65 A Code said:I already have the car and I just could not see buying one already built. Friends say I am a gluten for punishment but I see working on it as a stress reliever from work and I enjoy it and am in no hurry to finish. 7k is just a ruff guess I came up with while bored at work.
allcarfan said:shop smart....shop...S-mart.
That was the BEST movie ever. Not even close.65 A Code said:What a great line from a not so great movie
65 A Code said:...working on it as a stress reliever from work and I enjoy it.....
65 A Code said:I plan on rebuilding the engine fairly close to stock. I am assuming you are building your engine up quite a bit?
I build some pretty stout cars these days but one of my favorite cars to drive was my first 66 coupe. It had a stock longblock with an aluminum intake, 4 barrel Holley, dual point distributor (would use a petronix today), a set of Tri-Ys and 2 inch dual exhaust. It was close to stock but just fun to drive and it deosn't cost much to set one up this way and the drivetrain can stay stock also which means simple and cheap. That car got 24 mpg on the highway when I was trying with a 2.8o rear and a C-4....both stock again. You can have fun without spending a bunch.65 A Code said:I plan on rebuilding the engine fairly close to stock. I am assuming you are building your engine up quite a bit?
Ferf said:I know a lot of people think that I am nuts for putting that kind of money into a "common" car. Nick, I am sure you had a few wierd looks or comments when you drop the bottom line on them. However, where can you buy a new car for 30K that will put out over 450 HP, turn heads (hey we all like getting attention in our rides), not depreciate in value, and be the car that you always wanted? Plus, it is one more Pony saved!
Oh, how well I remember those days... I was 15 when I bought my decent running, decent bodied, decent riding Mach 1 for $1200. It was drivable, looked ok in the rain (the only way it would have any shine), and wasn't completely unsafe. I started doing things like rebuilding the brakes, tuning the motor, etc... Soon though, things started to seriously deteriorate, and as I was on a "hobo" budget, I nickel & dimed the car over the next 7 years, keeping it just barely drivable as it was my daily driver. In the end, all the "hobo'ing" caught up with me, and I just couldn't consider the car safe and drivable anymore. I let the car sit for nearly 7 years before getting to do the current restoration (in progress for nearly 3 years now).none67 said:i'm 16, poor as a hobo, and am doing a total restoration myself... either you take the young hot roder route or the probably smarter more expensive route it will come out great in the end. good luck.
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