Thank you for saying it - it's the story, the life of the car, what it's been through, that makes this so interesting. They were all brand new once, it's what happened after that, that makes them each unique. Thanks to everyone involved for sharing these ~ Chuck
That is actually the plan for most of these cars. They get displayed in the barn find section when found, then a few years later they make it onto the show floor, fully restored.
Absolutely not. There are plenty of perfectly restored (boring) cars out there. These cars tell a story, each bump and bruise should stay. Just make them mechanically sound and preserve them as is.
I can't help but think of Steve Magnante when it comes to car history
Especially mopars
Yessir Steve is walking knowledge on cars.
As you should!
The gold standard. An American treasure.
Thank you for saying it - it's the story, the life of the car, what it's been through, that makes this so interesting. They were all brand new once, it's what happened after that, that makes them each unique. Thanks to everyone involved for sharing these ~ Chuck
I just hope the "Dollar Gobbler" was the car itself and not Shari. LMAO!
I’d wager that it’s pronounced Sherry’s CUDA. Just a different way to spell it.
Barnfinds make me cry ! Restore them !!!!!
That is actually the plan for most of these cars. They get displayed in the barn find section when found, then a few years later they make it onto the show floor, fully restored.
Absolutely not. There are plenty of perfectly restored (boring) cars out there. These cars tell a story, each bump and bruise should stay. Just make them mechanically sound and preserve them as is.