Street Machine

WHERE ARE THEY NOW? OWEN WEBB’S BRUISER

> OWEN WEBB’S FIRST STREETER IS UP FOR SALE!

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IT IS ALWAYS exciting when a survivor from the 1980s golden age of street machining pops up in good nick, so we were pumped to see Owen Webb’s XW Falcon ute, Bruiser, for sale online. Owen is the chief judge for both

Street Machine Summernats and Meguiar’s Motorex, but he got his start with the XW in the late 1970s. It is an instantly recognisab­le car to those of us of a certain age, thanks to the blacked-out bar and distinctiv­e rear spoiler.

“I’d owned a few EJ Holdens and stuff beforehand, but it was the first car that really got me hooked on the whole car scene,” Owen says. “It was traded in on a new ute at the Bowral Ford Dealership where I was doing my panel beating and spray painting apprentice­ship – Nugget Gold, with a 250 2V six. A local earthmovin­g contractor had owned it, so it was pretty knocked around. Being 18 and an apprentice, I gave it the cheapest spray job possible and 12-slotters, which took me about a month.

“I drove it around like that for about four years before taking if off the road for rebuild number two. This time around, I gave it a good paintjob and added the 351 Cleveland and nine-inch. It was also one of the very first to have Center Line Auto Drags and BF Goodrich TAS; I thought that was pretty cool, the bee’s knees!”

Other mods included vinyl/velour trim (both in the cabin and the tray!), flared rear guards in steel, XB exterior mirrors, XW GT chin spoiler, a Ford Blue Oval etched into the rear window, and the ubiquitous letterbox scoop.

“I took it to a lot of shows – Roselands, Yennora, Orange, Wollongong, Albury Street Rod show,” Owen remembers. “I used to come up to Sydney and hang out with guys like Graham Stubbs and Steve Turner, High

Performanc­e World. I took it to the 4th Street Machine Nationals in Narrandera, Easter 1980; that was a huge show. I did the first two Street

Machine Summernats in that car, went in all the driving events – even the burnouts held on the main drag.

“The ute was my first car ever featured in a magazine – Custom Vans & Trucks,” he continues. “It was also David Feathersto­n’s last-ever Aussie shoot for Street Machine (Jan/ Feb 1986). He photograph­ed the car and flew back home to the States the next day. David and I still regularly catch up whenever I go over.”

Owen was stoked to see that the ute is still in good shape and seemingly still in the hands of the bloke he sold it to in Ulladulla way back when. “I sold it in the early 1990s, to fund a ’38 Ford coupe project,” he says. “The only real changes are that it has 12-slotters back on it, XY tail-lights and a shaker. Other than that, it looks exactly the same!”

While Bruiser was Owen’s first streeter, his most famous build remains his XY sedan, Wild Thing, which was a Summernats Top 10 car and the March 1988 Street Machine cover star.

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Unlike many famous street machines of the 80s, Bruiser has survived in great nick and with few changes from Owen’s original build
ABOVE: Unlike many famous street machines of the 80s, Bruiser has survived in great nick and with few changes from Owen’s original build
 ??  ?? BELOW:
While Bruiser was highly detailed for its time, Owen’s XY that followed it, Wild Thing, was on another level. Comparing Bruiser’s mild custom theme to the XY’S pro street vibes and wild graphics neatly shows how quickly street machine trends...
BELOW: While Bruiser was highly detailed for its time, Owen’s XY that followed it, Wild Thing, was on another level. Comparing Bruiser’s mild custom theme to the XY’S pro street vibes and wild graphics neatly shows how quickly street machine trends...

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