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Everything posted by balthazar
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^That's my GP - such a gorgeous car. '63 with redline tires is awesome also.
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I see that now. I guess I don't find those attributes to be unique at all. Design has become distressingly homogenized...
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it's a '69-70. Someone built one of famous stylist Harry Bentley Bradley's designs. http://www.deansgarage.com/2014/harry-bradleys-mitchell-gp/
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Curious; what specifically do you find "take's the cake, visually unique" about it?
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'63 Pontiac Tempest, 'Indy 4' inline 4-cylinder, factory iron head, naturally-aspirated, 4-spd. 1/4-mile : 11.74.
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‘59 Ranchero, white over turquoise, exc stock shape, on side of gas station.
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Here you go, Robert Hall : 16 original miles, pre dealer-prep Cobra ~ https://www.ebay.com/itm/194496528432?mkcid=1&mkrid=711-53200-19255-0&siteid=0&campid=5337851298&customid=489489&toolid=10001&mkevt=1
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I was riffing off a FB Barn Finds piece on a clean Dodge Aspen coupe for $5500. To me, the cleanest/nicest one out there (of that) shouldn't be more than $1000, so I feel like someone is trying to say it's worth that much... because I don't know why- I assume because they think someone will want to pamper / maintain it. Like a collectible. - - - - - RE my car list (owned), I've had 23, only 2 were bought brand new. The average model year of all 23 is 1969, since it's so heavily laden with 60s cars (the '21 GMC bumped it up from -I think- 1966.) 1 from the 2020-on, 0 from 2010-19, 1 from 2000-09, 2 from 1990-99, 0 from 1980-89, [[that's only 4 from the last 40 years]], 3 from 1970-79. The other 16 were from the '40s-60s. Somewhere I have a running list of other vehicles I've driven, and it's similar, but there are more newer ones. LOTS of '60s stuff. Not sure where that list is at the moment... - - - - - My mind : "WTF?!?" -->
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Here's a ferrari, with it's infamous gated shifter. Yeah- it's a manual- irrelevant. Yeah, it still doesn't look great (ferrari's aren't known for even marginally nice interiors), but it's better than the floppy, crumb-catcher vinyl boot (automatic OR manual). So do a gated automatic- they're all 'by-wire' now so the pattern isn't mechanics-dependent, and come up with something better.
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^ I've noted ads about low-mileage 20-30 yr old cars popping up, unremarkable other than being in great condition, but kinda being pitched as a collector car. 'Would you put this 35K mile Chevy Celebrity in your driveway for $5000?', but I say - buy it as a commuter vehicle, not a collectible, and use it up. It sure beats spending $15K for something 7 yrs old.
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Top pic is a factory-issued promo photo ('64 GP). I added the yellow lines comparing rear axle centerline & the bottom of the rocker chrome. This is an accurate portrayal of factory ride height. Lower pic is how far too many 'restored' cars todays sit, on 'reproduction' springs ; a mile too high (here about 3 inches). I find it irksome (and aesthetically offensive) when folk defend this exaggerated ride height as 'correct' because the springs were 'factory spec'... when they obviously aren't. "You've got eyes; use 'em!' I say. Praise the lowered. Here is my GP from many years ago. It's a tad LOWER than factory height, due to spring settle; over time, coil spring deflection rate remains the same, but it's ability to hold its load at the same height diminishes somewhat. Me; I think it sits PERFECTLY (still has the same springs in it today).