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« on: November 21, 2020, 02:24:38 PM »
Thanks so much! I will pass the compliment on to Dick who did all the work and deserves all credits.
The car was for sale at an online auction at a nearby company that went broke. I was bidding on some tools as I pass that company on my way to work daily and thought I could pick these up if I could win the bid for a reasonable price. Then, I saw there was also a classic car for sale. I didn’t know it and I usually do. Pictures showed a rust-free, but rough body and countless loose parts and boxes. My father liked the car, too, and joined me in the bid. We threw in a low bid as we had no time to check out the car. Next day, I received an email that I was expected to come pick it up.
We also liked the history of the Kaiser brand after WWII in the city of Rotterdam (the city was pretty much levelled by the Germans and ressurected after the war) and decided this car needed to be on the road again.
Now, people come look at the car everywhere. It was in the local newspaper with a picture tourists took when I went for a swim. Some older guys (usually men) still know about the Nekaf (Dutch Kaiser Factory) in Rotterdam. Most car buffs look at least two or three times at the emblems and leave surprised that they don’t know the brand. They are even more surprised when they hear the car was assembled here.
We shipped out the radiator to have the cooling block replaced as it was leaking. The company called us if they could buy it from us as it turned out they made it (Dutch Radiator Factory) and are still in business. We left it in the car, though.
I had two seat belts installed, so I can take my sons for a drive without my wife objecting (luckily she is very much into classic cars) and we drove it a lot this summer. Traffic here is not as friendly and laid back as in many parts of the US, so I might have to improve the brakes. Other than that, the car is ready to last a long long time and we are looking forward to that.