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70 R/T Charger 440/4bbl Good project

Started by edl0944, October 19, 2014, 07:04:39 PM

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workworkwork

If it were all about money, then it is best to buy the nicest charger your budget can afford because then you are usually getting someone else's time for 50 cents an hour. But if you have the skills and enjoy the restoration like some people like golf then have fun with the hobby. When I was younger I might have gone for a car like this and dumped my time into it.  When you have the time and not the money you spend the time. Now I am older I like spending more time in the car driving than I do taking things apart and fixing them. I will still work on things that I can get done in a weekend. But 3 years of weekends is just too much work for me now. I would rather spend 20K and find the nicest car I could get for that much money and then do little things as I can if it isn't perfect. But if you take your time and look for a while you can still get a really nice one and not spend an insane amount of money. One way to look at is that you can go to a dealership and buy a brand new one and spend 35K and 5 years years later it will be worth 20K. Or you can find a nice 68 to 70 charger for 20K and have it be worth 25K in 5 years. Which is the better investment.

myk

Hey who needs that guy, right?  He's just another person looking to resurrect another rare Charger so who cares!   ::)

Ghoste

Quote from: edl0944 on October 20, 2014, 07:02:31 PM
i have just joined the forum and am pretty dissapointed with the comments so far. It seems that there is a rather high number of Grumpy Old Men  on this one which need  to "get a life" other than passing on low class comments. Anyway I am not sure how to delete my membership in this forum but i will certainly try. Good bye  :2thumbs:

So you joined in July and made one post to find the hp of a car someone was offering to sell you and then three months later posted it for sale in the wrong section and because one person didn't like the color of the seats and as an individual doesn't like projects unless they are Hemi 68"s (which you admittedly probably don't know), and for post three you call a bunch of us gumpy old men (plural) who didn't provide the comments you were seeking (I assume the comments you hoped for were offers to buy?) and now you want to leave?

Mytur Binsdirti

Quote from: Ghoste on October 21, 2014, 05:34:36 AM
Quote from: edl0944 on October 20, 2014, 07:02:31 PM
i have just joined the forum and am pretty dissapointed with the comments so far. It seems that there is a rather high number of Grumpy Old Men  on this one which need  to "get a life" other than passing on low class comments. Anyway I am not sure how to delete my membership in this forum but i will certainly try. Good bye  :2thumbs:

So you joined in July and made one post to find the hp of a car someone was offering to sell you and then three months later posted it for sale in the wrong section and because one person didn't like the color of the seats and as an individual doesn't like projects unless they are Hemi 68"s (which you admittedly probably don't know), and for post three you call a bunch of us gumpy old men (plural) who didn't provide the comments you were seeking (I assume the comments you hoped for were offers to buy?) and now you want to leave?





Call me a grumpy old man, but the cars that are selling for 10-20K today were $2,500.00 cars 20 years ago and I just can't see spending that kind of money for something that needs so much work. Those who know me, know that I do plenty of work on cars myself and because I know my limitations, I pay for services that I know that I don't want to do or can't do.

Currently, I have two other 383 powered Chargers & to be honest, they are more of a pleasure to drive than the hemi car. But the point being made that with patience and spending a few thousand more, you can finds a much better starting point of a car. For those here who have the desire and talent to resurrect a car from a pile of rust, God bless you. I look through the restoration threads and I am in awe at some of the work that is being done by members here.  But I am of the mindset that paying more money for an original solid and mostly rust free body is better in the long run than getting involved with a 10-18K car that needs major body & frame work. 

Sorry for pissing off the O/P, but I'm just calling it as I see it.

lukedukem

Quote from: Ghoste on October 21, 2014, 05:34:36 AM
Quote from: edl0944 on October 20, 2014, 07:02:31 PM
i have just joined the forum and am pretty dissapointed with the comments so far. It seems that there is a rather high number of Grumpy Old Men  on this one which need  to "get a life" other than passing on low class comments. Anyway I am not sure how to delete my membership in this forum but i will certainly try. Good bye  :2thumbs:

So you joined in July and made one post to find the hp of a car someone was offering to sell you and then three months later posted it for sale in the wrong section and because one person didn't like the color of the seats and as an individual doesn't like projects unless they are Hemi 68"s (which you admittedly probably don't know), and for post three you call a bunch of us gumpy old men (plural) who didn't provide the comments you were seeking (I assume the comments you hoped for were offers to buy?) and now you want to leave?



So, i read all his post too. is he a flipper. bought the car in july, now selling??

luke
1969 Charger XP29F9B226768
1981 CJ7 I6 258ci
2016 F150, 5.0, FX4, CC

nvrbdn

for me its a difference of what you want and what you are willing to put out to have a ride. the guys that want the perfect car will spend a ton. the guy with out pockets will get a car and patch it up themselves the best that they can for as cheap as they can. they both will end up with a car that they can go to the local cruise night and have a ball.

   it all depends on what kind of car, and the desired condition of the car you want when you show up at the cruise, that determines how much cash you have to invest to accomplish the task.   

   i agree with the comments that at my age i really dont want to start another long term project. i took 16 years of a couple hours here and there to get my charger on the road. i did every task myself except for paint. its not perfect. its a 10 footer. i love the crap out of it and am having soooo much fun driving it that i wish i had pushed myself to finish it sooner. (never really done with em).

   surely what is too much work for one person is exactly right for someone else that wants to jump in the hobby and doesnt have a big roll to finance it.
70 Dodge Charger 500
70 Duster (Moulin Rouge)
73 Challenger
50 Dodge Pilot House

Ghoste

And I wasn't trying to piss all over you either Mytur, I picked on you only because it seems like we are a group of grumpy old men but yours was the only comment that could be taken as not positive by my review of the thread.

6spd68

Quote from: myk on October 20, 2014, 11:53:59 PM
Hey who needs that guy, right?  He's just another person looking to resurrect another rare Charger so who cares!   ::)

Technically, OP is not one of those guys.  He's merely offing what he has. 

Not that there's anything wrong with it, too each is own.  Even though he'll likely not read this, he'd probably score about 12K in Canada for that car.  I've seen worse posted for more money, but who knows what they ended up selling for.
Every great legend has it's humble beginning.
Project 668:
1968 Dodge Charger (318 Car)
Projected Driveline:
383 with mild stroke
Carb intake w/Holley 750 VS

6-Speed Dodge Viper Transmission

Fully rebuilt Dana-60 w/Motive gears. 3.55 Posi, Yukon axles.

Finished in triple black. 

ETA: "Some velvet morning, when I'm straight..."

Mytur Binsdirti

Quote from: Ghoste on October 21, 2014, 07:54:27 AM
And I wasn't trying to piss all over you either Mytur, I picked on you only because it seems like we are a group of grumpy old men but yours was the only comment that could be taken as not positive by my review of the thread.


Trust me, I am not easily offended. I'm just stating my position in what I look for in an old Charger. I fully understand that many others here don't have my high standards, ability, vast knowledge, and endless fortune and are mere paupers in comparison to the great being that is me.  ;)





F8-4life

An interesting observation, people usually quote a huge $$ amount that represents a quality full resto of a project.
What about a driver? What about just getting it roadworthy and cruising around in a rust bucket?
These are options too and are way cheaper and just as fun

6spd68

Personally, I wouldn't make a driver out of an R/T car.  That's what 318's are for  :2thumbs:
Every great legend has it's humble beginning.
Project 668:
1968 Dodge Charger (318 Car)
Projected Driveline:
383 with mild stroke
Carb intake w/Holley 750 VS

6-Speed Dodge Viper Transmission

Fully rebuilt Dana-60 w/Motive gears. 3.55 Posi, Yukon axles.

Finished in triple black. 

ETA: "Some velvet morning, when I'm straight..."

Mytur Binsdirti

Quote from: F8-4life on October 21, 2014, 09:34:26 AM
An interesting observation, people usually quote a huge $$ amount that represents a quality full resto of a project.
What about a driver? What about just getting it roadworthy and cruising around in a rust bucket?
These are options too and are way cheaper and just as fun


I recently bought a 68 383 Charger with the express purpose of it being  a nice presentable driver quality car. It needs an exterior paint job (screw the jambs, trunk & engine compartment) and some TLC, but once it's done, I want to be able to drive & enjoy it for what it is.

F8-4life

Quote from: Mytur Binsdirti on October 21, 2014, 09:51:54 AM
Quote from: F8-4life on October 21, 2014, 09:34:26 AM
An interesting observation, people usually quote a huge $$ amount that represents a quality full resto of a project.
What about a driver? What about just getting it roadworthy and cruising around in a rust bucket?
These are options too and are way cheaper and just as fun


I recently bought a 68 383 Charger with the express purpose of it being  a nice presentable driver quality car. It needs an exterior paint job (screw the jambs, trunk & engine compartment) and some TLC, but once it's done, I want to be able to drive & enjoy it for what it is.

Thats a great way to enjoy these cars, and a driver 383 is a little less worry then driving a original hemi car I'm sure.

Ghoste

Quote from: Mytur Binsdirti on October 21, 2014, 09:29:48 AM
I fully understand that many others here don't have my high standards, ability, vast knowledge, and endless fortune and are mere paupers in comparison to the great being that is me.  ;)


You forgot the harem.  A lot of people are jealous of the harem even if they won't say it.

Mytur Binsdirti

Wishing for this harem......






But reality is this.....



stripedelete

Approximately 3 rows up, 4th from the right.   Is she taking a dump?

chargerperson

I was curious to see where this car ended up....

$16,100, reserve not met with 3.5 hours to go in the auction