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Hello, my name is Bob Varto,
and I'm a charter member of the Motor City Galaxie Club. Here's some
information about me:
Family:
- 3 children (1 daughter Candy
Suzanne, 1 son Robert Gerald & 1 son Robert Joseph)
- 5 grandchildren (Christopher &
Mindy, Nick & Hallie, and Kira)
Education:
- Harper Woods High School (1959)
- R.E.T.S. Electronics (1963, 1 year
certificate)
- Eastside Design & Engineering,
(1964, car body design)
- Macomb Community College (1967,
Associate Degree in Mechanical & Fluid Power Technology, 1970, Associate
Degree in Electrical Engineering Technology)
- Bower Roller Bearing (1968,
Apprenticeship 8,000 hr in machine repair/tool & die)
- Lawrence
Institute of Technology (1975, Mechanical Engineering Technology)
Armed Services:
- 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Bragg,
North Carolina, paratrooper (38 jumps)
- 2nd 503 Airborne Division, Okinawa,
Japan, paratrooper (21 jumps), Karate (black belt), sky diving team (55
jumps)
- 2nd 503 Airborne Division, Laos
(start of the Vietnam War), Korea, Philippines
Hobbies:
- 1961 Ford Galaxie Sunliner
- Golf
- Boating
- Bowling
- Baseball
- Basketball
- Football
- Karaoke
Organizations:
- Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) Post
7170 (Commander)
- Sterling Heights Lions Club (past
Board Member)
- Motor City Galaxie Club (Board
Member)
- 5 Golf Leagues: 3 in Troy,
Michigan (President of all 3), Ford (President), BSLC (President and
Property & Business Manager)
Experience:
- 1962 - Army Paratroopers
- 1963 - J. L. Hudson Company: sales
staff for men's clothing
- 1963 - Bower Roller Bearing
Company: apprenticeship, 8,000 hours in machine repair/tool & die
- 1968 - Cross Company: machine
repair, tool & die, electrical maintenance and numerical control
- 1970 - Ford Motor Company:
journeyman tool & die/machine repair
- 1971 - Ford: Experimental
Technician (A) in Chassis Experimental
- 1972 - Ford: Manufacturing
Process Engineer (SQA/Systems Body Structures Sheet Metal)
- 1977 - Ford: Divisional
Liaison Engineer (Exterior Trim, Tooling Aids, Code X/Y, Exterior Lamps,
Warranty)
- 1982 - Ford: Supervisor
Structures/Exterior Trim (Exterior Trim, Tooling Aids, Code X/Y,
Harmony/Environmental Bucks, Body Lamps, Dimensional Control, Warranty)
- 1995 - Ford: Supervisor Final
Assembly Engineering (Interior & Exterior, Tooling Aids, Dimensional
Control, Harmony/Environmental Bucks, Code X/Y)
- 1997 - Ford: Supervisor Final
Assembly Engineering (Power Tools and Fastening Systems)
- 1999 - Ford: Supervisor Final
Assembly Engineering (PVT Engineers, Light Trucks -Explorer, Mountaineer,
Ranger, Econoline)
- 2000 - Ford: Technical
Specialist Final Assembly Engineering (Interior & Exterior Trim,
Chassis, Dimensional Control, Tooling Aids, Code X/Y, Verification/Harmony
Bucks, Fit & Coordination)
After 31 years of service with Ford
Motor Company, I retired on January 1, 2002. I spent 30 years of my Ford
career at what is now called Vehicle Operations - New Models Program.
I enjoy being retired and life has been
good to me. I'm very thankful to Ford Motor Company for all that I have,
and for providing me with the opportunity to put all of my children through
college. I golf year-round, in Michigan and at my second home in
Poinciana, Florida. I do minor and major upgrades around the house, doing
all of my own electrical, carpentry and plumbing.
I really enjoy and am proud of my mint
condition 1961 Galaxie Sunliner. Here's some information about it:
VIN 1E55W138858, BODY 76B, COLOR H,
TRIM 92, DATE 11A, TRANS 2, AXLE 2
Description:
Vehicle overall appearance
is excellent. All functional and
operational components are 100%
operational. Vehicle
appears as overall factory original, street show quality, there are many new
cosmetic improvements and mechanical updates as noted below.
Exterior:
Dark Portofino
Blue Pearl Matallic basecoat clearcoat (Code XB-1994 - # B9436 KH (ALBZ 19500
6618A). Refinished color gri1le bar,
headlight surround moldings, taillight
bezels and mirrors (all painted
body color).
Options:
V-8 engine, rebuilt automatic transmission, rebuilt power steering, new
power disk brakes, new alternator,
new
racing steering wheel, new racing wheels, 4-way
power seat,
tinted windshield, dual outside
body-colored mirrors.
Engine:
Ford 390-4V Thunderbird 300 hp V-8 with
new 4-barrel 650 cfm Edelbrock carburetor,
aluminum intake,
dual exhaust, and chrome accessories. Note:
engine has been 100% rebuilt with
new components effective
10/03. Actual mileage on new rebuilt
engine as of 9/1/06 is 2,800.
Transmission:
Cruise-O-Matic
with column shift, rebuilt with new components as factory design.
Interior:
TRIM code 92: Morocco grain, light and medium blue vinyl bench
seats, doors and quarter trim panels.
Overall factory new/original and restored appearance.
Convertible
Top: White top, power operated. Rear
window and top in excellent condition.
Windows: Good condition and fully operational.
Tinted windshield.
Radio:
New Pioneer CD, Sirius, AM/FM stereo player and Ford AM/FM stereo
cassette.
Body:
BODY code 76B: 1961 Ford
Galaxie Sunliner. All steel overall
original as factory new. Excellent
condition/appearance. Street show
quality.
Suspension: Almost all front end components, gaskets and seals are new or
have been rebuilt.
Chassis:
All factory original & appearance.
Note: no apparent damage or
deterioration.
Rear
End: Rear end has been rebuilt
with a gear ratio of 3.50:1.
Chrome:
All original factory, excellent condition.
Tires:
B.F. Goodrich T/A RWL, P255/60R15, new in excellent condition.
American Racing wheels polished
aluminum, new in excellent condition.
Mileage:
Actual mileage showing on gauge before rebuilt engine installed was
80,600. Mileage as of 9/1/06 is
83,400.
Left
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Let's see what the VIN and production
data tell us...
The VIN of 1E55W138858 decodes as
follows:
1 = model
year: 1961
E
= build plant: Mahwah, New Jersey
55
= Body Serial Code: Galaxie Sunliner ( 2-door convertible), bench seats
(44,614 produced during the 1961 model year)
W
= engine: 292-2V Thunderbird V-8, 175 hp @ 4200 rpm, 279 lb-ft @ 2200 rpm,
8.8:1 compression ratio
138858 =
Consecutive Unit Number (CUN): 38,858th Ford car scheduled to be built at
the Mahwah, New Jersey build plant during the 1961 model year (Job 1 was CUN
100001)
The production data decode as follows:
BODY 76B =
Body Style Code: Galaxie Sunliner ( 2-door convertible), bench seats
(44,614 produced during the 1961 model year)
COLOR
H = exterior paint color: Chesapeake Blue (dark blue metallic)
TRIM
97 = interior trim color, material and front seat style: medium blue
pleated vinyl cushion inserts and light blue "Morocco" grain vinyl
cushions, bolsters and back, bench seat
DATE
11A = scheduled build date: Wednesday, January 11, 1961
TRANS
2 = transmission type and shift location: 3-speed manual with overdrive,
column shift
AXLE 2 = rear
axle ratio and type: 3.89:1 non-locking
Left
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Here's the article that appeared in the
September 2005 issue of the Galaxie Gazette about me:
<<<<<
I
was born in 1941 and my story on cars goes back to 1944 when my parents bought
me my first brand new 1944 Ford red convertible (remember the small metal cars
with pedals). This car was the
fastest in the neighborhood because I could pedal the fastest.
My whole life has
been focused around the automobile industry. My
father was a major car buff (along with being a plant superintendent for a major
supplier his whole life). He had a
new car every year (mainly sporty models) and we went to the races almost every
Saturday. My father knew several of
the drivers, because most of them worked for him and we were always in the pits
with the drivers.
Having been brought
up in and around cars my whole life, I learned at an early age many aspects of
cars and racing.
When I was 12–years old, my father started teaching me how to drive. Back
then you didn’t need driver’s training to get a license. When
I turned 16, my father bought me a new 1956 Ford 2-door red hardtop. I
really liked the car, however, the car was not the fastest car in town and it
wasn’t lowered nor did it have bubble skirts. Well
needless to say, my buddies and I decided to modify my car to make it cool
(remember this car was brand new). The
first thing we did was get bubble skirts, than we put metal blocks between the
rear leaf springs to lower the car. These
couple of improvements were cheap and I could always remove these parts before I
went home (we put these parts on and off daily) so my parents wouldn’t know.
The real difficulty
of the project was to modify the engine. Money
was part of the problem however, making sure my parents didn’t know what we
were doing to modify the engine was the other. Well
needless to say, we finally got all the parts needed and we worked continuously
day and night in the school body shop to finish the car. To
make sure my parents didn’t know what we were doing to the car, I told my
parents the school body shop class wanted to use my car for body shop class.
Every year our city
had a parade and anyone with a cool car could drive in the parade. My
buddies and I decided that we would enter the parade with my car. Well
to make the car cool we needed to lower the car, put the bubble skirts on and
add glass pack mufflers for load noise. While
we were driving through the city as we were passing the high school, we spotted
my parents sitting on the side of the street. Well,
we all know what followed when I got home. After
all the what, why’s and wherefores, my parents finally accepted what I did to
my car.
During my senior year
of high school I broke up with my girlfriend (she was kooky about paratroopers);
everyone had thought that we would marry after graduation. Well
to show my ex-girlfriend that being a paratrooper was no big deal, I joined the
Army and became a paratrooper with the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort
Bragg, North Carolina. Following
jump school, I sold my 1956 Ford and bought a 1961 Ford Starliner (dark blue). This
car was super and extremely sharp. The
Engine was a 390 V-8 with a 4-barrel carburetor. The
car was extremely fast, however, not fast enough. While
I was stationed at Fort Bragg, I met some friends in Southern Pines who raced
cars and were aces on building racing engines. I
gave them my car and they converted the automatic transmission to a Hurst four
on the floor, changed the rear end ratio, modified the engine and added tri-pods
with a blower. Needless to say this
car screamed (burned rubber and gas like crazy) and after all the modifications,
no one came close to beating my car.
Soon after I got the
car finished, I was given orders that I was being transferred to Okinawa (2nd
503rd Airborne Division). I
took my car home to store it until I came home again, however, my parents
wouldn’t drive the car so it sat in the garage without anyone driving it. Three
months after I was in Okinawa, the 2nd 503rd Airborne
Division was sent to Laos (start of the Vietnam War). Not
knowing when I would be home again I told my parents to sell the car.
When I got out of the
service, I bought a Corvette (like many people wanted), but many times my mind
would drift back to that 1961 Ford Starliner I had and what it could do. Following
my time in the service, I became employed with Bower Roller Bearing (father was
Superintendent) where I was fortunate enough to get a 4-year apprenticeship
(Tool & Die / Machine Repair) and at the same time I attended Lawrence
Institute of Technology (Mechanical Engineering).
After completion of my apprenticeship, I joined Ford Motor Company as an
Engineer in manufacturing at Vehicle Operations, Dearborn. I
worked for Ford Motor Company for 31 years, 22 years of which I was in
management. Looking back, I’ve
owned more than 60 cars, and as many as 3 at a time. As
you can see I have been around cars my whole life, even after retirement.
1961 Ford
Galaxie Sunliner:
Every year we go to
the Woodward Dream Cruise, and quite frankly, I was looking for a cherry Mustang
or Corvette convertible. In 1997, my
wife and I were walking around watching all the cars, when all of a sudden my
wife noticed this gorgeous car. It
was a 1961 Ford Sunliner with a striking color (Dark Portofino Blue) which was
almost the same color I had on my original 1961 Starliner. The
reasons the car really struck me were the color, it was a convertible, the
appearance, the condition, and no Bondo. We
talked to the owner and discussed price and I told him I thought he was high and
I countered with my price. Two weeks
later he called and we made a deal.
The car is an
original Texas car with no rust at all. The
individual we purchased the car from owned a body, paint and detailing company. The
previous owner personally removed every body molding and all interior components
from the car and sanded, primed and painted every part and all exposed metal
surfaces. All sheet metal components
are original and there is absolutely no rust or Bondo. When
I purchased the car, the interior was all new and the exterior color was newly
painted.
The original engine
was a 292 V-8, with a manual 3-speed column shift transmission.
Since
I purchased the vehicle, I have made numerous changes and improvements.
>>>>>
Left click on the thumbnail below to read what the Buyer's Digest of New Car
Facts for '61 had to say about the 1961 Galaxie Sunliner:

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