by Tucker Fan 48 » Thu Mar 26, 2009 7:28 pm
It is interesting following the discussions both here and many places on the internet about the "convertible". After spending several hours reading verious postings it soon becomes apparent that there was no "convertible" started at the Tucker plant. In an interview with Old Cars Weekly, Allen Reinert himself said when he acquired the car it was basically a frame with a cowl tack-welded in place, two front doors and two rear quarter panels. “It had no motor, no transmission, no steering, no tires or wheels. No nothing. After I found the car I started scrounging parts.” Reinert said he began networking in Chicago, Milwaukee and elsewhere and eventually purchased a big stash of parts from an Illinois collector. He said the parts had once been part of an October 1950 auction. “I bought everything he had, and with that, I was able to get the car as far as a I did. But I still couldn’t afford the $50, $60, $70 dollars an hour (at a restoration shop) when it came down to it (completing the car). I’ve had it for over 25 years, and I stopped working on it a good 7-8 years ago. I’m 68 years old, I’ve got diabetes, and I just decided that I can’t work on it anymore.”
I also found postings that Alex Tremulis had been working on a prototype for a wraparound rear window car and that they had cut the roof off of a body that he believed was # 57 to begin working on the project shortly before the plant closed.
Once you begin to put all these bits of information together the puzzle starts to come together. Just making a personal guess here after a lot of reading is that the "convertible" is the remains of the wraparound rear window car started by Alex Tremulis. With no roof, someone, years ago, came up with an idea to make it a convertible. Over the 35 years between the close of the Tucker plant and it's purchase by Mr. Reinert the cars background was lost. What is known is that when Mr. Reinert purchased the vehicle it was far from being a complete car. Mr. Reinert himself says it was two doors, two quarter panels, a frame, and a cowl that was tack-welded in place. Hardly a "convertible" prototype.
While it is exciting to see the car come together in a "what might have been" form, It seems that Benchmark Classics is misleading people about the true facts behind the car. No where on their site or in their press releases do they mention the condition it was in when Mr. Reinert acquired the car and that most of the parts on the car were parts Mr. Reinert bought from an Illinois collector. They seem to want people to believe the car was somewhat more complete and that it only needed to be "finished" from where the Tucker people left off,when in reality most off the car is made up of parts collected by Mr. Reinert or new parts being fabricated by Benchmark Classics.
The parts collected by Mr. Reinert are real Tucker parts and I personally believe that the pieces of the body and most likely the frame were built at the Tucker plant. Once the car is completed, it'll be made out of 60-70% real Tucker parts. I just don't believe that makes it a real Tucker "convertible" or that a cowl and a couple of body panels make up a "prototype". That's just my opinion of course and maybe there is a collector out there that won't care about the history of the car and be willing to pay several million for it. After all, it'll still look like a Tucker and you won't see any other convertibles around.