Author Topic: How You Found Your Car  (Read 102371 times)

Offline Challenger6pak

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #75 on: January 03, 2007 - 11:20:06 AM »
My friend new I was into Mopars, and asked me to get his Challenger running as it had been sitting in his garage for a couple years so he could sell it. He needed to make room for his new Ferrari. I rebuilt the carb, and replaced all the ignition parts. I bought it for $1800.
  Soon it will be worth more than the Ferrari. 
« Last Edit: February 07, 2007 - 04:58:40 AM by Challenger6pak »
1969 Sport Satellite H code convertible, 1970 Cuda 440+6, 1970 Challenger R/T 440+6, 1970 Challenger 383 R/T auto, 1970 Challenger R/T 383 4 speed,1971 Challenger convertible.




Offline Todd DesMarais

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #76 on: January 04, 2007 - 02:13:45 AM »
 Back in '88 my buddy was into Mopars and I was into Ferds.  :eek4:  He bought a nice 70 R/T plumcrazy 440 auto from a local "muscle car" lot (Roger Peck's for you Mi guys) and I got HOOKED !!!!!  I went up there and spotted the 74 in the back corner completely stripped of trim, bumpers, etc. looking though it was just primered and found out it was recently painted and wet sanded for another coat.  I had little (NO) money but had to have it... funny thing that the sales guy (Rob the owners buddy) kept telling me I didn't want to buy "that car". I thought it was a ploy to up-sell me on another car and I stuck to my guns. Needless to say, three years later when I started the "resto" I found it had been totaled and hacked back together   :crying:  (Pass quarter, frame rail, tail panel, package tray, trunk, and roof all had to go) I had so many good memories of that car, and that what good parts left were rust free, I HAD to fix it.  It is still in peices, though I have all the stuff to complete it, just no time.  Who woulda' thought he was trying to help me  :dunno:

 Back then they had a 69 1/2 Hurst Rambler Scrambler 390 4 speed California car I was very fond of that was absolutley perfect. the asking price was $9,000 which was $6,000 more than I could muster up.  too bad that car is worth ~$65,000 today !!

  The story is quite a bit longer, but I'll save that for another depression session.  :violin:
« Last Edit: January 04, 2007 - 02:22:24 AM by Todd DesMarais »
74 'Cuda                       "There's a fine line
66 Belvedere II               between a hobby
66 Satellite                    and a mental illness"
05 Ram 3500 CTD

Offline Rob72

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #77 on: January 05, 2007 - 01:19:15 PM »
I found my car at a Classic Car Dealership near Toronto that sold all types of cars from Ferarris to Muscle Cars.  I had been there a few times, looking first at a 318 1968 Charger R/T Green on Green.  Didn't like that one because of the small engine.  There was a 440ci White Challenger R/T there as well which I didn't even look at as I was looking for a B body.  Went back a couple of times, then one day got a call from my mother telling me to get over there as she was looking at my new car.  Rushed there to see a beautiful 1972 Challenger 340,Yellow with Black interior.  Looked under the hood, felt this drip go down my neck.  The previous owner used so much oil in the engine bay/chassis it was dripping!!  Took the car for a drive, wasn't bad except it was running so rich the exhaust had burnt the rear bumper.  Bought the car the next day for $10k (good price in 1999) drove the car home.  Half way home the horn came on and wouldn't turn off so back to the dealer to fix it.  Got home, steering fluid all over, back to the dealership.  They replaced the pump once, then it leaked again so took it back again, all under wannanty as they certified the car.  COuple of days later my mother went back to see what was going on, found out the cops were closing the place down so she took the car home as is.  We later found out the dealership was selling cars on consignement but wasn't giving the owner his/her share.

No pictures back then, but great story to tell as this was my first car ever! 21 years old!

Rob
   

Offline mmccarty

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #78 on: January 05, 2007 - 02:49:15 PM »
In '92 I was 22 years old and driving an old Ford pickup.  I was looking for a project to wrench on in my spare time and was scouring the Sunday classifieds for old Mopars.  I looked at some basket case Road Runners and Super Bees that I passed on.  One Sunday a '70 Cuda showed up in the ads, so I called the fellow and went to have a look.  It was a '70 340 4-speed with the original drivetrain, paint, interior, even the original 15" ralleys, factory tinted windows, center console, ralley dash, and rim blow steering wheel, two options tags on the fender.  It was a daily driver for a 19 year old who had owned it for a year.  I gave him $5000 for it, which I thought was a bit steep.  I wanted to give him $3500, but he needed $5G for something. 

I figured I'd fix it up over time; the paint was shot, the interior was worn, bucket seats split, trunk floor rusty, a little bit of rust in the quarters, but it was a very solid car with all the parts there and little rust, a survivor.  I ended up driving it to work and back a few days a week for 5 years.  I rebuilt the engine, but never did fix up the rest of the car, just kept it running.  In '97 Uncle Sam sent me to Guam for two years and I stored the car under a cover in my mother's garage in Wisconsin.  I just retrieved it this past summer.  The pic is from the day I pulled it out of my mom's garage, in pretty much the same condition as the day I bought it 14 years earlier.

In September I tore it all down to a bare chassis and it's now hanging on a rotisserie waiting for me to get back from this war to work on it.

Offline go-fish

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #79 on: January 05, 2007 - 11:45:25 PM »
This dam war is getting in the way of a few of our projects mmcartey. BTW, Hafa Day. ( Native Guam saying)

Offline 71GTX

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #80 on: January 06, 2007 - 08:45:53 AM »
Went to Guam last year at this time....Cool place! Was walking along Soldier Beach and found a M1 Garand clip with bullets still in it....rusted as bad as a Chevy in the upper midwest....but the clip and some of the bullets were still intact....I want to go back there soon....
69 RoadRunner (clone)
70 Cuda 383 4 speed (project) one of the first few off the line at Hamtramck with a 1017XX VIN
70 Cuda convertible 340 4 speed (project)
70 Barracuda (project)
71 GTX 440 4 speed (project)
72 Cuda 340 3 speed (project)
3 Harleys
95 Dodge Ram 2500 Diesel 4x4

Expensive Pee is the end result of Expensive Beer!

Offline 1 Wild R/T

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #81 on: January 06, 2007 - 08:14:02 PM »
This dam war is getting in the way of a few of our projects mmcartey. BTW, Hafa Day. ( Native Guam saying)


Are you from Guam? Or were you stationed there?
JS27N0B 70 Challenger R/T Convertible  FJ5 Sublime, Show Poodle w/90,000 miles since resto
WS27L8G 68 Coronet R/T Convertible  PP1 Bright Red, Project
RM21H9E 69 Road Runner Coupe R4 Performance Red, Sold...
5H21C  65 Falcon 2 dr Wagon... Dog Hauler...

Offline Transamcuda.com

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #82 on: February 06, 2007 - 12:50:56 PM »
Found my AAR by word of mouth and a sales add in local paper.
« Last Edit: February 06, 2007 - 12:53:03 PM by Transamcuda.com »
Dont forget to register your AAR at the AAR Registry only at www.transamcuda.com 1981 AAR's on file. Also info on 70 thru 74 E-Bodies. Ask me about yours!!

Offline barnfindcuda

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #83 on: February 07, 2007 - 08:36:28 PM »
litterly a barn find for me, almost a year ago i saw it stiing next to a barn and just 2 weeks ago aquired it . 340 a/c a/m f/m black on black, going for a full factory cosmetic resto ,with a few performance upgrades,

Offline 70_challenger

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #84 on: February 07, 2007 - 11:18:59 PM »
This is a GREAT thread.  It is interesting/inspiring to see how these cars started, and the results of the hard work to bring them back to life.

One day at work about 6 years ago, I mentioned that I wanted an old Mopar (I actually wanted a Cuda).  It turns out that one of my co-workers (who I didn't know at the time) had an old Challenger that he lost interest in many years prior.  It was sitting at the edge of a soybean field near Dundee, Michigan, where it had sat since it was torn apart in the late 80's.  When I first looked at it, I walked away, thinking it was too big of a project for me.  The previous owner had hit a tree, and brazed on an aftermarket quarter skin and trunk floor.  Eventually, the heart won out over the brain, and I couldn't resist getting it. 

It went through media blasting, then tearing out all the braze.  It got a new Goodmark factory-style quarter, a new trunk floor, a new trunk lid and sail panel, and several patch panels.  It is a long way from done, but the bodywork is almost complete.
« Last Edit: February 07, 2007 - 11:27:34 PM by 70_challenger »

Offline 360 'CUDA

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #85 on: February 07, 2007 - 11:44:26 PM »
Looks like the hard part is done !!!  :2thumbs:

Offline JS29

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #86 on: February 08, 2007 - 05:28:52 AM »
I waited a VERY long time to finally get my mopar and after looking at complete junk for over a year, and giving up almost all hope, this one just fell right into my lap.  My Uncle spotted it on a front yard and called me about it.  I went to look at the car, the seller told me a price, which I couldn't afford, and he ask me what I could pay, he said give me your name and I'll call you if I can't move it.  Thinking that was the end I quickly put it out of my mind.  When I got home from work the next day there was a message on my machine saying that if I wanted the car for the ammount I said yesterday, I could have it.  I jumped on it, and he held the car for me for almost 4 weeks while I got the $ together.  My wife didn't see it till the day I paid for it and picked it up.  She was never really excited about me spending all this $ on a "toy", regardless of my passion.  When the garage door went up at the seller's place she just said "wow".  And now she loves the car, and has told me to never sell it.  I have the car for about 5 1/2 years.
Looking for my buildsheet starting with: JS29N0B115###

Offline Transamcuda.com

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #87 on: February 08, 2007 - 07:41:46 AM »
Here was how I found my 69 1/2 6 pak Bee. With a 6ft black snake under the dana of all places!!! Scared the crap out of me when I went to the rear to see if the dana was still under the car and saw it!!!!  :scared:
Dont forget to register your AAR at the AAR Registry only at www.transamcuda.com 1981 AAR's on file. Also info on 70 thru 74 E-Bodies. Ask me about yours!!

Offline 70_challenger

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #88 on: February 08, 2007 - 10:07:56 AM »
Here was how I found my 69 1/2 6 pak Bee. With a 6ft black snake under the dana of all places!!! Scared the crap out of me when I went to the rear to see if the dana was still under the car and saw it!!!!  :scared:

If that had been me, that Bee would still be sitting there!  I'm scared to death of snakes - When I brought my Challenger home (after 10+ years of sitting in a field) I spent the whole next day looking for snakes in it.

Offline HP2

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Re: How You Found Your Car
« Reply #89 on: February 08, 2007 - 08:32:47 PM »
I found mine in a local newspaper ad in 2001. It simply said "74 Dodge, needs work, $2000." I was unemployed at the time, but figured any old mopar under $2k isn't all bad. So I called and talked to the girlfried of the seller, he wasn't home, and she had no idea what it was but it ran and she said it was the one that looked like a camaro. That was a dead give away so I got directions, asked when the guy would be home and told them I'd be there. I figured at that price it must be a basket case, so I'll just nab it and part it out.

A buddy and I headed out at the appointed time and follwed the directions to their house. When I rounded a corner I saw it. "OHMYGAWD!" Talk about your bad 70s flashbacks...Cragar SS with N50 back and G60 up front. Of course it had the requisite air shocks and shackles. It also had its nose in the weeds, shag carpet inside with that fuzzy hairy stuff on the dash. It was dark dark blue, almost black and it had a pretty pitted roof from the original vinyl. The paint was severely oxidized.

So the kid comes out stats telling me what a hot car it is, how he blew away all these so called race cars and he was restoring it but didn't have room for it since he was moving into another house. When he popped hte hood to reveal a grimy, dirty 318 2bbl, I knew he was full of it. Anyway, I played along and asked him to start it since his g-friend said it ran. He said she was wrong, it won't start. He tried just to prove the point so I immediatly set into to talking him down because of it. Lopped $800 right off the price with that one.

I then asked him if he installed that classic stink big stance. This he was very proud of and confirmed that he had done it. However, he hadn't done anything to the front because the springs were missing. The previous owner must kept them when he bought it because it hadn't always sat that low. Well, I just had to start knocking more money off the price because of that. I mean really, do you know how difficult it is to find new front springs for a Challenger? By this point we were in the $500 range and he was hemmign and hawing about the price, so I pulled out 8 $100 bills, laid them on the fender and said that's my final offer and I'll get it out of here right now.

He agreed, went inside to get the title and we closed the deal. Once I had thepapers in hand, my friend and I set about correcting some problems. First was taking the air out of the shocks. Then we jacked up the fornt end, slid under it adn put about a dozen cranks on the t-bar bolt. Dropped it back to the ground and had it sitting level. Hmm, not bad I thought. Next we dug through our box of goodies and found a piece of wire. Since this was a 74, we figured the seat belt interlock was bad. So we jumped it to ground. Turn the key and nothing. "Battery is dead." the kid interjected watching curiously at all our activity. So we hooked up the jumper cables, turn it over, pumped it a few times and listend to the stacato sounds of a slowly awaking, old 318 through glass packs. Let it idle for a while while the lifters pumped up. Eventually the blue smoke subsided and the kid was jsut standing there with this look of disbelief on his face. I almost felt bad for him. He did come over and shake my hand adn said he had some great times in that car and he hoped I would enjoy it as much as he did. I assured him I would, hoped in it and drive it home.

It was missing a few trim pieces that I pcked up off various web sites. Another friend gave me his old carpet and dash pad when he replaced his. I smoothed the roof and resprayed it in the closest matching blue I could find. I also spent some time wet sanding the trunk and fenders to even things out some. I found out it has about 5 paint jobs on it. The AAR style scoop was a cobra jet piece I got at a swap meet and performed some mods to. The cragars came off and some wheels off my old Explorer went on. A TA deck spoiler and a ful chin spoiler completed the trans am look.  I eventually began workign on retractable headlight covers and blacked out the grill area. The 318 was a real weazer so it came out and a 360 I had sitting in the corner went in. SInce I was swapping parts around, the 904 cam eout adna 4spd went in as well as replacing the 2.94 with 3:55. Fortunalty is was an 8.75 rear.

Decoding the tag shows it was fairly heavily optioned. It came avocado gold with a white vinyl roof, white interior, white stripes, a/c, light group, rear defrost, and deluxe wheel covers. After the green it looks like it was B5 blue, then black, then dark blue on two seperate occasions.

It needs lower quarters and trunk extensions. It also has some rust around the hood hinges and the cowl. I hope to get around to it this summer, but we'll have to see if time allows it. In the mean time it is undergoing suspension transplants and upgrades. I did the low budget trans am theme and will probably stick with the TA style through its rebirth.