In an attempt to entice Ford into a contract, the Budd Company created this all-steel Model A, one of only a handful ever built.
Feature Article from Hemmings Classic Car
September, 2010 - Words and Photography by Mark J. McCourt





Not all prototypes lead glamorous lives on turntables, supporting comely models under the glare of show lights.
Some become factory hacks, unceremoniously ending up in the jaws of the crusher when their useful lives are through.
Others become curiosities, passed around and forgotten until surprising
coincidences bring their past to light. This unusual four-door sedan was
the latter, and its longtime owner, with the help of knowledgeable and
generous Ford Model A enthusiasts, continues to unearth its fascinating
history.
Our feature car has been called many things in the last half-century: A
''Lincoln-Ford.'' A ''Canadian Ford.'' A ''Whatz-It.'' But its original
purpose and name was, at one point, very clear: ''Ford Sedan Model
G-2,'' like its other Model A-based prototype compatriots, was
engineered and built by the Budd Company to sell Henry and Edsel Ford on
the concept of the ''All Steel Full Vision Budd Body.''
Recordkeeping being what it was back in the 1920s, Budd Company
documentation shows that the firm built approximately 15 Model A
projects. We use the word ''projects'' because Budd built complete Model
A bodies, as well as supplying body panels or bare chassis for certain
Model A serial numbers. According to this car's owner, this is one of
only four all-steel Model A sedans that Budd built, and the only one
known to exist today.
This car's story starts in Philadelphia, in the Budd Company's
Experimental Body Works division. Edward G. Budd was an early leader in
all-steel automotive body construction [''Pioneers,'' HCC #55,
April 2009], and his firm made its name supplying steel-intensive bodies
for Oakland, Dodge, Wills Sainte Claire and others. With advances in
steel quality and sheet size, and the vision of engineer Joseph
Ledwinka, the Budd Company developed multiple-strike, deep-draw stamping
techniques that could form entire body shells from just a few pieces of
sheetmetal.
Autobody, an automotive trade publication of the 1920s,
published a story titled ''The Budd Sill-Less All-Steel Body'' in March
1928, discussing the new design. ''This new body utilizes steel for the
first time as a generic construction material and not merely as a
substitute for the wood frame of the old type of automobile body. Just
as automobile body construction drew on carriage traditions and
principles for its early designs, Budd's previous all-steel bodies
followed traditional construction in using a framework to which the
panels were subsequently applied... The present body type departs from
this conception, the steel being used as a structural material based on
its own characteristics rather than those of the traditional wood frame
construction.''
The article goes on to explain that, for the first time, the Budd body
was designed as an integral part of the completed structure, and when
bolted to the frame, it was stronger and lighter than an otherwise
conventional body. It was also simpler: ''Whereas the former all-steel
body had from 400 to 500 parts...the present construction has from 150
to 200 parts, depending on size and body style.'' Stamped as one unit,
the body sides not only decreased build complexity, but lowered the
center of gravity and tightened the body structure measurably. Budd's
ability to fashion the door pillars, wheel housings, beltline moldings
and other contours from one sheet was revolutionary, and the time
savings from being able to paint and bake-dry the all-metal body sped up
the assembly process.
While Ford and the Budd Company had a good working relationship in the
late 1920s--Budd built Ford's Model A and AA pickup truck beds, and
various delivery bodies, and would continue to supply truck bodies up to
World War II--Ford did not adopt Budd's new methods for its passenger
car bodies. So what became of Model G-2 after it was presented in
Dearborn? How did it end up in McColl, South Carolina, in the hands of
retired lawyer and educator Terry Hutchins?
''In 1972, I opened my own real estate business on the side, and as I
drove around one day, I saw this old car sitting in someone's yard. It
belonged to a guy named Harlis 'Billy' Dial, and it had been sandblasted
and primed, and had new tires. I'd owned Model A's before, and it had a
Model A engine, but I knew it wasn't a standard Model A,'' he explains.
''I thought maybe it was something that someone had put together...it
was an ugly-looking old car.''
Terry spoke with Billy Dial, who told him that he'd bought this
''Lincoln-Ford'' from Douglas Peavy in Hartsville, South Carolina.
''Billy took the chance to unload a goat, and sold it to me for what he
bought it for. It wasn't much, and he lost the price of the new tires
and sandblasting. I didn't care what it was, and I figured it was
something I could have fun with.''
Ford Sedan Model G-2 had a new home, and Terry had the body painted.
''When we got it, we noticed that there was no molding on the
passenger-side cowl, like there was on the other side; we made a molding
out of Bondo to match. Another difference was the cowl air vent for the
driver--there was nothing for the passenger. My belief now is that the
car was designed to show one body style on one side and another on the
other, maybe like deluxe and standard.'' That's borne out by the
different door handles, which are fancier on the driver's side than on
the passenger's.
''I got to checking around about it, and called the Budd Company,''
Terry recalls. ''I got in touch with A.C. Maul, the manager of Body
Engineering at Budd's Philadelphia plant. Maul told me that his father
had been an official at the Budd Company, and on summer breaks, he
worked at the Experimental Body Works. I told him about my car, and he
said, 'I think that's one of the first cars that I worked on.' ''
Terry and A.C. Maul exchanged a number of letters in 1972, and at Maul's
request, Terry sent a number of Polaroid photos to show his new sedan
from numerous angles. He was elated to receive a letter, dated September
20, that stated: ''After reviewing your latest pictures, I feel quite
sure your car is one we made and, at the time, identified as a Ford
Model G-2 in the spring of 1929. I am sending three pictures, identified
by our numbers 7786-7-8, which were taken June 17, 1929, and also a
copy of our picture index confirming this identity.
''The only differences we can spot are:
- The upper front center area of the radiator on our picture seems to be a round button-type medallion--your pictures seem to show an oval Ford emblem.
- Our pictures clearly show a soft roof and you have advised the car has a steel roof.
- Your pictures show a radio aerial mounted on the right-hand cowl-side panel, which would be a natural addition over the years.
- Your pictures of the right-hand side below the door and through the cowl show a slightly different molding configuration than ours. This again could be part of a 'rust out' repair.
Source: http://www.hemmings.com/hcc/stories/2010/09/01/hmn_feature3.html
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