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#12
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$2500 a quarter? $2000 a fender? Really? Why would an engine rebuild be so much? Even with a block that needs 8 sleeves it should be cheaper. I whould worry about head corrosion more than block corrosion. I'm not saying it would be cheap, but those prices seem a bit on the outrageous side. Jason [/ QUOTE ] 1) It's a Pontiac, not a Chevrolet. Engine parts cost a ton more than a small block or big block Chevy. 2) If you want the correct parts for a 70-72 Firebird you will pay dearly for them. Nothing interchanges with the same era Camaros despite the fact that most venders falsely describe them as fitting both models. ![]() I've seem major allegedly reputable venders selling 70-73 Camaro and Firebird rear quarters with the same part number and 70-81 Camaro and Firebird door skins with the same part number even though the two cars have completely different body lines. 3) I have been lucky with my project. The only NOS body parts it needed were the driver's door skin, the lower front spoiler and the tail light panel. I lucked into an NOS door skin on ebay that the guy misdescribed as a later door skin. I found out when I had him email me back the door handle opening measurements. I think I picked it up for $300...and it was local, too! It was an absolute steal because the early style "long door handle" door skins never show up for sale since they were only offered as a service part from 1970 to 1972. The same thing happened with the front spoiler and the rear fiberglas tail light panel - misdescribed and bought reasonably cheaply! 4) Yeah, you could throw on a couple of 73 to 81 fenders and hood on the car and 95% of the people out there won't know the difference. You could also buy some repro quarters for $150 too, and repro doorskins that have the wrong later model door handle openings. You could bolt up a later model radiator support that has those easily spotted 73-81 front fender bracket indents instead of the unobtainable flat top 1970-72 support (another $2000+ piece) - no one will really notice. You could cut a lot of corners with the bad repro stuff out there and maybe do the car for a whole bunch less but it won't be correct. It's the same thing with First Gen Camaros, and even Mopars. You can restore a Copo to look presentable to 95% of the population but it won't be correct. That is the difference between the $100,000 Copo (with the Ford "CAUTION FAN" sticker on the shroud) and the $400,000 Copo (without the aforementioned sticker). Or the $125,000 Hemicuda (with the brand new Mopar Performance crate motor) and the $500,000 Hemicuda (with it's born-with block). It's all in the process, the parts, and the execution. A correct restoration means different things to different people. I prefer to do my cars to a certain level of insanity and try not to deviate from that self-imposed, financially ludacris, standard. On my T/A I am trying to refurbish and reinstall as many of the original components that were on this exact car back in 1972 as I can. (which is why I am just about broke now ![]() |
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