| Valley Custom Shop - part 1 |
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Custom Car Magazine by Geoff Carter
The world is full of peaks and valleys, some
big ones, some little ones, and some recognized only by their residents. Today,
however, thanks to musical missionary Moon Unit Zappa, one place is known to
the world as “The Valley.”
It wasn’t the Valley Girl, denizen of the
shopping mall, who put southern
Oh, how we dreamed and drooled over feature
after feature, cover after cover car after car. Each one longer, lower and
sleeker than the one before. Such majestic beauty and harmonious proportion
could only come from on place, the valley
(Laughing).
We have 12 grandchildren and four great grandsons, and all the family’s into
automobiles. All the kids came and worked with me in the shop- little tots-
push a broom, whatever.
Emory- Yeah, so as I was getting into high
school, I was manufacturing shackles of different lengths. I had a jack and I’d
go from service station to service station, make an appointment with their
customers to leave their car, and I’d lower it for them. Carried all this gear with
me in my car (Laughing), and lowered them on the spot! So anyways, it was just
that working in the station.
Then we had a station; three of us ran a
24-hour station one year in high school. Worked seven days a week. We still
went to school and kept the station open. I also manufactured mufflers.
Whatever you could do to make a living, because those days, you know, things
weren’t easy.
CC- Was survival your motivation
to be a businessman?
Emory- I don’t know. Most kids had to go out
and knock on a door for a job. There were so many kids out there trying to do
that, if you could generate something on your own, make yourself available…
When I was eight years old, I was Soliciting house to house to do anything they
wanted done-mow their lawn, or go in and strip wallpaper.
I built clothesline poles for the women. I
worked with my hands all the time. I’d just go to the lumberyard and bring the
material home, cut it all up so it would bolt together, take it down on the
bicycle, mix up the cement, put in the post, set the thing up. All you had to
do was look at a clothesline and you knew how to build it, yet the husband, he
didn’t know how to do it, or wouldn’t, or whatever.
But that’s the way things go. That way you
could make 25 cents an hour, unless you bid the job and you’d do it for so much
money. Even with that little detail thing, I serviced a car for five cents per
day.
CC- How long did it take you to
do one?
Emory- Well, we did them quick, because all
we were doing was going from car to car; we knew which ones were our customers.
The fellow that I had working for me, he’d work one side and I’d work the
other.
If the car was unlocked, we’d take a whisk
broom and whisk out the inside and running boards before we started whipping
down. We’d wipe our half of the car off, and clean the windshield, and we were
through. The glass was clean- if it needed them- because we were doing everyday, unless they didn’t come to work.
Sometimes some of them didn’t bring the car to work that day, or they brought
another car that we didn’t know they were driving, because otherwise we would
have serviced it. We’d go right down the rows; we could tell which. They really
didn’t have assigned parking places, but they would usually park in about the
same spot.
I just used a card file and a punch card
system that I made up. Each card would be good for four weeks. It had letters
right around the boarder of the card- one letter would represent each day of
the week- and at the end was a paid thing. In the center of the card was “Emory
Detailing” and the license number-didn’t even brother with the name, just the
license number- on there to I.D. the car, and that’s all there was. If they
wanted extra work done- a lot of times they decided they’d want them waxed or
something- I just made a note on the back of the card.
We knew all the cars by memory; knew which
cars were there that day. We didn’t have to punch them out until we were done
wiping because we just got to know everybody; that’s the thing.
I could run a card for a whole month and not
collect anything, but soon as I caught them coming in or out, or driving out
something- maybe I’d have a couple of cards for a couple of months on them-
they’d pay it. Then you just punch out the corners and it’s all paid up.
CC- Besides an occasional wax
job, what other types of work would you do for your clients?
Emory- Back in 1938, one of our customers
bought a new
I had already patterned it out and cut it out
from the dimensions, and made the cover come over and cover the wheel. Made it
fit the taper of the windshield so it stretched straight into the dash. It had
the snaps on the inside the dash, because that’s all he wanted it for.
Something to cover up the seats and dash in the sun so he didn’t have to put up
the top every time he came in.
Then the trend came along, and everybody that
was concerned about their car had a tonneau cover. When you get back early
‘30s, though, there were so many things that weren’t a fad or a trend. Nobody
had any need for them, then things came along…
CC- Growing up during the
depression, you must have been about the right age to serve our country during
World War II. How did you spend those years?
Emory- I had to get out of anything to do
with cars because of the draft, so I went into the defense plant at Douglas
Aircraft. Worked up in “Master Layout” with the engineering, blueprints, and
lofting figures. We’d make a full scale development of the surface. We had to
develop this entire part, an aluminum stamping for example, in flat pattern and
produce all the information, all the details, all of the bend allowances, all
the lines for forming, what ever it took to manufacture it, the information was
all on it. That’s what I did for
Then we built the first three jet fighters in
a new brick building that’s probably part of the UCLA campus now. It was right
on the edge of the campus. It probable got absorbed by the school because it
was a government building. This was all secret project work; you had to be
cleared.
We were probably about half was into that
project when I got drafted. See, I got five induction notices, but they kept
getting me deferred because of the work that I was doing. I thought that this
was as important a thing as I could
possibly do for the war effort anyway.
I mean, they sent me to school for about nine
months of engineering that I didn’t have for background. When I went through
personnel and showed my credits and everything, they asked if I’d go to school.
They had a government crash program that they handpicked us to go to at
I said, “Well, I’m married and I can’t afford
to go to school. I have to work.” They said “Oh, we’ll pay you to go to
school,” and I said “Where do I sign?”
The course took in everything. Engineers of
theory from USC, and practical experience engineers that worked in field,
taught us eight hours of class work and we got a day’s pay. But we also had
eight hours of homework every night.
They would let you- what we call in high
school-cheat. Instead of memorizing formulas, you dial that formula on the card
and start working the problem. In those days we didn’t even have calculators of
any type until I went to work at
But when they came through with blanket
order, “Anybody under 26 years old was drafted,” that was for me. They got the
aircraft finished, and flew them with pusher props, but the jet engines weren’t
ready until the war was over.
CC-Which branch of service
drafted you?
Emory- When I got into the service, first I
went through Navy boot camp. Our company was supposed to be there five weeks,
but I was there three months.
I was so sick of getting out on the finder
and marching for six hours with all these guys that were so stupid they’d trip
over their own feet. We’d rehearse and rehearse, and these guys couldn’t get it
through their heads, couldn’t tell their right foot from their left.
Then after you completed your busywork,
they’d assign you all day to pick up cigarette butts. I didn’t smoke, yet I had
to go out and pick up everybody else’s cigarette butts they threw on the ground
for something to do all day.
I told myself, “This is crazy!” I did more in
one hour when I was working there in aircraft than I did the whole time I was
in boot camp. It was something important that had to be done.
When our orders finally came through, 95
percent of us were going up here to
I thought, Man, what do I need with this?” I
was thoroughly disgusted with it since the day I went in. I didn’t want to go
in the first place.
CC- Did you start Valley Customs
as soon as you got out of the Navy?
Emory- When I got out of the Navy in ’46 I
went to work the next morning in a shop doing general repair. I worked there
about a year, but that wasn’t what I wanted to do. Soon, though, that little
custom job would come in, and they’d go ahead and do it anyway.
Then, when the owner sold out and went to
rebuilding wrecks, totals, I went to him. He had a partner who was a mechanic,
and himself, he was a painter. The three of us were rebuilding totals, but
after probably 18 months, General Motors built their assembly plant out there
in Van Nuys.
By now he was getting to the point where he
didn’t want to paint cars anymore, so he decided to go over and take a job with
them striping wheels. (That only lasted about another year or two before they
quit putting any stripes on wheels, but he worked there for several years).
When he had sold his shop and went to
building these totals, he and his partner had bought the property which was an
old abandoned dairy. They’d torn down some of the dairy buildings and made a
log shed they were doing these cars in, and they were living in the old
farmhouse. So he told me, ‘If you want, you can go ahead and come in here and
so bodywork or whatever you want to do, because I’m going to be working at the
factory.”
His partner was getting ready to do something
else, too, so I said, “OK, I’ll rent the place from you.” I got one of the
fellows I had met when I worked at the bodyshop in town that wanted to come
with me, and the two of us started general repair out there.
We picked up and delivery service, and we got
some of the people who worked with the studios, and they’d need something done
with their cars. We’d picked them up at the studio, take them out there and do
them, and take them back to them.
CC- This was still general repair
bodywork?
Emory- Just straight bodywork, and that
probably lasted another year. My partner was just crazy about the desert;
that’s where he spent all his weekends. He and his wife would go and lie out in
the sun in some Godforsaken part of the desert.
He finally came in one day and said they
decided they were going to move. They’d never owned a house, and they were
going to go down and buy a house in the desert. So he went down just outside
So I just took the place myself and that’s
the beginning of Valley Customs, though we didn’t go by that name then. We
started that in 1948, working there on this dairy property.
CC- When and how Clayton Jensen
enter the picture?
Emory- He was my brother-in-law, and he was
getting ready to go back to
He didn’t know anything about bodywork, but
he had a little mechanical experience from the Army because he was in the motor
pool all the time. So I said, “Well, I don’t like mechanical work- I don’t do
it- but somebody has todo it. Most all these cars need something mechanical
done, and you can sand the cars and pick up on other.”
So I brought him in and made him a partner.
That’s when we got started working into custom cars which is what I wanted to
do all along.
Before, I was doing this on the side. I
started doing custom work when I was in high school, and that goes back in the
earlier era- when I was in school and going around to all the custom shops.
CC- Were you able to concentrate
solely, then, on custom work?
Emory- In our early days in doing bodywork as
a custom deal, we did very little straight repair work. Usually it was only
involved if we were doing some custom work on the rest of the car.
We also did a lot of aircraft repair work.
All the small aircraft, and the handbuilts, still had a lot of fabric on them,
but there were a lot of aluminum pieces, engine nacelles, the wheel fairings.
It was all hand work.
CC- was this strictly repair
work, or did you do metal forming and fabrication too?
Emory- Some of it that came in for repair was
actually destroyed, and we’d make that.
CC- What equipment did you use
for metal forming?
Emory- Everything by hand, hammer and dolly.
We didn’t have equipment! The English wheel was just showing up over in this
country at that time. They brought two of them, in and two guys to run them.
That was a few years after the was. I think those wheels are still at
California Metal Shaping.
CC- Was there enough custom
business then to keep you busy, or did you still have to fill in with repair
work?
Emory- Well, we did both, but I never did
anything mechanical in the way of powertrain or anything like that. When we got
Valley Customs started, after I brought Clayton into it and he started picking
up a little metal work, he did a lot of our general repair work.
We were only there a few months on the dairy
property when we located a service station in
That was really when Valley Customs started
and that would have been late ’48. When we got that going, we stayed there as
partners until 1960. All the history of Valley Customs happened in those 12
years.
CC- How much of the operation was
Clayton able to pick up?
Emory- I would do the design and layout work,
then Clayton could come in right behind me. Often, we might be right in the
middle of repairing something and a customer would come in. I’d go take care of
Customer, and Clayton would pick up right where I left off. He could do any of
the operations, but the first time we did something we’d never done before, I’d
work out how we’d go about it, and he followed right along. I could get it
formed and he could take right over with the finish work.
He was quick to learn, even though he had
never worked a piece of metal in his life. The combination worked out great.
CC- What marked the end of Valley
Customs?
Emory- In 1960 I sold my home and moved down
to
You did a lot of cars in those days, but shop
rate was only $3.00 an hour. So how many hours can you put in a day? You
finally establish fixed prices for everything, and if you get to where you
could perform that job quickly, maybe you could make $4.50 an hour out of it.
(Laughing) By the time you figured it all up, though, you had put so many hours
in, you had no idea. You were so busy working that you didn’t have any time to
think of the management end of it. All you’re doing was try to make a living.
We all had families to feed, and
complications like buying a house and everything it takes, you know; you just
put in the hours. When you got done and you finally collect some money, you
paid a bunch of bills and you were probably still behind. (Laughing) But that’s
the way it was. There wasn’t big money around.
Oh, we did some cars for people that were
well to do, but prices are prices, and there’s competition everywhere. It didn’t
matter if the guy was the lube man at a service station or a studio actor, you
had an established thing you did and you’d run an estimate for this and this.
In the early days, though, you were working with people that you were lucky if
they came in and they wanted their headlights frenched.
That’s fine. We’d do that and we may not see
the guy again for a year or two, if ever. Meanwhile, he’d go down to one of the
other shops. He might go down to George’s and they would do something on it.
He’d go over to somebody else and they do something on it. He’d go over to
somebody else, people that you never even heard of would do some more work on
it, because it was all by price.
All of the sudden this car might end up
getting completed (which they very seldom were) and appear in a magazine. You
might never know that you even worked on it, you know. That’s the way the thing
went.
Once in awhile you get a car to do complete.
You kept seeing this person as a regular’s customer, although maybe he didn’t
have it all done at once, but he wanted the one shop to do it. That way, those
cars may have gotten finished, but a lot of them never did.
Among other thing, in the conclusion of our
interview, Neil Emory will tell us about some of the
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