Boyd Coddington passes...

stratman

stratman

Audioholic Ninja
He was quite the character, I wonder if they'll close shop now? Or butt-head Wayne will need a new job. I didn't like that guy at all.

By MARK VAUGHN

Boyd Coddington, the hot-rod innovator whose creations won the coveted Grand National Roadster Show's America's Most Beautiful Roadster (AMBR) trophy a record six times, died Wednesday morning after a lengthy hospital stay. He was 63.

Coddington was raised in rural Rupert, Idaho, but as soon as he came of age moved to Southern California to pursue his dream of building hot rods. He quickly earned a reputation for subtle, stylistic innovations on what had been an almost overdone theme--the '32 Ford roadster. That branched out to '33s, '34s and then all manner of surprising twists on iconic themes.

Cars with names such as Boydster, Smoothster, Alumacoupe and Chezoom redefined what a rod could be.

"When you saw a Boyd car you knew it was a Boyd car," said Chip Foose, who worked as a designer at Boyd's shop from 1989 to 1996.

His wheels were equally well known. They were first designed to match each car. Coddington specialized in machining them from billet aluminum, and soon earned the nickname "Billet Boyd."

An eye for talent

Perhaps his best trait, realized at the height of his creative passion in the mid-1990s, was his ability to gather a talented team to produce the creations he envisioned.

"His biggest talent was bringing talent to the table," said Foose. "It was like we were all spokes but we had to attach to one hub. He was the hub. He gave us the freedom to create."

Brad Fanshaw, who was president of the Coddington Companies during its glory days in the '90s, said: "I always looked at him as a conceptual designer. He couldn't draw himself but he had the concepts in his head and he would stand behind (designers) Chip (Foose), Larry (Erickson) and Thom (Taylor) and say, 'Yeah, that's what I want."

In the early '90s he had assembled one of the best teams ever, including designer Foose and builder Lil' John Buttera, to produce some of the best hot rods the hobby had ever seen, raising the level of what could be expected from such a craft.

Simplicity an early theme

His early works were swaddled in simple, flowing lines. The Foose-designed Boydster was an early Coddington interpretation of the iconic '32 Ford roadster, but Boyd's take was stretched three inches, lowered and smoothed out beyond what anyone else had ever done.

"We were cleaning up the cars at the time," designer Thom Taylor said. He started working with Coddington in the 1970s while still a student at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California.

"We were removing the door handles and the hinges, straightening out the contours of the frame, no louvers, no little trinket things, so that was kind of the theme for most of these cars," Taylor said.

The subsequent Boydsters II and III carried that theme but with full, flowing fenders.

The Smoothster was a yellow, full-fendered '37 Ford riding on Corvette mechanicals and a Corvette drivetrain.

A Corvette engine also powered the Taylor-designed Chezoom, a '57 Chevy so heavily modified that only 10 percent of the original sheetmetal remained. It was still unmistakably a '57, just unlike any '57 ever seen before, with a lowered, channeled body and a reclining cruiser elegance not normally associated with the muscle of the original.

Like Chezoom, Cadzilla was a reclined cruiser take on a more modern Cadillac. Designed by Larry Erickson and built by Coddington for ZZ Top guitarist Billy Gibbons, it is one of his most well-known creations.

Coddington experimented with aluminum in offbeat creations such as the Mitsubishi-powered Alumacoupe, the truck-based AlumaTruck and the shiny Aluma-Dub-Tub.

Cable TV star

Coddington went through his share of troubles, including a bankruptcy in the late 1990s. He is best known outside the rodding community for his Discovery Channel show, "American Hot Rod," which often showed his short-tempered side.

"The show was ridiculous," said Taylor. "I've been in his shop for years and years and I've never seen it like that. I think the show was really contrived. That wasn't Boyd, that wasn't how it worked."

Love him or loathe him, his influence on hot rods and customs cannot be overstated.

"It is my firm belief that Boyd is the founding father of this street-rod movement," said Gary Meadors of the Goodguys. "From the Boyd cars to the Boyd billet aluminum wheels ... that whole smooth look that he brought to street rodding is what set him apart. He took our hobby to a whole other level with all the exposure he got in media outside our world. He was a forerunner, and he will be missed."

Fanshaw said: "He elevated hot rodding into an art form. He raised the visibility of the hobby and gave it a broader acceptance in popular culture by getting his car on the cover of Smithsonian magazine, by working with Mitsubishi on the AlumaCoupe, by showing a car at the New York auto show. It gave the entire market legitimacy."

Foose said: "He is the reason the industry is what it is today. He took what people were doing in their garages and put it into production and really legitimized this hobby into a business. Without him and Lil' John (Buttera) it would still be in garages."

Coddington leaves a wife, Jo, and five sons.
 
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darien87

darien87

Audioholic Spartan
The guy built some pretty cool rods, but watching his show, he always seemed like kind of a prick. Kinda strange though. 63 isn't that old.
 
stratman

stratman

Audioholic Ninja
He looked bad the last few shows. That show had promise, but like all reality tv shows (American Chopper, etc.) they tire quickly. Yup he looked like a real sour puss on that show, but the worst was Duane, he's a male-member if there ever was one.
 
race4aliving

race4aliving

Audioholic
I'm with Stratman, He had been looking sick for a while now.
I thought maybe he had a tummy tuck or something a little while ago but, it now seems his weight loss and general appearance was caused by his illness.
I can imagine the lords car is going to look pretty cool.:)


Godspeed Boyd.
 
D

dc270

Audiophyte
He was quite the tallent I must admit. I loved his work and he advanced his industry like no one else. I hope what he leaves behind can prosper as well as he did with it.
DC
 
stratman

stratman

Audioholic Ninja
I'm not knocking the guy or anything, but what he did was to organize the hobby, the creative minds were the designers like Foose and builder Buttera, Boyd had an eye, but didn't posses the skill or taste of Foose and Buttera, the man has to be given credit for making a garage hobby into a legitimate, multi-billion dollar industry. But to frank, if you look at the designs shown on the TV show, they were nothing grounbreaking or innovative.
 
M

mudrummer99

Senior Audioholic
I'm not knocking the guy or anything, but what he did was to organize the hobby, the creative minds were the designers like Foose and builder Buttera, Boyd had an eye, but didn't posses the skill or taste of Foose and Buttera, the man has to be given credit for making a garage hobby into a legitimate, multi-billion dollar industry. But to frank, if you look at the designs shown on the TV show, they were nothing grounbreaking or innovative.
Nothing ground breaking by todays standards, but think back to 30+ years ago when he started doing it, he was one of the true innovators of the craft. What he did didn't really change by leaps and bounds, what was around him did, evolving from his humble beginnings and growing as time and his protoge's moved on.
 
stratman

stratman

Audioholic Ninja
Once something is done by rote, as a business, the passion is gone. Rod fabricating is judged by your latest and greatest creation, ie the Riddler trophy, what Boyd did 30+ years ago is irrelevant when it comes to innovation and styling today, he was living in his past glory, which is ok, but when you're trying to sell someone on a $500,000 hot rod it takes more than that. Again let me state I'm not knocking the guy, he was a driving force in bringing the hobby into a legitimate business, but to ignore the facts isn't honest. I was an avid viewer of American Hot Rod since it's inception, but it tired quickly, the cars were always the supporting role to the employee's shenanigans, I can't remember one car built in that series that floored me, yet Troy Trepanier is producing designs that are worthy of the prices asked, ditto with Foose.
 
j_garcia

j_garcia

Audioholic Jedi
He may not have been as innovative now, but he is no less talented as a result. He did help put rodding into the public's eye quite a bit though. I don't consider him to be one of the foremost rodding people on the scene either, but he was definitely a factor and an influence and he will be missed. Was he a crotchety old guy? Yep. And? It is part of his persona, and the way he is on the show is likely pretty much how he really is in the shop, so why not show that? We, as viewers, can't judge who he is by how he is portrayed on TV since what we see is not everything that was Boyd.
 
stratman

stratman

Audioholic Ninja
He may not have been as innovative now, but he is no less talented as a result. He did help put rodding into the public's eye quite a bit though. I don't consider him to be one of the foremost rodding people on the scene either, but he was definitely a factor and an influence and he will be missed. Was he a crotchety old guy? Yep. And? It is part of his persona, and the way he is on the show is likely pretty much how he really is in the shop, so why not show that? We, as viewers, can't judge who he is by how he is portrayed on TV since what we see is not everything that was Boyd.
Without a doubt you can't judge a person by what you see on tv, I think he might have been crotchety because his illness. An influence and a huge factor, absolutely.
 
majorloser

majorloser

Moderator
Makes me think about the song title, "Jesus Built My Hotrod" by Ministry.

Doin' burnouts in Heaven right now.
 
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