Chopped and Diced's Feature Website Pick - MOTOR Austin
If you are anything like me, you aren't a member of a club. You may work at a shop or not, but it doesn't matter, because you tend to gravitate towards doing things on your own. The independence of it all. The feeling of accomplishment knowing that you did every single thing on your personal ride yourself (even if it is a shitbox like mine). But that doesn't mean you want to be a hermit.
You see, Rod clubs have been around for as long as there have been rods. And it is only natural, that like minded people would find each other and then start forming groups. Hanging out together, putting on their own events, etc. But for those like me, and for those that may not have their own car but are interested in things going on having to do with them, or a family wanting to hit up a car show, or even if you are a club looking for a new road to run and some stops along the way, then, if you are from around these parts, you come to MOTOR Austin.
ANYTHING having to do with the greater Austin and surrounding areas that have to do with whatever kind of rods you are into, MOTOR Austin keeps you abreast (haha) of the situation. You need a shop to do some work to your ride? Some pinstriping or airbrush work? Clothing? MOTOR Austin has it. Not to mention one of the most comprehensive lists of events available.
And it gets better. Regular hang outs, local car clubs and tracks and rod friendly restaurants, bars and venues. You could easily fill up a calendar year or more making a point to visit each and every single one of these very unique and authentic places to visit.
And one step further, you drop our man James a little note, and your unique hot rod friendly business is up on MOTOR Austin for all to see. Give 'em a holler and tell 'em Chopped and Diced sent yaz....
PIN UP THURSDAY! PIN UP VIDEOS!!!
Thats right, plural. Because I love you........ actually, because I love pin ups. You can bugger off...... but you won't, because you love pin ups too..... :)
7:40 minutes of girlies and hot rods.... Pretty much the backbone of the culture.......
Because I will not leave out our motocross brethren, who also have a penchant for all things speedy, and for all things hottie......
And Olivia Munn.... quite possibly the hottest nerd on the planet. Pictures from the video below.....



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Thursday, March 11, 2010 at 9:44AM Chopped and Diced Ebay picks of the week
Sports fans, this week provides a lot of gems in the listings on that auction site we love to hate but can't stop browsing for fear we will miss that deal of a lifetime on rear end we have been looking for to complete our project, or that knucklehead project we have been patiently waiting to score for years.
*** Click the pictures to see their respective ebay pages.....
This one is my favorite this week. I love me some 348s and 409s. And this one has classic styling with some awesome hot rod cues.
I'll leave my opinions to myself as to what I would spend, but there is no denying, this thing is pretty damn sweet!
You can not go wrong with a raodster like this. Lots lof louvre love.....
Always love for a triumph.... Basic, bare bones bike riding at its best...
I like fenderless hoodless hot rod trucks.... you can tell.... but especially if someone isnt trying to hard. And this one is a good mix of keeping it simple, but having some style.
Here is that awesome start to a shop truck/parts/bike hauler. You pick this baby up and get it fixed up, add a little old school into that 60s and 70s flair for Biltwell's Vanatastic Mondays....
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Wednesday, March 10, 2010 at 10:22AM Vintage Tuesday - Old school ads from the industrial boom of the teens and 20s
So after perusing through tons and tons of industry advertisements and press releases during this era, I have really found that there were two groups dominating the industrial market at the time. Tires and oil. And this was well before the big boom of the automobile later in the 20s. But since engines were already well engrained into the mainstream of commercial and industrial businesses, the concept of tractors, heavy industrial rolling machinery and trucking was booming. This led to a lot more research in making that equipment much more efficient and as maintenance free as possible. And so you find the following from those by-gone times:









And you can leave out how you keep those early roads organized? The old school traffic light......
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Tuesday, March 9, 2010 at 10:23AM A man and his machine - an editorial
CONTENT WARNING - the following editorial has been left unedited in order to retain the fabric of this piece. Think of it as art. To edit it would be like covering up the cleavage of the Mona Lisa...... not that this bile filled with 4-letter words can be considered to be in the same category as the Mona Lisa..... but seriously, what was that b!tch smirking at???? - So cover your childrens eyes or scroll past this editorial if your fragile little eyes can not handle the language, but bear in mind there is a very important point herein. And while the piece may be directed towards motorcycles, the very same principles hold true to the hot rodder. So read on yon pup, and take it to heart.....

What is it about two wheeled hooliganism that soothes the soul?
“Open All Night” might have been a Springsteen ode to white trash roadrunners, but the spirit of the song translates nicely to anyone with an affinity for motorcycles. Not a mere interest, not an occasional fling, but an affinity; a full on lust for the perils that accompany a two wheeled pilgrimage anywhere past the driveway or apartment parking lot.
Today’s society demands the common man spend the majority of his life toiling away at some sort of soul-sucking insignificant task until he eventually is forced to retire and die of something he never knew existed. Alternatively, a person always has the option of slugging it out over a dream; and if he’s lucky, the bourgeois-sons of bitches who run Corporate Amerika won’t choke the hope out of him with high-interest loans.
Make no mistake about it sports fans, these are Hard Times we’re living in. The stock market’s falling faster than a suicide jumper and people’s savings accounts are disappearing like good ol’ fashioned rock n’ roll. Someone once said something about everyone needing some kinda ventilator; and the proletariat is no exception. People need some relief, goddammit!
Some people go fishing and wear shoes with no socks. Some play a round of golf in atrocious clothing, some go for a hike and watch bears fuck, and some of us swing a leg over a two-wheeled, quarter-ton, fire breathing suicide machine. Nothing kicks the work-day blues like executing a precision twenty-foot churning burn out in the workplace parking lot; cackling like a bat-shit speed fiend as you hurdle yourself into 5 O’ clock traffic with all the reckless abandon of a kamikaze pilot.
Fear not; you are not alone. Motorcycle hooligans are everywhere. They lurk in mild-mannered suburban garages, low-rent apartments, and down town tenements; and you can bet your ass you’re going to see a whole lot more of them coming out of the woodwork in these troubled times. Turmoil turns out two-wheeled rebel rousers like a full moon draws out an army of fuckin’ werewolves.
Let’s face it folks, hard times are what started all of this in the first place. The custom motorcycle was born in the hearts of men who had been to hell and back; their departure from conventional cycling was a direct reflection of their new perspective on life. These guys returned from years of unimaginable horror and were expected to trade their blood-stained fatigues for a clean white shirt and their rifles for a briefcase or union card. They were expected to assimilate themselves into a society that could never understand the things they’d seen and done; and by god, that’s what they did.
But with assimilation came the necessary ventilators; be it a highball in a rocks glass or a beer in a bowling alley. Others (read: The Boozefighters) cut loose on finger-fucked Harleys and Triumphs. Now here were some guys who were simply out to have a good time. Historical accounts of the clubs that sprung up after World War Two indicate they were little more than a bunch of vets looking to sew some wild oats and do a little living after kicking the krauts out of France and smacking the shit outta Tojo.
Clubs from all over used to get together for scrambles, hill climbs, and grassroots race events. There were no fights over territory, no bloodshed (save some occasional fisticuffs) over how many fucking patches were on the back of your vest, and no stupid-assed coalitions. Hell, some of the originals even flew different colors on different days. It was all about riding your machine and making some good memories with some good friends- which naturally included freaking out the citizens and AMA jockeys from time to time.
This brief visit upon history begs the question, “What the fuck is going on around here?!”
I came back from Russia five years ago utterly confused; but I knew for sure I was going to buy myself a ‘sickle and I was going to chop the fuck out of it. Not long after I accomplished that, some blue collar buddies and I started our own little motorcycle club, the Knuckle Dusters. The"rules" were absurd and nonsensical at best (i.e., "finish your goddamned beer"), and participation simply dictated you ride a motorcycle and show a little class.
No sooner did we dawn our crudely sewn colors then the shake-downs start rolling in. Some asshole from an “outlaw” club would come wandering up at a gas station in bumblefuck to feel us out. I’d tell ‘em we were a small group who just liked to ride and scare the squares; which would inevitably lead to a monologue about how we should join some sort of coalition for twenty bucks a month so “bad things wouldn’t happen to us.”
The way I see it, if I’ve gotta pay money every month to avoid having my ass kicked, maybe I need to have my ass kicked…
But I digress. We were talking about hard times and the soothing mystique of riding a hand-wrenched death trap.
Hard times might encroach on a man’s ability to put four-thousand dollar billet rims on a motorcycle, but they’re certainly not going to keep him from turning a wrench or firing up a sawz-all on a lazy Sunday afternoon. Desperation pushes people to inexplicable behavior, like chopping the shit out of a perfectly good fender or trading a fine set of shocks for some rigid steel struts. Your average God-fearing citizen will always question the mental health of a man who grinds all the turn signals off a motorcycle in favor of running a taillight the size of a dog’s asshole- but who gives a shit.
The stripped- down, bare- knuckle, death trap murder-‘sickle is a personal expression. Hell, ANY motorcycle can be a personal expression if the rider wills it. In the end, a true custom ‘sickle is one that embodies its rider’s fight against whatever ails him. If your bike stands as a monument to your struggle for freedom, you’ve turned a wrench in the right direction.
And that, mi amigos, is what it all boils down to. Work can get shitty, life can throw us curve balls, the whole world can come to an end- but we’ll be standing there to the bitter end, reeling in the dust and the blood; a noble and proud few who refuse to give up until we’ve been planted in the dirt.
We are savage horsemen, for fuck’s sake; and the custom motorcycle is a tribute to our creed. It’s about not giving up when you’re tits deep in parts on a modification gone awry, it’s about busting your knuckles on a week night spent wrenching up your shit when you’ve got to drag yourself in to work at six. It’s about screwing it on after a soul-sucking day at work and feeling alive- feeling ten and twenty and thirty years younger; feeling free, fearless, and completely in control of your own destiny despite whatever plans the world might have for you. Say what you want about brotherhood and beer joints, what it all comes down to is the machine- your machine- and what it stands for. You can strip away the extraneous bullshit, but you can never take away the feeling that comes with hammering through five O’ clock traffic at ninety miles an hour on a two wheeled suicide stallion you’ve made your own. That’s the living, breathing custom motorcycle. That’s the church of choppers. That’s the heart of the motorcycle hooligan.
For more from this hooligan of hot rod words, pay a visit to bcskdmc.blogspot.com. The very same warped bastard is responsible for our very first and vastly more professional shop ad video.
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Monday, March 8, 2010 at 1:09PM 






