Hemicuda in surgery

Author Topic: Hemicuda in surgery  (Read 3910 times)

Offline cooda

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Hemicuda in surgery
« on: June 03, 2006 - 11:34:00 PM »
 :walkaway:

The Hemicuda is now disassembled down in Florida with the body on a rotissorie. Typical Mopar rust, but no major nasty surprises. Should be done in 6 months.

I have pictures, but evidently they are too large to post. Anybody know how I can reduce?

Still contemplating the Arizona Barrett Jackson auction next January. Florida auctions are closer, but I am told American muscle cars do the best at the Arizona auction. Seen what Mopars are going for these days? And yes, I would still rather have the money than the car. Any opinions about BJ, pro or con?
Thanks.

Charles

70 black/black "R" Code Hemicuda, automatic, Super Trac Pac 4.10 Dana, pdb
67 Top Flight Corvette 4 speed silver small block #s roadster
2002 6 speed silver Pontiac Trans Am SLP Firehawk
2008 Red Z06 Corvette
2002 Blue Lexus SC-430 retractable HT- Wife's car




Offline Topcat

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #1 on: June 03, 2006 - 11:42:31 PM »
That sounds great Cooda. Can't wait to see your update on it.
Mike, Fremont, CA.


Offline hemi71

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #2 on: June 04, 2006 - 12:07:20 AM »
:walkaway:

The Hemicuda is now disassembled down in Florida with the body on a rotissorie. Typical Mopar rust, but no major nasty surprises. Should be done in 6 months.

I have pictures, but evidently they are too large to post. Anybody know how I can reduce?

Still contemplating the Arizona Barrett Jackson auction next January. Florida auctions are closer, but I am told American muscle cars do the best at the Arizona auction. Seen what Mopars are going for these days? And yes, I would still rather have the money than the car. Any opinions about BJ, pro or con?
Thanks.

Charles



Just take it to B-J in Arizona and sell it. It's obvious from your list of cars that Mopars are just a sideshow to you. Get out of the Cuda ASAP, cash in and buy 5 or 6 vettes with the proceeds.












Offline snowymountainman

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #3 on: June 04, 2006 - 01:06:59 AM »
The AZ Auction is definitely the high dollar one.  I would suggest driving the car before you make that kind of decision but these cars are not for everyone.  If you are hell bent on selling it that is where you do it but just a little advice.  Those guys know their cars and you had better spend the money in the right place before it hits the block or you'll be another sucker wondering why it didn't make the grade. 
 ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ???
If this is just an investment, the best of luck to you.  If it were me I would kick my own ass, two or three times for selling this kind of car.   :swear: :screwy: :screwy:

Personally, I don't want to hear any more about it if this is your intentions.  Maybe I've missed the boat here but the vast majority of the members here love their cars and are not here just to peddle them at Barf Jackass-son.   
73 Barracuda
68 Barracuda Convertible

Offline Bondavi

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #4 on: June 04, 2006 - 04:11:41 AM »
Maybe I've missed the boat here but the vast majority of the members here love their cars and are not here just to peddle them at Barf Jackass-son.   

Yup, said it all. We'll reach a hand out, a couple times, maybe for those buck-sellers, but we're interested in those looking to make the best of their MOPAR, restoration, buildup, and then the following grins and driving impressions when it is completed.

Just pay Chip Foose or Boyd Coddington $200K, and you'll get the car back in time for a profit at B-J. Then you can say "Hey my car was on TV!"  :roflsmiley: and throw a few thou on the price.

Hey....thining of which....park a restored Hemicuda clone in one of the high priced Vegas casinos....how much you think the casino would make out?  :naughty: Beats a Prowler....

David

'70 Challenger R/T FC7 440-6 4spd N96 3.54 Dana - SOLD

Offline cooda

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #5 on: June 04, 2006 - 08:14:33 AM »
What is with all this hostility? My intent was to sell this Hemicuda and maybe pick up a 440 Challenger or something much less expensive to drive. Also selling the 64 Vette to pay for the restoration. They run about the same and sell for 1/3 or less. Then I wouldn't have to worry about scratching the car or something. That leaves one Corvetter and one Mopar and some money.

If you won $500,000 (don't know if it will bring that much- it would easy if the #'s matched) would you look for a Hemicuda to buy? Or would you buy a house or put it towards a comfortable retirement. Your wife would tolerate the very expensive toy? Same thing. I have had the car since 95 and only want to sell it because they have gone up so much in value. And I don't see how they could go up MUCH more, although it's possible. Nobody really knows, although there are a lot of opinions.

Charles
70 black/black "R" Code Hemicuda, automatic, Super Trac Pac 4.10 Dana, pdb
67 Top Flight Corvette 4 speed silver small block #s roadster
2002 6 speed silver Pontiac Trans Am SLP Firehawk
2008 Red Z06 Corvette
2002 Blue Lexus SC-430 retractable HT- Wife's car

Offline whitesatinmopar

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #6 on: June 04, 2006 - 08:29:31 AM »
 :dunno: Your car, your thing. No hostility here, just bewilderment. My feelings on this kind of situation have been expressed probably too many times. Sorry I just don't understand it. I guess in one sense if a mopar is just sheetmetal, plastic, vinyl, etc. it can become a very comfortable commodity, and if someone isn't willing to sell nobody can buy. I guess the question then becomes, why did you buy to begin with? Was it to fulfill a dream or a dream of the possible $$$$$$$$$$ of it all. Either way, good luck.

« Last Edit: June 04, 2006 - 08:40:31 AM by whitesatinmopar »
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Offline matt63

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #7 on: June 04, 2006 - 08:51:33 AM »
I like my Mopars and cars in general but if I had a $500K car sitting in the garage I would be looking to cash out and buy a driver too.  It would make me nervous.  I think most of us drove Mopars well before they were "high dollar" cars.  It changes things for some of us.  I joke with my wife that I can finally sell the Cuda and buy a nice used 911.   Maybe I'm kidding - we'll see.  Either way, I get tired of cars quickly and will likely sell it and move onto another soon. No more projects though.  I'm getting too old to crawl around under cars!
Matt in Edmonton

'68 Valiant
'73 Cuda 340 4 speed (408) SOLD

Offline snowymountainman

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #8 on: June 04, 2006 - 09:27:33 AM »
Quote
What is with all this hostility? My intent was to sell this Hemicuda and maybe pick up a 440 Challenger or something much less expensive to drive. Also selling the 64 Vette to pay for the restoration. They run about the same and sell for 1/3 or less. Then I wouldn't have to worry about scratching the car or something. That leaves one Corvetter and one Mopar and some money.

Charles,

You make a very good point.  I never thought of it like that.  I guess that as much as I want a car like that, another part of me wants the finacial security even more.  If I can be of assistance please let me know.  My apologies. 

As for the pictures, open them in microsoft paint, click on image (top of screen), and use the stretch skew (cntrl W).  Reduce the pictures by 40% and see how they look. 
73 Barracuda
68 Barracuda Convertible

Offline cooda

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #9 on: June 04, 2006 - 09:32:04 AM »
whitesatin: Let me tell the story. I bought this car at Chryslers at Carlisle in Pennsylvania in 1995 for $23,500. Nobody else was really interested in the car, as it wasn't restored, sorry paint, and had so much chromy and non-original stuff on it. It had Firebird seats, a late 70's Torqueflight trans, aftermarket wheels in bad shape, a lot of wrong parts, a linelock setup for drag racing, and my intent was to restore it as close to original as I could knowing it had a Hemi block from a 1971 car. It also had a racing cam and ran very poorly. I gave Galen Govier a few bucks to inspect it and he confirmed it was an original Hemi car- I didn't even know how to read the letter on the VIN back then, but just wanted to buy a Mopar.

I found 70 Cuda seats and had them redone. Also found a correctly dated 70 Hemi Torqueflite trans (yes they were different), correct rear carb with automatic choke, Took off the linelock, put the stock cam (ran MUCH better), found correct valve covers, hardware for the shaker, repro rally wheels and slowly began to restore the car to original. Even  got the wiper motor redone and put in a washer pump. And a lot more little stuff.

And then the Mopar prices REALLY took off in the last few years, and so I decided to rotissorie the car.

The Black Book CPI Guide (Cars of Particular Interest) lists the following values for 1970 Plymouth Cuda with 426 engine- I assume this means matching numbers:

Fair: $165,000
Good: $275,000
Excellent: $ 550,000
Of course in reality, they are all over the place and a restored 4 speed matching Black 70 Hemicuda coupe sold on BJ this year for $ 702,000. Black brings more $.

Now look at the 440-6 prices CPI lists for the 70 Cuda:
Fair: $ 45,000
Good: $ 75,000
Excellent: $ 150,000

If that is accurate an "excellent" Hemicuda is worth over 3 1/2 times more than an "excellent" 6-pack Cuda. Same ratio for "good".

CPI is what the antique car insurers use to set the values on the cars they insure.

I am not in the business of buying and selling cars, but with prices through the roof like this, I would just as soon have a 440 car and the six figure change.

I think that if most people are honest and really think about it, a lot of people would do the same thing I am doing. Although I really want another less expensive Mopar, I think it is the only smart thing to do to sell it while the market is so hot. Is it "cool" owning a Hemicuda? Sure, but not $ 500,000 worth of cool. Why is that so hard to understand?

A real Hemicuda convertible sold for over 2 million at BJ this year to a collector. I'll bet 90% of the people here, if they had one, would sell it for 2 million.

Charles



70 black/black "R" Code Hemicuda, automatic, Super Trac Pac 4.10 Dana, pdb
67 Top Flight Corvette 4 speed silver small block #s roadster
2002 6 speed silver Pontiac Trans Am SLP Firehawk
2008 Red Z06 Corvette
2002 Blue Lexus SC-430 retractable HT- Wife's car

Offline Cuda Cody

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #10 on: June 04, 2006 - 09:38:04 AM »
You are right.... 440+6 are a great value compared to the Hemi.  Just as fast in the quarter and 1/3 the price.
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Offline 4Cruizn

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #11 on: June 04, 2006 - 10:27:10 AM »
I certainly understand why you ae selling.  I would be pretty nervous driving a car worth that much around at all!  When they are worth that much, it becomes a trailer queen and a consistant show car only in most cases.  I wish you the best of luck in the sale and if the market happens to crash and prices drop before you are done, I'll give ya 50K for it!   :naughty:   lol    j/k

Please keep us informed on the progress!  You can e-mail me the pics if you are still having problems with the photo's!!     :thumbsup:

4C

Offline Triple Black hemi

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #12 on: June 04, 2006 - 10:32:05 AM »
You are right.... 440+6 are a great value compared to the Hemi.  Just as fast in the quarter and 1/3 the price.

I agree.....

Not for long....the 440-6 cars are way undervalued compared to the hemi. 

Offline cudacharlie

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #13 on: June 04, 2006 - 11:38:23 AM »
440-6 cars are way undervalued compared to the hemi?!?!?  Whoa, guys, since when are ANY of these cars REALLY worth that kind of coin?  Don't get me wrong, I drive Mopar and only Mopar, but the thought of any of these cars being "worth" $500k is ridiculous, and you all know it.  Just cause Bill Weimann will throw money at car owners until they relent doesn't mean the darn things are "worth" that much.  At some point, EVERY car gets sold, unless it is crushed.  Who's gonna buy those Cudas from Bill Weimann's estate sale, and for how much?  Who will buy these cars at a higher price than they were sold to their current owners at?  That's what it's going to take to make these "investments" break even.  All these guys who just paid $1m for a car will have to sell it for $1.3m to feel like they are making a profit, and then what?!?!

"Rotsa Ruck" to all the speculators.  Rot in heck, vile vermin.  I hope they all lose their a$$e$.  (It's not sour grapes; I paid $13,500 for my Cuda ragtop at Carlisle '95)

Has nobody heard of the Tulip speculators of the 17th century?  (yes, Tulips, as in the flower)

(For a laugh, I've inserted the word 'hemicuda' for the word 'tulip' in the following story, and made a few annottations...)

(From wikipedia) The tulip (hemicuda), introduced to Europe in the middle of the 16th century, experienced a strong growth in popularity in the United Provinces (now the Netherlands), boosted by competition between members of the upper classes for possession of the rarest tulips (hemicudas). Competition escalated until prices reached unsustainable levels.

Tulip cultivation (hemicuda restoration) in the United Provinces is thought to have started in 1593, when Charles de L'Ecluse (Roger Gibson) first bred tulips (restored a hemicuda) able to tolerate the harsher conditions of the Low Countries from bulbs (an unrestored hemicuda) sent to him from Turkey (France) by Ogier de Busbecq (Carlos Monteverde). The flower (car) rapidly became a coveted luxury item and a status symbol. Special breeds were given exotic names or named after Dutch naval admirals. The most spectacular and highly sought-after tulips had vivid colors, lines, and flames on the petals as a result of being infected with a tulip-specific virus known as the Tulip Breaking potyvirus (billboard stripes). 

In 1623, a single bulb of a famous tulip variety could cost as much as a thousand Dutch florins (the average yearly income at the time was 150 florins). Tulips were also exchanged for land, valuable livestock, and houses. Allegedly, a good trader (Craig Jackson) could earn sixty thousand florins a month.

By 1635, a sale of 40 bulbs for 100,000 florins was recorded. By way of comparison, a ton of butter cost around 100 florins and "eight fat swine" 240 florins. A record was the sale of the most famous bulb, the Semper Augustus (Bill's white export hemicuda), for 6,000 florins in Haarlem ($2million at B-J).

By 1636, tulips were traded on the stock exchanges of numerous Dutch towns and cities. This encouraged trading in tulips by all members of society, with many people selling or trading their other possessions in order to speculate in the tulip market. Some speculators made large profits as a result.

Some traders sold tulip bulbs that had only just been planted (unrestored shells) or those they intended to plant (in effect, tulip futures contracts) (bodyshell with resto work prepaid). This phenomenon was dubbed windhandel, or "wind trade", and took place mostly in the taverns of small towns (swap meets) using an occult slate system to indicate bid prices. State edict in 1610 made that trade illegal by refusing to enforce the contracts, but the legislation failed to curtail the activity.

In February 1637 tulip traders (hemicuda owners) could no longer get inflated prices for their bulbs (cars), and they began to sell. The bubble burst. People began to suspect that the demand for tulips (muscle cars) could not last, and as this spread a panic developed. Some were left holding contracts to purchase tulips (cars currently undergoing high $$$ resto) at prices now ten times greater than those on the open market, while others found themselves in possession of bulbs now worth a fraction of the price they had paid. Thousands of Dutch, including businessmen and dignitaries, were financially ruined.

Attempts were made to resolve the situation to the satisfaction of all parties, but these were unsuccessful. Ultimately, individuals were stuck with the bulbs (cars) they held at the end of the crash—no court would enforce payment of a contract, since judges regarded the debts as contracted through gambling, and thus not enforceable in law.
Lesser versions of the tulipomania also occurred in other parts of Europe, although matters never reached the state they had in the Netherlands. In England in 1800, it was common to pay fifteen guineas for a single tulip bulb. This sum would have kept a labourer and his family in food, clothes and lodging for six months.

See any parallels, people? 

Yeah, restore that hemicuda and get it out of there, and don't take short $$$.  Go ahead and punish the fool that's gonna buy it, hurt him bad!  Put it in the garage of someone with too much money, then buy or build a clone the way you want, and enjoy the darned thing.  If you gave me a real hemicuda, I'd unload it that day and pick up a Cuda, a Chally, a pickup and car hauler, a Ford GT for me AND a Lotus Elise for the wife.  And I'd have change left over...

What are they, Faberge eggs, and we're ALL trying to be Malcolm Forbes?  Sheesh.  Come back to reality people.  It's nice that some folks can cash out an old car for a retirement fund, but all these cars changing hands without being driven is a game for Fruity Ferrari Guys, Bloomington Gold Golfers, COPO Code Chasers, and now Hemicuda Hype-Believers.  All trailer-queen crowds.

Let them have their fun, if spending $1m on a car they don't drive is fun for them....  Losers, I reckon.  If I wasn't allowed to sell it for cash, I'd much rather have Goody's 318-powered a$$-kicker than Wiemann's gay red hemicuda any day. 

It's only a car...

[rant off]

Oh, yeah, the auction.  B-J for sure, that's where all the bid-dong-swinging-contests will occur.  People pay way too much there, and the same cars go unloved and don't meet reserve at Mecum and Kruse.  You take a risk with B-J's no reserve policy, but with a black R-code hemicuda I think you will have no problem draining some fool's bank account.  I'll be watching and cheering from the sidelines!

BTW - hemi71, aren't you selling your black Cuda right now on moparts?  Promise me you won't buy a Corvette with the money!
« Last Edit: June 04, 2006 - 12:06:32 PM by cudacharlie »
70 Cuda convert
70 Charger R/T
06 Magnum SRT8

Offline Robb

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Re: Hemicuda in surgery
« Reply #14 on: June 04, 2006 - 12:37:20 PM »
What is with all this hostility? My intent was to sell this Hemicuda and maybe pick up a 440 Challenger or something much less expensive to drive. Also selling the 64 Vette to pay for the restoration. They run about the same and sell for 1/3 or less. Then I wouldn't have to worry about scratching the car or something. That leaves one Corvetter and one Mopar and some money.

If you won $500,000 (don't know if it will bring that much- it would easy if the #'s matched) would you look for a Hemicuda to buy? Or would you buy a house or put it towards a comfortable retirement. Your wife would tolerate the very expensive toy? Same thing. I have had the car since 95 and only want to sell it because they have gone up so much in value. And I don't see how they could go up MUCH more, although it's possible. Nobody really knows, although there are a lot of opinions.

Charles


Sounds smart and realistic to me.  All that money in one car, is a high risk.

These muscle car prices and market isnt much differnet than buying "art".   

70 Challenger SE  (440 SIX PACK / Keisler 5 speed, R/T SE replication)       68 Sport Satellite Convertible 383 Super Commando / 727  Survivor

2002 Trans AM WS6 convertible:  DD
1999 4Runner 4x4:  lifted-locked-armored  expedition vehicle
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