Hemmings Find of the Day – Model A Snowbird

Posted by Daniel Strohl on December 23, 2009 under Daniel Strohl, Hemmings Classic Car, Hemmings Find of the Day, Hershey, Model A Snowbird, RM Hershey, auctions, service and fleet vehicles, snowmobile conversion, snowmobiles | Comments are off for this article

1929 Model A Snowbird

Model A and Model T snowmobiles are a perennial favorite around these parts, so we naturally investigated this particular 1929 Model A Snowbird that recently appeared on Hemmings.com, being offered out of St. Louis for $69,500. From the seller’s description:

This 1929 Ford Model A Tudor Sedan with its Arps Snow Bird conversion was originally used by the New York Guard and later by a rural mail carrier. Finished in Manila Brown accented in Black Yellow wire wheels with Taupe cloth upholstery it drives through caterpillar style treads encompassing the rear tire and two leaf sprung auxiliary bogies on each side. The front wheels have long skis mounted just an inch or so off the ground inside the front wheels. In addition to the Snow Bird package this Model A also has an exhaust manifold heater missing only its sheet metal shrouding. An older restoration it has been mechanically refurbished and freshly detailed cosmetically. It is an understatement to say that it will be the center of attention wherever it appears.

Like the Bugazzi, which also ended up with a classic car dealer in St. Louis, this particular Snowbird sold at RM’s Hershey auction back in October. Selling price then was $33,000. The free market system at work, indeed.

Hershey 2009: Cheers and jeers

Posted by Daniel Strohl on October 16, 2009 under 1908 BrownieKar, 1976 Citicar, AACA Hershey, Bugazzi, Daniel Strohl, Hershey, Model A Snowbird, RM Hershey, alt-power cars, auctions, microcars and minicars, one-offs and homebuilts, snowmobiles | Comments are off for this article

takin' a picture at Hershey 2009

Inevitably, some things work and some things don’t for every event. As I continue to comb through my shots from this year’s Hershey, I noticed some of both.