Dean Hansen and I have been discussing this and I'm not sure. It could be
that it was a 1931 but purchased in 1932. My dad and all his siblings are
gone so there is no way to find out. For you car buffs, my wife's
grandmother was a Hupp from the family that manufactured the Hupmobile cars.
They stopped production in 1940. /jmac
-----Original Message-----
From: olympus-owner@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:olympus-owner@xxxxxxxxxx]On
Behalf Of NSURIT@xxxxxxx
Sent: Thursday, March 09, 2006 9:00 AM
To: olympus@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [OM] Re: Digital decisions - Thank you. Now - Totally off topic
on old Fords
In a message dated 3/9/2006 12:50:19 AM Central Standard Time,
jnmcbr@xxxxxxx writes:
I like my E-1 and really must learn to use it one of these days. Perhaps
nothing will ever match the delightful simplicity of the OM-1 though.
/jmac
Jim, your earlier posting about your grandfathers 32 Model A Ford has
banged
around in my head for a day or so and what I'm about to say makes
absolutely
no difference and could even be wrong. I believe his 32 Ford roadster was
a
Model B, rather than a Model A unless it had the V-8 engine which I think
were designated as a Model 18. As I said it makes no difference. I'd love
to
have either a Model A or B or 18 roadster . . . but I'd probably trade in
on
something really special like a Studebaker open bodied car of the same era.
Bill Barber
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