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Great Stories and photos Bill!
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Triple green 69 Z28 that I bought in January of 73 for $300 (!) minus engine, trans, hood, grille, and probably several other items. Had green Deluxe interior and AM-FM Blue light stereo radio, none of which I cared about since I was making a car to drag race. Also had factory 4.10 rear axle which I eventually traded to a guy for one with a 4.88 gear. The LT-1 from my 70 Z28 went into this car, with the 140 off-road cam, an Edelbrock Tarantula manifold and 750 Holley double pumper, and Hooker headers. After getting it all sorted, it ran a best of 11.98, twice.
First pictures as-bought, with the M22 trans (out of a Corvette) that went in it, on the garage floor in front of it. |
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Powertrain installation day on my mom's driveway in the spring of 73. I had plenty of moral support as well as helping hands! Also a couple pictures at the old farmhouse where I lived for a while. My friend's 68 L89 Camaro (which I eventually owned - briefly - in 1980) is barely visible in the background of the second picture.
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The 73 Z28 which I bought new in March of 73. Swore to my bride-to-be that I would leave it completely stock so it would be dependable. That promise lasted about 3 years :naughty: Wound up keeping this car until August of 2000. Third picture is my wife and I on the way home from our honeymoon in April 74.
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By 1976 we had stopped driving the 73Z daily with about 32000 miles on it. Pulled the intake and heads off of it, replaced by a set of angle plug heads, a 70 Z28 cam & solid lifters, an Edelbrock Torker intake, a 780 Holley, and Hooker headers. Also put a B&M shift kit in the T400 trans. In late 1977 had it repainted the original Midnight blue metallic color but with blue pearl flames replacing the white stripes, and added a 70 Z28 spoiler. Also added American 200S wheels. It stayed like this until I sold it to a friend of mine in August 2000. He still owns it.
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Cool pics Bill! How are you and Marilee doing?:biggthumpup:
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Berger COPO 1971 pictures
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Wanted to add to the baby pictures thread with our Berger car from the early summer of 1971. Just got returned from the Army ( thus the haircut ! )and got the car out of storage. My fiancé and I posed for these at the end of my parents driveway. We were married in August and took the car on our honeymoon to upper Michigan for @ 5 days. We were out of gas $$ and came home early ! Notice the copper colored rally wheel centers. I could never afford mags, so we painted the wheels different colors, to change up the look. After we were married I wanted a Baldwin Motion look so we added Corvette side exhaust to go with the 427 numerals we had already added to the hood. We traded cars with a friend in 1974 to get a 66 Corvette. The car had 33,000 miles on it and was still under factory warranty. Bought the car back in 1994 and all the original paperwork from Berger was still in the glove box.
Yesterday I pried those numerals off the hood to strip it, but my buddy and I are putting them back on with tape after the new paint job. ONLY painting the car because it had been painted in 1986, when it was in a large car collection and had lots of bad lacquer checking. My wife, same one from 1971, and I will be hauling the car to Berger in 2025 for their 100th anniversary. |
That's AWESOME Kevin:headbang:
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The silver Firebird belonged to my college roommate. IIRC, it was a Formula 400. |
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Forgot to include a few pics of the green 69 Camaro after I got it all done. Last two was its first time out at Byron IL Dragway, and the others were after I had paint & bodywork done,
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Here you go... Attachment 248687 Attachment 248688 Attachment 248689 |
Berger COPO pictures
Thanks Bruce, almost called you to post them initially. This looks lots better.....
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You can always call me :) :biggthumpup: |
Bruce has this picture posting stuff down to a science :BruceRocks:
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In a previous post here I made mention of a friend's 68 Camaro SS396 L89, one of 272 produced that year. Here are some pictures of it when I bought it in early 1980, from another friend. Back story.....I've known this car since 1972, when my friend Bruce bought it from a salvage yard as a running, driving car. He went thru the motor and added headers, a Hurst Super Shifter, and probably a few other goodies that I've forgotten. Factory 4.10 gear, and I think it's an M21, not M22. This thing ran really strong. I had planned to do a total resto on it, but a couple months after I bought it, I had the opportunity to buy a 70 Dodge Hemi Challenger from the original owner, a guy that I worked with. So, I jumped on that opportunity and sold the Camaro to my friend Brian, who still owns the car.
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After 27 years of doing absolutely nothing with this Camaro, another friend and I shamed Brian into getting the thing off to the body shop for body work, and paint. We hauled it down to a shop near Springfield MO, where the work was done, and they did a really nice job. That's the good news.....the bad news is, once back home, it got pushed into Brian's shop and buried with absolutely nothing else done to it in the 15 years since :(
Not long after Brian bought it from me, he was able to do a title search with the State of Illinois (back in the good old days when you could do things like that without people getting their panties in a bunch) and he got in touch with the original owner. He confirmed that it was indeed an original L89 car and that he blew the engine under warrranty, which explained the "CE" block in the car. In late 71 or early 72, his lower level garage flooded in a heavy storm and the Camaro was inundated. His insurance company would go either way, fixing the car or totalling it. He said the car needed brakes and tires and had some rust showing, so he decided to let them total it. That's how it ended up at the salvage yard where my friend Bruce bought it. |
WOW! I could listen to these stories all day! Keep ‘em coming.
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My '68 L72/M22/4.10 Biscayne when Larry Myers brought it home to his mother's driveway from Polar Chevrolet in White Bear Lake, Minnesota. And some photos from his days racing it.
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Here’s the story on the 1970 Dodge Hemi Challenger that I used to own. Rather lengthy, but I think there’s a lot that is interesting, so please forgive me if it gets too lengthy for you. Pictures to follow.
I bought it from the original owner in March of 1980. We worked at the same place, but it was a huge factory and I never really knew him prior to buying the car. I paid $900 (talked him down from $1000) for it. It had 64000+ miles on it, it was his everyday go-to-work car. He stopped driving it in 1975 and had intentions of having the engine rebuilt and just using it for pleasure afterwards. He had the motor pulled out of the car and sent it for machine work. The shop doing the machine work turned the crank and took too much off the sides of the crank journals, which would have resulted in excessive side clearance. They deemed the crankshaft junk, which put a halt to the progress. In the meantime, he and his wife built a new house plus had another child unexpectedly, so the car just ended up sitting in his garage. At some point, the radiator, air cleaner assy, and distributor had gone missing from the shop that took it apart, so that was another roadblock to him. He eventually lost interest and that’s when I heard from another co-worker that he was going to sell it. OO special ordered it from Grand Spaulding Dodge in early fall of 1969. Per the build sheet that I found under the rear seat (at least the portions that the mice had not chewed up), it was built on Veteran’s Day, November 11, 1969. It was triple black, no stripe, 426 Hemi, 4 speed, Super Track Pack (4.10 Dana and power disc brakes), console, AM radio with 8 track tape player, Rally wheels, and 6 way adjustable driver’s seat. (Regarding the seat, I believe I have seen our resident E-body Mopar expert njsteve describe it as offering ‘6 positions in which to be uncomfortable’ or something to that effect, and I would not disagree.) I owned it for 16 years, the first seven doing an every-nut-and-bolt restoration on it. While beginning the deconstruction process, I made what turned out to be a wise decision. I had a good friend who was the Parts Manager at the local Chrysler-Plymouth dealership, and we went thru the parts book and ordered all new emblems, moldings, front fenders, exhaust tips, and many other small parts. Hadn’t yet resolved how I was going to have the body shell stripped so held off on ordering new rear quarters. By the time I decided I did need them, they had been discontinued. Eventually wound up driving to Columbus OH to Mitchell Motor Parts to get those (paying a lot more than if I had got them thru my friend) and also got a NOS H-pipe for the exhaust from them. After I had it stripped down to the bare shell, I was considering taking it to Redi-Strip for immersion to remove all traces of rust. But I had heard, especially on unibody cars, that the stripping solution would remain in cracks and crevices and seep out after paint, ruining it. A friend had heard of a place in Chicago that did “water blasting”, which was sand mixed with water, the idea being that the water would keep the metal cooler to prevent warpage of the sheet metal. Sounded promising, so I decided to go with that. I took them the bare shell, hood, and doors. When done, I went to pick it up and was horrified. They obviously used way too much pressure when blasting, and the roof and hood had dips more than an inch deep. Doors were somewhat saved due to the side impact beams behind the outer skin. I didn’t even bother to bring the hood home. Using a die grinder and small cutoff wheels, I ground off every spot weld holding the roof skin to the sub-structure and removed the damaged roof skin. Went to a junkyard and had them cut the complete roof structure off another Challenger, where I repeated the process to remove the good roof skin. In the early 80’s, there were virtually no reproduction parts being made for Chrysler E-bodies, so it was a challenge (pun intended) to find what was needed to progress. I bought a complete running driving Challenger just to cut out a portion of the drivers front floor pan to replace the rusted section on my car. Bought another one just to get the vent tube for the fuel filler neck. Had to weld in small sheet metal patch panels in the front inner fenders, the passenger side rear seat footwell, and trunk floor. Finding the missing parts turned out to be not terribly difficult, even in pre-internet days. Got the air cleaner assembly from a guy in Indiana. I decided to use a Direct Connection electronic ignition kit, which came with a distributor. In the local “Tradin Times” paper, found a guy up in Grand Rapids Michigan who had the correct p/n radiator (2998956, still burned into my memory) so I drove up there to get that. He told me it came from a car that he had parted out….ready for this??....a Panther Pink 70 Cuda 440 six pack convertible! Even back then, I thought to myself, that’s gotta be a pretty rare and valuable car. In June of 82 I was laid off from my job, and for the next 3+ years never had steady full time work, so restoration progress slowed considerably. Finally got to the point where it was time to build the engine. I mentioned previously about the crankshaft being deemed junk by the OO’s machine shop. Well, my experience had been that, as long as a crank wasn’t physically broken into pieces, it could be fixed. I took it to a reputable shop that did a lot of performance work, where they welded up the journal sides and remachined them, and it turned out fine. I had zero experience building a Hemi engine but figured as long as I followed my trusty “Motor” manual, I’d be OK. When it came time to install pistons and rods, that manual noted “notch or arrow on piston head toward front of engine”, so that’s what I did. Took my time and got everything buttoned up, engine installed into the car, and it was time to fire it up. It started with no issues, but there was a loud ticking noise, which I just assumed was the hydraulic lifters taking time to pump up. I was very nervous as this seemed to be taking too long to happen, so I had my hand on the ignition switch the whole time. After a few minutes, there was a loud “BANG” and I instantly flipped the switch off. A couple days later I began the teardown process. IIRC, when I pulled the passenger side cylinder head, I found the problem. All the intake valves on that side had been hitting the pistons. One of the valves finally broke. The broken piece put a good gouge in the combustion chamber of the head, but thankfully not even a scratch in the cylinder wall. All the other intake valves were slightly bent, but not broken. Now the puzzling part; why did this happen? Eventually I noticed that on the other side, all the pistons had valve reliefs on the top (intake) side and on the damaged side, all the valve reliefs are on the bottom (exhaust) side. I found that strange. I noted that all 8 pistons had the stamped arrow pointing forward, just as the Motor manual had said they should be. I eventually found out that the 426 Hemi engines had different pistons for each bank of cylinders. The reason for this is there is a very slight (thinking it’s like .002” or something) offset in the piston pin hole. For whatever reason, this engine had originally been built with all 8 the same pistons and the Chrysler assemblers were smart enough to put the valve reliefs all at the top side, which meant that the arrows on top of the piston head were all pointing backwards on the passenger side bank instead of forward. Having the wrong offset pistons on one bank was good enough to get this car through 5 years and 64000 miles of use, so apparently not a big deal. Sure made a lot of work and expense for me though! I found a guy who had the four correct pistons and got it all back together with new intake valves, and it ran fine. In the spring of 1986 I took it to my old college roommate who, along with his father and brother, ran a body shop south of Springfield IL. They did all the finish body and paint work and then I brought it back home and did all the final assembly. The car was completed in 1987. Sold it to a good friend in 1996 and he sold it 2 years later and it went to Bethesda MD to a guy who also had a black Hemi Road Runner. |
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"As purchased" pictures. Note patinaed Grand Spaulding Dodge decal on trunk lid.
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After being stripped to the bare shell, it was time to cut off the quarter panels. I guessed that it would be rusty underneath them, and that proved to be a good guess. This work was done by a couple of my friends, who are pictured here.
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out of curiosity what did you get for it after the restoration? (not trying to twist the knife lol)
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I re-scanned some pictures in a jpeg format so that I could post them here.
More shots after the rear quarters were cut off. |
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Since winter was going to be coming soon, I decided we needed the garage for our daily drivers, so the Dodge would take up residence in our back yard for the winter. We lived in a normal residential neighborhood with an 80 ft wide lot and a fenced back yard. So, had to get creative in order to get it to the back yard...
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After spending the winter there, my wife told me it would NOT be spending any more time back there, or else I would be living inside it :tongue:
So, it came back to the garage and I got to work on it. This is when it went off to get 'water blasted'. |
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After water blasting, my friend came over to get the thing all in primer. After that was done, I got to work cutting the roof skin off.
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OK, this has gotten lengthy enough, so I'll fast forward. Got the engine in and eventually it ran without undesirable noises and flying parts. I couldn't wait to take it for its first drive, since I had owned it about 5 or 6 years at this point and had never driven it before. And then a few years after it was all done, went to an all Mopar show in Oakbrook Terrace IL and won an award. Had the picture from that show signed by Norm Kraus, "Mr. Norm" a few years later when I brought the car to an event where he was present.
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That’s is so cool!!
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I was in a car club at the time, Keith :) In addition to the club members, I had many other friends who helped me in various ways throughout the restoration process :worship:
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Wow..I know where this was taken.
Bill,what month/year was this? |
Oak Brook mall right?
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