Junk (pronounced juhngk)
(1) In historic nautical use, old cable or cordage used
when untwisted for making gaskets, maps, swabs etc and (when picked apart), the
oakum used for filling the seams of wooden ships.
(2) A fragment of any solid substance; a thick piece; a
chunk (obsolete).
(3) Old, damaged or discarded material (metal, paper,
rags et al).
(4) Anything regarded as worthless, meaningless, or
contemptible; nonsense; gibberish.
(5) Anything judged cheap or trashy.
(6) In slang, the narcotic heroin (used casually of other
injected drugs, the users thus “junkies”).
(7) In historic sailor’s slang, as saltjunk, the salted
beef or pork used as rations on long voyages, the origin being the comparisons
in taste and texture made with junk (frayed old rope).
(8) In slang, the external genitalia (especially of a
male if used as a target in unarmed combat).
(9) In baseball slang, relatively slow, unorthodox
pitches, deceptive to the batter in movement or pace (knuckleballs, forkballs
et al).
(10) A sea-going sailing vessel with a traditional Chinese design and used primarily in
Chinese waters, having square sails spread by battens, a high stern (poop deck)
and (usually) a flat bottom.
(11) A sperm whale equivalent of the melon (cetacean)
(12) To cast aside as junk; discard as no longer of use; to
scrap.
1350-1400: From the Middle English joynk & junke (old
refuse from boats and ships), from the earlier nautical sense of “old rope or
cable”, and the use of junk to describe “old rope and such” may have been
influenced by the words “join, joint &, juncture”. The Middle English junk, jonk, jounke, jonke & junck
(a rush; basket made of rushes), from the Old French jonc or junc (rush, reed
(also used figuratively to describe “something of little value”), from the Latin
iuncus (rush, reed) was once often
cited as a source but etymologists have concluded there’s “no evidence of connection”. In nautical use, the extension from “old rope
& cables” to “old refuse from boats, ships & ports” had occurred by the
1660s, travelling inland to “old or discarded articles of any kind” by the late
nineteenth century, initially with the implication of reusability.(following
the naval tradition with rope) as opposed to “scrap” which (except for metals)
had an air of finality. Saltjunk (salt beef
or pork used on long voyages) was first recorded in 1762, the slang for heroin
(later used loosely of other injected narcotics) dates from 1925, junk food (the
term rather than the product” first appeared in the US in 1971, the culinary
equivalent of junk art (from a decade earlier and used by conservative critics
to decry some modern art). Junk mail
(unsolicited advertizing delivered to the letterbox was so described in 1954
and was later re-used for the electronic version (“junk email” thought just a
letter too much and never caught on) while the term junk bond (a financial
instrument (originally bonds) rated below “investment grade” due to a high risk
of default by the issuer and thus offered at a high interest rate) emerged in 1979. The verb, dating from 1803, also owed
something the old nautical practice of “cutting up ropes for other purposes” in
that it conveyed the idea of “to cut off in lumps”, the modern sense of “to
throw away as trash, to scrap” appearing a century-odd later. The synonyms can thus (depending on context)
be rubbish, trash, rubble, debris, detritus, refuse, litter or clutter while
(in the sense of (to throw away) they include bin, chuck, chuck away, chuck
out, discard, dispose of, ditch, dump, scrap, throw away, throw out, toss or trash. Junk is a noun & verb, junkie &
junker are nouns, junky is a noun & adjective, junklike, junkier &
junkiest are adjectives and junked & junking are verbs; the noun plural is
junk or (of the sailing vessels) junks.
The use to describe the Chinese sailing vessels dates from 1545–1555 and was from the Portuguese junco, either from or influenced by the Dutch jonk, from the Arabic جُنْك (junk), from the thirteenth century Malay (Austronesian) jong (large boat, ship) or Javanese djong (a variant of djung), from the Old Javanese jong (seagoing ship), ultimately from either the Hokkien 船 (chûn) or the Teochew 船 (zung), from the Proto-Min -džion (ship, boat). The use in Malay may have been influence by the dialectal Chinese (Xiamen) chûn (which may be compared with the Guangdong (Cantonese) dialect syùhn, and the (Mandarin) Chinese chuán). In sixteenth century English use it was recorded as giunche & iunco. Unrelated words include junket and the German Junker. Junket was from the Middle English jonket (basket made of rushes; food, probably made of sour milk or cream; banquet, feast), from the Medieval Latin iuncta, possibly from the Latin iuncus (rush, reed) and thus possible a doublet of jonquil (a species of daffodil and a shade of yellow). By the 1520s the meaning had shifted to “feast or banquet”, presumably because of the association with “picnic basket”, leading to the early nineteenth century notion of a “pleasure-trip” which later evolved by the 1880s to mean “a trip made ostensibly for business but which is really for leisure or entertainment”. Junkets remain common (often well-disguised for expense-claim purposes) and in the gambling business, a junket is a gaming room for which the capacity and limits change daily, often rented out to private vendors who run tour groups through them and give a portion of the proceeds to the main casino. The idea of a junket being “a delicacy” or “a basket” is long obsolete but remains a culinary niche, describing a dessert made of sweetened curds; it was originally a type of cream cheese, the name gained from it being originally prepared and served in a rush basket. The English Junker was from the German Junker, from the Middle High German juncherre (young lord; not yet knighted nobleman). As a term it became associated with Prussia militarism and was used to refer to the stereotypical “narrow-minded and anti-liberal, authoritarian attitudes associated with the “Junker class” (the sometimes impoverished) land-owners of “great Prussian estates”, the families which provided the so many of the officer class of the Prussian and later Imperial German Armies (thus “junkerdom”, “junkerish” & “junkerism” entering the language of political science).
Junk is widely used in derived terms and idiomatic forms
including “Jesus junk” (Christian-specific junk mail or other merchandize),
“hunk of junk” (a term which adds no meaning but is a compelling rhyme (compared
with “heap of junk”, “pile of junk” “load of junk”, all of which mean the same
thing) and often heard in IT departments when discussing components more than a
year old), “junkaholic” (either a hoarder of what others perceive as junk or an
individual who consumes much junk food), “junkhead” (either a drug user or
addict (ie a synonym of “junkie”) or in engineering, an always unusual (no
close to extinct) design of internal combustion engine (ICE) in which the
cylinder head is formed by a dummy piston mounted inside the top of the
cylinder, “junk news” (a early 1980s critique of “journalism” consisting of
sensationalized trivia (as opposed to the later “fake news” which was intended
to mislead rather than being merely entertaining)), “Junk DNA” (in earlier use
in genetics, “any portion of the DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid; the so-called
“building blocks” or “framework of life”) sequence of a chromosome or a genome
with no apparent function” (the term “non-functional DNA” now preferred because
there’s now a greater understanding of what was one dismissed as “junk DNA”),
“junk in the trunk” (having a big butt), “junk shop” (a shop selling
second-hand goods, originally cheap but there are now some “junk shops” with
some high-priced items), “ junk drawer” (the place designated for the storage
of various miscellaneous, small, but (at least potentially) useful items (and
apparently usually the third-drawer down in the kitchen); some residences even
have a “junk room”), “junk science” (assertions or methods expressed in the
language of science but either with no scientific legitimacy or with data
interpreted in a misleading manner), “junk conference” (a nominally “academic”
conference run for other purposes (holiday junkets, commercial promotion etc),
“junk job” (used variously of employment thought boring, pointless, disrespectable
or offering no obvious social benefit, “junkware” (in computing, (1) malicious
or unwanted software or (2) software which is buggy or doesn’t work),
“junkshot” (in oil drilling, a method to shut off a faulty blowout preventer
(BOP) by injecting the BOP with material which will “choke off” the hole),
“space junk” (the objects in orbit around the Earth that were created by human
activity but which now serve no useful purpose and can be a hazard to
satellites (known also as “space debris”), “junk hook” (in whaling, a hook
designed for handling or extracting the unwanted material (junk) from the head
of a whale) “junkman” (one who works in a “junk yard” (a place where scrapped
items (typically cars) are sold for parts or metal recycling).
A little corner in the late Rudi Klein's junkyard, Los Angeles, California.
In the junkyard business, in some jurisdictions, there are cars with “salvage titles” and “junk titles”, both designations related to the condition of a vehicle but serving different purposes and reflecting distinct stages in a vehicle’s lifecycle and potential future. A Salvage Title can be issued when a vehicle has been damaged or declared a total loss by an insurance company, typically because exceeds a certain percentage of the car's assessed value (75-90%, depending on local regulations). Despite that, a with a salvage title may be repairable and returned to the road after undergoing proper repairs and inspections although the title usually significantly reduces the resale value and can be a factor in insurance companies limiting or denying subsequent coverage. A Junk Title (also known as a “Certificate of Destruction”) can be issued for a vehicle that considered irreparable or not safe for use on public roads and thus suitable only for scrap or the salvaging of usable parts. Once a junk title is issued, the vehicle cannot be registered or driven on public roads again, unlike a salvage title vehicle which can be repaired or restored. Informally, the terms “junkyard” and “scrapyard” are used interchangeably and while there used to be many “car wreckers”, of late, environmentally respectable titles like “recycling centre” have come into vouge.
The Junkyard: The Rudi Klein Collection
Although well-known in the collector community for its large stocks of rusty and wrecked Porsches, Mercedes-Benz and other notable vehicles from the post-war years, the Californian “junkyard” belonging to Rudi Klein (1936-2001) attracted world-wide interest when details were published of the gems which had for decades been secreted in a large and secure shed on the site. Mr Klein was a German butcher who in the late 1950s emigrated to the US to work at his trade but quickly discovered a more enjoyable and lucrative living could be had dealing in damaged or wrecked European cars, sometimes selling the whole vehicles and sometimes the parts (“parting out” in junkyard parlance). His Porsche Foreign Auto business had operated for some time before he received a C&D (cease & desist) letter from the German manufacturer’s US attorneys, the result being the name change in 1967 to Porche (sic) Foreign Auto.
Three dusty Lamborghini P400 Miuras in a corner of Mr Klein's now famous shed.
Unlike many collectors, Mr Klein amassed his collection
unobtrusively and, astonishingly to many, apparently with little interest in
turning a profit on the rarest, despite some of them coming to be worth (at the
time of his death), over a million US dollars.
In the way of such things, just what sat unseen in the big shed was the
stuff of speculation and rumor, the mystery enhanced by tales of Mr Klein
turning the junkyard’s dogs (“junkyard dog” itself an idiomatic use suggesting
the particularly aggressive type of canine associated with such a role and
applied figuratively also to people of similar temperament) on those who
ventured too close to the locked doors although some trusted souls apparently
were give a tour on the basis of maintaining the secret and it seems all
respected the confidence. After Mr Klein
died in 2001, his two sons preserved the collection untouched but in October
2024, a series of rolling sales will be conducted by the auction house Sotheby’s.
Period photograph of the 1935 Mercedes-Benz 500 K Special Coupé (the “Caracciola Coupé” Roadster-Limousine).
Undoubtedly, the star of the show will be the 1935
Mercedes-Benz 500 K Special Coupé, built by Sindelfingen (the factory’s in-house
coach-building house) for the three-time European Grand Prix Championship
winner Rudolf Caracciola (1901-1959).
The leading driver of the Mercedes-Benz racing team, it was said of him
by Alfred Neubauer (1891–1980; racing manager of the Mercedes-Benz competition
department 1926-1955): “He never really
learned to drive, he just felt it, the talent came to him instinctively”. The one-off 500 K (W29, deconstructed as 5.0
litre (306 cubic inch) straight-eight with kompressor (supercharger)) was a
“gift” (ie part of his “package” as a factory driver) and confusingly tagged (the
build-sheet is included in the documentation) by Sindelfingen as a “Roadster-Limousine” which neither
etymologically nor by coach-building conventions makes sense but was explained
by the car being “built on the chassis of
a 500 K Special Roadster with limousine-like fittings & appointments.” As a basis, the sleek 500 K Special Roadster
was illustrious enough, described in the post-war years as “the brightest glint of a golden age” so the lines and unique
provenance of the “Caracciola Coupé” will attract much interest.
The “Caracciola Coupé” in Mr Klein's shed
It’s believed Caracciola used the car until the late 1930s when it is said to have passed into the hands of Count Galeazzo Ciano (1903–1944; Italian foreign minister 1936-1944), notable both for his entertaining (if not wholly reliable) diaries and having married the daughter of Benito Mussolini (1883-1945; Duce (leader) & prime-minister of Italy 1922-1943). The marriage was certainly a good career move (the Italians would joke of the one they called “ducellio”: “the son-in-law also rises”) although things didn’t end well, Il Duce having him shot (at the insistence of Adolf Hitler (1889-1945; Führer (leader) and German head of government 1933-1945 & head of state 1934-1945), something which over the years must have drawn the envy of many a father-in-law (and the sentiment was expressed by Winston Churchill (1875-1965; UK prime-minister 1940-1945 & 1951-1955) who didn't always approve of his daughters' choices). There seems to be no evidence of Count Ciano’s stewardship but even if not true, it’s certainly the sort of car he’d liked to have owned. Things become murky after the outbreak of World War II (1939-1945) but in 1962 it was discovered in Ethiopia, covered in tarpaulins and hidden in a manure pile. That may hint at a (probably unrelated) connection between count & car because in 1935, during the Second Italo-Ethiopian War (the last war of the era of European colonialism which even at the time seemed to many an embarrassing anachronism), Ciano had commanded the Regia Aeronautica's (Royal Air Force) 15th Bomber Flight (nicknamed La Disperata (the desperate ones)) in air-raids on primitive tribes during the Italian invasion, being awarded the Medaglia d'argento al valor militare (Silver Medal of Military Valor), prompting some to observe he deserved a gold medal for bravery in accepting a silver one, his time in the air having hardly exposed him to danger.
The “Caracciola Coupé”, "Best in Class" winner, Pebble Beach, Monterey County, California, 1978.
The coupé in 1963 then travelled to the US where it was subject to an 18 month restoration before being entered in the 1966 Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance, finishing second in class, behind a Bugatti Royale (type 41), beginning a 13 year career as a fixture on the North American concours & classic car circuit becoming, a little ironically given its later 44-year hiatus, one of best-known Mercedes-Benz of the “supercharger era”. Back on the manicured lawns of Pebble Beach in 1978, it went one better than a decade earlier, this time taking first in class and in 1979 it was purchased by Mr Klein who exhibited at a show at least once. After that, it was left to languish in the big shed but it remained solid, mechanically original (apparently, in the restoration only the paint, chrome, upholstery and perishable parts were replaced) so as re-commissioning projects go, while unlikely to be “cheap”, it won’t be intimidating. Sotheby’s haven’t published a price estimate but most are suggesting it should achieve between US$3-4 million.
Out in the California sun: The Mercedes-Benz 300 SL Roadster & aluminum Gullwing with the one-off Iso Griffo A3/L Spider prototype behind the roadster, sitting beneath a Facel Vega HK500.
At auction also among dozens will be a 1957 Mercedes-Benz 300 SL Roadster, a rare (one of 29) 1955,
aluminum-bodied Mercedes-Benz 300 SL Gullwing (long thought lost and likely to realize close to US$10 million), a trio of damaged
Lamborghini P400 Miuras, the one-off Iso Griffo A3/L Spider prototype (which
will need to have its unique front coachwork re-created but will still command over US$1 million) and a 1939 Horch
855 Special Roadster, always prized for its rakish lines and the only 855 known to have survived the war.