roadster Show, where it debuted on the main floor, in the shadow of the AMBR award. Although the concept of a custom rod goes back more than 50 years, the presence of one still turns heads, especially when it's one as unusual as tis four-door phaeton. We talke Tommin into lending us the "judges book" na dtelling us the story of this out-of-the-ordinary car.

At the genesis of the project, Tommy was looking for a way to pay homage to teh legendary creations of George Barris-a tall order, he knew.

 
The core of the L.A. Tub consists of a relatively simple chassis with a lot of design and detail. Total Cost Involved built the Model A frame slightly Z'd at the rear axle. The chassis was muscled up in front with hairpins, a monoleaf spring, a sway bar, Pete & Jake's shocks, and a dropped I-beam axle. At the other end, the Ford 9-inch is suspended by a four-link with coilcovers and Total Cost Involved shocks, and a panhard bar.
The finished' rails were painted Aztec Candy Apple Gold with some 'flake thorwn in to sparkle it up, provided by Specialized Powder Coating of Huntington Beach. Tommy added his sense of humor to the oil pan. Can you read it? It says, "Use only extra virgin olive oil, imported from Greece!"

Rick rounded the inner fenders and built braces to provide plenty of support to eliminate vibration when the L.A. Tub is
rolling down teh street.


On the original Ala Kart, you can see the front wheels when looking down at the fenders from above. Rick Cresse at Tri-C Engineering took the '28-29 fenders, attained from Gaslight Auto Parts, and bobbed, peaked, an dcurved them to emulate the Ala Kart look.


Don Armstrong at U.S. Radtiator built a cardboard mockup to use as a template for the upper and lower tank and core of a custom radiator to make sure it would fit within the grille shell.

The '28 touring body didn't look like this before Arty Regan applied his bodywork talent to the project. Michael Black modified the cowl, which maintains a funcitoning vent. John as Rydell Chevrolet in Northridge, CA, did the finishing touches to the body before Joe Arndold at Arnold's Auto Body in Northridge shot the PPG pearl white, modified with a blue tint.
This earlier photograph shows the headlights in place in the L.A. Tub. Tommy used a pair of Volkswagon Golf headlights, tilted 90 degrees, to combine modern headlight power with the old-timely verticle look
The sheetmetal hood and nose, built by Michael Black in Prescott, AZ, is a direct tip of the hat to the original Barris custom rod. The front of the grille shell was a Deuce shell narrowed at the bottom. The lower chin does not extend than the ax le, so it won't get torn up on steep driveways.

Thanks to Rod and Custom's writer Tim Bernsan for creating this write up on this genuine car.
Photography by Tommy Otis.



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Tri-C Engineering
29095 Avenue Penn.
Valencia, CA 91355

Phone: 661.295.1550
Fax: 661.295.1597