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The Life of Lynn Wineland

By Dick Martin
Photography by Courtesy of Lynn Wineland's collection
Lynn Wineland
Lynn acquired this roadster... 
   
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Lynn Wineland
Lynn acquired this roadster from Doane Spencer in 1956 for $300, saving it from being parted into oblivion. This stunning '32 is one of the most historically significant hot rods of all time, and it's as valued today as a rare Bugatti.
Lynn Wineland
This is Lynn's first hot rod... 
   
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Lynn Wineland
This is Lynn's first hot rod in the California oil fields in 1946. The teardrop taillights were clearance lights from a wrecked Shell Oil truck. Lynn rebuilt the entire car, including the top, with his father's guidance.
Lynn Wineland
A chance meeting at the '51... 
   
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Lynn Wineland
A chance meeting at the '51 Indianapolis Hot Rod Show started an enduring friendship between Lynn and Doane Spencer. Lynn first met Spencer at the first Hot Rod Show at the L.A. Armory. Kinmont disc brakes on all four wheels and a speedboat-style windshield set Lynn's channeled '32 apart from other "back east" rods.
Lynn Wineland
Lynn went to Bonneville with... 
   
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Lynn Wineland
Lynn went to Bonneville with his '34 three-window coupe in 1951 and ran 117 mph. The engine and running gear came from his roadster (he traded his body and frame for the coupe body and frame). Later on, this car came to a tragic end. Lynn, inspired by the Pierson Brothers' coupe, chopped the top of the coupe, then asked a fellow Hoodlifters club member to fill the roof. After cutting a donor piece to weld in, the bodyman "chased dent after dent," says Lynn. "He tried to shrink-weld it. He tried to swell it. One night, after working on it most of the day, he got mad and destroyed the entire body with a pecking hammer. Nothing was left undamaged."
Lynn Wineland
Lynn created a brochure for... 
   
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Lynn Wineland
Lynn created a brochure for his friend Duffy Livingstone, who was manufacturing "little cars" at GP Muffler in Monrovia, California. Lynn felt a racier name was in order. At two in the morning it came to him: Go Kart. That's Lynn having too much fun at the Pasadena Rose Bowl.Photograph: Eric Rickman
Lynn Wineland
Lynn wrote a series of articles... 
   
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Lynn Wineland
Lynn wrote a series of articles titled "Fit a Feathered Ford to your Forty Freighter," on installing a T-bird engine in a '40 pickup. This innocent-appearing truck was built from one '41 and two '40 pickups, with a '57 312 factory high-performance D engine under the hood. Lynn gave it to his dad for Father's Day. Mr. Wineland sold it a few weeks later for $800-Lynn had that much money in the upholstery.
Lynn Wineland
Lynn liked sleepers. He was... 
   
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Lynn Wineland
Lynn liked sleepers. He was doing creative work for Shelby in 1963 when this "Cobra in Ranchero's clothing" was built. It sported a 289 Cobra engine, Cobra stabilizer bars, Lincoln finned brakes in front, and a functional hood scoop. A business associate took it to Mexico without permission and thrashed it. Returning to the U.S., the culprit angered some border-patrol officers, who further destroyed the truck while looking for contraband.
Lynn Wineland
Lynn thought up mini-bike... 
   
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Lynn Wineland
Lynn thought up mini-bike as a name for the pocket-cycle. R&C held its first Tiny Bear Run competition in 1960. Here, Lynn puts a check mark on a racer's helmet card.
Lynn Wineland
Lynn never missed a chance... 
   
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Lynn Wineland
Lynn never missed a chance to lift a hood to see what was hot-thus he and his friends became known as the Hoodlifters. Lynn formed the club in 1948 and attended the still-active Hoodlifters 50th anniversary in 1998. This member card is an example of Lynn's graphic-art talents. His hundreds of designs include the famous L.A. Roadsters' logo.

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Lynn Wineland passed away on February 24. He was born 81 years earlier to the day, the son of an auto mechanic and racer who passed along the gene for building cars and going...
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