The Rodding Roundtable
Motorhead Message Central => Rodder's Roundtable => Topic started by: enjenjo on December 13, 2007, 11:10:32 PM
I'm not a big fan of woodies, real or fake. They rattle, and squeak. And since I don't like real ones, fake ones are a waste.
I was interested in sports cars before any other type of car, until I drove one.
I have never owned a tri5 Chevy.
I have owned 28 Camaros, one twice,and only drove one of them, the rest were parted out.
I don't thing 16" tires belong on hot rods, all I saw when I was growing up
had 15" wheels, first thing.
I never like three tone paint jobs.
I still would like to own an Austin 7 special.
My dad had red wheels, and WWW on his cars, so I guess that's why I never thought they were cool.
I think a 55 to 57 Tbird is one of the most over rated cars made. Pretty to look at, but very unfriendly to drive.
Hudson, Packard, Nash, and Studebaker are gone because they didn't understand marketing, not because they were bad car.
I think sloppy workmanship reflect on the craftsman, even on a low buck car.
Anything older than you are is an old car, no matter how old you are.
I feel sorry for someone who wants to restore an early 80s car, a lot of the electronics are no longer available at any price.
Hope I didn't offend anyone too much.
not interested in woodies
not interested in sports cars unless you think of the old Vettes as sports cars
owned 1 55 Chev
no camaros
yes on the 15's
tri-color belongs on animals
the only red wheels I have are on my trailers
WWW back then, but not now
kind of funny when you ask if there are any old cars around and you're told about something from the mid to late 80's. I just say no, 50's or older
Quote from: "enjenjo"'
My dad had red wheels, and WWW on his cars, so I guess that's why I never thought they were cool.
Amen to that.
I'll be glad when WWW go out of fashion again.
Dont feel good or bad about woodies I guess
First car was a 39 Chev Sedan. Dad's fishing car.
High School...Me and 3 friends took an Austin Healy Sprite onto private land and had road races. Cops came and we all got thrown in jail. Had fun though.
Owned a 57 Chev 210 while in college. Paid $400 for it. Sold it for $400.
Owned one Camaro...A 1968 Z28. No bottom end but at about 5500 it would take off. It was my demo while working at Burt Chevrolet in Denver. Pretty Funny I thought.
Had 2 Corvettes. A 1964 Roadster 327 with the old style fuel injection. Paid $2400 for it in 1967. 1968 Roadster 427/435 HP with 3X2's. Fastest car I have ever owned. Paid $5,000 for it in 1968 (used with about 6,000 miles on it.) Traded it in on a 68 Chevelle SS396 before leaving Colorado for Alaska. Drove it up the ALCAN . 1500 miles of dirt road. Ugly.
Ditto on 16's on a hot rod.
Three tone...no
Two tone./..eh maybe
I like red wheels. My 53 Chev had em with WWW's. My rat rod is gonna have em (maybe) .
Dont know nuthin bout 55-57 Birds. My neighbor just finsihed rebuilding a 57 though and its really nice. The rest of the cars he owns are Studebakers. 50 pickup, Golden hawk, President, and is now working on a Lark. He recently sold one but I dont remember what it was.
How about Edsel???
So if I was born in 1945 does that mean my 48 Ford is not old!!!
Not sure why you would want to restore an 80's type car.
:D
We are BOTH old farts ...
Never much into woodie wagons
Had a Vette ( 65 Red, black interior ... 4 speed Big Block roadster ) in 66 ...
Had a bunch of Tri 5's
Had more 67 -69 Camaros than 28 ... 3 Z-28's, couple 396 SS factory cars ... 1 COPO iron block 427 69, and lot of junkers
15 inches ... YES
Black cars ... red wheels ... always works for me ... just the two colors I need ...
Had a Black 56 T-bird ... too small a car for a big guy like me ( or you 8) ) ... it had red interior
Old people are folks 10 years or more older than yourself ... [/b]
I bought a new 1990 Silverado ... and went to visit my Dad ... he was 69 years old @ the time ... He said I really like your Silverado ... I think I will get me one also ... :) I passed it off as polite conversation ... a few weeks later I drove the 100 miles to visit Dad and there's a 90 Silverado sitting in his yard ... Dad said I got it from a old guy ... because he could not renew his drivers license due to his bad eyesight
I asked how old the guy was and Dad said the previous owner was 80 ...
:-o
Hummm,
I kinda like woodies, I'm just a stationwagon kind of guy. I probably would never have been able to maintain a woody properly but still I like wagons and sedans, even though my first car was a coupe and I had it for 35yrs or so.
My mom tried to get me to buy an Austin Healy Sprite before I got my coupe, about as close as I got to a sportscar, except for the couple 3 Vettes I've had.
I've had a 56 Chevy Wagon and did a 57 Convertible for my little Brother.
I've always been really fond of Tri-5 Chevies. Just my kind of car. Heck when I drive my 86 Chevy Suburban it brings back memories of my 56 Wagon, kinda why I like it.
No pony cars for me, never did like any of them.
15" is the only size for me. 16" were truck wheels.
heh,heh, I also never got anything out of 3tone paint jobs, or even 2tone for that matter.
I can enjoy seeing red wheels and www's occasionally but wouldn't ever have any, my choice would be black wheel with baby moons and narrow walls for my nostalgia.
I've worked on several 55-57 Birds, guess I never was much in the handling thing, I liked them pretty much because they were 50's era Fords.
I also liked most all 50's era Fords as well.
Of the orphan cars I was mostly a Packard fan due to apprenticing with a former Packard mechanic. Think the rest of the orphans always just looked odd to me.
Dunno about 80's restorations, with all the aftermarket stuff available for computer controlled FI drivetrains to allow retrofit to hot rods, I imagine the ingenuity is there to be able to keep them going.
Think my concerns are for how long our treasured hobby and rides are gonna be around into the future.
Seems we were a generation of folks with a certain ability and taste in things that may not be around much longer.
Heh,heh, I forgot to mention I do have a bit of a thing for 60's Mopars.
Ok, I'll play too. :D
Don't mind woodies but wouldn't want to own one personally.
Sportscars are ok, I liked my Bugeye Sprite (but the 289 Cobra I swapped in made it sooooooooooo much better. :shock: )
Red wheels are fine with me, but I think I have done my share of cars with them so I am now moving on to other colors.
Yeah, I remember more 15 inch wheels than 16's, but I don't mind them on the right fenderless car.
Love T Birds, but do not like the reproduction ones at all.
Tri 5 Chevies, these I like a lot, especially 2 lane blacktop '55's.
Three tone paint jobs aren't my cup of tea either.
Sloppy workmanship is just that regardless if high dollar or low dollar.
and some personal ones................
Don't like radials on fenderless cars.
Hate those grille shells for '32 Fords and other cars that have cut out flames protruding back from the shell.
Don't like valve covers from one engine put on another one so that the motor "looks" like the other one. (ie Olds valve covers on Chevy engines)
Independent suspensions on fenderless cars.
Those dumb crying dolls and peeing dog dolls.
and finally, cars that don't follow some theme all the way through.
Don
Kinda funny how we can span so much automotive "stuff" over a 45-50 year habit. The line that caught me the most on your list Frank was the workmanship one. It's a sorry fad we're living through where people go out of their way (don't they?) to make the car look crappy.
Having some similar experiences, as I look back I call them periods. I had my clunker period when I first started; 51 Merc, 56 Pontiac, 50 Ford, 56 Bug. Hey, they were just old cars a school kid working in a grocery store could afford. Then the drag race period, the sports car period, the 4 wheelin' period, the restoration period, the Bug period, and back around to hot rods.
Did the Tri 5 chev thing, 56 is my favorite, even gave away a 57 Bel Air hardtop once because nobody would buy it.
First sports car was a bugeye Sprite I built for my sister to have as her car but she decided it wasn't "cool" enough for her. Then on to a few Porsches later in life.
A string of pickups old and new with the latest being a slammed Ram that's still chuggin' after 11 years.
Went through a period of restoring Hudson Hornets. The twin H 51 coupe with overdrive was one of the best highway haulers ever!
Thought at one time I'd like an early Vette.........................until I drove one.
Never got into the Camaro thing, though came close once on a 68 396 4 speed. Most of the muscle stuff I've had were Mopars.
I'm with Pops on the tire/wheel thing, it depends on the car and how the proportions work out. The concept of theme is lost on some folks.
Not going to start listing pet peeves.......................it would suck up too much bandwidth! :D
Lol, I guess and early 70's car is old to me...
I cant stand big wheels and low tires, I kind of like www tires, especially on a deuce.
Woodys are for the ladys, not to drive around town... :D
Maybe i am odd, but i especially like the 20-30 cars myself, I wouldnt restore a 69 camaro if it was givin to me....
As most of you have, I have not tinkered with to many rods, Im still dreaming....I have tinkered with a 29 model a tudor with my father...Someday I will have one of my own all original, the chuging sound of the engine turns heads....I would also like a blown big block chevy A on a 32 chassis as well.... :D :D
I'm just beginning to play with the deuces, I'm not especially fond of the roadsters myself, I am partial to cars with tops, and short windshields...
Oh ya, lets not forget the vw bug, I can say I know them inside and out...
sorry...i dig woodies, won't ever have enough money to build one, but.....
like the sporty cars, owned a triumph spitfire and an X1/9. I was young & stupid, but both were a blast to drive (when they ran)
owned a 56 chevy in high school, 301, 4speed, straight axle car. That was the vehicle that helped me find religion :lol:
owned 1 camaro, 307/auto on the tree, handled decent, got great gas milage...just slow
16's / 17's look allright on a large early 60's ride, but yeah, the wheels were the first change.
never understood the 3 tone paint either. Would have really sucked to have to match paint after a collision in the 50's
Buddy of mine had a Bug Eye Sprite, never understood the attraction
Dad had a thing for big block fords, that looked like sleepers. He drove a lot to various construction sites, time was of the essance
55-57 tbird....meh, only thing i think about is Suzanne Sommers in one in Graffitti
Hudson, Packard, Nash, and Studebaker are gone because they didn't understand marketing, not because they were bad car.
Argeed, no one evere went broke underestimating the stupidity of the american public
I think sloppy workmanship reflect on the craftsman, even on a low buck car.
Agreed again. If the stuff you CAN see looks bad, think about the things you cant :shock:
Anything older than you are is an old car, no matter how old you are.
So, by that yard stick only one of my trucks is old? Thank you
I feel sorry for someone who wants to restore an early 80s car, a lot of the electronics are no longer available at any price.
I feel sorry for them, for they have no taste. The early 80's were dark days for Detriot
Hope I didn't offend anyone too much.
You didn't. And if you did....so what, that's why everyone does NOT own a 55 chevy
I may not qualify as a carnut, there are a few things I like more than cars.
Supermodels, well, maybe just pictures of'
Old superbikes
Hammocks
Beer
My cat Cody
My sea kayak
My first car was a donated 1953 Plymouth Cranbrook 4 door. I shoulda learned from that one. I was thirteen, it took two days and a few skinned knuckles to get it running. It ran for about five minutes and died, never to run again. My dad had it hauled away.
Bought a 56 Chevy 2 door hardtop from a cousin for $35, never drug it home. Every time I see one at the Barrett/ Jackson TV thing, I wonder???
At my age I'm Happy about woodies
Had one Camaro 70 307 automatic, looked nice. Real dog.
I like 16,17,18" wheels on some cars as long as the tires are sized appropriately. Nothing rides worse than electrical tape wrapped around an aluminum rim.
Sports cars, Sprite, Austin Healy 100/6, 356SC Porsche, BMW 2002, BMW M635, faux 427 Cobra and..., good old Ugbugly, I really miss that car.
Currently own; two cars, 67 VW bug, in a basket, 98 Eldorado needs head gaskets... six trucks, 84 Chevy LWB daily driver, 68 Stepside hotrod, 84 Blazer cash cow (I hope) 89 Ford Ranger cash cow & 2 basket case 55 Chevys... three motorcycles, all Honda CB750s...two boats, one I/O Trihull and one human powered (underpowered?) sea kayak.
Carnut? maybe. Just plain nuts definately. I'd give up one nut to take a few laps in a Formula one car. Jbird 8)
!st car 1963 Mercury Monterey 4-door. big * 'ole boat, but lotsa back seat room 8)
never owned a tri-5
owned 1 Camaro. 1976 Berlinetta. wound up as a dirt track stock car.
owned 1 big block chevy, 1974 Monte Carlo
Dad was a Ford man, grew up around them.
woodies don't really do anything for me.
WWW's look good on certain vehicles, just like big rims. personally, I will never own either.
have always wanted a T-bucket since I was a boy, finally going to build one. :D
I like the older stuff, 20's 30's 40's
two tone paint is OK, on certain vehicles, I have never owned that certain vehicle.
Vance
I think the wood work in a "Woody" is like fine furniture and I'm afraid they should be treated the same. The first car I got to drive was a wagon, a '59 Rambler. It was the family car and when I got my license my father gave me the keys and said "Now you can drive your mother wherever she wants to go". A sports car might be all right on a race track but in traffic I'd rather be somewhere other than "eye-to-eye" with somebody's headlights. I do like the early Corvettes but when they put dual headlight on them in '58 they ruined the body style. As for my feeling about the newer vettes refer to the sports car answer. Never owned a Camaro but I had a '69 Nova with the exhaust system that I pulled of a "Totaled" Camaro. Of course that Nova also ended up with that motor out of a '74 Vette. I guess the newer Vettes make decent donor cars. On T-birds' they're OK to look at but the '55s still had the 6V negative ground. If you owned one you didn't drive it every day to show it off. If you let it set 3 days it wouldn't start. While we're talking about '55s I've never owned (or wanted to) a tri5 Chevy.I did have a '57 Plymouth convertible with a 392 "Hemi" but as far as that year range goes I'd more like to have a "plain jane" '57 Ford like the one in "Thunder Road" I don't like large diameter wheels with "O" ring tires. The height of the sidewalls on tires adds some cushion to stiff suspension. And I'm not a big fan of whitewalls, no matter what the width. I'm also not a fan of Red wheels. The wheels can be the same color as the tires (black) and as far as hubcaps/wheels I like something simple like "Baby Moons". Not only are they simple but they aren't "over-done" and they do add the practical use of keeping the lug nuts from rusting to their threads. Although the use of them hides the fact that your lug nuts are loose but they will catch the lug nuts when the wheel departs from it's axel. I am a fan of seeing tires/wheels but they don't have to be showy. Consiquently I'm not a fan of "Fender Skirts" or the lowered look with tires buried in the body. I do like the look of the rear fender opening on the tri5 Nomads. Of course where it makes sense (and not on '48 to '55 Chevy trucks) I do like "fenderless". I mosty like thinking about or working on a play thing vehicle. I don't enjoy any competition about who's best or who spent more money. GPster
My turn I guess....... :?
I'm with Jbird on woodies...
Worked on sportscars until I learned why Lucas was called "the Prince of Darkness" ..Took about a week..Never touched another....
I was given a '57 Chevy once ..Gave it away that afternoon...Does that count??
Never owned a Camaro..Beat lots of them with some "cobbled Fords" on the street though...
My Gran Marquis has 16" wheels ..Enough is enough....
Three colors look great in traditional flames..No place else...
An Austin?? See my sports car remark..
Red wheels & WWW? ...Ah...No...
I almost rolled a restored '57 Bird on the highway...Not Mine .. :shock: An "interesting adventure " to be sure..Same owner had a '60 Corvette.. 283 with Dual Quad's....Useless car....
Hudson, Packard, Nash, and Studebaker..I couldn't agree more...Packard was a fine automobile...Until the last year....
Frank complemented me on my Olds in Indy this summer...'Nuff said.. (Took three days for my hat to fit again... 8) :wink: )
REAL old cars had running boards...The rest were just stuff we worked on..
RESTORE an 80's car??? Jeez...I still DRIVE them :!: :!:
There..I probably offended EVERYBODY at least once ...( My record is secure.. :wink: )
woodies... I can appreciate the craftsmanship &attention to detail but would never own one . sunbeam alpine'70 ...cute car but lesson learned! black,57 chev more door ,sold, but son of 4yrs old at the time will never forgive me! have never owned a camaro,the only ones I ever thought were inspirational had SS/ (pick a letter) decals in the WINDOWS there are few cars that look good with big rims. I still love PRO STREET(shove some RUBBER in those wheelwells) WWW & red wheels ,ok but I prefer cream ,greyw/red pinstripe,or apple green all on blackwalls with baby moons maybe Im crazy but I would like to see a little splash of metalflake as an accent (not a complete car) now and then. hudson nash packard studebaker Iwill probably never own one but they all make you stop and look. I worked on a 56 nash metro with a friend ,it was to be a mazda turbo rotary 5 speed car ,never got done ,too bad!sloppy craftsmanship .... as a machinist i have to ask how picky do you want to be ? do your best ,try to learn some things and improve your skills with each project . be safe and enjoy yourself. old cars have round headlights(except the new cars with round headlights)the old cars i like best have buckets for the headlights. as a matter of understanding ones perspective on things,yes ,cars older than you are old cars.I feel sorry for anyone who wants to restore an 80's car, PERIOD!
OK, here goes.
I like real woodies, but wouldn't want to own one. Too many down sides for me to bother with. Fake ones, why bother?
Sports cars still have a special place for me. More so now that you can get the quickness and agility of a sports car with the acceleration of a muscle car. A new Z06 Corvette? Yeah, I could drive that.
I've owned my tri5 Chevy entirely too long for the minimal work I've been able to do. Somehow my life got really chaotic around the time I bought it. Finally things are coming back together again and the car has waited patiently, like an old friend.
I wish I had owned more "cool" cars than I have. But I've enjoyed driving every car I've owned.
I'm not bothered by 16" wheels, or even 17" wheels, but they need to be there for a reason. Covering big brakes is a good reason. Filling up big wheel wells is another. Really enormous wheels degrade performance and tiny sidewalls don't function well on a street car. Too much is too much.
Same goes for paint. Including three tone paint jobs.
If I had the money I'd have trouble buying anything besides a new Roush Stage 3 Mustang.
Red wheels and WWWs don't speak nostalgia for me because I don't remember when they were current. The old school thing is cool but not for me. I'd rather take an old car and make it run as much as possible like a new performance car. I won't be one of those guys driving an old car on the freeway at 10 under the speed limit because it doesn't mix well in modern traffic. If it works for those guys fine, but it isn't for me.
A lot of old cars are unfriendly to drive. That can be fixed.
The "orphan" cars and odd rods are great. There should be a lot more of them.
Very few people are capable of Steve Moal or Troy Trepanier-level work. But if you aren't doing the best work you're capable of there is no point in doing it at all.
I'm glad people restore cars but I really don't understand why they do it. The best you end up with is still an old car. I'd rather end up with something that looks like an old car and drives like a new car.
All of the above is just my opinion. Just because I wouldn't build something for myself doesn't mean I don't think it's cool. From early bangers to Ferrari Enzos there's a lot of cool out there. It's all good.
I am a big fan of woodys. Never owned one but know that it would not be the right car for me. I don't keep my cars very clean or dry. Once I get them built they sit outside while I build the next one.
The only sports car that ever looked good to me was the Austin Healy & that got shot down when my neighbor got one & I seen how much trouble he had with it.
I once owned a 55 Chevy (belly-button car) for about 20 minutes. Traded a truck for it, but already had it traded for a 40 Buick.
My first car at age 14 was a 34 Chevy 3-window coupe. I bought my next Chevy at age 55 A 1940 chevy sedan that now 10 yrs. later I must admit is the most dependable old car I have ever owned. Still own it.
Never owned a Camaro. Did buy the wife a 69 Firebird when they were new.
16" tires? They come on trucks don't they?
3-tone paint? I don't even like 2-tone. (sayes the guy with a 5-tone paint job.)
Red wheels are only for the little red ring to show around the full hubcap.
Would love to have a 52 or 53 Hudson. Even a 4-door
Just this old mans opinion but don't really care for much that was built after 57. Well, maybe a few.
Little off topic, but crosley mentioned machines, I have one older than any of us... :D
Research has brought me to the conclusion she was born in 1910...Upgraded to electric in the 50's...And its useable, I have made a lot of parts on this old girl....
(http://i139.photobucket.com/albums/q316/bugpac/Picture-1.jpg)
Never saw a woodie that looked like a "hot rod"; they're kinda neat, but don't make a good rod.
Never had much interest in sport cars, my brother owned a Triumph TR4A when he went away to college, I was still in high school and he asked me to run it once in a while. I was scooting down a street in it one day and a guy in a Buick ran a stop sign in front of me, That sight was enough to make me quit drivin it forever!
I never got the tri five Chevy thing
Never owned, or driven a Camaro...why does that make me feel good!?
16" tires, bias ply look great on the right car (traditional) especially on 16" wires
Three tone paint? :?
Red wheels with WWW...I love 'em
'57 T Birds...made cool looking drag cars..in 1964....
I miss the odd brand cars, my Dad got a 'Stude for a second car in the early 60's. That thing was indestructable, my brother and I tried hard to blow it up, who wanted to drive a four door 'stude to high school!??
I agree with an old car being older than you, but now there are "old" guy that were born in the 60's; they think a '65 is old and I call it a late model!
no 80's car should be restored, ever, what's the point? It would be like restoring a toaster or other kitchen appliance..... :lol:
Well personally I like Woodies, but I'm prejudiced. I will agree they rattle and squeak. I like to think of it as extra personality.
Sports cars, I've owned and loved a '57 356A Porsche, I've also owned and hated a '72 XK-E Jag. Had friends in HS with Sprites, MGA's and TR-3's. The guy with the TR-3 got T-boned at an intersection and had a bad bruise on the side of his head shaped exactly like the other cars headlight trim!
Owned a '58 Chevy BelAir in HS with a decent running 348, that was as close to a tri-5 car as I've been. There were some nice 57 tudor hardtops around town that I would have killed for.
Drove a friends '57 Bird for about a week while I was doing some repairs on it. Got a lot of looks but I thought it was a POS. Bad ride, no power etc.
I really do not like the big wheel/skinny tire look that is showing up on a lot of rods now. 15" Wheels are just right.
My dad and uncle drove and drag raced early 50's Hudsons, those old things would move for a tank. Dean Loewy (Sp.) designed some of the prettiest cars ever built but it didn't save Studebaker.
You can tell how old I am by the fact that I don't think of 46-48 Fords as being old enough to qualify as hot rods. However my best friend (who reads RRT) has a nice 46 coupe that I make an exception for.
Three tone paint jobs don't deserve an answer!
Bugpac, go ahead and ship me that lathe, the check's in the mail. I had a 1929 Leblond Regal, really loved that machine. Jbird 8)
Quote from: "Jbird"Bugpac, go ahead and ship me that lathe, the check's in the mail. I had a 1929 Leblond Regal, really loved that machine. Jbird 8)
I have had it advertised on craigslist for only 700.00 bux for 4 months, No takers and I am kinda glad it didn't go.... I hauled this sucker home 150 miles from detroit, the old guy i bought it from wanted to just sit it down on this old wood center decked car trailer i had, I told him no way, it will go right thru with a good bump....So we found some oak 4x6's probbaly 40 yrs old, sat it on top of them...Anyhow to shorten a long story, when i was unloading it, i accidentally pulled the leg off the oak 4x6, so it dropped 4" on this wood deck trailer...Just imagine 5500 lbs dropping just 4"....Yes it went right thru, bent 2 cherry pickers, not them cheap hf jobs either....Garage door held it up....After i look back now, it was funny....But *, I thought i was gonna be heading for the scrap yard with 2 broken legs and a pile of rubble....
Sorry to get off topic here... :D
I have a 1910 Rivette toolroom lather, my favorite. Still flat belt driven.
I have a buddy near Adrian that has Henery Ford's personal lathe, documented. the Ford Museum has offered him a ton for it, but so far, no deal.
I do not desire a tri-5 chevy even though Ive been offered a fully restored one in trade.
Local car guys are weird and I dont like local car events.
Most of the local street rod guys are * to me.
I like mini-trucks, but only ones that are built with restraint and a good eye for style
Even though there are alot of cars i wouldnt want to own, I can almost always think of something cool to do to any car.
I hope 'rat rods' go out of style soon
'traditional' styled hot rods and custom are my favorite but I still like the 'high tech' cars alot
I love my car, but I don't like it at all because I know now that I can and want to build a nicer one.
I think that the majority of corvette guys are not car guys and the majority of harley guys are not bike guys. They just want to be.
I would rather watch an episode of Dexter, The Sopranos, or Seinfeld more than an episode of My Classic Car, Horsepower TV, or Pinks.
I go through phases were I cant stand working on cars and would rather do anything else, but in the grand scheme of things, working on cars is my favorite hobby of all.
Driving down the road for the first time, in a car I built, is one of the greatest things I have ever experienced.
Thats all i can think of for now. If any of my 'confessions' make you angry, just forget you read it because my opinion doesn't really matter.
Before i go get the snow off the vehicles i may as well play too
I like woodies but ive also never owned one .
My most favorite car was my 56 chevy 2 door post.
I had the chance to work on a 56 t bird and drive it all summer. I liked it and it was sure fun with the top off..
Never owned a camaro but i like em..
I hate 32 fords with the bobbed frame rails. Just doesnt look right.
I also dont care for channeled cars ..
3 tone :?: If it aint my car then do what you want with the paint.
Rat Rods.. Go to the Hamb the love to discuss em there :lol:
I ride a Harley and ive ridden all others too.
Never owned a Vette but tried to buy a couple just didnt pan out.
No excuse for sloppy work.. Your life could count on it.
I sure dont remember everyone having wide white when i was growing up either.. I think some guys are just trying to make their own trends..
Dave
I sure dont remember everyone having wide white when i was growing up either.. I think some guys are just trying to make their own trends
Dave, that's cause your too young. You probably never saw port-a-walls either did you?
Quote from: "phat rat"I sure dont remember everyone having wide white when i was growing up either.. I think some guys are just trying to make their own trends
Dave, that's cause your too young. You probably never saw port-a-walls either did you?
Now Jack I said when I was growing up ok.. :?: Lets not get you started telling everyone that you were around when they invented the wheel.. There is an age difference here so your trends are different than mine.. Just because your going on 99 years old doesnt mean that ive never seen a port-a-wall either.. At least when I was growing up the kids were a little smarter as were the adults cause they didnt run WWW's :lol:
How much snow you guys got over there? I got lucky 20 bucks and a guy with a ford and a plow..
Dave
Naw the wheel was before me :wink: although you may not believe it. :lol: We got about 3" here yesterday and overnight. Yes I know there's a bit of diference in trends. You grew up in the muscle car, skinny whites or red line tires era. These pics are from spring 61 to fall 65, note everything has whites
Quote from: "phat rat"Naw the wheel was before me :wink: although you may not believe it. :lol: We got about 3" here yesterday and overnight. Yes I know there's a bit of diference in trends. You grew up in the muscle car, skinny whites or red line tires era
Ya but i read all the mags and always wanted a hot rod so then i bought the t bucket and threw away 90% of it and built a better one :lol: . That was a mistake but i sold it and broke even.. I never had any really fast cars but i did have a jet boat with a 550hp 427 in it but it didnt have white walls either.. :lol: :lol: Back to the garage..
Dave :wink: :arrow:
QuoteYou probably never saw port-a-walls either did you?
Dave told me that's what they call the sides of the little stinky buildings... :wink: