In 2012, just ahead of Parkes’ retirement and move with his British wife to the UK, it was decided that a further sympathetic refresh would begin, carried out on both sides of the Atlantic and preserving original character where possible.
Stand in front of the car now and only a handful of details – twin exhausts, fat tyres and ride height – give away the effort; otherwise the Reo is very close to the factory aesthetic.
The original colour was green, but Parkes chose an autumnal two-tone faithful to the ‘Old Brown Reo’ family memory.
The interior was professionally retrimmed in a paler shade, but the dashboard still reflects its ’30s heritage and all of the dials and fittings have been restored.
Father Don even fashioned a replacement window winder for that rear ’screen.
The delightful, Deco-style dials have been brought back to best
Things get a little less conventional under the skin.
The second rebuild included chassis mods for rack-and-pinion steering, double-wishbone front suspension and disc brakes – much of the work by Adrian Smith at Buckland Automotive.
Before leaving the US, Parkes sourced a rebuilt Chevy V8 and Turbo-Hydramatic three-speed ’box, which was slotted into the blasted and repainted chassis along with a rodders’ favourite Ford rear end. That sturdy wooden floor was, remarkably, still good for another 60 years.
“The V8 was tuned by the shop in Texas,” says Parkes, “at around 400bhp it’s overkill, but the car drives really well.”
It sounds magnificent, too: those twin pipes are burdened only by a pair of straight-through silencers, so almost every crackle is audible when asking for more power.
The Reo will cruise happily at 70mph – an incongruous sight in motorway traffic, with that long, Deco-style bonnet reaching ahead of you and reflections of much more modern metal dancing over the chrome headlamps.
The Reo proudly shows its history
It’s a controversial package.
The Reo Club of America counts only four 1934 Flying Cloud coupes in the world, so you’d have to travel some distance to find another.
Whether you wince or applaud the modifications depends on which era of US automotive history you most identify with – that of the birth years early in the previous century, or the hot rods of the American Graffiti cultural age.
Being rebuilt with parts correct to the latter period, and not completely beyond the point of no return, this Reo is a blend of both.
It’s now time for this much-loved family classic to be enjoyed
But to Parkes this is of little consequence, because his car will never test the market.
His duty as family custodian is to prepare the Flying Cloud for the next chapter.
As he stands on his own driveway, this time as the parent with his own sons, at least he knows when they turn the key that the Old Brown Reo will start.
Images: Will Williams
Thanks to Dreamland Margate
This was originally in our April 2020 magazine; all information was correct at the date of original publication
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