An Old Van And Two Taillight Thoughts: Cold Start

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Cold Start is a bit late this morning because I fell asleep last night with every intention of pre-writing my Cold Start, but soon found that I’m much less capable a writer when aslumber. Then I had to do my cardio rehab this morning, which is just exercising with a bunch of sensors stuck to me, all of which were either slipping off my sweat-slick, dolphin-like flanks or yanking clumps of hair from my chest. But, still, why should you suffer? It’s hardly fair. So, please accept my apologies for the delay in the form of this wonderful old Econoline I saw yesterday, as well as a pair of taillight photos, each one of which triggered a larger taillight thought.

First, look at that Econoline! It’s fantastic! It’s one of the first-generation ones, from 1961 to 1967, and this one is actually the Super Van variant, which you can tell from the extra length grafted on the rear, its seam proudly and unashamedly visible just aft of the rear wheelarch.

These vans with the extended rears, with their obvious seams, is something I’ve written about before at The Old Site. I always really liked how old extended Econolines had funny little plugs for their rear side marker lamps:

These conversions always seemed just a little half-ass, which endeared them to me, because I’m an idiot.

Okay, I promised two taillight things, too so here we go. The first one was something I saw that reminded me of unfinished business:

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You know how those Lexus GS300 inner taillights, the ones on the trunk lid shaped like river stones, always fade to an odd salmon-pink? Years ago I was reaching out to Toyota and their part suppliers to figure out why, why did this happen to just those lights and not any number of other taillights? Something is clearly different with the plastics or dyes but no one would give me an answer. I need to restart this investigation.

Here’s the other taillight thing:

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I think the new default box truck taillight is no longer the traditional box taillight. Remember the box taillight? Sure you do?

Anyway, these seem to be slowly being replaced by those narrow oblong, hot dog-shaped LED lights.

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These are sold by innumerable manufacturers and sometimes come in housings like the ones above, or just on their own. They come in red, amber, and clear, but in America I mostly just see the red and clear teamed up, with the rear indicator handled by the red lamp.

I don’t find these as elegant as the box taillight, but I can see how their simplicity and modularity and small size make them appealing. They’re just a bit charmless, that’s all, and, yes, I demand charming taillights on my garbage trucks, because life is a rich and complex tapestry, dammit.

 

42 thoughts on “An Old Van And Two Taillight Thoughts: Cold Start

  1. The narrow, hot dog lights also allow them to be put in locations that the box lights wouldn’t fit, so you can simplify your lighting arrangement whilst maximising the utility of the box.

  2. Between the salmonizing tail light mystery and the hypertrophied sunglass cubby prevarication, I am finding Toyota’s convenient lack of transparency disturbing.

  3. My mom’s daily driver from 1964 to 1973 was a ’64 Falcon Deluxe Club Wagon (AKA windowed passenger version of the Econoline in the lead photo, minus the “Super” extension). It had two round red combination taillights, no backup lights, and – since it was deluxe and not for peonstwo additional round rear reflectors below the taillights.

    It could carry a lot of stuff, and the parents did a mild car camping conversion – bed seats, tables, power inverter. It was fine for that as long as it wasn’t raining (the doors leaked) and you avoided low traction areas (skinny 13″ wheels) and hills (101 alleged HP). The interior engine compartment was loud, hot, and a steady source of fresh carbon monoxide. Also, the metallic Viking blue color was nice – a good thing since this model was offered in a total of one color, take it or leave it.

  4. Hey JT Don’t feel bad I seem to have lost Sunday. Whether much needed sleep or much too much Vodka I thought today was Sunday. Love the Econoline van which I submit has sold far more vans than the European transit that claimed best sales. Also I don’t hate the Tylenol Taillights, feel free to use that term, but replacement of the rubber gasket is simply impossible.

  5. Speaking of taillight oddities, since acquiring my GR86 I have been curious about these little lumps it has on the side of the taillight housing. It can be seen on several other toyotas including the rav4, Corolla, and Camry. I have 2 theories; it is perhaps a vortex generator? Doesn’t seem like it would do much in that regard but I am not an aerodynamicist. The other explanation I can think of is that it serves as some sort of assembly aid, but that doesn’t make much sense either. As a fellow lover of tiny and mildly interesting automotive details, I implore you Jason, please solve this mystery!

  6. I’ve said this before, but I will reiterate that you never need to apologize for taking care of your health. As cool as this site is it’s not worth dying over. 🙂

    1. Likewise I feel obligated to mention Neil Young’s Tonight’s the Night and the lyric

      Bruce Berry was a working man
      He used to load that Econoline van

  7. And as the former owner of a 1st gen Econoline, you really don’t want one of those ill handling things… 2nd gen was a huge improvement and set the standard for vans.

    1. Although the 1st gen Econoline was based on the Falcon, the coil spring perches for the Falcon’s double wishbone suspension would’ve severely intruded into the cab, so they went with leaf springs and a solid beam front axle. There were farm implements that handled better and rode smoother.

        1. A while back there was an article about the oddity of the Gen 1 Mustang front suspension, which was brought over from the Falcon. The coil springs were mounted to the top wishbone rather than the bottom one, which put the tops of the springs very high. Because of the cab-forward layout the driver and passenger sit right above the suspension in the Econoline. The spring towers would’ve cause problems. On the positive side, the leaf spring front suspension makes it easier to convert to 4WD.

  8. Those box tail lights are littering the landscape because they’re useless as their bulbs are shaken to death by vibration as they hang too far from the apex of their mounting points. The round and oval LED lights are taking over because they last forever and replacement consists of popping the old one out, unplugging, plugging in the new one, and popping it in. Pretty much standardized on on trailers and truck bodies, unfortunately the lights on the cab are becoming more proprietary and overpriced.

    1. That switch to ovals and 4 inch rounds and penny lights has been a godsend and a curse for truckers. Cheap and easy to replace also means easy to steal. We are switching to riveted versions of rounds and ovals and gluing in the penny lights at this point.

      1. I was working for the Postal Service back in ’98 when we had hundreds of new trailers with LED lights delivered by rail… and a lot of the lights that could be easily reached were missing. After that they got riveted in!

  9. The old Toyota pickups suffered from Pink Taillight Syndrome as well. I had to replace a broken one on my old truck, and it looked so stupid with one red brake light and one pink that I ended up replacing both.

  10. As someone who long struggled with “waterproof” housings on boat trailer tail lights, I applaud the advent of LED replacements and I don’t miss the old ones.

  11. Those second lights are actually utility trailer lights, that they put on trucks. I am guessing they are cheaper and brighter than the alternative, and now are being used in production vehicles. I’ve had to replace a few in trailers and they are easy peasy and work great at minimal cost.

    Ecolines are badass. I would love one, but had a semi-rough experience on the one older car I ever bought (never ending issues with no end in sight) and I am scared (cowardice) to do it again.

  12. Ah, yeah, those extended vans were popular around here in East Tennessee on account of churches using them as church buses (one county in East Tennessee was notable at one time, in the 1970s-80s, for having the highest per capita rate of churches…and the highest per capita rate of bars.) It always seemed like the Ford vans were more problematic than other manufacturers’ vans on account of having poorly engineered road-handling characteristics further compounded by such massive rear overhangs so those church buses would crash more frequently than others (which puts “Jesus, take the wheel” in an entirely different light.)
    And extended vans were also popular around here with carpet installers for obvious reasons, that is, for transporting long rolls of carpeting, and people would refer to such vans as ‘carpet vans’ rather than ‘extended vans’ regardless of their actual use. The ubiquity of carpet vans around here was in part due to the close proximity to Dalton, Georgia, which proudly proclaims itself to be “the Carpet Capital of the World.” Such a proclamation is indeed borne out, as per Wikipedia: “More than 90% of the functional carpet produced in the world today is made within a 65-mile (105 km) radius of the city.”

    1. Ford’s much-advertised Twin-I-Beam front suspension was in fact swing axles. So along with massive pendulum-like rear overhang and a center of gravity that got higher as more people got in (sitting with the bulk of their weight 1-3′ above the load floor) you had constant camber changes in front. When GM finally brought out an extended van at the end of the ’80s churches and the like made a mass changeover to them (no pun intended) because they extended the wheelbase and not just the rear overhang.

      In the ’80s all carpet stores had Dodges, because Dodge extended vans were just a bit longer between the backs of the front seats and the rear doors. It was something they advertised on, that you could close the doors on a carpet roll in a Dodge but it would have to stick out the back of the Ford.

  13. “These conversions always seemed just a little half-ass”
    On the contrary Jason, surely these conversions are a little extra-ass?

  14. The box trucks have ditched the box taillight for these multi-LED jobs that inevitably have at least 30% of their LEDs burned out making neat patterns. From a distance they usually look like low-res characters from the old Space Invaders game.

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