Street Machine

HONOUR ROLL

A FAMILY CRUISER WITH BIG-BLOCK POWER AND PERFECT PANEL AND PAINT THAT GETS DRIVEN IN TRIBUTE TO A FALLEN FRIEND

- STORY BORIS VISKOVIC

A gorgeous big-blocked tri-five Chevy built in remembranc­e of a good friend

IT WAS a 12-year labour of love for Brian Green to get his ’57 Chevy Bel Air on the road, which might sound like a long time, but then he effectivel­y built the car twice. The car was a South African import purchased from the Bendigo Swap Meet sight-unseen for $20,000; you’d have to be more than a little nervous waiting for the truck to arrive.

“I got it freighted up to the Wollongong area near the bottom of Mt Ousley and drove it home,” Brian remembers. “It could drive, but you wouldn’t drive it very far. It got driven that one time and then torn apart and I totally redid everything – all the drivetrain, suspension, steering. It took six years to get it up and running, engineered and on the road registered with the 502 in it.”

Brian drove it for around two years, still wearing the original cream-and-white paint and stock interior, and sorted out the usual teething problems of overheatin­g and braking quality. Thankfully, for his 20 grand, Brian scored a good solid car with very little rust, so it was a pretty cool-looking rig. Fitted with a narrowed nine-inch and sporting 17x7 and 17x10 Boyd Coddington Smoothies, a lot of people would be happy with the car, but Brian was keen to up the ante a fair bit, just waiting for the right person to become available to paint it. In the meantime, he was saving up, purchasing all new brightware and storing it away, knowing that one day the car would be resprayed.

Brian wasn’t sitting around waiting for any random person to come along; he knew exactly who needed to paint the car: the late Tony Roberts, an old-school mate and close friend of Brian’s. “It took me nine years to get Tony to paint it, or quit his job and start his own business, because he was a paint rep for a long time,” he says. “He finally opened the doors to Cool Ride Refinishin­g, joined by Daniel Baker, and they created a work of art.”

The car was taken down to bare rails and everything was sandblaste­d. The lead-wiping was redone by Daniel, who also tidied up parts of the chassis and floorpan and sorted out all of the panel gaps. A lot of work also went into re-engineerin­g how the front sheet metal attaches to the body. “Daniel created a support bar that travels underneath the guards and attaches to the front of the crossmembe­r. The radiator support panel was custom-fabricated to house the radiator forward of the serpentine system and create a shroud for the twin 14-inch thermo fans,” Brian explains.

With the body on a rotisserie, the Cool Ride team went to work making the underside as nice as the topside, including painting the floorpans in the body colour. For some contrast, the driveline and chassis are all painted satin black, while the shock absorbers and sway-bars are painted the same colour as the roof.

If you like the colours, don’t go looking for them in any colour charts, it’s a custom mix brewed up by Tony: “It started off as a champagne colour, but when Tony sprayed a little bit out and we took it in the sun, it looked a bit too girly and pink for the car, so what we did was add two tones to it to get the body colour, and then two tones again to get the roof colour. It can look silver and it can look gold and it looks bronze and it can turn brown, depending on what light’s on it. After seeing the colour on the car and out in the sun we laughed and came up with Maad Mocha for the roof and Magic Mushroom for the body!”

With close to 2000 hours spent on the bodywork, it’s no surprise how nice it has turned out. The problem was, Tony was starting to grow attached to the car after spending so much time on it: “His wife Michelle rang me and said: ‘Brian, you have to come and get your car. If it stays any longer you won’t get it back!’” That was all the inspiratio­n Brian needed to get the car trucked back home, where he could commence the painstakin­g task of putting it back together for the second time, installing things better and neater – but this time without scratching it!

What should have been a happy and

TONY’S WIFE MICHELLE RANG ME AND SAID: “BRIAN, YOU HAVE TO COME AND GET YOUR CAR. IF IT STAYS ANY LONGER YOU WON’T GET IT BACK!”

ENGINE: The 502 big-block from GM Performanc­e is no slouch, with 535hp on tap and a mighty 751lb-ft of torque! The radiator support panel was modified to mount the radiator forward of its stock position. This gives plenty of room in the engine bay for the twin 14in fans, serpentine system, and of course, that big-block engine 1: Brian chatted to legendary US painter Charley Hutton at Summernats 30, who was so impressed by the panel and paint that when the car made the Top 60, Charley headed straight over to the Elite Hall and autographe­d it 2: Being an original RHD car from South Africa, Brian’s car has the double-hump ’55-’56 dash. It’s been updated with Dakota Digital gauges and a Billet Specialtie­s wheel 3: Brian set up the narrowed 9in around the 17x10 Boyd Coddington Smoothies to make sure they fit nice and tight under the guards 4: The other signature on the car is Tony Roberts’s, and the 0001 signifies that this was the first build out of his Cool Ride Refinishin­g shop

SEEING THE #449 ON THE SHEET OUTSIDE THE HALL AT SUMMERNATS WAS OVERWHELMI­NG. WE MADE IT – TOP 60 ELITE HALL!

exciting time while he completed the final assembly turned to grief when Tony was killed in a tragic accident while riding home from his workshop on his Harley.

“I was now on a mission to get the car ready for Summernats 30, as it was a goal for us all to get the car out there and be seen,” Brian says. “The judging was first and we got some great feedback, then headed over to the City Cruise on Thursday lunchtime. Then there was the wait until Friday afternoon. Seeing the #449 on the sheet outside the hall was overwhelmi­ng. We made it – Top 60 Elite Hall! The car stayed there for four days and thousands of people walked past my car, admiring it and talking to me about the quality of the paint, the interior and colour selection.

“After the completion of Summernats 30, I drove it home from Canberra, living the dream in a brand new, 2016-built 1957 Chevy Bel Air.”

With a very supportive wife who has a ’34 Ford roadster, a son with an EJ Holden wagon and a daughter with an FB Holden sedan, Brian really is living the dream and s passing on his passion for cool cars. 1: Tony drew up his own design for the door panels and seats and had Ciadella Interiors in Tempe, Arizona create the all-new interior using original Bel Air ‘cloud’ material highlighte­d by silver piping 2: While you can buy just about everything brand new for a ’57 Chev out of the US, they don’t do many parts for a four-door. For example, Brian had to find someone through the internet who could supply a full set of stainless side trim on an exchange basis

 ??  ?? The late-afternoon light really brings out the bronze hues of the paintwork and highlights the contrast between the roof and body colours 1 3 2 4
The late-afternoon light really brings out the bronze hues of the paintwork and highlights the contrast between the roof and body colours 1 3 2 4
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PHOTOS BEN HOSKING
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