“It’s about two-thirds the height of a standard beer can,” Australian Autopian reader Laurence Rogers told me over a video chat, describing the diameter of a giant Huntsman spider he lets crawl freely around his house in New South Wales. I had just agreed to spend a month with him fixing a 1969 Chrysler Valiant kangaroo-hunting ute he’d bought for $900 on my behalf, and I was now deeply regretting my choice.
To be clear, I will not be hunting any “roos” (as he calls them). The only hunting that will take place during my trip to the center of New South Wales later this year will involve this spider hunting me, possibly in my sleep:
You thought I was kidding about that Huntsman spider, eh? That’s okay; I, too, figured Laurence was joking, but as shown in the video-chat screenshot above, the crazy bastard actually does live harmoniously with enormous, frighteningly-quick arachnids. It’s been nice knowing you, folks.
Anyway, let’s back up for a second and talk about how I ended up the owner of a 1969 Chrysler Valiant ute located in the Australian bush.
Actually, I really don’t know how it happened, in the same way that I don’t know how I ended up bathing in the Baltic Sea just prior to driving a diesel Chrysler minivan to Koenigsegg, and in the same way that I have no clue how I ended up with trenchfoot off-roading a rusted-out Forward Control Jeep near Seattle.
These things just…happen. One moment I’m chatting with a new friend on social media, then they’re telling me about a cool, dirt-cheap vehicle they’ve found nearby, then I black out, and the next thing I know I’ve wired money to a stranger 10,000 miles away. It seems like a bad thing to make a habit of, but then again, just look at this glorious machine!:
Check out the scaffolding in the back. Laurence, owner of a 1970 “VG” Valiant Wayfarer and a 1974 “VJ” Valiant Charger, tells me that it’s there to facilitate kangaroo hunting. I guess one would rest a weapon on the foam to stabilize a shot?
See those little rear bumperettes with integrated turn signals [Hi, it’s Jason Torchinsky here. I just thought I’d hop in since my Someone Is Discussing Turn Indicators implant started pulsating. You know what’s cool about those bumper-mounted amber indicators? They can also be reverse lamps! Yes, Australia and New Zealand were the only countries that allowed amber reverse lamps, primarily to accommodate U.S.-market cars brought over, where the clear reverse lamps could be repurposed to be amber indicators and back-up lights.]? Those allow the ute’s tailgate to fold not just flat, but also in the downward position so one can better reach stuff near the front of the bed. That’s right, Chrysler Australia had the MultiPro tailgate well before GMC did. Check it out:
Even if you are a Mopar fan, you’d be forgiven for scratching your head in confusion right about now. Because this machine, and many old Australian Chrysler vehicles, was quite different from what Chrysler sold in the U.S.
Laurence, who spends much of his time talking with farmers (who tend to own amazing old vehicles) as part of his job, broke it down for me, saying:
…Chrysler Australia…were always the smallest of the big three. They never had much money, and so did their best to disguise that the same platforms and parts were carried over for several years. We had Valiants from 1961 to 1981, the last two years were actually made by Mitsubishi under licence because Chrysler Australia was broke and sold the factory to them
Getting back to the misfit status of Valiants, they had a reputation as a car bought by immigrants, particularly Italians and Greeks of which we had thousands settle here in the 50sThey were often derided as ‘[derogatory term] Chariots’Farmers liked Valiants though, as the Hemi six pulled like a V8 and Valiant utes were often much cheaper than their equivalent Holden or Ford
Now with classics sky-rocketing in price, quite ironically many of the die-hard Holden and Ford guys that used to give me shit for owning Valiants are now very interested in them and ask me lots of questions
Unlike many of today’s “global vehicles,” which are pretty much exactly the same regardless of the market in which they’re sold (with some differences in standard content and powertrains), Australian Chryslers were thoroughly different than Chryslers sold elsewhere. In fact, Chrysler Australia had its own engineering team that developed its own bodies and powertrains, using basic designs provided by Chrysler engineers in the U.S. as the basis.
Take the “VF” Chrysler Valiant Wayfarer ute that I now own (woh that feels weird to say). As you can see in the little orange box in the brochure below, there’s a little storage area behind the bench, below the front part of the bed. This is actually just a byproduct of using the American Plymouth Valiant wagon platform as the ute’s starting point. That storage area is shaped exactly like the wagon’s rear footwell.
Chrysler Australia vehicles — which absurdly mishmashed American nameplates to bring the world vehicles like the “Chrysler by Chrysler” and “Chrysler Valiant Charger” — had styling that might look familiar, but it’s not quite same as what Americans are used to. That’s because Australian Chryslers’ sheetmetal and bumpers were often a blend of parts from various U.S. Chrysler model-years, and grilles and lighting was sometimes totally unique for the Australian market.
More fascinating than styling differences and vehicle platform adaptation, though, is the existence of the Hemi-Six. My 1965 Plymouth Valiant, and every Valiant offered in the U.S. through the 1970s, came standard with the Leaning Tower of Power — arguably the most reliable engine of all time, the slant six. The heaping pile of crap 1969 ute that I now own (still feels weird) also came equipped with the unkillable motor. But in 1970, the base motor became the Hemi-Six, an Australia-designed straight six that allegedly has its roots in an old U.S. Chrysler design that never was. As rumor has it, Chrysler sent blueprints over to its Australian division, the Ozzies actually finished up the development process, and started building the iron-block 215s, 245s, and 265s for Valiants and Chargers and more until the early 1980s. It’s become a legendary engine in Australia, right up there with Ford’s hallowed “Barra” straight six, which could be modified to handle immense power.
Needless to say, I will be removing the slant six from my rustbucket and chucking in a Hemi-Six and three-speed column-shift manual Laurence has sitting around (apparently the motors and transmissions are as ubiquitous as Kangaroos).
The engine swap should be easy, as the underhood packaging is the same between slant six and straight six Valiants, but I just had a chat with Laurence the other day, and the farm insurance agent just had to point out this white ball by my motor:
It’s an egg sack from a Redback spider, which Laurence says is “not generally deadly.” Between that comment and the beer-can reference to his house-Huntsman (both made with a smirk on his face), I’m beginning to wonder if the man is messing with me, or if I’m about to be rid of my arachnophobia through exposure therapy.
Anyway, let’s have a look at what I’m in for. The slant six appears to be in good shape, and I bet it runs just fine, but I must have the Hemi-Six, so I’m selling this to one of Laurence’s friends to offset the Hemi cost.
As for the rest of the vehicle — well, it’s rough. [Jason here again–look how cool the front turn signals are, integrated into the body as those two rectangles over the headlamps.] As a general rule, if you buy a vehicle with only three wheels, it’s almost certainly a massive pile of crap; it means someone yanked a wheel and thought the vehicle was so far gone, it wasn’t worth the immeasurably low effort needed to bolt the thing back up.
Laurence went out to a local woodcutter who had bought the ute from a nearby farm, and jacked up the machine he had bought for a random American journalist halfway across the world; then he threw some rubber onto that front right corner. But that didn’t exactly help the ute roll, as the brake in that corner — along with the rear brakes — was locked up.
As shown above, the Mopar fan and his buddies had to resort to some drastic measures to get the ute onto a trailer, with the result being that the ‘roo hunting bars in the back took a bit of a beating.
While we’re talking about the ’roo bars in the bed, it’s worth mentioning that there are some rust issues with the shotgun shell-covered bed floor:
Also, the exhaust basically doesn’t exist:
And the front right frame rail is a bit tweaked from an apparent impact:
But overall, the body looks mostly rust-free. Check out the underside:
The rear left quarter panel is rusted out, sure, but the main unibody rails look solid:
And the interior isn’t too bad, either. Sure, the dash is cracked, and the seat is a bit rough on the driver’s side, but the former doesn’t matter, and a seat cover will clean the latter right up.
The floor does look a bit perforated there under the disintegrated milk jug with a shotgun shell in it:
Laurence ratchet-strapped the Ute’s hood shut (I’ll have to figure out what the deal is with that, too) and towed the vaguely vehicle-shaped carcass from Tottenham (a city in New South Wales with roughly 300 inhabitants) to his place near Dubbo (which has nearly 40,000 residents).
I’ll be lugging my tools onto an airplane and flying there this September. My plan? I don’t really have one, other than: Wrench my heart out and pray I can get the ute into good enough shape for an epic road-trip through the Australian outback, where I plan to learn as much as I can about car culture in the region, with regular dispatches making their way onto The Autopian for your enjoyment.
Unlike all my other hopeless wrenching projects through the years, the vehicle itself — which I’m naming Project Roo until I can think of something more clever — is, despite its horrible condition, somehow not the most likely thing to kill me this time around. And that’s a bit alarming.
David Tracy, looking at a car obviously covered in surface rust: “Basically rust-free!”
[yes I know he means it’s mostly structurally sound]
Finally, I got my 3rd party rust fix. Can’t wait to see the chronicles of DT down under. Site looks amazing, ready for merch!!! Let us readers know what you need from us to keep this going.
This is awesome Dave, there’s some incredible car culture down under! I’m shocked you’re not doing an off road vehicle though…
If that Valiant doesn’t end up with mud tires (sorry, tyres) I’d be severely disappointed in David.
Just kidding, I can’t get mad at him.
In Australia, EVERY vehicle can be an offroad vehicle! That ute was built in an era where every car built in Australia was built to be able to survive long trips on dirt country roads, since there was a lot less bitumen than there is now! The first Ford Falcon model built here (1960) had to be hastily reengineered because the US-designed front suspension was rattling loose its adjusting shims and balljoints were collapsing. The subsequent model was ‘upgraded’ with Fairlane parts to survive the harsher Australian conditions.
Expended shotgun shells in the bed, missing radiator and gas caps, lots of rust, etc., this has the potential to be an interesting project, even by David’s standards.
Doesn’t seem to have a Tracyesque amount of rust, maybe the ‘generally not deadly’ spiders will make up for it
Proud to see the “Spirit of the Wrench” is as strong with this one as ever.
This is the kind of content I missed, that I craved.
I know that each project has to up the challenge level but I didn’t have “old Chrysler filled with spiders” on my David Tracy bingo card.
Glad you are back online!
And this, my friends, is what I’ve been waiting all these weeks for.
“But overall, the body looks mostly rust-free. Check out the underside:”
*posts picture that is approximately 90% rust*
I was thinking the same thing along the lines of “I found part of the car that is not rusty I think”
Huh, that actually… doesn’t… look that bad? (Can’t believe I’m saying that.)
I share your concern with the spiders. When I brought my MGB home the underside was covered in cobwebs, and I found an empty egg sac behind one rear wheel, nestled up against the brake drum. It worried me because the car came from Hawaii, and I didn’t know what sort of creepy-crawlies are native to Oahu that we don’t have here. I found a few weird little whitish almost-transparent spiders under there, but they may just as easily have been Portland natives. But that was six years ago, and I’ve since cleaned it up. Sometime this summer I’m going to get it dry-ice-blasted underneath, and that’ll take care of the little bastards once and for all.
Ok saw this on the main page and thought this would be a perfect tracy april fools joke. I really hope it started that way. Now though? now you definitely have to follow threw on this mess
I hope you’re planning on doing something with MCM.
Hunting roos? Better do some training first: https://images.app.goo.gl/91mrgnBsS6qcEshi6
Jason and I were thinking about creating a category for my ill-advised wrenching stories; it would be called “Autopain.”
Awesome content! I’ve missed reading the adventures of the rust man!
I missed you guys! That’s an awesome car.
We missed you, too!
David, if I knew your services could be had so cheaply, I’d have invited you to help me restore my wrecked LJ months ago.
“The slant six appears to be in good shape, and I bet it runs just fine”
Only David could look at that engine bay and say “this looks fine and I’m sure it runs”
It’s the leaning tower of power! It CAN’T die!
This will be great!!
Once its done- will it stay in austrailia, or make its way back to the US? Ship to LA, roadtrip it home…
“Ship to LA, roadtrip it home…”
YES!
While reading up on many of your adventures, I’ve thought “nothing can top this” yet, here we are.
While in Australia the need to look out for life taking creatures is REAL (look first before reaching into darkness) and ask about Drop Bears. If I recall, they’re everywhere (or at least I was advised that’s the case).
Good luck, ‘mate!
On the bright side, this Ute looks less likely to give you some kind of exciting respiratory infection than the Jeep FC! Looking forward to seeing more about this thing!
The site is off to a great start! Great content, clean design, and it looks like you’ve already got some excellent writers on board. I also actually kinda like that this comment box is at the bottom of the thread, which encourages people to read the conversation before posting. Good stuff here, keep it rolling!
As a lover of all things Mopar, and long-time enthusiast of Aussie Mopars, I may as excited about this project as you are.
I’ve been tracking David Tracy’s fixing-shitboxes-away-from-home escipades for a while now. From project Krassler, to the Jeep FC, now to this. These projects seem to be getting more remote and less functional from the start. It’s only a matter of time before we are reading about him attempting to turn a vaguely car-shaped piece of rusted iron in an abandoned Antarctic whaling village into a working auto.
And I just want to say that I’m 1000% here for these adventures!! Please keep making these amazing stories Mr. Tracy.