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I spotted an (insert obscure car name here) classic car today! (Archived)
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The 260Z was problematic from the get-go. That's a car you'll need to re-engineer to make it right.
I hear putting on the earlier 240Z carbs works well, but you'll slam into emissions problems in California if you do that.
It looked nicer than I remember those looking.
2001 BMW 330ci/E46, 2008 BMW 335i conv/E93
I'm sorry I missed the maintenance chat the other day.. How did that go?
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I saw a nice Audi S8, does that count as obscure?
This was the performance version of the often over-looked prior generation A8, quite a nice car.
2001 BMW 330ci/E46, 2008 BMW 335i conv/E93
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I saw a c.1969 Ford Cortina today, in a dark blue and it looked very mint. I wanted to get a pic, but I was going too fast. Maybe I'll see it around.
I knew it was bound to happen, but WHY?!
Chrysler design department is apparently going nuts over this and trying to stop it, but legally I rather doubt they have any grounds to do so. But then I haven't read a factory/dealer contract lately so maybe there is a way.
Ebay time:
German Corvair of sorts
Perhaps the best one left? "Best" is used loosely
It's pretty, but seems really expensive
I've always liked the style of these, but geez, it can't be that hard to get a proper rear bumper
A once proud marque that vanished off the face of the Earth at the snap of a finger
This is really nice, more suited for ENGLAND, but the price is hilarious.
Nice looking car, but an example of the wrong way to present pics
These are neat looking, this is nicer than most
You'll be the only one
I somehow get a feeling there is tons wrong with this car
Never seen a Citroen this modern in NA
Affordable Andre-mobile
This is neat, but is it that hard to wheel the car outside and get some semi-decent pics?
Not really obscure, but it's identical in model and color combination to my 126. This one has some really healthy bidding, as it looks exceptional. Mine is almost as nice, and it has more than 3x the mileage.
Late '70s Regal.. with a new lemon-lime metallic paint job and a white vinyl landau roof.. riding on 24" wheels and low profile tires.. or maybe riding above it.. Looks like it had a lift kit, just to get it to clear the wheels.. Rode about as high as a stock full-size pickup truck. Very strange, but someone put a lot of work into it.. Looked very unstable when it passed me at 80 MPH. Like it still needed the suspension sorted out.
And a ratty looking Peugeot 505.
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59 DESOTO: Well, here's your tip-off, this statement:
"This is a FRAME OFF REFURB. Car is 98% original."
That makes no sense whatsoever. My motto is "loose with words, loose with the truth".
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'52 RILEY -- I wonder how long it will take Riley owners to realize that nobody in America much cares how "rare" Rileys are, because the rarity has to do with the fact than nobody in America every wanted one. This car, with its needs (owner says, optimistically--->"Body: looks good, but this is a project car on the body because it needs some work only, only, only, with the body,")
....is bid to $5K which is just about all it's really worth. That is market correct at the moment, perhaps even generous-- any further bid is money lost forever I fear.
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1938 Wolseley -- well, neat old car and possibly worth the opening bid---NAH, I take that back---but regardless, the seller blew it. Another "it's rare but we don't care" type of car, a rather stodgey middle class British car built for utilitarian purposes. A British Buick at best. They love to crack their blocks, too, and I'd be amazed if this one isn't suffering that. I think what I'd do with this car is buy it cheap, take the engine out and put it in an MG SA, WA or VA Tickford bodied roadster (they used the identical engine) that needed a powerplant (most do), and then ROD the Wollseley and make a real car out of it....tastefully of course. Otherwise it's rather doomed, as soon as it deteriorates further, since restoraton costs will easily exceed value. But that's just me! I don't see how one could commit sacrilege on something that nobody wants anyway.
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1965 Peugeot 404 Cabriolet --Egad, yet another Puegeot nut who thinks he's sitting on a gold mine. An opening bid of $9K and it isn't ENUF for reserve??!!! ARE YOU NUTS MAN??? Given the mods, this opening bid is more than fair retail. I thought the comparisons to Ferrari and Lancia were pretty funny, too. God help us.
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This coming Sunday, September 26th, is the Valley Forge Region Cadillac-LaSalle Club Fall Meet in Lahaska, PA. It's a rather small show, (nowhere remotely near the size of Macungie or Carlisle) but some very interesting Cadillac and LaSalle automobiles are always there. One year we met with the Professional Car Society with their limos, hearses, and ambulances. The best times to get there are between 10 AM and 2 PM. It breaks-up around three. I should be there with my 1989 Cadillac Brougham, (weather permitting of course).
Can't be many left this nice...esp. with a vinyl roof
Buy 3 neat Lancias at once
Porsche 914-4, the original VoPo in orangish red (or was it reddish-orange), an early model with stamped steel wheels ('70-'71?).
This one had good gloss to the paint and looked good-to-go.
2001 BMW 330ci/E46, 2008 BMW 335i conv/E93
Anyone read the new Hemmings publication on Classic Cars (replaces Special Interest Auto)?
Pretty well done (a companion to Hemmings Muscle Machines, also well done). I did spot a bunch of historical errors though and some confusing language--they need to tighten up the editing, definitely.
Best part is that they do road tests and give you an idea of what it's like to drive some of these older cars---mostly American stuff. Also a good article on how to evaluate a car for possible restoration, with lots of photos. Some of the cars they featured though for possible restoration I thought were a bit reckless to take on. But I guess if you have time and need a hobby and can devote 5 years of your life to a project, it's probably cheaper than going to a shrink.
My favorite line was from a guy who runs the AMC Pacers Owners' Club. Obviously a real good sport when he said: "It's better to be ridiculed than not talked about at all".
AMC Alliance-4 sale $800, about $900 over market?
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When radials came out in about '72 I put a set of BFG's on my '65 Buick Special wagon, and it was all over the road. Seems that the tires could transmit driver instructions much more accutely than the old bias jobs, and the car would try to do whatever you told it, but was unable. I was working at BFG and we got lots of "comments" about how much steering input was required with radials.
It took several years for the auto manufacturers to start tuning the suspension and steering gear for radials. My '91 was fine with radials; GM had tuned it back to the old track-straight-ahead handling.
I'm sure my '67 Catalina had bias-ply on it when it was new, but when I bought it it had 215/75/R-14's. I don't know how it handled with bias ply, but it seems fine with radials...probably because I got used to it. Sometimes I hear a ticking noise from the rear tire, and my mechanic, years ago, told me that was because I had radials on it. Dunno if there's any truth to that or not, but he said it was making some kind of vibration that made the hubcap flex! And going along with that theory, my front right wheel has a tendency of losing hubcaps! It got to the point that I drive around with it off, and just put it on when I take it to car shows!
I did notice a difference when I transitioned my TR-4A to Dunlop SPs (red stripes!). The steering was even sharper and the tires lasted 30000 miles.
2001 BMW 330ci/E46, 2008 BMW 335i conv/E93
http://www.fast-zi-nation.de/
(click on link below small pic of Alfa @ top of page)
That one spins my flywheel, how about yours?
2001 BMW 330ci/E46, 2008 BMW 335i conv/E93
Saw a nice shiny red Ferrari 328 GTS, yesterday afternoon, sounded like mechanical heaven.
Don't get me wrong - I think a convertible Brera would be very nice. But Alfa has always had different styling on their coupes and convertibles, so who knows if it will happen or not. Even if it does happen I've become pretty much resigned to the probability that Alfa won't be coming back here.
-Jason
Secondly, it's a "hometown" car and they enjoy all the privileges of "old timer" status that we really can't relate to over here with a car like that.
Thirdly, most old cars in Germany have rusted away by now, so anything even remotely intact and original and street legal at this age is pretty rare.
is unlikely but perhaps it will have a very thin piece at the top like the E-Type or 356 Speedster.
There already is current precedent for Coupe and Spider sharing the same styling, the current Europe-only versions of the Alfa GTV...
http://www.fortunecity.com/silverstone/lancia/58/gallery/alfa/gtv- .htm
The old Italian tradition of separate bodywork on Berlinettas and Spiders has gone by the boards as evidenced by current Maserati, Ferrari and Alfa models, probably because of crash worthiness rules.
2001 BMW 330ci/E46, 2008 BMW 335i conv/E93
-Jason
2001 BMW 330ci/E46, 2008 BMW 335i conv/E93
I can't think of many vehicles I'd want to crash less than a Renault 4
I suppose you could ship fintails to Germany, but with shipping costs, insurance and the taxes they have to pay, it can't be all that lucrative.
Maybe if you sent 25 at a time or something.
-juice
What I'd do is bring them in slowly, field test them, make them "hard to get", and develop a hunger for them and a good reputation.
-juice
Alfas at a Pontiac dealer just gives me the willies.
2020 Acura RDX tech SH-AWD, 2023 Maverick hybrid Lariat luxury package.
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