03-30-2014, 04:11 AM | #101 |
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Re: Keeping them stock
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03-30-2014, 06:12 AM | #102 |
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Re: Keeping them stock
I appreciate everyone's ride here. Mine is going back "stock" with the addition of fenton's and dual exhaust. I am quite happy with a straight six and four speed sm420.
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03-30-2014, 09:25 AM | #103 |
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Re: Keeping them stock
To reiterate dicer's comment,
This just popped up on Hot Rod http://www.hotrod.com/pitstop/one_of...ad_of_restore/ |
03-30-2014, 10:23 AM | #104 |
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Re: Keeping them stock
It's a very rare part and people pay stupid money for rare parts and not use common sense. Also considering the source Hot Rod, they will pander to their audience. I think everyone should do what they want. I won't criticize anyone for what they do to their car......unless it is putting a chevy motor in an Olds.
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03-30-2014, 11:10 AM | #105 |
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Re: Keeping them stock
My dad went to war in 1943 so that we could make decisions on how we wanted to live and what we wanted to do as long as our rights didn't infringe on another persons rights. I don't really give two hoots if you hot rod a classic truck or you restore it too all original. As long as YOU save it from being turned into some scrap steel!!!!! I think the horse has died and beating on it will make it start to stink. Get out and enjoy what ever you have for a truck or car - That is the most important thing to do!
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03-30-2014, 11:44 AM | #106 | |
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Re: Keeping them stock
Quote:
You know what I mean? Especially if it COMPLETES a car, that exhaust manifold is for a very rare and valuable car. It's all relative I guess. I just think that is an ignorant argument for HotRod to make other than it really is just for entertainment reasons. I just have to think of a 69 Shelby GT500 fastback that was in my town back in the seventies when I was in highschool. He flared the fenders and quarters by cutting slots in them, MANY slots and then bending the metal out away from the body to clear the wider tires. He never welded it back together and the metal would flap as he drove down the street, no kidding! Brian
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1948 Chevy pickup Chopped, Sectioned, 1953 Corvette 235 powered. Once was even 401 Buick mid engined with the carburetor right between the seats! Bought with paper route money in 1973 when I was 15. "Fan of most anything that moves human beings" |
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03-30-2014, 11:49 AM | #107 | |
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Re: Keeping them stock
Quote:
Brian
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1948 Chevy pickup Chopped, Sectioned, 1953 Corvette 235 powered. Once was even 401 Buick mid engined with the carburetor right between the seats! Bought with paper route money in 1973 when I was 15. "Fan of most anything that moves human beings" |
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03-30-2014, 12:56 PM | #108 |
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Re: Keeping them stock
Another thing driving the price of collectible stuff out of sight is that so many more people have more money than ever before.
For many years there were definite ratios in place regarding wealth. A CEO of a major corporation earned about 35X what the janitor of the same company made. Today that 35X is probably 1,000X. But the amounts they pay for stuff doesn't establish the going rate. One outrageous sale may help drive the price up but there also may be only ONE buyer for the item.
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03-30-2014, 01:18 PM | #109 | |
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Re: Keeping them stock
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Boy if that isn't the truth! The oddest thing, I sell stuff on ebay regularly, collector car stuff. I sold some back up lamp lenses a while ago, a pair of them for $65. Started them low as I always do, like ten or fifteen bucks. Then let the buyers create the price I end up getting. I happen to have six of these lenses so I thought cool, I have like $175-200 for these lenses, awesome, more parts I can buy for my truck! So a week or two later I put another pair on, nothing, not even one bid starting at $15! I waited a month or so later put them on again, nothing! I put them on again a few weeks later at $15 with free shipping and I sold them. LOL Funny stuff Brian
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1948 Chevy pickup Chopped, Sectioned, 1953 Corvette 235 powered. Once was even 401 Buick mid engined with the carburetor right between the seats! Bought with paper route money in 1973 when I was 15. "Fan of most anything that moves human beings" |
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03-30-2014, 01:46 PM | #110 |
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Re: Keeping them stock
People often say "look at eBay to see what they're selling for" and that is usually just one more anecdote.
I never have a reserve or a 'Buy it Now' on stuff I offer on eBay. It's the least expensive way to sell and usually works out well for me. The key is good quality pictures and an accurate description. Those details will grab the right buyer.
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03-30-2014, 02:09 PM | #111 |
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Re: Keeping them stock
Exactly, I sell things on ebay to get rid of them, not make a living. So I put them on LOW an just let it go where the buyers want to take it. I have been surprised more than a few times at things going WAY, WAY higher than I thought they would. And it's going the other way around too!
Brian
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1948 Chevy pickup Chopped, Sectioned, 1953 Corvette 235 powered. Once was even 401 Buick mid engined with the carburetor right between the seats! Bought with paper route money in 1973 when I was 15. "Fan of most anything that moves human beings" |
03-30-2014, 04:23 PM | #112 |
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Re: Keeping them stock
The main problem with "do it like you want" is no one ever keeps the truck or project till they're 90 years old. Just look at all the messed up modified things on craigslist. If you want to fix something up and sell it the best thing to do is instead of spending the $$$ on all the cutting it here and there and suspension parts etc. Spend that $$ on a nice paint job, inside and out. That will sell it faster than all the other stuff.
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03-30-2014, 05:07 PM | #113 | |
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Re: Keeping them stock
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03-30-2014, 06:49 PM | #114 | |
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Re: Keeping them stock
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Jeff
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03-30-2014, 08:40 PM | #115 | |
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Re: Keeping them stock
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I'm with you on the idea that you will be selling it some day, but we don't want to build only what other people like so even if we only kept it a while WE had fun with it, you know what I mean? Besides, often on these old cars it is common for them to be worth more with it properly updated than stock. But that is a whole-nother part of the decision we each have to make before we do what we are going to do to our truck. Thanks for bringing that up. Brian
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1948 Chevy pickup Chopped, Sectioned, 1953 Corvette 235 powered. Once was even 401 Buick mid engined with the carburetor right between the seats! Bought with paper route money in 1973 when I was 15. "Fan of most anything that moves human beings" |
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03-30-2014, 08:47 PM | #116 | |
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Re: Keeping them stock
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And on my study of traffic, you know the funny part, EVERYONE questions my findings, even right here in town, "It can't be like that" is often heard. Why, because we see what we want to see. Just as I use to see something completely different than what I did after the studying. I have asked how long are you stopped at the average light and I get 3-5 minutes, when it is 30 seconds. When I ask how many stop lights you stop at in my town in the average week I get 25-35, when it was 85 in my study. Our image of time is sooooo twisted. I only hope with my preaching someone else takes a look at it to prove me wrong and finds out that I gave them something to think about. Brian
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1948 Chevy pickup Chopped, Sectioned, 1953 Corvette 235 powered. Once was even 401 Buick mid engined with the carburetor right between the seats! Bought with paper route money in 1973 when I was 15. "Fan of most anything that moves human beings" |
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03-30-2014, 09:08 PM | #117 | |
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Re: Keeping them stock
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I wrote a lengthy essay on 'timing is everything' years ago. Most of us as a society seem to be in a constant race against time. We want what we want and we want it right now. This starts at birth with the newborn wanting mama's breast and if it doesn't happen in the next instant, the baby is apparently hard-wired to scream, hold its breath, etc. until it gets what it wants. Fast forward and we have over crowded prisons because the inmates didn't get what they wanted when they wanted it. Both the baby and the convict simply have a distorted concept of time. Now, let's get back to trucks.
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03-31-2014, 01:05 AM | #118 | |
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Re: Keeping them stock
Quote:
Brian
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1948 Chevy pickup Chopped, Sectioned, 1953 Corvette 235 powered. Once was even 401 Buick mid engined with the carburetor right between the seats! Bought with paper route money in 1973 when I was 15. "Fan of most anything that moves human beings" |
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04-01-2014, 05:35 AM | #119 | |
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Re: Keeping them stock
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Another reason that manifold is so expensive is that it's for a Mopar. We're doing a '70 Road Runner at our shop and everything...down to the stupid little molding clips is crazy expensive. I could restore my '54 panel truck *and* my '61 F-100 for what he's got in that Road Runner.
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04-01-2014, 09:59 AM | #120 |
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Re: Keeping them stock
Don't tell the Camaro or Corvette guy Mopar parts are more expensive! LOL I saw on ebay once a pair of hood bumpers NOS hood rubber bumpers, the little quarter sized rubber hood bumpers..............they sold for as I remember $120!
Brian
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1948 Chevy pickup Chopped, Sectioned, 1953 Corvette 235 powered. Once was even 401 Buick mid engined with the carburetor right between the seats! Bought with paper route money in 1973 when I was 15. "Fan of most anything that moves human beings" |
04-02-2014, 04:45 AM | #121 | |
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Re: Keeping them stock
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04-03-2014, 05:56 AM | #122 |
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Re: Keeping them stock
In the end pretty much all the modified junkers will end up in a scrap bin, well the ruined parts anyway. If there are any rare salvageable parts they will be removed. Some day it will be like old corvettes, no true collector wants some messed up vehicle. They collect all the original literature, sales info etc. etc. the real car people with $ go to places like Mark Worman's to have there vehicles done the factory correct way and that is where the real value is. I see no sense in taking a good stock truck and modifying it in anyway. If modified is what a person wants buy one that has had that done already. If the mods weren't up to your desires then redo it.
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04-03-2014, 08:54 AM | #123 |
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Re: Keeping them stock
"I see no sense in taking a good stock truck and modifying it in anyway."
If you read most of the threads like I do you will know that most of us don't start with a "good stock" truck. These trucks are over 50 years old now and most have been worked to death and left to die in a field, or have been patched up with non original parts just to minimally keep them running. I appreciate the fact that folks here on this forum will go to the trouble and expense to bring back to life a truck that most people would just send to the crusher. We are preserving them. |
04-03-2014, 09:11 AM | #124 | |
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Re: Keeping them stock
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My current '54 truck was somewhat 'restored' when I bought it and I didn't even consider that it might have been done correctly. Liberal amounts of Bondo under a fresh coat of single stage crap had it looking good at 40 paces. A new crate motor appeared to have been installed by chimpanzees. But it was mostly 'all there' so I started in on it. I ENJOY the work and I've been modifying cars since the '50s when I stuffed an Oldsmobile motor in a '38 Chevy coupe and painted it lavender. Now at 73 I still enjoy the work so I'll keep doing what I do and you can keep preaching. BTW this is the first I've heard of Mark Worman.
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04-03-2014, 10:02 AM | #125 |
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Re: Keeping them stock
Oh man let's go back 50 years! Ain't going to happen, what a boring world it would be if kept everything just as it was 50 years ago. Using some of the logic displayed on this thread it sounds like a highly modified street rod wouldn't be worth the same as bone stock Model A. Wow I love that logic. Maybe when we buy a house we shouldn't do any remodeling because it would lower the Value! Stockers are fine for some people, I'm not going to bad mouth any body that prefers to keep them stock but I don't really care if they don't like my modified cars or trucks. When and IF they give me money to build them maybe I would care what they think.
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