Ur-Turn: How My Dream Car Killed My Dream Car

Mike George
by Mike George

Memory can be a funny thing: an ally or an enemy. Any modern American likely grew up with cars, and can summon countless tales of good and woe. Childhood vacations that required an I-70 burn through Kansas winters, causing the POS ‘83 Vanagon’s fuel lines to freeze. Dad pumping bottle after bottle of Heet into the damned thing to no avail. Making our way to Oregon during the freakish Wyoming blizzard of ’85, seeing countless vehicles of all sizes rolled in the median, while the family cat is sleeping peacefully on Mom’s lap…

Mom. The cancer had spread to her brain. Through ten years she had fought, remission after remission, till those damned words: The Brain. Where memory lives; the realm of dreams.

Science has no consensus on dreams: a repository of unresolved feelings and emotions; a Freudian dumping ground delighting teen-age males. But what about the other dreams? Day dreams? Dream girls? Dream cars? Like James May, I was a huge fan of the Countach when I was a wee lad. The angles, the aggression, the way it looked like it could open up and devour anything in its path. The stuff of dreams. And the Countach retained that title for many years, until I eventually attempted to “grow up” and stop being such a dreamer; settling in to a full-time job, having bills and taxes. No time for dreaming.

That is, until 2007, when I discovered Top Gear. A friend e-mailed me a link to the boys trying to kill a Toyota Hilux. This was art! I had purchased my first Toyota (and second) from a friend when I was nineteen: a ‘76 Celica GT in Krylon Blue. I learned to shift in that car, and drove the piss out of it for years until trading it off back to him. Dead reliable, unlike the truck I got in return. Over the next ten years, I would own an ‘84 Camry, ‘85 Celica, ‘84 Tercel 4×4, ‘85 van (twice), ‘86 van, ‘81 Cressida, ‘82 truck, and two Four Runners. Even an LS400. You might say I liked Toyotas.

Come the fall of ‘07, the same friend has an ‘87 Integra he needs to sell to pay off his latest used car, as well as a speeding ticket earned in the Acura. $550 cash and a 12 string guitar, and we’re golden. My first drive was all I needed to know: across the Cascades in the dead of winter, balding tires doing their FWD-damndest to find grip. My new dream car.

My new dream car was twenty years old with 240,000 on the clock. Twice stolen, often abused and neglected, the Integra not only ran like a champ, but sparked my brain like no car I had ever driven. Over the next several years it took me to Yellowstone and back, including hours of 90+ mph burns through northeast Nevada. The following year, to visit my parents in Colorado; never once a hard start or a hiccup. I put on massive 18′ wheels that looked quite hilarious, and didn’t quite fit, but no matter. The grip was immense and I could corner so hard I laughed. That’s all that mattered.

Not long after getting the Integra, I got to Top Gear Series 7 Episode 5: the long-awaited and ridiculed Bugatti Veyron vs. a Cessna race across Europe. Later, Cpt. Slow doing the v-max run at Ehra-Lessien. I was smitten. An odd-looking car, even compared to the Countach. But the more I learned, the more I studied, the more I gazed at it parked in front of some place called “The Miner’s Club”, the more I loved it. The historical horsepower, the acceleration, the deceleration, the sheer audacity of the thing. The new stuff of dreams.

Early 2010, my immediate future is now obvious. Quit the job, sell the excess, stash the essentials, and go where I’m needed. GPS in tow, I plan a route to the folks via Las Vegas, where I can meet friends and leech a hotel room. The first day’s drive takes me back across the Cascades and into northwest Nevada. I set up camp along a power-line maintenance road, five miles north of Gerlach. The boulder-to-human ratio was approximately 86.32 trillion to 1, which I quite enjoyed. The night winds, howling like a million dervishes, I quite did not. My water bottle was frozen solid come 4 am, but I had packed accordingly, and slept well. I left camp around 5am and reach Gerlach, known mostly for it’s proximity to Burning Man.

I still can’t explain what triggered the voice-in-my-head: “slow down, take in the scenery.” I took it as an order, and did so. What’s there to see at 5 am? Nothing is open, no one is awake, there’s nothi…. Wait! I remember that! I do a 180 (ok, I turn around legally) and go back a few buildings. And there it is: The Old Miner’s Club. Veyron territory. Bugatti had brought some early prototype Veyron(s) to the Black Rock Desert to sort out high speed dynamics and such, and many pictures were taken. For weeks the picture of the Veryon parked right here in this very gravel parking lot in front of this very bar was my desktop wallpaper. That photo, as much as any race across Europe, had cemented the insane Bugatti as my all-time fave. My Day-Dream car.

There was no coffee to be had in Gerlach at 5 am, but no matter. My little semi-rendezvous with destiny had amped me like a gallon of the Fine Colombian. And there was a nice sense of serendipity: driving my dream car, in Day Dream car territory. I felt inspired. As the next few miles went by, the road straightened. And straightened. You could see for forever in any direction. No trees, no other vehicles, surely no patrols. The speed limit said 70, speedometer 85. Highway 447 became my Ehra-Lessien, and I gave it the beans: 90, 95, 100, surely it’s almost done, 105, no way it can hit 110…

One ten. My $700, 23 year old, 265,000 mile 4 banger with maybe 90 horsepower left can hit one ten. At over 5,000 feet elevation. And it keeps on for what seems like forever. Sated, I ease off and let the old girl back down to 85, where I spend the majority of the rest of the day heading to Vegas. The next morning the car made a funny noise. A few hours of phone calls and parking lot DIY’ing broke the bad news. The Integra had thrown a rod. My Dream Car killed my dream car.

I sold the Integra on Craigslist for $400 and flew to Colorado. For the next few months my dream life would be on hold. Mom’s remaining dreams, and making new memories, were what mattered. On April 26th, her dreaming ended.

Back home in Oregon some months later, the reassembly process on my life and dreams continues. And, frankly, it’s not like I’ll ever own, drive, touch, or even see a Veyron. So my new dream car? A one-owner ‘83 Tercel I found on Craigslist. Time to make more memories.

Mike George
Mike George

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  • Rocketrodeo Rocketrodeo on Sep 06, 2010

    Good words, H Man. I recently lost my mother to cancer. I recognize your journey. I had a first-gen Integra on the other end of the life cycle: from 0 to 220,000 miles. It was the first car I owned that I felt zero need to modify, with the exception of stickier tires. It ate at least one set of Potenza RE71s each year. Five speed, no sunroof, 2300 lbs, 16 valves, 113hp, four wheel discs. As Lokki noted above, it really was a Japanese Alfa. I shopped Sciroccos and AE86s as well; though competent handlers, neither had the soul of that engine. Such lovely balance. I'd love to have another one -- I have more nostalgia for it than the 2002tii that preceded it. Much more, actually. Sadly, the first-gens were quickly biodegradable in the temperate climes so I'll probably never drive one again. I hope someone will plug a new engine into the one you sold and it will go on for another owner or two. I continued to see mine a couple of years after I sold it.

  • Jimbowski Jimbowski on Sep 06, 2010

    BUY ANOTHER INTEGRA (with stock wheels)!

  • SCE to AUX Range only matters if you need more of it - just like towing capacity in trucks.I have a short-range EV and still manage to put 1000 miles/month on it, because the car is perfectly suited to my use case.There is no such thing as one-size-fits all with vehicles.
  • Doug brockman There will be many many people living in apartments without dedicated charging facilities in future who will need personal vehicles to get to work and school and for whom mass transit will be an annoying inconvenience
  • Jeff Self driving cars are not ready for prime time.
  • Lichtronamo Watch as the non-us based automakers shift more production to Mexico in the future.
  • 28-Cars-Later " Electrek recently dug around in Tesla’s online parts catalog and found that the windshield costs a whopping $1,900 to replace.To be fair, that’s around what a Mercedes S-Class or Rivian windshield costs, but the Tesla’s glass is unique because of its shape. It’s also worth noting that most insurance plans have glass replacement options that can make the repair a low- or zero-cost issue. "Now I understand why my insurance is so high despite no claims for years and about 7,500 annual miles between three cars.
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