Sunday around 2PM. 60 degrees, partly cloudy. Cincinnati, Ohio. I bid adieu to my friends after a fun weekend, and about 2:30 in the afternoon I check the level of 15W-50 Mobil 1 in the 440 and head off. My trip to Cincinnati had been with one express purpose: get there quickly. As such, I had frequented the expressways and superhighways I generally loath. Also, with the planned inclement weather, I figured a multi-lane highway would be a safer bet. However, on the trip home, I decided to test the old Imperial on the roads it was meant to run- blue highways. After circumnavigating Cinci on its Beltway (275) I hopped onto the Appalachain Highway (rt 32) and plowed thru the bottom part of Ohio, a few dozen miles north of Kentucky. Now, Western Ohio has one very pronounced trait: it is flat. Pancake flat. This, however, is quite advantageous when one has a large, powerful car that one wishes to run full out and watch for officers of the law who might not be pleased to see a large, powerful machine speeding down their highway. On a few occasions I tipped the needle up around 120; as I was deccelerating off one such run, a police cruiser passed me in the opposite lane. I watched him in my rearview, but he never came after me. Got to thinking later on, maybe that officer knows what a '67 440-powered Imperial is, and that, if he'd given chase, I could have easily left him far, far behind, given my head-start. At any rate, 32 is 2 lanes each way, and I soon desired more adventure. After a fuel up in Albany, Ohio, I turned onto 681 east which, according to my map, would take me right to the ohio river and West Virginia. 681 was a blast. 25 miles of undulating, twisting, up-and-down road that, on several occasions, left my stomach behind me. Unfortunately, the Imperial had a somewhat nasty habit on the blind hills: As I'd crest a hill, the body kept wanting to go up, but the suspension pulled the front wheels down, and when gravity caught up with the suspension, the front end nosedived and the suspension bottomed out. The only solution was not to drive 65 mph over such cliffs. ;) Besides, the fact that the road was EXACTLY 2 lanes wide and each lane was EXACTLY 6 inches wider than a 1967 Imperial, made truely spirited driving a dangerous proposition. >From 681 I went through Parkersburg, W. Virginia and took 50 east. 50 is a great, 4 lane byway, with gorgeous scenery, and once again I was able to flat-out run the wheels off the Imperial. For about an hour. After Clarksbug, 50 turns into two lanes, even twistier and more undulating than 681, but, fortunately, with wider lanes and a shoulder. Here, the 440 proved its stuff. 50, you see, cuts right throught the heart of the Appalachain mountains. And the mighty big block pulled that 5,000 pound Imperial up the switchbacks with aplomb. And the mighty Budd Brakes were more than adequate to slow that lead sled down on the downslopes (which, conventiently, were also switch-backed, with happy 180 degree hairpin turns, unmarked, of course.) At the top of the highest hill I took a slight detour, aiming the Imp down a single lane, barely paved stip to the middle of the road. There, I found a small gospel church with a modest graveyard, overlooking what had to be one of the most beautiful vistas I've ever laid eyes upon. I snapped about two dozen pictures while I was up there, a few with the Imperial in the foreground. :) As I got back in the car to leave, I glanced down at the odometer: 86,000 even. route 50 took me into Winchester, Virginia, after a harrowing 50 or so miles with no gas stations and a fuel gauge that was beginning to illuminate the "check gages" light. Well, there was one station, but their "premium" fuel was 89. Goat p*ss was not going into my Imperial's tank. >From Wichester I took 81 south to 66 east, back to the Beltway (495 again) and up to the Balt Wash parkway to get home. Being that I drove into Winchester under cover of darkness, I figured continuing the trip on blue routes would be meaningless, and perhaps foolhardy. The trip home was definitely more fun, had better scenery, and was more relaxing. Sure, it took an extra hour and a half, but the quality of one's trip is not necessarily measured in how quickly one arrives at their destination. Plus, I got to drive a plush, smooth highway machine nearly 1100 miles, through some beautiful country. ===== --Mike Pittinaro Piles of pitted chrome Hubcaps along the floorboard My junkyard-bedroom __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? LAUNCH - Your Yahoo! Music Experience http://launch.yahoo.com