Mike: enjoyed your trip story. About the only car to drive around Washington City is an old Imperial. Then you are bigger than they are. Good writing. Bill '67 ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mike Pittinaro" <mechimike@xxxxxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Monday, May 20, 2002 1:38 PM Subject: IML: Cinci to D.C. > 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 > >