When Jason approached Lane Motor Museum about contributing to The Autopian, I had one thought: If I were a regular schmo who knew nothing about weird car museums and the weird cars therein, would I want to read that? Here’s hoping that you do. For those who have been following Torch and his wacky videos in the past, you have an idea of what Lane Motor Museum’s collection contains.
For those who bumped into this website looking for the history of automatons or whatever and have NO idea what Lane Motor Museum is, let me give you a quick history.
The museum is the vision of director and founder Jeff Lane, the most famous person from Romeo, Michigan who is NOT Kid Rock. His dad Gene was very into MGs, and passed on his passion for rusty European things to a young Jeff. The museum still displays Jeff’s first car, a 1955 MG TF, that he and his dad began restoring when Jeff was 12. Flash forward to the late 1990s, and Jeff realized his collection of odd and unique cars was approaching 80, strewn between his Nashville home and a couple of local warehouses. Sharing his collection with the public would require one large space, he thought, and the museum format was the best way to do that.
When the museum opened its doors in October of 2003, its predominately European collection stood at about 100 cars. They could all fit on the main floor at once. As of this writing, we have over 540 cars, 30 or so motorcycles and scooters, 10 airplanes, approximately 40 bicycles, and a few canoes and other watercraft. We only have room to display 150 cars at a time. We rotate the big exhibits once a year. This quirky, non-profit car museum, located in the heart of country music and hot-ass chicken, holds the largest European car collection in North America, with some interesting American one-offs and a growing JDM collection.
When I describe the Lane’s collection to new people, I tell them that the museum is kind of like the Island of Misift Toys, you know, from the 1960s Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer T.V. special. If a mode of transportation doesn’t fit in a conventional car museum, it’s probably here (or will be here one day). I genuinely believe that many of the cars in the collection would have been cut up for scrap metal, but some brave/lazy/dumb soul thought “eh, maybe this is worth something” and decided to save it. It is to those people that we at the museum are eternally grateful. Many of the cars in the collection are regular, everyday drivers, and not necessarily weird or odd cars…they’re just not familiar to American eyes. That makes them extraordinary, even if the car itself isn’t anything extraordinary. “Can you believe someone bought a Citroën LNA to drive to work? Everyday?! Crazy, right?”
In this recurring series, our museum staff will be bringing you a look into how our wacky car museum works, with articles including but not limited to: behind-the scenes stories, what’s going on in our restoration shop, what it takes to change out big exhibits, new additions to the collection, what museum education is and does, profiles of our weirder cars, profiles of our more well-known cars, driving impressions, how to treat your tour guide, and much, much more.
For example, this past Saturday was our annual Start Your Engines Day. We start various engines every hour so that guests can hear a variety of different engine notes. This is a museum volunteer-led event (as opposed to museum paid staff), and one of my duties is volunteer coordinator, so it was my job to train the volunteers on how to start the engines. Our Wankel rotary engine example was a 1975 Hercules W-2000, one of the few rotary-powered motorcycles ever produced. The Herc requires a two-stroke fuel/oil mixture; later W-2000s had an oiling system. I had instructed everyone to start all of the engines before we opened at 10 A.M., so that they weren’t demonstrating a cold engine on the first try. By the time I got there, everything had started just fine, except for the Hercules. I diagnosed a dead battery.
While I was retrieving a new battery, one of the volunteers reported that someone had put straight-gasoline into the tank, thinking it needed fuel. Our mechanic Nick had spent all week preparing the engine, clearing the plugs and getting the mixture ready to go (by the way, he and I believe there is a draw on the battery, as it was fully charged on Thursday). I texted Nick in a panic, and he said to just use the reserve tank, and hopefully that would be enough fuel to last all day. It was, and fun was had by all, but it looks like the plugs may be fouled again. And that’s just one of a hundred things that happened this past week…with 540 cars, it kind of never ends.
It’s never a dull day at Lane Motor Museum, and I can’t wait to share with you my passion for these unique and oddball cars, every week, right here.
I was looking for information on the BAG Spatz a very quirky German car they made very few of that they have one of (My last name is Spatz but no relation I am not even German just thought it was funny.) They were super nice and provided me with some info on where to find obscure BAG Spatz stuff.
I eventually made it down to Tennessee to see the museum and its friggin awesome! I appreciate the beauty and history at the Petersen in Los Angeles or the Porsche Museum in Stuttgart and I dearly miss World of speed in Oregon but none of them have as crazy and fun a collection as this place. They had every kind of strange vehicle you could ever imagine and it seemed like a great place for kids. I would strongly suggest a visit if you have have the opportunity
I am really looking forward to your regular contributions. I hope they will be photo intensive to match your excellent prose!
Is Eric DeWeidt still associated with the Lane? Does he still sell 2CVs?
His website disappeared a few years ago.
I’m actually in Nashville now on vacation. I planned on stopping by the museum on Sunday. Can’t wait to get a tour of the vault.
The lane should buy my Regembeau diesel Citroën SM, the only SM that can do 39.2mpg and tow tons of stuff. Such a great highway cruiser.
Excited to hear more! I wish I lived near there….would love to work at Lane. With a BEd. degree and prior museum experience, it would be my DREAM job!
Looking forward to seeing more behind the scenes and hoping I get to see some 2-cylinder air-cooled FIAT content….also Voiture Sans Permis, because they are so terrible, but yet so awesome 😛
Oh boy, have you come to the right place. We will be changing out exhibits next week, and our first new exhibit will feature the Fiat 500….so you’ll get plenty of Cinquecento content in the coming weeks. And sans permis?! We have arguably the largest collection of sans permis this side of the Atlantic, so look out for that too.
Man, I’ve been living in Nashville for 4 years, found out about this place during Corona lock downs and such and have been meaning to go for a few months. I will definitely be visiting soon!
Not for nothing, but is there an address? I’m assuming Metro Nashville? Awesome that you get ’em out and fire ’em up, kind of like the Wheels of Time guys. Can’t wait for the next story!
Yup, south Nashville on Murfreesboro Pike. 702 Murfreesboro Pike, to be exact. It was a hopping area back in the day…the museum is housed in a old bakery (that’ll be another post), and most of the high end dealerships were along this corridor. The Volvo dealer down the street is the only premium Euro dealer left, and it sticks out like a sore thumb.
Just visited the hypercar exhibit at the Petersen a couple of weeks ago. Probably the same amount of horsepower as the entire Lane collection. Still, maybe I’m jaded, but not nearly as much fun as discovering all the amazing oddballs at the Lane a couple of years ago. (The cars there were interesting, too. Just kidding, Rex ????)
I love the Petersen too…I’m a bit of a Hollywood car lover, so its one of my favorite museums. But, yeah, we definitely have most car museums beat on diversity alone. So many different ways to make a “car”.
I love this museum. My boys and I spent several hours there last spring, and I honestly think I could have spent days. The museum is about 3 hours from us, but I am hoping to make another trip this year with more time to explore. Thanks for preserving all those weird and unique vehicles!
Visited your lovely museum about this time 3 years ago as part of a surprise 40th birthday getaway my wife had planned. It was a welcomed break from the normal Nashville experience, and a highlight of the trip for certain. Especially since we had a former Toyota TRD engineer in our group that toured the basement collection, which made the stop by the Toyota World Racer a once in a lifetime experience.
Am expecting another Nashville trip in the not to distant future and will definitely stop by and see you again!
I’ve never visited, but remember reading Torch’s stuff from the past with the museum. Look forward to reading about the collection.
Love the collection of Tatras. The Mrs and I visited on our way from Pittsburgh to Dallas last summer and truly enjoyed the visit. That mammoth you had parked out back is surely worth a story to itself.
Looking froward to hearing more! I would love to visit, but it’ll take some logistics since I’m on the opposite end of the country. But someday.
By the way, how’s the Tatra doing after the “Hagerty Incident”?
You’ll be getting a T-87 update in the next article.
I visited the Lane with my Pontiac Vibe group a few years ago, but was unable to enjoy the museum. I need to go back. I love that such a place exists.
I was just mentioning to a guest about your Vibe group….I think it’s awesome that every car has a club! He had a Matrix, and I wondered aloud if Matrices were allowed to mingle with the Vibes.
Growing JDM collection?!? Tell me more……
We have quite a few bubble-era JDM stuff, late 80s/early 90s….things like each of the Nissan Pike cars, a Suzuki Alto Works, Mitsubishi Dangan, Honda Today, Honda City Turbo with Motocompo, and two of the three ABCs…a Beat and an Autozam AZ-1. I’m missing a few, I know, but that’s a taste. Folks seems to like them some hot JDM content, so I’ll be sure to include articles on that part of the collection.
Might just be me, but I would love a deep dive on the Honda City Turbo and Motocompo. I’ve never seen them in person, but something about them is so… *chef’s kiss* in a way I can’t fully explain.
I’ll add it to the list. Thanks for the suggestion!
Visited back and ’18 and had a great time. Big bonus is there are enough quirky cars and oddities that even non-enthusiasts can enjoy it.
Love the Lane Motor Museum. Visited back in pre-lockdown 2020 and look forward to returning!
I’ve got a question – were you the guy in Torchinsky’s “Jason Drives” on the Peel P50? The one who looks like he really wants to either pass out, murder Jason, or possibly smooch him? 😀
https://youtu.be/9oZlZ1D5SGI
That’s Rex! And those are the reactions most people have to me.
I was…and it’s all three. It might have been the asphyxiation from the two-stroke, but whose to say. We have a newer 2013 Peel Trident, and its WAAAY better to drive. I’ll do a compare and contrast between the old and new version at some point.
Yesssss, love it. Can’t wait to hear more.
A visit to the museum is on my short list if only to visit my old Reliant Regal Convertible. From all I’ve seen it will be a fabulous experience!
The Lane Museum is definitely somewhere I plan to visit. I’m looking forward to reading more about it!
Ever since I first learned about this place back in the old site, I’ve been itching to visit. It’s at the limits of what could be a day trip for me but these articles might just push it over the top for me.
Great writing! I’m very happy to hear that weird and obscure cars will be regular features on this site.
This is just great. The Lane Motor Museum is fantastic, and I’m stoked that we have a Man On The Inside to tell us all its secrets!
Super pumped to read more!!!