• Mustang Forums
  • 1965 - 1973 Classic Mustangs -General/Talk-
  • Classic Mustang Specific Tech

Question in Getting Feet Wet

  • Thread starter Thread starter sg22
  • Start date Start date May 9, 2005
S

sg22

New Member
May 9, 2005
2
0
0
May 9, 2005
#1
  • May 9, 2005
  • #1
Hello All,

I am a Mustang enthusiast who is just getting around investing money and time in a project car. I feel nervous about doing major repairs such as overhauling an engine, transmission, or body work. I like coupe style and years 1964+1/2-1969. Do you have any suggestions what year and what price range I should invest in and where to look (e.g. Ebay, cars.com, or local Mustang club members)?

Thank you,

SG22
 

yeloxr7

Member
Apr 18, 2005
429
0
16
May 9, 2005
#2
  • May 9, 2005
  • #2
Buy the best, most complete one you can afford. Less expensive in the long run than buying a crap bucket and paying someone to do all the work.
 
G

Gud T.B. Blown

Member
Dec 9, 2004
583
1
18
May 9, 2005
#3
  • May 9, 2005
  • #3
i would stay away from ebay for the most part unless you can actually see the car or have someone inspect it for you. the best deals are usually a friend of a friend or a referral. try a local club for some intial contacts and go from there.
 

coolblue65

Founding Member
Jul 26, 1999
1,224
2
39
Algonquin, IL
May 9, 2005
#4
  • May 9, 2005
  • #4
the 65-66 coupes are going to be the least expensive in terms of initial cost and parts. Also, IMO opinion they are the easiest to maintain and restore/fix/modify due to there simplicity. They are great to learn on.
 

FasterThenU72

New Member
Nov 2, 2004
108
0
0
Orange County, CA
May 9, 2005
#5
  • May 9, 2005
  • #5
i completely agree with the above mentioned, the 66's are by far the easiest to "fix, maintain, restore, etc...." Its when you start getting into my years and such that the sh** starts to hit the fan, concerning certain parts....etc.. Just remember dont get a rust bucket.....
 
S

sg22

New Member
May 9, 2005
2
0
0
May 9, 2005
#6
  • May 9, 2005
  • #6
Thank You!

WOW! You guys are wonderful. I cannot thank you all for the valuable help. I understand experience comes in small doses--and within long years. I appreciate your generosity of sharing your combined experiences.

Thanks,

SG22
 

gbarber

Member
Jan 26, 2004
158
0
17
delaware, ohio
May 9, 2005
#7
  • May 9, 2005
  • #7
I bought my '66 off of Ebay. Be very careful. I won the auction and drove 3 hours with a trailer to pick it up. The car wasn't nearly as nice as advertised, and the pictures were several years old. I walked away from the deal. In the sellers defense, she knew nothing about the car, and she advertised what the previous owner had told her. The car was given to her by someone who owed her money. I did work out a deal with her a week later for less money. Like mentioned before, buy as nice of a car as you can afford. The mechanical stuff is much easier to fix than the body work. Look for the normal problem areas (floor boards, cowl vents, lower quarter panels, collision damage).
 

CochinoFilipino

Founding Member
Jan 14, 2002
171
2
19
CA
May 9, 2005
#8
  • May 9, 2005
  • #8
From the title, I thought this was a thread about the infamous leaking cowl vent.
 

69Rcode_Mach1

Active Member
Apr 20, 2004
1,473
1
37
Salt Lake City, Utah
May 10, 2005
#9
  • May 10, 2005
  • #9
Definantly get 66 for the simplicity and availibility of parts. 67-68 isn't too bad. Its when you hit 1969 when it becomes a bitch and parts are hard to find. Leads to a lot of fabrication and first time experiences. Personally Ithink the 69-70's look the best IMO, but then the 66's.
 

jeb134

New Member
Apr 19, 2005
22
0
0
Roseville, CA
May 10, 2005
#10
  • May 10, 2005
  • #10
Just go in knowing it'll cost more and take longer than you think it will. With old cars, you have to be patient. My suggestion, buy my car off me and save yourself a lot of time, money and hassle
 

danewers

Member
Dec 26, 2004
97
0
6
May 10, 2005
#11
  • May 10, 2005
  • #11
CochinoFilipino said:
From the title, I thought this was a thread about the infamous leaking cowl vent.
Click to expand...


haha same here
 

geostang351

Member
Mar 30, 2005
946
0
17
Danb., CT
May 10, 2005
#12
  • May 10, 2005
  • #12
If he's new to this whole thing and has a '66, we'll see the same title but with actual cowl questions soon!
 
F

Fireman255

New Member
Apr 2, 2005
119
0
0
May 10, 2005
#13
  • May 10, 2005
  • #13
I am new and I got a 66' I stumbled across here in town. It runs strong has some minor problems but all seem to be easy to deal with. My problem is now that I have replaced the front suspension, I don't know what I want to do next.

I would sugest getting a nice car with small problems unless you have a shop. I don't, so my projects are mostly limited to a day at a time as I do them at work on my days off and you can't stop and drink a beer or leave it overnight in a fire station

Oh ya how do you know if your cowl vent is the problem? it is raining like mad here and the driver side floor board it soaked, and I can't find where it is comming from!
 
S

Sicarius428

Active Member
Jan 6, 2004
2,085
5
49
May 10, 2005
#14
  • May 10, 2005
  • #14
Worry about what condition the body is more than the engine. Body work will always outcost any drive train part... The cost of a descent paint job at about 2-3k will buy you a whole engine for example... and thats just paint not including body work. Check out the trunk, cowl, floorboards, rear wheel wells for rust. This will all cost you an arm, leg and your marrage later on. The wheel wells are pretty common so there may not be much to get around it... You can typically find good deals on cars without engines too because it sounds like you are gonna end up putting your own engine in anyways. Shop around and actually look at the cars. It is really hard to tell what condition a car is in from a picture or description....
Kevin
 

degins

Member
Sep 18, 2004
361
0
17
Texas
May 10, 2005
#15
  • May 10, 2005
  • #15
yeloxr7 said:
Buy the best, most complete one you can afford. Less expensive in the long run than buying a crap bucket and paying someone to do all the work.
Click to expand...

Good advise. It will be much less expensive to buy a restored or good original than to do the work yourself, not to mention hire someoe else, to restore a car. You will still have plenty of things to do to it that will satisfy your urge to fix it.
 

krash kendall

Active Member
Nov 19, 2004
1,258
0
36
Aldergrove, B.C. Canada
May 10, 2005
#16
  • May 10, 2005
  • #16
Fireman255 said:
Oh ya how do you know if your cowl vent is the problem? it is raining like mad here and the driver side floor board it soaked, and I can't find where it is comming from!
Click to expand...

Get someone to pour water down the grill behind the hood and watch the inside under the dash for incoming water.

THE EASY FIX (what I did)

THE RIGHT FIX
 

DukeGnarley

Member
Apr 2, 2003
597
2
19
Auburn/Ellensburg, Wa
May 10, 2005
#17
  • May 10, 2005
  • #17
everyone keeps saying '66, but incase you are unaware, the '65 is essentially the same thing with a few different trim pieces.
 

geostang351

Member
Mar 30, 2005
946
0
17
Danb., CT
May 10, 2005
#18
  • May 10, 2005
  • #18
Fireman255 said:
Oh ya how do you know if your cowl vent is the problem? it is raining like mad here and the driver side floor board it soaked, and I can't find where it is comming from!
Click to expand...

Look up under the dash at the vent location. Where it meets the medal you should see water up there. If you carpet is wet, pull it up and see how much rust damage you have under there!!!
 
F

Fireman255

New Member
Apr 2, 2005
119
0
0
May 10, 2005
#19
  • May 10, 2005
  • #19
I pulled up the carpet, the I don't see major rust and it sounds solid..... I just baught it last month and it had been in a carport most of it's life
 
You must log in or register to reply here.

Similar threads

R
1965 mustang body work, Complete Floor Pan Assembly install questions
  • runawayabc123
  • Jun 1, 2022
  • Classic Mustang Specific Tech
Replies
12
Views
7K
Classic Mustang Specific Tech Sep 14, 2025
GOvert
G
C
For Sale FOR SALE ENTIRE CAR
  • cptcrunch93
  • Jun 13, 2023
  • SN95 Mustangs For Sale (1994-04)
Replies
2
Views
2K
SN95 Mustangs For Sale (1994-04) Jun 13, 2023
cptcrunch93
C
Exhaust Headers for '65-'70 Mustangs...
  • geoklass
  • Mar 16, 2020
  • Classic Mustang Specific Tech
Replies
6
Views
7K
Classic Mustang Specific Tech Mar 22, 2020
geoklass
Exhaust Headers - Myths and Secrets...
  • geoklass
  • Jun 20, 2020
  • Fox 5.0 Mustang Tech
Replies
3
Views
4K
Fox 5.0 Mustang Tech Nov 9, 2021
WhiteCobra95
A
New Guy, Old Car
  • AlmostCoffee
  • Feb 4, 2020
  • The Welcome Wagon
Replies
3
Views
1K
The Welcome Wagon Feb 15, 2020
kiddiccarus
Share:
Bluesky Email Share Link
  • Mustang Forums
  • 1965 - 1973 Classic Mustangs -General/Talk-
  • Classic Mustang Specific Tech
Menu
Log in

Register

  • Forums
  • What's new
  • Media
  • Resources
  • Contact
  • Sponsor
X

Privacy & Transparency

We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:

  • Personalized ads and content
  • Content measurement and audience insights

Do you accept cookies and these technologies?

X

Privacy & Transparency

We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:

  • Personalized ads and content
  • Content measurement and audience insights

Do you accept cookies and these technologies?