n February 2018, the NHRA Museum in Pomona, California, was packed with folks who were there for one thing: to honor the memory and life of Bob Bauder. Outside the facility the parking lot was full of the legacy Bob was so well known for: An exceptional group of cars he had built (fully or had-a-hand-in/on) over the previous five decades.
Though the collection was as varied as their current owners, they all had one thing in common besides Bob’s handiwork: They were all pure hot rods. Real-deal hot rods aren’t as prevalent nowadays as there may be too much emphasis placed on creature comforts but, rest assured, when Bob built a ride for either himself or a customer, each car was going to be a handful, and it was going to profile better than anything else around it.
But Bob’s connections allowed for some of the most memorable and recognizable rods ever to be built, among them Vern Luce’s coupe (Bob introduced Luce to Coddington), he was involved with the creation of Jerry Moreland’s “World’s Fastest ’40” Ford sedan, and teamed with Pete Chapouris on the 30-day builds of the HogZZilla motorcycles for ZZ Top’s Billy F. Gibbons. Bob was also the one who turned collector Bruce Meyer onto Pete Chapouris and that was only one of the reasons Chapouris had said Bob was “instrumental” in helping him become the icon he was.
For this build Bob used an Al Simon frame to make his own four-bar front suspension (with a monoleaf) as well as a triangulated rear setup. A Ford 8-inch rear (3.23:1), with Currie axles and Romic coilover shocks would go in finished with 8-inch drums. Up front ’41 Lincoln brakes were used (topped with Buick drums) along with a Vega box connected to a ’55 Corvette column and a ’58 Vette steering wheel. The wire wheels came from Wheelsmith and are 15-inchers (6s and 8s) shod in BFGoodrich rubber.
Bob said the cab of the truck was a “true barn find,” and it came from Wisconsin. A set of 25-louver hood sides were found and Bob tracked down a pair of scratch-built rear fenders that were in very good shape. He then turned the metal parts over to Dakota Wentz of Star Kustom Shop in Riverside, California, so he could start on the custom fabrication, which included removing some of the rivets in the bed and reskinning a portion of the driver door. Wentz sprayed the cab, repro bed, and wire wheels with the PPG paint codes Bob gave him, then painted the fenders and some extra accents in a gloss black. It was all followed up with a red pinstripe down the body reveals and, on the trunk, found in the bed (a ’30s Potter Mfg. trunk that holds Bob’s tools and cleaning stuff).
All in all, it took about 10 months for Bob to finish his ride, but it would be his last in a long line of wonderful cars as he died in September 2017. In the last couple years of his life, Bob had become friends with Larry Jacinto as the two had started building Larry’s Willys pickup.
A few months after Bob’s death, Larry contacted the Bauder family as he was interested in buying the ’32 pickup, keeping the memory of Bob alive, and preserving an example of Bob’s hot-rodding style. Looking back now, Larry thinks of Bob as a hot rod hero (something Bob would no doubt quickly deny), so having Bob’s truck in his garage is a great way to remember their friendship as well as preserve his legacy.