00:05Intro Music
00:22Expert car customiser Jerry Patrick has transformed a golf cart into the animated car's character
00:29Matar
00:29This is our newest creation. We'll call him Little Matar. His daddy was a famous tow truck and his mama
00:34was a southern belle of a golf cart.
00:40We build Matar all in house, all hand laid fiberglass, all LED lights, west coast mirrors just like he was
00:48born with.
00:49As we come down the side we try to keep him as screen accurate as we could.
00:53As we come around to the back, here again trying to keep it as screen accurate as possible for a
00:57golf cart.
00:58All new upholstery front and back.
01:00Jerry has been bringing movie and cartoon cars to life for over a decade.
01:04I own AKA Junk. It kind of started about 15 years ago out of necessity, meaning that I couldn't afford
01:12to pay someone else to paint my cars and do body work and weld and everything else.
01:16And so we kind of started our own show and been doing our own thing ever since.
01:21Matar
01:22Matar the golf cart. He's made up of 13 LED lights. He has a perforated front windshield. New upholstery front
01:29and back. An all steel back boom. Fiberglass front end obviously.
01:33We customise his wheels, we customise all the paint, there's about 16 colours that go
01:38into the paint job and we sell the Tow Mater golf carts for $7,900 apiece on up and that's
01:43based on the year and a few variables but it's basically around $7,900.
01:47Having already created a number of these cartoon replicas, it's taken time for owner
01:52Jerry to perfect his Mater method.
01:54The most challenging part of Mater was doing the first one.
01:57The process we have done a little bit better but the first one was a lot of trial and error
02:01to get it as cartoon accurate as we could, at least our version of it and I'd have to
02:06say this is the most challenging part which is doing the first one and getting all the
02:09kinks worked out of it.
02:09Every cart has been carefully mapped out to build the most cartoon accurate vehicle possible.
02:14Generally we bring in a stock golf cart, they're normally 2013's or newer and we strip it down,
02:20we strip it down to the frame, we have to add an overwhelming amount of steel to the back
02:24for the structural support for the whole back end for the seat area.
02:27The sides are made out of a marine grade lumber coated in fiberglass resin, the front end
02:31obviously on the factory carts removed and we put our fiberglass front end on it and about
02:36a day and a half of straight up wiring a gob of LED lights to make it as matery as
02:41we can.
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