Damn that GTO fell a long way if it was at a Super Chevy show in 2008 and it looks like what it does today with no dash and the seats just laying in the car
Thank GOD we still live in a country where you can in some states and counties park a car in the yard with no tags,to us GEAR HEADS this is Supreme Yard Art!!! I would like to see some of these sold before the people who want to own one ALL Die Off!!! Most of us with Any Common Sense Know Death is on the Way for us,time is running Out,Restore what you REALLY Can and Sell the Rest, Let's Share before it is Toooo Late!!! GOD Bless!❤😊
Wow ! What an amazing collection. Thank you for sharing. I do have to say that the money and time to restore these are going to be *_astronomical !!!_* Can't wait to see them finished.
Thank you for a great video of those fantastic cars. I'm a bit shocked over all the negativ comments... everyone is getting the same answers... most of them are for sale and the owners has a professional set up for restoration and more videos will come. Still nearly everyone are coming with negativ comments Well - thanks here from Norway and looking forward to more videos. Tor The Viking ;-)
Unless the owner is a 12 year old Jeff Bezos, he won't live long enough, and doesn't have enough money to restore all of them. My advice would be pick the one you love, and sell the others to finance its restoration. I restored a numbers matching 70 Road Runner. 383, pistol grip 4spd, Air Grabber car. The worst thing was a rotted trunk floor. What you'd see advertised as an "easy resto". It took 3 years and a lot more money than I thought possible. About halfway through, I found a 70 340 Dart that I bought from the original owner. If I'd had the Road Runner and the Dart at the beginning, I may have done the Dart instead because it was in marginally better shape. With a year and a half under my belt on the Road Runner, I knew there was no way in hell I'd ever do the Dart, so I sold it. The amount of money, time, and brain damage involved in restoring all of those cars (which is what they deserve, not being left to rot into the ground) makes my head spin. Like I said, pick one, and sell the others to make it perfect.
Man, you nailed it! I was watching and listening to everything that was going to be restored... Yet not a restored, or even partially restored in-process anywhere. 10 years from now they will all still be sitting in exactly the same spots, just with a lot more rust! I have completed projects, and you really have to stay after it and invest the cash and time. Just not seeing that here.
Can already hear the 75 year old owner going "Ohhhh, I plan on restoring it SOMEDAY," Typical, hoarder response. I mean, it's his property/life he can do what he wants, but it just makes you shake your head.
Those poor cars. Rotting away. It's fucking sad. Thanks for filming them before they aren't recognizable anymore. Shame on the owners. Wouldn't it be better to GIVE some away rather than let them rust?
I agree. At least sell them at a reasonable price to give them a chance to come back to life. Geez... what a shame! Every person that says ( I'm going to restore it) never does and they end up rotting into the ground beyond repair... sad
What a great hoard collection now this gentleman needs to do the right thing and let other people have the opportunity to really restore these vehicles. He's not gonna do nothing but be a hoarder.
Those 71s speak to me. Grew up around a 3rd gen as my uncle owned a 72. We were lifelong Petty fans and remember his 74 Charger cleaning up in NASCAR until it was too old a body style to run. Decades later I bought me a plain jane 74 Charger 318 as my uncle sold the 72 to a cousin who crashed it.
@@AutoArchaeology Yep. The 72 was like my 74; plain jane 318 2bbl with a bench seat and canopy top. He owned it from new and it was supposed to become mine when I got my license but he took it to Florida and my mom wouldn't let me go get it. When I heard that a palm tree "crashed into it" I was so mad (figured maybe one I could have bought it from her). Nope, she totaled it....
Your friend has a problem. Do you realize the cost of restoring just one of these cars would exceed the entire collection. He should sell that stuff off and just get one car done. Sell the rest to fund a professional collector like Dennis Collins or god forbid Graveyard cars. That way he could enjoy one while he's still young enough to enjoy it.
But the prices people come up with for rusted down donor cars are absurd. Its like they want them to rot into the ground. And then you get one that's complete with no work done and they want mecum prices because they know what they got.
Your friend should actively advertise these for sale. Otherwise they *will* just sit there and die. He's doing the cars no favors by holding onto them with the "one day" intentions; that's a story old as time. Seen many many cars sit there and die a slow ignoble death while their owners refused to let go. Get those vehicles out there and let someone bring them back to life.
Theyre just assets they can sell when they need the money. THeyre still going up in value thanks to inflation but if your into these cars having an abundance of parts in your own junkyard is the only way its worth doing IMO.
Oh my god I’m drooling the whole video… I’ve always been a B body guy (current 71-RR 4sp) and 69 R/T Coronet being my all time favorite… great collection 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
That blue Polora conv....I had it's cousin, a blue '64 Plymouth Sport Fury conv as my very first car when I was 16. Paid $500 for it with help from my dad. It had a 273 cid push button auto, very drafty but it was fun as my 1st ever car. The engine blew up and a local dealer mechanic bought it and made a drag car out of it. First car memories.
Its really nice to see all these rare and expensive cars. Unless the owners have great intentions of saving all that detriot iron, its just gonna rot where they sit. sell them to people who want to save american history. Thats right its american history just sitting there collecting rust barnicals. SELL SELL SELL SELL.
Wild to see those 72 Charger N96 hoods both had what many would consider '72 style vents. And my 72 N96 has the 71 style (no gap). Any idea if they are original to the cars?
Many of these hoarders that you call friends that are not willing to sell to someone is a real determent to the Mopar hobby. They don't want to sell to anybody but Bezos or Musk if they sell at all. Leaving them to rot away because they'll never get to them.
@@bengone3349 I live in Georgia and have over 40 cars ... some are very rare. only 3 old mopars ( 70 rt see challenger) 2 glhs shelby chargers ... I know I will never get to them all. I am 63 years old and need to start moving them. The challenger is my high school car so it is not going anywhere but my daughter. BUT I have a bunch of other cars ... mostly Mustangs
@@AutoArchaeology yes and so was Shelby Amos ( Aflac family) He had a building full of cars and died with big dreams that never happened. As a builder, I know the real world. Money does not make your projects complete. I have over 50 vehicles and only 21 of them have been completed. I am 63 years old and know I do not have time to do them all. So the dilemma is what now...
“ why isn’t he restoring these ?? “ he runs a restoration shop so I’m sure he has many on going projects keeping him busy , these are future projects for the shop or someone who steps up to purchase them .
Happy New Year! I've got to ask. Are these guys in the restoration business or do they buy, sell, or trade vehicles or sell parts or what? Seems like they've cornered the market for desirable Mopars that some folks would love to get their hands on!! Love your videos!👍
Iam glad they saved them and they're still around. If they don't get them. All restored they will be sold eventually so someone else can life dictates that but there still here haven't been crushed its a win win as i see it but do try to get them out of the weather
Dude, if you are going to hoard these cars, atleast store the more rarer ones out of the weather. you are just letting them rust and rot. It's like having 100k in paper cash, and letting it wither away to the elements outside until it becomes dust.
"I`m gonna restore `em someday" LOL. I did not even see a proper garage/workshop. No tools or equipment. This stuff is going to sit & rot. Convertibles sitting outside with the tops down collecting rain. Sad.
@@AutoArchaeologyHey Ryan do you ever see many F-bodies? If so, do they also do poorly? I can’t remember seeing too many outside of an Aspen R/T or two in a more recent mopar video (it had a ton of A-bodies in it).
I have shown them on occasion, like in the Mopar City video. But never did a stand alone on one. Never found a Aspen R/T or Super Coupe, etc... to shoot.
WOW! What a waste!!! He needs to sell them, before they go to waste..... I won't be watching the "series" of these guys HOARD! I guess I'm crazy, I would never do this to cars I love. If I don't have room under cover and on concrete, it should be sold to someone who can restore it. These guys don't love or care about these cars, it's just $$$$$$. SAD :( :(
Did anybody recognize the crew cab ford truck sitting off to the side in the beginning of the video those trucks are hot here in Texas and anywhere else, this guy needs to reach out to Dennis Collins, Dennis would give him a fair amount for everything, and the stuff that maybe a little rough he would pass it over to Gas Monkey Garage and they could make a cool resto mod with a hellcat drive train, or a 392 drive train and suspension, and I’m saying that because they have the resources and the equipment and the connections to get these cars up and on the road, people will by these cars but they need to be restored and road worthy, nobody wants to see these cars rust and rott back into the ground, it takes a lot of money to restore and build cars of this magnitude, and yes there are other builders out there, but I’m from Texas so I got to give credit to the people I admire the most and that is Dennis Collins and his crew
That's what I'm saying! That is my dream truck but they are crazy rare and expensive now. I wish he would have given it some attention especially since it looked like a 4x4. I also love Dennis Collins and he would definitely find interest in these cars.
why isn't he busy restoring those? he is aware that a bank will give him a loan if he has a sound structured/scheduled/itemized restoration program meaning he has the shop, all tools, all parts (price and availability) all labor and skill to get them finished, he would need a forecasted timeline appraisal of all work and sale... once he has the first pone completed and sold and the bank paid off he would be golden to do more restorations, then he would be at apoint he would have his own money to do them himself, I'd start off with the cars I really dont wanna keep but will sale, then sell it for a good price just to move it quickly as this loan would be like an automobile loan, if it doesnt sale you still have to make payments on the loan.. its a good way to get these vehicles finished up to stop the rott, OR sell a few to find the building of a shop, buy parts and tools and get them restored.. these cars won't be valuable forever, once electric is all there is on the road they will not be desirable in any way, all museums will have plenty, you'd have to do electric conversions or whatever form of energy they are using... at that point not really a muscle car is it...
He can do whatever he wants with them, but it would be nice to maybe sell a couple to let other people enjoy them since there are so many people trying to get into the hobby, instead of letting them rot outside. I also think that electric vehicles will change the hobby, not in a good way.
I hear the prices of the classics are falling due to the government wanting to go to EV's and make gas powered cars obsolete it is reallu going to suck if that happens but there is no way I will be driving a EV at all.
Naw...that's not the reason it'll happen; it'll happen because the number of people with the memory and nostalgia of when these cars were new, and the disposable income to buy them and restore them, gets smaller every year...just like the passing of WW II vets. Not many of them left, unfortunately...
This guy lives near me. I’ve been here and my dad has bought some parts for his 64 Sport Fury project. Took a big tour of the place, it’s amazing.
Когда приходит время, всё и все оказываются на свалке Истории. Даже очень сильные и дорогие. Отличное видео. Автору респект!
Damn that GTO fell a long way if it was at a Super Chevy show in 2008 and it looks like what it does today with no dash and the seats just laying in the car
Just insane collection..... mopar heaven for sure. I hope that they will be restored and saved.
Doubtful at best
Thank GOD we still live in a country where you can in some states and counties park a car in the yard with no tags,to us GEAR HEADS this is Supreme Yard Art!!! I would like to see some of these sold before the people who want to own one ALL Die Off!!!
Most of us with Any Common Sense
Know Death is on the Way for us,time is running Out,Restore what you REALLY
Can and Sell the Rest, Let's Share before it is Toooo Late!!! GOD Bless!❤😊
What is available to purchase as of today Nov 1 2024? PLB
Just a crying shame ! Everyone knows none of those cars will ever get touched, let alone restored. Time for an onsite auction !
Oh they will, if they don't get sold. Just wait.
These cars came from an America that does not exist anymore, That's why they should be restored.
Wow ! What an amazing collection. Thank you for sharing. I do have to say that the money and time to restore these are going to be *_astronomical !!!_* Can't wait to see them finished.
Oh just wait.
We can all tell that he truly has deep concern and love for his automobile collection
Thank you for a great video of those fantastic cars. I'm a bit shocked over all the negativ comments... everyone is getting the same answers... most of them are for sale and the owners has a professional set up for restoration and more videos will come. Still nearly everyone are coming with negativ comments
Well - thanks here from Norway and looking forward to more videos. Tor The Viking ;-)
Thanks for watching!
There's a lot of potential on that property. Looking forward to part 2. Thanks for sharing. Have a great week.
So true William
Unless the owner is a 12 year old Jeff Bezos, he won't live long enough, and doesn't have enough money to restore all of them. My advice would be pick the one you love, and sell the others to finance its restoration.
I restored a numbers matching 70 Road Runner. 383, pistol grip 4spd, Air Grabber car. The worst thing was a rotted trunk floor. What you'd see advertised as an "easy resto". It took 3 years and a lot more money than I thought possible.
About halfway through, I found a 70 340 Dart that I bought from the original owner. If I'd had the Road Runner and the Dart at the beginning, I may have done the Dart instead because it was in marginally better shape. With a year and a half under my belt on the Road Runner, I knew there was no way in hell I'd ever do the Dart, so I sold it.
The amount of money, time, and brain damage involved in restoring all of those cars (which is what they deserve, not being left to rot into the ground) makes my head spin.
Like I said, pick one, and sell the others to make it perfect.
Been there! We do it for the love... I think.
Man, you nailed it! I was watching and listening to everything that was going to be restored... Yet not a restored, or even partially restored in-process anywhere. 10 years from now they will all still be sitting in exactly the same spots, just with a lot more rust! I have completed projects, and you really have to stay after it and invest the cash and time. Just not seeing that here.
100% Completely agree. I'd probably pick the orange 70 Hemi Road Runner. It's a bummer, as these cars will probably rot where they stand.
Can already hear the 75 year old owner going "Ohhhh, I plan on restoring it SOMEDAY," Typical, hoarder response. I mean, it's his property/life he can do what he wants, but it just makes you shake your head.
Those poor cars. Rotting away. It's fucking sad. Thanks for filming them before they aren't recognizable anymore. Shame on the owners. Wouldn't it be better to GIVE some away rather than let them rust?
I agree. At least sell them at a reasonable price to give them a chance to come back to life. Geez... what a shame! Every person that says ( I'm going to restore it) never does and they end up rotting into the ground beyond repair... sad
Just hoarding restoring nothing, just a mopar graveyard an trying to get out the roof prices for cars 85% rusted away
You nailed it!
Nah, just wait until you see their shop.
@@AutoArchaeologyOK, when do we see that?
Shits worth what people will pay for it
It will be in a video in a week or two.
Hope to see follow up on the restoration on some of the cars ...good content and thanks.
Oh just wait
What a great hoard collection now this gentleman needs to do the right thing and let other people have the opportunity to really restore these vehicles. He's not gonna do nothing but be a hoarder.
These are for sale
id build me a dip tank and get busy de-rerusting these things sealing them up and covering them
You did an excellent job and you really know your cars. I instantly glued to your content.
I appreciate that!
awesome videos
Nice collection. Hope they are all in line to be built or sold to be built
Truly amazing collection of cars ,love the A12 roadrunner. Burnt or not 😊
Lots of reproduction parts now
Those 71s speak to me. Grew up around a 3rd gen as my uncle owned a 72. We were lifelong Petty fans and remember his 74 Charger cleaning up in NASCAR until it was too old a body style to run. Decades later I bought me a plain jane 74 Charger 318 as my uncle sold the 72 to a cousin who crashed it.
Oh damn
@@AutoArchaeology Yep. The 72 was like my 74; plain jane 318 2bbl with a bench seat and canopy top. He owned it from new and it was supposed to become mine when I got my license but he took it to Florida and my mom wouldn't let me go get it. When I heard that a palm tree "crashed into it" I was so mad (figured maybe one I could have bought it from her). Nope, she totaled it....
Ugh
@@AutoArchaeology Yep, ugh is right. Such a waste.
Your friend has a problem. Do you realize the cost of restoring just one of these cars would exceed the entire collection. He should sell that stuff off and just get one car done. Sell the rest to fund a professional collector like Dennis Collins or god forbid Graveyard cars. That way he could enjoy one while he's still young enough to enjoy it.
cant believe theres so many of these hoards about. merry christmas and a happy new year from australia.
Oh yes. Thank you! You as well.
He will probably get them all restored by next week
THANKS FOR THE GREAT CONTENT.. GOD SHINES ON THESE GUYS JUST TO HAVE THESE CARS..
Thanks for watching.
Many comments about the cars just wasting away. He said in the comments, THEY ARE FOR SALE!
But the prices people come up with for rusted down donor cars are absurd. Its like they want them to rot into the ground. And then you get one that's complete with no work done and they want mecum prices because they know what they got.
such a shame all those mopars rotting away
NO doubt.
Your friend should actively advertise these for sale. Otherwise they *will* just sit there and die. He's doing the cars no favors by holding onto them with the "one day" intentions; that's a story old as time. Seen many many cars sit there and die a slow ignoble death while their owners refused to let go.
Get those vehicles out there and let someone bring them back to life.
They don't want me to do that.
Theyre just assets they can sell when they need the money. THeyre still going up in value thanks to inflation but if your into these cars having an abundance of parts in your own junkyard is the only way its worth doing IMO.
@@tabbott429 great addition to the conversation that didn’t address what I said at all
Oh my god I’m drooling the whole video… I’ve always been a B body guy (current 71-RR 4sp) and 69 R/T Coronet being my all time favorite… great collection 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
You and me both!
That blue Polora conv....I had it's cousin, a blue '64 Plymouth Sport Fury conv as my very first car when I was 16. Paid $500 for it with help from my dad. It had a 273 cid push button auto, very drafty but it was fun as my 1st ever car. The engine blew up and a local dealer mechanic bought it and made a drag car out of it. First car memories.
That must have been a fun car!
Its really nice to see all these rare and expensive cars. Unless the owners have great intentions of saving all that detriot iron, its just gonna rot where they sit. sell them to people who want to save american history. Thats right its american history just sitting there collecting rust barnicals. SELL SELL SELL SELL.
Oh just wait.
What a waste , he's not going to restore all those cars, why do people do this ?
They are for sale
What did he do with all the engines?
Wild to see those 72 Charger N96 hoods both had what many would consider '72 style vents. And my 72 N96 has the 71 style (no gap). Any idea if they are original to the cars?
No wonder you cant find any of this kinda iron anymore, cornholes like this got it sitting around the house slowly rotting away
Many of these hoarders that you call friends that are not willing to sell to someone is a real determent to the Mopar hobby. They don't want to sell to anybody but Bezos or Musk if they sell at all. Leaving them to rot away because they'll never get to them.
These are for sale.
Nice find!
Gotta get those cars out of the weather asap
My first mopar was a 68 coronet 500 383. Idkill for that hemi car!!
Most of these cars will never be built by the current owner. He has dreams but not the time.
That is exactly what I thought. They will continue to rust and rot along with the owners.
@@bengone3349 I live in Georgia and have over 40 cars ... some are very rare. only 3 old mopars ( 70 rt see challenger) 2 glhs shelby chargers ... I know I will never get to them all. I am 63 years old and need to start moving them. The challenger is my high school car so it is not going anywhere but my daughter. BUT I have a bunch of other cars ... mostly Mustangs
These two guys are millionaires, just wait until you see their shops.
@@AutoArchaeology yes and so was Shelby Amos ( Aflac family) He had a building full of cars and died with big dreams that never happened. As a builder, I know the real world. Money does not make your projects complete. I have over 50 vehicles and only 21 of them have been completed. I am 63 years old and know I do not have time to do them all. So the dilemma is what now...
These guys do sell stuff though, a dozen cars have left in the last few years. They are just in no hurry.
1 word=El Roacho.
The owners mantra=Hoarders is my orders.
What a find. Does he collect any A bodies?
I had most of the A-bodies in the previous video.
Going to restore it lol
Is this another person that says they are going to restore them and never restores any of them and lets them rot?
65 Tri pwr GTO Convertible should have always been kept inside 😢
He got them like that, they will get sold here soon.
Never restore them, what a shame
“ why isn’t he restoring these ?? “ he runs a restoration shop so I’m sure he has many on going projects keeping him busy , these are future projects for the shop or someone who steps up to purchase them .
Hemi superbee !!!
Yep Pretty Sweet Find !!!!!
It was a running-driving car before it caught fire.
The fire wasn't from the car, the building it was in burned.
What kind of prices is he asking, is the million dollar question.
They aren't pricing them since they aren't actively selling. But they are taking offers.
Oh I hope these cars get saved
I see some treasures!!!!
Happy New Year! I've got to ask. Are these guys in the restoration business or do they buy, sell, or trade vehicles or sell parts or what? Seems like they've cornered the market for desirable Mopars that some folks would love to get their hands on!! Love your videos!👍
Yes, to all of the above.
Are there any cars restored ?
Iam glad they saved them and they're still around. If they don't get them. All restored they will be sold eventually so someone else can life dictates that but there still here haven't been crushed its a win win as i see it but do try to get them out of the weather
I think the guy who built the 4 door cuda is connected to these cars he also started classic industries
Holding is a sickness nothing will come of the vehicles its a shame
Dude, if you are going to hoard these cars, atleast store the more rarer ones out of the weather. you are just letting them rust and rot. It's like having 100k in paper cash, and letting it wither away to the elements outside until it becomes dust.
Anything for sale? Some of the "less desirable" would go a long way to restoring those HEMI cars. It's just a thought 🤔
Most of them are for sale.
@@AutoArchaeology Thank you. Contact information?
Drop me a line, they are taking offers.
"I`m gonna restore `em someday" LOL. I did not even see a proper garage/workshop. No tools or equipment. This stuff is going to sit & rot. Convertibles sitting outside with the tops down collecting rain. Sad.
Yes high Hopes eh mate 😊
Where are you located?
You should do a story on how he got each car
That would be a very long video.
You must have a billion friends
My address book is quite big.
Is that 300 solid underthe
Sorry hit the wrong button
Is the 68 300 solid underneath I have two
I believe it was solid.
As long as they haven't sat in the dirt & leaves for too long. Moisture from the ground is a death sentence
Fcuking sell them, NOW...
Holy smokes
Cars deserve better than that come on dude😢
Devil has outdone himself this morning
I try
How is your blue challenger coming along ?
No word since them getting the engine.
@@AutoArchaeology wow!!! Been awhile!!!!
Yup, almost six months
@@AutoArchaeology hope you can atleast get a hell cat motor via fed ex????????!!!!!!!!!!
Ha, wouldn't that be nice.
Get the hemi and 6 pak to driver #3 condition and sell off the rest
Are any of them for sale
Yes they are.
You keep walking by the 300 can you do some videos on C body's
I have, they never do well.
@@AutoArchaeologyHey Ryan do you ever see many F-bodies? If so, do they also do poorly? I can’t remember seeing too many outside of an Aspen R/T or two in a more recent mopar video (it had a ton of A-bodies in it).
I have shown them on occasion, like in the Mopar City video. But never did a stand alone on one. Never found a Aspen R/T or Super Coupe, etc... to shoot.
@@AutoArchaeologymakes sense. They built so few of the cool ones (R/Ts, Roadrunners, SuperCoupes, KitCars). I’ll check out the vid you suggested 👍🏻
I have a video from long ago with a 77 Kit Car in it. I wish I would find more!
I have in Storage a black 1969 roadrunner 440 six pack
Wow! Sounds awesome! I hope short term storage.
Any of these for sale?
Yes they are!
Lot's of project cars there so any for sale or does your friends have the millions to restore all of those Project cars
He does have millions.
Whats for sale?
Just about all of these.
How long has this guy had these cars
He said they were all acquired within the last two years...
Some were longer, but most within the last decade.
@@AutoArchaeology dude you could do a good story on dudes background, and where he found some of these cars if it was only in the last decade
They came from all over. Junkyards, etc... it would be hours long.
On its way to being junk ,waaaaaay to late
The owner should start lubricating the door and hood hinges.
Where's the 69 chargers an the 71 roadrunner at
They were in the videos in the field.
Guess he didn't show them in that video I only seen the 71 chargers I believe he said
This is only showing one small section of the collection.
گزارش عالی بود
بالاخره اینا در مسیر خرید و فردش وبازسازی قرار میگیرن چون با این فکر خریداری و یک جا جمع شدن و این بهتر از اینه که یه جایی پوسیده بشن
WOW! What a waste!!! He needs to sell them, before they go to waste..... I won't be watching the "series" of these guys HOARD! I guess I'm crazy, I would never do this to cars I love. If I don't have room under cover and on concrete, it should be sold to someone who can restore it. These guys don't love or care about these cars, it's just $$$$$$. SAD :( :(
Id consider it a pretty nice retirement nest egg and a yard full of appreciating "assets". The buyers will dry up in another couple decades.
I would like to have that 71 charger or the other one
They are for sale.
Scrap the collection of cast iron and use the proceeds to buy a used Dodge truck. You can't restore what isn't there.
,,,...REMEMBER KIDS=== TODAYS DEALS ARE TOMORROW'S BARGAINS,,,,,,😮....................hurry up....
I like the '64 Polara convertible.
And they are all mopar owners
the owner is pipe dreaming. id be surprised if any of these cars get restored
Oh just wait until you see his restoration shop setup!
@@AutoArchaeology ha ha people in hell be getting ice water before that happens
Just wait
Wow he has desirable mopars /awesome
Any minute now.
When he dies his family will have a auction and what would you value that collection over 500k I think
Did anybody recognize the crew cab ford truck sitting off to the side in the beginning of the video those trucks are hot here in Texas and anywhere else, this guy needs to reach out to Dennis Collins, Dennis would give him a fair amount for everything, and the stuff that maybe a little rough he would pass it over to Gas Monkey Garage and they could make a cool resto mod with a hellcat drive train, or a 392 drive train and suspension, and I’m saying that because they have the resources and the equipment and the connections to get these cars up and on the road, people will by these cars but they need to be restored and road worthy, nobody wants to see these cars rust and rott back into the ground, it takes a lot of money to restore and build cars of this magnitude, and yes there are other builders out there, but I’m from Texas so I got to give credit to the people I admire the most and that is Dennis Collins and his crew
That's what I'm saying! That is my dream truck but they are crazy rare and expensive now. I wish he would have given it some attention especially since it looked like a 4x4. I also love Dennis Collins and he would definitely find interest in these cars.
why isn't he busy restoring those? he is aware that a bank will give him a loan if he has a sound structured/scheduled/itemized restoration program meaning he has the shop, all tools, all parts (price and availability) all labor and skill to get them finished, he would need a forecasted timeline appraisal of all work and sale... once he has the first pone completed and sold and the bank paid off he would be golden to do more restorations, then he would be at apoint he would have his own money to do them himself, I'd start off with the cars I really dont wanna keep but will sale, then sell it for a good price just to move it quickly as this loan would be like an automobile loan, if it doesnt sale you still have to make payments on the loan.. its a good way to get these vehicles finished up to stop the rott, OR sell a few to find the building of a shop, buy parts and tools and get them restored..
these cars won't be valuable forever, once electric is all there is on the road they will not be desirable in any way, all museums will have plenty, you'd have to do electric conversions or whatever form of energy they are using... at that point not really a muscle car is it...
He is, you will see in a future video the restoration shops they had built for their projects.
He can do whatever he wants with them, but it would be nice to maybe sell a couple to let other people enjoy them since there are so many people trying to get into the hobby, instead of letting them rot outside.
I also think that electric vehicles will change the hobby, not in a good way.
I don't think he will have to worry about E.V.. GM and Ford are having major problems with the EV by the looks of it nobody is buying EV
He will not
I hear the prices of the classics are falling due to the government wanting to go to EV's and make gas powered cars obsolete it is reallu going to suck if that happens but there is no way I will be driving a EV at all.
That's not what I saw at Mecum.
Naw...that's not the reason it'll happen; it'll happen because the number of people with the memory and nostalgia of when these cars were new, and the disposable income to buy them and restore them, gets smaller every year...just like the passing of WW II vets. Not many of them left, unfortunately...
Wow.
Those guys must be billionaires
Oh just wait.
What a gold mine , but what a waste🤬
Yeee Yeee