Way back in the 1980's I started a similar project on a '67. Was pretty serious into being authentic as much as possible and travelled to the Joe Weatherly museum after speaking with the curator and setting up an after hours metting to take detailed shots of the car on display. Armed with these photos and six 8x10's from the Daytona historical archives I started on a '67 Satellite that I and a friend went in together and bought from a guy that was at the time the manager of Honest Charlies in Chattanooga. He was selling the car to move outta state and go to work for Weld Wheels. I mention this because this chance meeting was also my first real exposure to early B coolnees. He had a really nice ice blue '64 Dodge big block car and that was definately a turning point for me; seening a nice one for the first time. Our combined purchase went like this, he got the interior, and I got everything else. This was a two tone burgandy body, silver rocker, black vinyl top combination with a 383/727. I had the cage duplicated as close as possible leaving out a forward diagonal to accomodate a passenger bucket. The engine hoop looks somewhat convincing but doesn't connect through the firewall. There's a in car rear shock mount that again looks the part but isn't really doing anything. I spent a lotta nights, summers, and time. A young feller oughta be out doing somthing more enjoyable: but I guess all in all it kept me outta trouble and I'm sure I musta learned a thing or two while I was at it. Bought and stockpiled some parts, still have just about all of them, there's a bunch of stuff been waiting in an attic since the early 80's for a day that never came. Jumping ahead several years, my dad who has ran a carlot since '62 takes over the project and puts his on staff body guy on it full time. It made some real progress for a while the doors made it to final paint, the hood and deck lid got well toward completion and are in tinted primer, these parts too are in storage. Car was sandblasted inside and out, the quarters were radiused as were the fenders, and the quarters were also swelled for clearance like they did in the days prior to templates. And then it stopped. Dad tired of the project and it was pushed outside under a shed in bare metal no less and there it sits. This is not a project for the timid. There is a bunch of stuff worth acquring the project just for the parts alone. I will include every piece I have for '66/'67 Plymouths AND my research photos etc. I am relunctant to do this and I hope whoever might be interested will finish the vision I and my father had. The car has no title but I do have the Georgia Bill of Sale that I got with the car so long ago. Greg Weld might know the whereabouts of the original owner as might whoever the oldest still working dude is at Honest Charlies. I have the original block which is a hunk of cast iron that has sit under a shed with no heads for years, it's included if you want it. If the sound of this strikes a chord in you, I'll be willing to make a deal that would be worthwhile on any level. I realize that I'm not gonna finish this car: my dad isn't able and has no interest, and my son just hasn't turned out to be a car guy like his old man. It will require a donor vehicle, in fact the donor might be the car to swap onto...I don't know if it can be saved at this point but I'll be more than happy to show you the car and let you decide. In a day of "Pro Touring" - "Barrett this and Jackson that", a true, pure, real man's, no holds barred, Mopar race animal on the street will pitch a iron glove in the face of "the large money in a hermetically sealed box on wheels" set. The concept has come and gone a time or two over the years but I've yet to see but a handful that were built more like a scale model than a street car with decals and Air Conditioning. Are you the next hard core trend setter? If so either E-mail me at 426_maxwedge@ comcast.net or call John Hammond 423-506-2497 Sorry for the long and probably misplaced post but this car has half of my life's memories attached to it and I feel like the members of this forum would be the most likely candidates to understand why I've never offered it for sale. I also feel members here are of a type that I'd like to see acquire it in hopes of giving it back the
life I've been unable to do.... John From: "Ollie" <satellite1965@xxxxxxxxxxx> To: <1962to1965mopars@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2009 11:01 PM Subject: Re: Petty Stock Car Rick, I know that 65 was a bad year, hemi ban, and that he draged a Cuda. It was a parts car that I had for my good Satellite and I did not want to scrap it. Ollie----- Original Message ----- From: "Rick Gilmore" <rickgilmore66@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Mopar Website" <1962to1965mopars@xxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Wednesday, June 10, 2009 9:35 PM Subject: RE: Petty Stock Car Ollie, Just curious why did you decide to clone a car the year Richard hardly raced in NASCAR due to the hemi boycott? '65 was the year for the most part he drag raced. It was pretty much a wasted year for his stock car activities
> For any whom are interested..just posted some updated pics of my Petty > Stock Car Project
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