From an outsiders point on this (and I have not seen any of these cars in person), the feeling I am getting from seeing pictures of one thing and being told a different thing via highly known magazines lead me to believe that something is not being presented as the truth. Maybe it is a spin on words with the magazines or not. If it is, I find it highly unlikely that multiple magazine articles would indicate it one way vs. the pictures showing a new floor needed to be put in place. Yes, it might be an original floor pan from a DONOR car and if that is the case then say it is. Metal rusts, we all know that. Its not like it is a reproduction piece of sheet metal in the floor. However, when one starts trying to present something as "rust free" you have to start to wonder about what else might have had subjective literacy, basically spinning words to ones own advantage. Again, I have not had a car in OE type of judging so I don't know if they deduct points for "donor" panels being used. If they do and you told the judges that they were original to the car, that outright is deceiving trying to better a score. In other words.... cheating, lying, coniving, etc to now get "approved" that the car is certified Original Equipment. Very similar to a hemi 4 spd 69 charger that was at a New England Concour's d'Elegance show with me that had a mangled VIN tag on the dash. It was questioned by the editors of the show and did not win an award at the car show the day prior, matter of fact, it didn't even place! The next day, it takes a first place at the concours show which now says that it is basically an original hemi (if it isn't) since it won a first place at a concours event. I know I would be really pissed if I were to purchase this car down the road and pay big bucks for something being claimed as all original sheet metal only to find out that it has had a donor vehicle parts.