Vic Hickey (1 Viewer)

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JohnnyC

Long ago TLCA# 2231
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I had been looking into finding and talking to Vic Hickey and maybe getting some old literature and or photos of cruisers from him...but...i have found that Vic had passed away of natural causes on June 13, 2003.


I thought I would share what I had found:

This is from the "Off Road Hall of Fame"

Vic Hickey is recognized for his achievements as an off-road vehicle designer. He helped design vehicles which are cultural icons today such as the Chevrolet Blazer, the Humvee, the Lunar Rover and the legendary off road race vehicle the Baja Boot.

In 1919 Vic Hickey was born in Akron, Ohio. His family moved to South Gate, California soon after his birth. As a boy Hickey spilt his time between South Gate and his grandfather’s ranch in Tenachapi, California. As a young man he found flying, sports (including roller derby), hunting and hot rods interesting. By age 12 he had purchased his first car a Model T Ford and by 16 he had soloed his first airplane. In his teens he raced cars across Southern California’s dry lake beds. He earned his pilots license at age 19. He self taught himself to work on sprint cars, dry lake racers, and Novi Indy Cars.

At age 24 in 1943 he attended the Navy’s pre-flight training program at Cal Poly, San Louis Obispo Campus. He served the Navy during World War II. While in the military he invented a device which converted air-to-ground missiles into ship-to-ship missiles. After the War he returned to Southern California and his young wife Leona.

Hickey met his wife Leona at a California roller rink. As a roller derby racer he had been speeding around the rink, when he accidentally knocked her over. He asked her out. The couple were married for 63 years and had two children Jim and Gail. Because of his family Hickey choose to design, build and repair race cars for others rather than take the risks of driving himself. He once stated, I figured anybody can drive a car, not everyone can build one.

Building and designing innovative vehicles, many well before their time, is what Hickey is most recognized for. He worked on numerous projects many providing long lasting contributions that would help from space exploration to traversing earth’s varied terrain. When he returned from WWII he briefly attended Cal Poly again on the GI Bill and studied Physical Education. He then opened his auto shop in Los Angeles where he specialized in Indy Dragsters. During the Korean War he developed flotation devices and extra wheel kits for Military Jeeps to keep them from getting stuck in rice patties. Rolling with the success from these inventions he felt that a better off-road vehicle could be developed the general public too.

Between 1957 and 1959 Hickey developed an off-road vehicle he called the Trailblazer. His father helped to come up with the name. The vehicle had a prototype General Motors engine which his friend Bill Yeager helped him secure. Ed Cole the General Manager of GM came to California to see the capabilities of
Hickey’s new vehicle. Hickey took Cole for a test drive in a dry river bed. Cole ended up driving and pushing the vehicle as hard as he could eventually breaking a tie-rod, suitably impressed with its performance he offered to buy the rights to the vehicle, its name and offered Hickey a job as a research and development engineer. The Trailblazer would not go into GM production as the Blazer until 2001, forty-two years after Hickey conceptualized the vehicle.

While at GM Hickey specialized in designing off-road military vehicles. There he helped develop amphibious vehicles, improved independent suspension which would be used on vehicles designed to explore the lunar landscape. He led the group which built the mobile Geological Trainer for the Apollo Space program as well as the Lunar Rover which went to the moon.

GM gave Hickey a semi-blessing to also work on off-road race vehicles in his shop. In 1967 with the help of friends he built the Baja Boot in 30 days. The Boot was a racing version of the Trailblazer and could hit a top speed of 140 miles per hour. Its first drivers Al Knapp and Drino Miller tested it at the 1967 Baja 1000 where its speed capability proved to be a liability and a rear suspension strut broke. Bud Ekins raced the vehicle at the inaugural 1969, Baja 500 to victory. The Boot had two other famous drivers, Steve McQueen and James Garner. The Baja Boot was the first purpose-built racer for the Baja event.

Hickey left GM in 1968 and set up Hickey Enterprises. He continued to work with GM as a main client for another 13 years. Now having his own shop he had the opportunity to experiment more with the types of off-road vehicles he chose to develop. He designed and built the Banshee for James Garner to race. This vehicle had an Olds Cutlass frame, an aluminum 455-inch Oldsmobile engine and toped out at a speed of 150 miles per hour. Garner won the Riverside Grand Prix in it. While Hickey enjoyed fabricating one-off race cars it was not very profitable. Hickey Enterprises grew beyond just developing race vehicles quickly and included the development and fabrication of aftermarket parts for off-road vehicles including the Blazer, Ford Bronco and Dodge Ram Trucks. By 1979 the company grew to 140 employees and a catalogue which listed over 1,400 items. Hickey chose to sell the company once it became more focused on manufacturing rather than design.

In semi-retirement he continued designing for GM, U-haul and others. In 1979 Hickey took a contract with the Food Machinery Corporation (FCM) to design a High-Mobility Multi-Purpose Wheel Vehicle (HMMWV). The vehicle would become known as the Humvee and eventually the Hummer. This vehicle was basically a very heavy duty version of the Baja Boot. The U.S. Army viewed the vehicles at a demonstration and had ten more built for testing. AM General began building the vehicles for the Army. By 1995 over 150,000 Humvees had been built for the U.S. Military and its allies. In 1999 General Motors purchased the name Hummer from AM General and began producing civilian versions of the vehicle.

Hickey and his wife moved to the ranch of their dreams a 900 acre property near Paso Robles. In 2000 they sold the ranch and moved to Arroyo Grande. Hickey passed away of natural causes on June 13, 2003 at the age of 84.


Sources:

Rafferty, Tod. The Achievers, Central California’s Engineering Pioneers. Central Coast History Foundation, San Luis Obispo, CA. 2004.

Obituary Victor Francis Hickey, The San Luis Obispo Tribune, 10 July 2003, p.B2.

Auto Maker, Vic Hickey Loves Cars and it Shows…,English, Jennifer. The San Luis Obispo Tribune, 24 March 2000, p.H1.




1st pic is Vic
2nd pic Vic is on left and Bill Stroppe on right
3rd pic is Vic Hickey Nico Saad and Howard Hawks NORRA Mexican 1000 Ensenada Baja October 1968

More stuff to come

9.jpg
Vic Hickey Bill Stroppe.jpg
Vic Hickey Nico Saad and Howard Hawks NORRA Mexican 1000 Ensenada Baja October 1968.jpg
 
Alil more Vic Hickey:

Vic Hickey - Motor Trend Magazine

"Tuner Sport/ Utility Shootout-Circa 1972
December 01, 2001
The tough-looking dude on the left is Vic Hickey. The equally tough-looking dude on the right, the late Bill Stroppe. Behind them, their respective weapons: the Hickey K/5 Blazer versus the Stroppe Baja Bronco. And this was long before MT initiated Sport/Utility of the Year. Hickey and Stroppe are each off-roading legends in their own right. The former generally preferred to work his magic on Chevys; the latter was inextricably identified with Ford for nearly 50 years. The friendly bickering between these two competitors, as recounted in our Feb. '72 story, "Friendly Hostility," was laced with barbed wire: Vic accusing Bill of illegally swapping in a 351-cu-in. V-8 in place of the Bronco's stock 302 and Stroppe chastising Hickey over an abundant use of chrome on the Blazer.
While there are many tunerized sport/utilities out there today carrying $75K pricetags, these rigs could be had for a tenth of that: just $7463 for the Bronco and only $15 more bought you the Blazer. Associate Editor Chuck Koch declared the Blazer the winner based on roominess, cabin comfort, and stronger brakes-but noted the Bronco was indeed the better off-roader. Any way you slice it, it's just a different twist on, and another round of, Chevy versus Ford.-Matt Stone"
Vic Hickey Bill Stroppe.jpg
 
Cool Johnny :beer:

Edit: very very cool !
 
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Victor Hickey sold the rights to the sidewinder winch to Advanced Adapters and they in turn eventually sold it again, it exchanged a few hands and the present owner of the sidewinder brand is unkown to me.

I am going to try and get some toyota photos from the current owner of the trademark name "Hickey Enterprises" thats if he has some.

The currect owner owns the 1969 Chevy C-10 4X4 Vic Hickey built Steve McQueen Baja race truck, 1970 Olds 442 Vic Hickey built James Garner raced Baja race car, 1969 Chevy Blazer Vic Hickey Built Baja race Blazer,The list is to big to go on.

Interestingly he also owns the first Blazer ever built, GM gave it to Hickey after he designed the prototype for them, he has SN# 000001.
 
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What about historical 4x4 photos and info...from the first electirc Porsche in 1900 to the 4x4s of today?
first electric Porsche :
"The first hybrid car is a 100-year-old Porsche! The car had in-wheel electric motors and an onboard gas engine to recharge the batteries."
The Lohner Porsche 1899
Lohner-Porsche-Electric.jpg



first 4x4 also a Lohner Porsche 1900-1905
lohner-porsche_phaeton_1.jpg

The 1899 Lohner Porsche, the first Hybrid Vehicle?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lohner-Porsche_Mixte_Hybrid
Cheers
Peter
 
Thanks Peter....but....do you have anything about Vic or Hickey enterprises?

If anybody has any information about Vic Hickey or Hickey enterprises please post up :)

Vic Hickey * he is abolutely unknown in Germany or Europe
never heard this name before you posted it.
Cheers
Peter

* I looked at Wikipedia Germany .... nothing about him
 
Vic was a really big name in Baja Racing in the late 60's in 1971 and 1972 Parnelli Jones and one of Bill Stroppe's fabricators, Dick Russell won the baja 1000.

In 1973 Four Wheeler staff writer Bill Sanders and Pete Springer entered the Baja 1000 with a Toyota Land Cruiser fueled by an Impco propane conversion kit.

Sanders and Springer not only finished the race but ended up winning the 1973 Baja 1000...the 1st win for a Toyota Land Cruiser.

Some of the accesories found on the baja1000 winning Land Cruiser are from Hickey Enterprises.
0802or_01_z+40_years_to_glory_happy_birthday_baja_1000+four_wheeler_land_cruiser.jpg
0802or_04_z+40_years_to_glory_happy_birthday_baja_1000+bill_stroppe_big_oly.jpg
 
found this also:

40 Years To Glory - Happy Birthday Baja 1000! - Off Road Magazine

"This is Vic Hickey and George Hurst's famous Baja Boot. Actually it's the second of two Baja Boots (the second version being built in 1968). It was revolutionary for its time with a 112-inch wheelbase, four-wheel independent suspension, four-wheel drive, four-wheel Hurst disc brakes, and custom-made Goodyear 36-inch racing tires. Hickey was a senior engineer at GM, and one could make a claim that the Boot came from the best of GM's skunkworks in the late '60s. Though it did not win the Mexican 1000 in 1967, it did go on to win the Baja 500 in 1969. In 1970, Steve McQueen bought and raced the Baja Boots with his friend, Bud Ekins."

also about McQueen owned BajaBoot:
Steve McQueen's 'Baja Boot'

Baja Boot - Rennsemmel von Steve McQueen - Tuning - autobild.de

heres a pic of the Baja Boot:
bajaebay01.jpg
 
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