NOVEMBER 29, 2011 (DECEMBER 2011) STAR TRUCKIN’: “MYRTLE THE TURTLE” 1964 DODGE TRAVCO MOTOR HOME

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The Dodge Motor Home was one of Chrysler’s best kept secrets but it did get quite a reputation for reliability and function.

 

This is a very rare 1964 version and its owner is now an expert on this Mopar RV.

 

Capri Rasmussen is the current owner of this ’64 Dodge Motor Home and her pursuit of this iconic RV was not an easy road.

 

She saw a 1963 version of this Dodge in her hometown and immediately started a harassment campaign with the owner-with limited success. In fact, the guy was so sick of Capri she thought he might consider a restraining order.

 

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Undaunted, Capri expanded her search into Montana where she located this classic 1964 Dodge Motor Home. The owner “was in over his head on it” Capri explained because, “it had no heat and mushy brakes so we drove it home that way”. Once it was home Capri located a shop manual and she laughingly added, “not many women get excited about a shop manual but I’m one of them because it’s been a godsend“.

 

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Capri’s first mission was to personally take on a thorough detailing for the old Travco and the results are spectacular because this RV is nearly 50 years old but it looks like new inside.There were some issues with the floor and seats but generally the work has been minimal. She focused on a period correct theme for the Dodge Motor Home so this RV has dishes, curtains and cutlery that would look right at home in 1964. The only thing that would add to the ambience would be a portable turntable playing a mint condition 45 rpm version of Please Please Me by The Beatles.

 

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Guys don’t notice curtains but Capri had a closet full of magazines including Mechanix Illustrateds and Popular Science from 1964 and those definitely set male reference points for time and place far better than a knife and fork set. This RV was built long before a portable satellite dish could pull in the world on a unit the size of a pie plate. Reading material, not CNN, was your window to all outside events back in 1964.

 

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This is a 27-foot version of the Dodge Motor Home so it has a very rare rear door option. This was the last year for the push button transmission and this old RV has that option to shift its 318 cubic inch poly V-8 through the gears.

 

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Capri added that she is “surprised at how little gas the old Dodge needs to go back and forth” but many older car guys know how much torque is produced in the 318 poly. They’d like a little more punch so Capri’s husband is researching the value of a 6-pack carb upgrade. No word on how that might affect the MPG rating but the only part replaced to this point was a cracked exhaust manifold.

 

Parts are expensive for these old Travcos but Capri explained that this example was well looked after because it had a full array of the difficult to replace things like factory lights and shades. Clearly this RV didn’t spend a lifetime hauling kids on vacations with a survival rate like that because lamps are usually the first casualty in a long list of things that urchins will break.

 

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Capri is the only member of her family who “likes old things” so this ancient RV is an enigma to them. She counters their skepticism by pointing out that “new trailers blow over, these things are more solid”.

 

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The other thing is an intangible feature that you’ll find with old trailers and campers-they are comfortable in a way that no new trailer can equal. They make you feel like you’re going back to a time when a vacation was a huge adventure and not an expectation. These old units smell like wood not plastic and if you want to experience anything close you have to find a house built in the 1950s, not a condo built last year.

 

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Capri gets the philosophy better than most people twice her age and she protects the heritage of this unique vehicle better than the original owner.

 

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She’s made a few concessions to the 21st century because this RV now has smoke and CO detectors plus a full array of fire extinguishers. They’ve also replaced the original low back driver’s and passenger’s seats with newer ones from a diesel push RV because some things should stay in the past-those tiny factory seats are a great example.

 

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They have more ahead with the Travco-the windows were resealed and now the sliding ones won’t open and as Capri explained, ” you get a lot of people who want to talk to you about the old Dodge”. For now the ’64 Dodge is fully functional because everything from the toilet to the furnace works perfectly and that’s rare in new RVs.

 

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They’ve done some significant trips in the Travco-the longest trip has been 600 miles and many more are on the horizon but for now Myrtle the Turtle is in great hands. Incidentally, Capri gave the old Dodge that name because “it looks like a turtle and it brings its own shell”.

 

 

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Give an old ride a name and it becomes part of the family and Myrtle is clearly part of Capri’s family.

 

Jerry Sutherland

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