Chance to look ‘under hood’ at vintage car garages

SALISBURY — Former race car driver Bob Green wears many hats —or perhaps it should be said he wears many helmets. A resident of Lakeville, he describes himself as a professional driving enthusiast, automotive training and traffic safety specialist, motor sports and automobile race driving instructor and automotive event coordinator. Since 1992, he has been senior lead instructor and consultant at the Skip Barber Racing School.His particular area of interest, though, is in teaching young people to drive more safely. In 1996, he created a program called Survive the Drive. He has offered workshops for teens at Housatonic Valley Regional High School that include a classroom session with reminders that a devastating crash can occur in the time it takes for a driver to reach over and change a CD; and that texting while driving is illegal (he refers to this sort of multitasking as Driving While Stupid). Young drivers also go out on the racetrack at Lime Rock Park and learn how to safely negotiate, for example, a sharp curve on wet road.The program has grown and is now offered across the United States. Green said he has presented it to 120,000 teens since 1996. In addition to presenting the Survive the Drive program to teens, Green is often asked to speak to adults about auto safety. He was recently the keynote speaker in Washington, D.C., at the National Organization for Youth Safety.Green said the Survive the Drive programs are usually presented at schools within a two hour drive of the Northwest Corner. However, “If a group pays my expenses, I’ll go anywhere to reach out and talk about safe driving.” Vienna, Austria, is the farthest he has traveled to present the program.Not all high schools or high school students can afford Survive the Drive. Green is organizing a three-day fundraiser this spring, not only to raise money but also to raise awareness.The benefit is designed to appeal to the many automotive enthusiasts who live in and visit the Northwest Corner. It will open to the public the garages of three auto specialists who live and work in the area. The first stop on the Survive the Drive Garage Tour was held Saturday, March 23, at Don Breslauer’s DB Enterprises workshop in Salisbury. Breslauer, a former race car driver, refurbishes and restores old motor cars and custom makes parts that can no longer be found or purchased. On the day of the tour, visitors got a chance to see a rare Vanden Plas with an all-aluminum body; a 1934 British Alvis; a 1967 Piper GT; Sharon resident Sam Posey’s Formula Ford track car; and three 1953 Cunninghams, two of only 20 coupes and one of five convertibles ever produced by the company.“Most of the cars that come here were manufactured by companies that are no longer in business,” Breslauer said. “We use the Internet and other sources to literally scour the planet to find replacement parts. Sometimes we find a wreck of the same model in another country and the owner will sell off the parts. When original parts can not be located, we have to fabricate them ourselves. That’s why restoration and refurbishment of old cars can take years to accomplish.”Breslauer showed visitors the hood of one of the Cunninghams he is working on, which was resting against the garage wall. While it looked like something was terribly wrong with it, Breslauer explained, “It looks like that because the car was half buried in someone’s backyard and was covered with leaves for decades. The hood is actually in good condition; what you see are the worm trails we found upon removing the accumulated leaves. It made a good home for them.”Many of the visitors’ cars parked outside Breslauer’s garage that day were vintage automobiles, including a Rolls Royce sedan with the steering wheel on the right side of the car. The tour continues on April 20 at Kent Bain’s Automotive Restorations in Stratford, Conn.; and on May 11 at Brian Donovan’s Donovan Motorcar Service in Lenox, Mass. Each is a single-day event costing $100. Attendance is limited to 25 enthusiasts per event. The tour time is 2 to 4 p.m. To register, contact Joy Martorell at ljoy@survivethedrive.org or 860-435 1054. For information, go to www.survivethedrive.org.

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