Auto-biography 10: Strung Out

Paul Niedermeyer
by Paul Niedermeyer

Once I crossed the line, once I became a fifteen year-old driving addict, there was no turning back. Nothing could stop me from using my drug of choice. Like most addicts, I was willing to cross any line to get my fix. If my supply was cut off, I found another. Needless to say this is not my auto-biography’s most innocent chapter.

After my first illicit drive in the family’s Dodge Coronet, I couldn’t stop. On the day after Thanksgiving, I cruised to the mall. A sale-crazed woman ran a parking lot stop and hit me in the rear. Panicked, I drove away. It was just a dent, but returning the keys to my parents was not a Kodak moment.

My punishment: a two year postponement of my license. Did that stop me? Did that even slow me down? Hell no. They might as well have banned me for life for all the difference it made.

I cultivated other sources of wheels. In a pinch, I still took out the family Dodges. Locked? A stick opened any Chrysler product vent window. No keys? A piece of wire and a screwdriver and I was ready to roll. Oh, and I also unhooked the speedometer cable; my father had a photographic memory for (odometer) numbers.

I finagled a job at a tiny two-pump gas station. I worked solo on Saturdays, pumping extra-high-octane Sunoco 260.

I only had some twenty customers a day, but many drove high-performance motors looking for their un-cut fix. I eagerly popped the hood to check fluids, especially if a Jag 4.2 or 426 Hemi was lurking there. It was a great way to spend Saturday: listening to The Doors blaring on the radio, examining the obscure objects of my desire. AND I got paid.

The boss owned a fleet of taxis (Coronets!), which he parked behind the station. Most had tired slant sixes. One ’67 still had a semblance of vitality, holstering a 318 V8. I always went to work an hour early and treated myself to a therapeutic “wake-up drive.”

In the fall of 1968, I was a sophomore in a boys’ prep school. It was destined to be my last year at that august institution (I flunked out). The school had a fresh-out-of-college French teacher who drove a ’65 VW bus. He was very friendly to his students.

During lunch, half the class piled into the VW “smoke-mobile”. We had our mid-day nicotine fix while (slowly) touring the neighborhood, smoke billowing out the windows. It shouldn’t have surprised us that our accommodating teacher was fired after only three months.

Because I could get his bus started when the choke stuck, or perhaps for other less salubrious reasons, the French teacher became particularly friendly. Next thing I knew, I was driving everywhere (slowly) in a VW bus.

To honor its name, the smoke-mobile eventually blew up in a cloud of…. smoke. The ex-teacher’s grandfather gave him a pampered 1962 Olds F-85 Cutlass coupe: black, bucket seats, and the four barrel 185 hp version of the immortal Buick-Rover-MG-Morgan-Land Rover aluminum 3.5 V8. Those ’61-’63 GM compacts were sharp looking and light; they shared their Y-Bodies with the Corvair. With the V8, the Olds was no slouch.

We went to Ocean City. At night, somewhere between Cambridge and Salisbury, I opened up the Cutlass. The speedometer needle’s progress slowed above 95. But it kept moving: 96, 97, 98… damn!

Steam erupted from the front of the hood. The thermal challenges of the aluminum V8 had stumped the GM engineers. Maybe that’s why they sold it cheap to Rover: the weather’s always cool in England, no?

After his dismissal, the ex-teacher (and accelerative enabler) tried out the monastery. Driving back late from an outing, the police pulled me over going a little too fast on the Beltway. I shook the intoxicated sleeping novice awake.

While Maryland’s finest got organized and out of his car, we changed seats (no joke in the little coupe). The fogged-up rear window helped. The dazed-looking theologian in the black Olds presented his religious-affiliation ID, and was instantly absolved. Praise the Lord! My, how times have changed.

Even though most of Baltimore was still in 1959 (think “Hairspray”), I embraced the psychedelic late sixties fully. Hallucinogens opened new windows of auto-perception. It was like being five again; cars became living, breathing entities. We communicated, and I gained new insight into their personalities as expressed through design. I almost solved the mystery of the ’61 Falcon grill.

Although my fellow mind-travelers were freaked out at the idea of dropping acid and driving, I never had problems driving in drastically altered states of consciousness. You just had to know how to talk to cars and ask for their help, when needed. As I soon to discovered, danger was never far away.

[Editor’s note: TTAC does not recommend driving while under the influence of hallucinogenic drugs. Always wear your seat belt.]

Paul Niedermeyer
Paul Niedermeyer

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  • MgoBLUE MgoBLUE on Apr 04, 2007

    Fabulous work, Paul!

  • Leewestover Leewestover on Nov 09, 2010

    I know I am like three years late to the party but I had to comment. I am a Towson High alum, but about 30 years younger. I had my license junior and senior year and there really wasn't anything that appealing to me on the student parking lot. I like to think I was near the top of the food chain with my 1986 300zx junior year and 1991 Talon Tsi AWD senior year. There was another student who had a pretty nice 1981 Corvette but they didn't have a parking permit so it was never parked within a half mile of the school. Driving on acid can be scary, but acid in general was scary. I didn't really intend to. I thought acid would enhance a concert going experience just like mj but I was sadly mistaken. The whole crowd thing totally freaked me out and I convinced myself I had to get home. I had a long drive back from DC to Baltimore, scary at first but I sort of got into it and enjoyed myself after the fear let up. My only regret is leaving my friend who had also dosed back at the concert grounds by himself. Our friendship was really never the same after that.

  • Redapple2 Love the wheels
  • Redapple2 Good luck to them. They used to make great cars. 510. 240Z, Sentra SE-R. Maxima. Frontier.
  • Joe65688619 Under Ghosn they went through the same short-term bottom-line thinking that GM did in the 80s/90s, and they have not recovered say, to their heyday in the 50s and 60s in terms of market share and innovation. Poor design decisions (a CVT in their front-wheel drive "4-Door Sports Car", model overlap in a poorly performing segment (they never needed the Altima AND the Maxima...what they needed was one vehicle with different drivetrain, including hybrid, to compete with the Accord/Camry, and decontenting their vehicles: My 2012 QX56 (I know, not a Nissan, but the same holds for the Armada) had power rear windows in the cargo area that could vent, a glass hatch on the back door that could be opened separate from the whole liftgate (in such a tall vehicle, kinda essential if you have it in a garage and want to load the trunk without having to open the garage door to make room for the lift gate), a nice driver's side folding armrest, and a few other quality-of-life details absent from my 2018 QX80. In a competitive market this attention to detai is can be the differentiator that sell cars. Now they are caught in the middle of the market, competing more with Hyundai and Kia and selling discounted vehicles near the same price points, but losing money on them. They invested also invested a lot in niche platforms. The Leaf was one of the first full EVs, but never really evolved. They misjudged the market - luxury EVs are selling, small budget models not so much. Variable compression engines offering little in terms of real-world power or tech, let a lot of complexity that is leading to higher failure rates. Aside from the Z and GT-R (low volume models), not much forced induction (whether your a fan or not, look at what Honda did with the CR-V and Acura RDX - same chassis, slap a turbo on it, make it nicer inside, and now you can sell it as a semi-premium brand with higher markup). That said, I do believe they retain the technical and engineering capability to do far better. About time management realized they need to make smarter investments and understand their markets better.
  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X Off-road fluff on vehicles that should not be off road needs to die.
  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X Saw this posted on social media; “Just bought a 2023 Tundra with the 14" screen. Let my son borrow it for the afternoon, he connected his phone to listen to his iTunes.The next day my insurance company raised my rates and added my son to my policy. The email said that a private company showed that my son drove the vehicle. He already had his own vehicle that he was insuring.My insurance company demanded he give all his insurance info and some private info for proof. He declined for privacy reasons and my insurance cancelled my policy.These new vehicles with their tech are on condition that we give up our privacy to enter their world. It's not worth it people.”
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