The father-son team of Lance and Zach Garcia don't follow the crowd when it comes to creating cool street machines. Lance's little '29 Dodge coupe, for example, is not exactly a hot-rodding icon. Nor is Zach's '67 Ford pickup a model that has received much attention among truck fans -- so far.
link to image
Mike Berry The Wichita Eagle
Zach Garcia applied his considerable fabrication and painting skills to achieve a '70s-style mild custom look on his 1967 Ford F-100. No garage queen, the pickup is used frequently as his daily driver.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
Lance Garcia said his little black Dodge coupe doesn't have a lot of `creature comforts' because he didn't get carried away with the design. The diminutive Dodge was ahead of its time in many ways, built on an all-metal inner structure when most cars had wood framing inside their sheet metal.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
Zach Garcia decided to have a little fun by switching the first and last letters in the badging on his truck, transforming his `Ford' pickup into a `Dorf.' He tells people it was a rare one-year only vehicle that never really caught on with the public. Note the row-upon-row of hood louvers.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
A Mustang contributed its 302 small-block V-8 to the pickup project, providing decent power and gas mileage. Here the LTD A-arm suspension that was grafted onto the stock frame can be seen.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
Often mistaken for a '32 Ford, Lance Garcia's hot rod is a five-window '29 Dodge coupe that rolls on Grabber Blue steel wheels outfitted with center bullet caps and wide whitewalls. The grille shell is, however, a '32 Ford unit, Garcia confesses.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
Junior Blackwell fabricated a new deck lid for the little Dodge coupe, which Rick and Jeb McGregor promptly punched full of louvers.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
The ultra-low profile of Zach Garcia's pickup is due in large part to the fact it rides on a transplanted LTD front frame stub, replacing the twin I-beam front axles. The frame kicks up high enough that full suspension travel has been maintained and there was no need for lowering spindles or cut springs.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
A set of chrome reverse wheels dressed up with wheel spiders mount 3/4-inch whitewalls at all four corners, contributing to the low, mild custom look.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
Zach kept the cab of his `Dorf' simple and straightforward, but there's more here than meets the eye. He built his own aluminum insert for the instrument panel and uses an all-aluminum racing-style steering wheel atop an ididit tilt column. Mike's Custom Upholstery did the bench seat, while the door panels remain painted steel pieces. The Tiki head shifter controls a big C-6 automatic transmission.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
A three-piece folding tonneau cover keeps things nice and dry in the cargo area. The cover was made using plywood, a little padding and convertible top material.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
In keeping the `Dorf' theme going, Zach painstakingly even swapped the letters on the tailgate from one end to the other. The truck substitutes a smooth, rolled pan for a rear bumper.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
The nifty sun visor was not an add-on, but it too was treated to the louver treatment in keeping with the '50s hot rod look.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
The top of the coupe got the same treatment as the bed of the `Dorf' pickup: a padded plywood insert covered with black convertible top material, which produces a pleasing old-school look.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
The '32 Ford grille shell throws a curve at onlookers who assume the rest of the car is Ford-supplied, too.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle
Lance Garcia uses the same all-aluminum 15-inch racing steering wheel in his coupe, with a full complement of gauges and a tachometer for feedback. An Indian blanket draped across the bucket seats keeps things period authentic. Check out the wrenches used for window and door handles.
link to image
Mike Berry/ The Wichita Eagle