Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Friends turn DeLorean into time machine

Back to the Future fan pays $23,000 for rare 1981 car

- PAUL GUZZO Distribute­d by The Associated Press.

“You can’t exactly go to an auto parts store and ask for parts for a 1981 DeLorean. A lot of what we needed had to be custom made, some in Australia, some in Europe.” — Bradley Despaigne

CLEARWATER, Fla. — After watching “Back to the Future” “hundreds of times” since he “was in Pampers,” Clearwater’s Bradley Despaigne claims he can recite the movie verbatim from start to finish.

His favorite quote? When Marty McFly incredulou­sly asks Doc Brown, “Are you telling me that you built a time machine out of a DeLorean?”

It is a question now posed to him.

“I hear it a lot,” Despaigne, 36, said.

Despaigne purchased a DeLorean a little more than a year ago.

He and friend Joe Benson have since converted it into a near-exact replica of the famed cinematic time machine, right down to the Flux Capacitor.

“This is what makes time travel possible: the Flux Capacitor,” Despaigne said with a laugh, quoting Doc Brown’s explanatio­n to Marty McFly in the popular 1985 film.

There are only two difference­s between his time machine and the cinematic one.

His is still missing the ceiling console, but that will be added in the coming months.

And, of course, his does not go back in time when it hits 88 mph “yet,” Despaigne said with a wink.

Some of the time machine’s parts are sold online — the flux capacitor and the digital “time circuit” that displays the destinatio­n time, present time and last time departed.

Despaigne recently had the destinatio­n set for 6:30 a.m. on Aug. 29, 1984, the day and time of his birth.

“I want to run into the hospital room and tell my mom, ‘What are you doing? Push harder,” he chuckled.

Other parts had to be fabricated.

The “plutonium chamber” lid on the back of the car is a 1976 Dodge Polara hubcap and the time circuit lever is a double-sided wire brush handle.

Benson said those were the materials used to create the cinematic prop, too.

“We wanted everything to be as authentic as possible,” Benson, 30, said. “We made this just like the movie made theirs.”

If real, how would such a time machine work?

“According to the movie, it requires 1.21 gigawatts of power for the flux capacitor, which is where the plutonium comes into play,” Despaigne said. “Once the car hits 88 mph, it pulls the required power that then activates the worm hole emitter, which transports the DeLorean through time.”

He agrees the DeLorean is the perfect car for a time machine.

“The way I see it, if you’re gonna build a time machine into a car, why not do it with some style,” said Despaigne, again quoting Doc Brown.

The DeLorean was only produced from 1981 to 1983. Despaigne paid $20,000 for a 1981 DeLorean that had 23,000 miles on it.

He has since driven it 1,000 miles.

The rare car needed thousands of dollars in repairs before it was road-ready, Benson said.

“You can’t exactly go to an auto parts store and ask for parts for a 1981 DeLorean. A lot of what we needed had to be custom made, some in Australia, some in Europe.”

spent Thousands creating more the replica were time machine.

“This is just something I wanted for myself,” Despaigne said. “I love the movie, obviously.”

He is not alone in his obsession. world own Fans similar around replica the time machines, the most famous being Jay Leno. Despaigne’s is for rent, but for event display only, not for drives. Inquiries should go through his Instagram page — @81DMC_CLW.

The first time he took his time machine on the highway and watched the odometer hit 88, Despaigne laughed that he wondered if he’d “soon see sparks, enter a wormhole and run into dinosaurs. When I didn’t, I wondered if the car would hold together at that speed. I don’t go that fast anymore.”

 ?? (Tampa Bay Times/Dirk Shadd) ?? Bradley Despaigne (left) and Joseph Benson, 30, show off Despaigne’s 1981 DeLorean which they have made into a time machine replica DeLorean modeled off of the original “Back To The Future” movie, at Edgewater Drive Park in Clearwater, Fla. Despaigne purchased the DeLorean in September 2019 and the two have been working on it for a little over a year. “The way I see it, if you’re gonna build a time machine into a car, why not do it with some style,” said Despaigne, quoting Doc Brown.
(Tampa Bay Times/Dirk Shadd) Bradley Despaigne (left) and Joseph Benson, 30, show off Despaigne’s 1981 DeLorean which they have made into a time machine replica DeLorean modeled off of the original “Back To The Future” movie, at Edgewater Drive Park in Clearwater, Fla. Despaigne purchased the DeLorean in September 2019 and the two have been working on it for a little over a year. “The way I see it, if you’re gonna build a time machine into a car, why not do it with some style,” said Despaigne, quoting Doc Brown.
 ??  ?? The interior of Despaigne’s DeLorean.
The interior of Despaigne’s DeLorean.
 ??  ?? Despaigne’s 1981 DeLorean.
Despaigne’s 1981 DeLorean.

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