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Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Ed Big Daddy Roth's Outlaw

    Ed Big Daddy Roth's Outlawed the lot
      Outlaw was designed  and
   built by Ed Roth who was a
   of Drag-Wagons car club of
   Maywood California.
      Outlaw was the first cool
  fiberglass creation done by
  Ed Big Daddy Roth. It had
  started with the back of one
  his Weirdo's sweat shirt
  monster drawings on back
  of these shirts.Ed got this 
  idea of  fiberglass from 
  Henry Ford  swinging a very
  sledge hammer on a deck lid
  of a 1941 Ford.The Ford had
  a fiberglass deck lid would
  not dent.Ed introduced this
  at Hunting Beach Pier,called
  fiberglass.He saw a wooden
  surf board with a waterproof
  covering of fiberglass.Ed had
  read about Shadoff in Life
  Magazine who built the cool
  streamliner Shadoff Special
  Bonneville Streamliner out
  fiberglass.In 1957 Ed started
  experimenting with this new
  material in his shop,located  
  at 4616 Slauson Avenue in
  Maywood California
     Outlaw had a 1929 Model 
  A frame with a 1925 cross
  member.A 1950 Cadillac
  V-8 Ed found in a junk
  yard that was installed in
  between the frame rails.
  Ed went to a lumber yard
  and bought casting plaster.
  The buck was covered with
  messy fiberglass.When this
  fiberglass finely cured,he
  knocked out the plaster out
  from the back side,and that
  became the female mold for
  the Outlaw.the Outlaw,the
  only car with a four piece
  piece female mold held in
  place with took box latches.
      Ed wired everything he
  wanted welded together
  with bailing wire,before he
  trailered the car to this cool
  shop Clarence Bell ,in which
  Clarence welded everything
  together,then Ed Roth went 
  back to his shop for  his cool
  final preparation work.Ed 
  then filed the weld marks by
  hand,the whole chassis was
  chrome plated by this cool
  Chrome Nickle Plating.The
  rear axle drive shaft,and
  also 1939 Ford transmission
  were chrome too. Ed had to
  sell his custom built car that
  Little Jewel to pay for the 
  chrome on the Outlaw.A 
  local mechanic helped Ed
  who was Fritz Voigt, was
  going to rebuild the cool
  Cadillac V-8 engine.The
  idea was to install four of
  Stromberg 97 carburetors,
  on a Craigar manifold. He
  added Cal Custom finned 
  valve covers,chrome oil
  pan,and a set of long cool
  sweeping chrome zoomy
  headers.The front axle and
  spindles from 1937 Ford
  installed up front along with
  a couple of front springs 
  cups that housed cut down
  1958 Chevrolet coil springs.
  The coil were combined with
  Airflow trailer cushions and
  Mercury outboard shocks,
  the rest of the running gear,
  except for a Model A cross
  spring,came from a old 1948
  Ford.The 1941 Ford steering
  gear was mounted on the
  drivers side.Front height is
  kept stock,while the rear was
  raised.The windshield frame
  came from a 1922 Dodge,then
  blue tinted safety glass was
  installed into the 1922 Dodge
  windshield frame.The 1958
  taillights from a Bel-Air was
  fit into 1956 Chevrolet lenses
  before Ed installed into the
  body.Quad headlights came
  from a 1959 Rambler was
  installed up front.The quad
  headlights were mounted
  under the fenders in a type
  of special spring ring.The
  grill is a a cut from a 1959
  Chevrolet.A radiator from
  DKN  that is stock is used
  to cool the engine.Nerf bars
  designed for protection are
  mounted.Larry Watson is
  responsible for the paint on
  the Outlaw.House Of Style
  does it in pearl white with
  candy green panels.This is
  Larry Watson who does the
  painting at his shop.
     Ed  installed a 1958 Chevy
  Impala steering wheel and
  cool seven Steward Warner 
  guages.
     It debut at Disneyland 
  Car Club Day and Autocade
  Show September 5,1959.
     The Outlaw was originally
  fitted with a gullwing top
  made of Naugahyde and also
  aluminum over a wooden
  frame.But in 1960 while he
  was trailering the car in the
  Kansas state,the top blew
  off and was destroyed. Ed
  was happy when  his car
  Outlaw was on Car Craft
  January 1960 issue on the
  magazine.January 1960
  issue still showed Outlaw
  with a tonneau  over the
  interior and Mercury
  steel wheels on all four 
  corners.After Disneyland
  Show,Eddie Martinez had
  upholstered the interior in
  tuck-n-roll,that was Roth's
  designed.In July 1960 Ed
  was selling glossy pictures
  of Outlaw in 8"X 10" in
  Car Craft Magazine.Now 
  the front wheels were do
  be replaced with spindle
  wire wheels and motor-
  cycle tires.Ed Roth took
  home many trophies with
  Outlaw.He got a T-shirt
  Booth and traded for using
  the car for appearances,
  that made him money,that
  he could use. 
     Ed bought Dick Cook's
  1940 Chevy to trailer the
  Outlaw around.It had a 
  Tri-power Oldsmobile V-8
  in the car.A simple trailer
  with two wheels and tires,
  one axle, open air model.
  The Chevy was replaced
  by a Cadillac Hearst so
  Ed Roth could sleep on
  the road.
     Revell called Ed Roth
  and asked if they could
  make and sell model kits
  of the Outlaw.Ed Roth
  said yes,and was happy
  and agreed to the terms.
  He would get one cent for
  every model kit sold.Now
  there was a problem that
  had to be settled at Revell.
  Ed Roth was taken into
  office,to discuss this matter
  that would want kids to buy
  his kits.Henry Blankfort
  said:" you need a name to 
  boost the sales."Ed:"At
  Bell High I was called Big
  Ed."So Blankfort wanted
  Ed to go with the Dutch
  movement and call him
  "Spider" or "Roach"but
  Ed didn't like those.He did
  know in LA there were
  beatnics that wore their
  beards long,and those cool
  coffee places were called
  "Big Daddy".So Blankfort
  that he would be called the
  name "Big Daddy."Ed Roth
  had five children at home so
  it would fit.He agreed to be
  "Big Daddy" Ed Roth. Kit
  was designed by Jim Keeler,
  who  did designed work on
  many of Ed Roth kits later.
    1961 Bob Larivee Sr. bought
  Outlaw for $3,250 from Ed.
  Ed saw the deal to fund his 
  next car.He already started
  Beatnic Bandit.












































































   
The story of Little Jewel was

Ed Roth returned four years
from the US Air Force he built
1930 Ford Tudor that was red
enamel by Wally Jordan. It
had a white Naugahyde top,
and white running boards. A
1932 Ford grill and radiator
shell was swapped out.Ed had
made the nerf bar with signal
lights in them.The interior was
done by Martinez Upholstery
in black and white upholstery.
   Undercarriage was chromed
to bring home trophies.  


























   You are looking what
Ed Roth had to  give up
to finance the Outlaw's 
chrome to be finished.It
must have been hard for
Big Daddy to give it up.
   There are more details
about the car. The rake
was achieved installing
3-inch dropped front
axle,Juicy brakes,from
a 1948 Ford passenger
car,shocks from 1949
Ford components,now
under this hood is a
pinstriped firewall by
Ed Roth.He installed
a 1950 Oldsmobile
engine.Big and cool
little whitewall tires,
cool chrome hubcaps,
and what look like a
set of black pinstripes
on the front fenders. 
 Ed Roth had to sell
Little Jewel in 1958
to pay for the chrome 
on the Outlaw.It was
sold to Lee Rhodes of
Long Beach Renegades.
Then later Little Jewel
sold to Henry Cantu,
had the car now lime
green with pearl white
scallops painted by Ed.
In 1962 the hood was
removed with a Chevy
small-block installed.
No one seen the car
since.