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-   -   Market for survivors... (https://www.yenko.net/forum/showthread.php?t=143665)

RST 07-24-2017 02:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Postsedan (Post 1361146)
The best pictures I have seen on sYc.....Priceless :D

Dan

+1

SBR 07-25-2017 08:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by WILMASBOYL78 (Post 1361056)
Well..let's hope it doesn't come to this :no:

-wilma

It already has, most of the Bloomington Gold Benchmark and NCRS bowtie Corvettes from the 50/60s have been so heavily fluffed that I would hardly call them survivors. As someone once told me, they are restored to look old. There are exceptions but they are very few and far between.

RPOLS3 07-25-2017 08:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SBR (Post 1361500)
It already has, most of the Bloomington Gold Benchmark and NCRS bowtie Corvettes from the 50/60s have been so heavily fluffed that I would hardly call them survivors. As someone once told me, they are restored to look old. There are exceptions but they are very few and far between.

I remember a pretty nice silver/black 67, 435 coupe that we took the body off (did not touch the body, paint, glass, or interior) and fluffed the chassis to make it look "old". Someone who knew what they were looking at could tell it was not untouched, but most run of the mill car show people had no clue. This was back in the 1989-90 timeframe. At the time I was in awe how it turned out as 99% of the work being done then was overly perfect restorations.

SBR 07-25-2017 08:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RPOLS3 (Post 1361504)
I remember a pretty nice silver/black 67, 435 coupe that we took the body off (did not touch the body, paint, glass, or interior) and fluffed the chassis to make it look "old". Someone who knew what they were looking at could tell it was not untouched, but most run of the mill car show people had no clue. This was back in the 1989-90 timeframe. At the time I was in awe how it turned out as 99% of the work being done then was overly perfect restorations.

I think I know the car that you are referring to.

On another note, the pictures that Steve posted of his children is absolutely priceless!

RPOLS3 07-25-2017 09:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SBR (Post 1361509)
I think I know the car that you are referring to.

Always curious what happened to that car as I do not recall ever seeing it again after they took it to Bloomington that year. I think that was the year we had a bunch of cars in a big tent out in the showfield by the highway and a terrible storm came up and snapped several of the large wooden tent posts and miraculously none of the cars sustained any significant damage including that silver 435.

Sorry for the thread hi-jack but those were fun times and these discussions bring back great memories.

SBR 07-25-2017 09:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RPOLS3 (Post 1361510)
Always curious what happened to that car as I do not recall ever seeing it again after they took it to Bloomington that year. I think that was the year we had a bunch of cars in a big tent out in the showfield by the highway and a terrible storm came up and snapped several of the large wooden tent posts and miraculously none of the cars sustained any significant damage including that silver 435.

Sorry for the thread hi-jack but those were fun times and these discussions bring back great memories.

If it's the car the David B. did a "chassis rejuvenation" on then that car is owned by a collector in the east coast. It has side exhaust, red stripe tires with headrest seats.

RPOLS3 07-25-2017 09:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SBR (Post 1361511)
If it's the car the David B. did a "chassis rejuvenation" on then that car is owned by a collector in the east coast. It has side exhaust, red stripe tires with headrest seats.

Sounds like the one - same guy own it now as back then?

Thanks!

WILMASBOYL78 07-25-2017 11:03 PM

old is new..
 
Interesting thread...people spend tons of money for plastic surgery to look young again...car folks spend the same money to make their ride look old.

So, if the owner looks younger than the car looks old...beware :tongue:

Great hobby...always a new wrinkle [sorry, we can fix that too]

-wilma

Ryan1969Chevelle 07-25-2017 11:47 PM

"Always a new wrinkle"

Tee Hee

Ryan

PS: if my money tree blossoms I will be the second owner of a wide variety of survivor or semi-survivors :-) I would pay more for a survivor than a restored car.

cook_dw 07-26-2017 12:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ryan1969Chevelle (Post 1361521)
"Always a new wrinkle"
PS: if my money tree blossoms I will be the second owner of a wide variety of survivor or semi-survivors :-) I would pay more for a survivor than a restored car.

And this is the reason why the faking of original cars will continue to increase. Where there is money to be made a liar, cheat and thief will try to take advantage.

Not picking on you Ryan just sayin'.


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