REPRINT FROM TRAFIKJOURNALEN #5 1991
THE HAWK THAT LOST ITS WINGS
Maybe you have this issue in your stash, but keep in mind that it didn’t tell you the whole truth.
When testing cars, many things tend to happen. And some of them never get mentioned, for different reasons. I guess that I don’t have to explain why there was no mention of this when we tested the Armor Streethawk in 1971. After 20 years, however, I guess that I can mention what actually happened.
Being an automotive journalist is no child’s play, it is a serious business. Some people say that “you only play around with cars all day long” - boy, they should only know, is always my first thought. Not even when testing a serious muscle package like the Armor Streethawk is it all fun and games. It should be tested as seriously as any regular family sedan. And you could always ask me how I know…
In 1971 I was pretty new at this job. But of course, I took it as seriously back then as I do now. For many young people it would probably be tempting to lay down some rubber and drive like they stole the thing if they got the opportunity to drive a 312 hp monster. Not for me, I was a serious automotive journalist. But that didn’t change the fact that I also was 25…
Somehow a bunch of “raggare” in a beat up old Ardent, if I remember right a 410 from somewhere in the late 50s, showed up and tried to make fun of me.
“Why don’t you test real cars instead?”
“This is a real car. It has got four wheels and an engine like every other real car, right?”
“Hardly an engine, it’s some Armor sewing machine under the bonnet.”
“I am pretty sure it will beat your old Orion six anyway.”
“Armor has never known how to build cars. I am sure that it won’t even lay down some rubber.”
When this braindead discussion had been going on for a while I was pretty tired of it. To prove a point, I somehow forgot what a serious automotive journalist I was, instead the devil on my shoulder told me to do some nasty things. Like lay down some rubber. Lots of rubber. Rather like “covering the whole parking lot in smoke and leaving residues from the tyres on the rear quarters of our new, shiny, white test car”. I had some thoughts about how to remove them as easy as possible without anybody taking notice, but at the time it was way more important to prove a point to that annoying bunch of blockheads.
“Yeah, laying down rubber when standing still is one thing, but I bet it doesn’t have any performance in the end anyway”.
“More than most other cars on the road, I would say”.
At that time,our activities had caught the interest of another muscle car driver. A brand new, violet Ardent Chesapeake 444SS turned up. As in very new, a 1972 model, one of the very first while the car we tested actually was still a 1971 model.
“Now that’s a real car. An Ardent, they know how to build cars.”
I was quite tired of the drunkards that tried to convince me that Ardent was the absolute peak of automotive engineering that nobody was ever going to match. And they kept telling me that the 444SS would blow the doors of the Armor if they should race against each other. Which it would not. The cars were pretty even, the Armor actually a bit faster but not a difference that a more skilled driver could not even out. And before I knew it, I was going to do the most stupid thing I have done in my whole carreer as a journalist.
Accept a spontaneous street race with one of our test vehicles.
Soon, the three american automobiles were heading towards a nice, almost abandoned straight outside town. (I can’t say that I support racing in the streets at all, that should be done on a proper track or dragstrip, but at least we took the safety measures we could by doing it in such a place, which of course is no excuse.) And in a scene that was actually pretty close to the Eden street scene from the movie “The last night with the buddies” * that came out two years later, the white Armor and the violet Ardent lined up for a race while one of the drunkards used a flashlight as a signal for “GO!”.
In the movie, which I am sure that all of you have seen, the black Earl Glenwood went off the road and caught fire. And I am happy that my way of losing the race was way less dramatic. Because when I saw a purple thing disappearing in the horizon, I was still stuck at the start, going nowhere. I don’t know how previous testers had treated the clutch (probably not very nice), my burnout was maybe taking the last life out of it, and doing something of a banzai start here were far from a success. The clutch took its last breath there, to the laughter of a bunch of douchebags.
Luckily, the Chesapeake driver was far from a douchebag and could at least drive me to a telephone booth so I could call a tow truck. And it was far from nice to tell the boss what happened, or for that matter the Armor importer that lended us the test example.
But since I am still here, writing this, as a chief editor for this magazine, I had some luck I guess. And I have absolutely no hard feelings about Ardents. Immature fanboys, on the other hand, regardless of their favourite brand…
See you in next issue, and remember, everything was better in the good old days!
If you have ever wondered what a “real car” looks like, here is an image of one. According to some experts, at least.
- = (OOC) Yes, it’s an American Graffiti reference, the movie was called “Sista natten med gänget” in Swedish, a direct translation is “The last night with the gang”, so I thought why not?