Quote:
Originally Posted by NorCam
While a lot of these cars may not appeal to millennial's, there seems to be a growing desire to get into these muscle cars by kids the age of my son who is now 14. I say that because he wants a late 60's to early 70's muscle car and so do his close friends who are the same age. His one buddy is now building a muscle car with his grandfather, and another (also 14) is now working on a 340 duster with his dad. Looks like the three of them will all have stick cars just a couple years from now, and that's a good thing!
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The desire is certainly there. I'm 19, and lots of my friends love these cars. One of my oldest friends had a '66 Comet project with his dad (sadly sold before completion), another has a '73 or '74 Charger project with his Dad, I've got my grandfather's toys, and one of my best friends has coveted our Camaro since I met him. When we were six.
So, it's not necessarily that younger kids aren't into them. We just have no hope of affording them at our age unless we're born into a family with them around.
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My cars, passed down by my grandfather:
'68 Camaro SS (454/TH400, possible L78/M22) LeMans Blue, black deluxe interior, black vinyl top. 3.73- mostly Day 2.
'89 Mustang GT- 3.55, subframe connectors, muffler delete, and a couple other minor mods. Exactly as he wanted it, so how it shall stay
Also:
1995 Ford F-150 XL
2004 Dodge Ram Hemi GTX- #192 of 433
Ain't no fun in viewing your car as an 'investment'. Get out there and beat on it!
Last edited by JRC99; 11-26-2018 at 12:50 AM.
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