Re: [FWDLK] Hello
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Re: [FWDLK] Hello



Hey Steve,
Subscribe to Hemmings Motor News. In Octobers Issue there is a 59 Saratoga
2HT (in minimal rust Texas) for $1300. I just called him and he still has
it. I wanted it if it had power windows, but alas....ROger
-----Original Message-----
From: Steven M. Charette <SC68Cuda@xxxxxxx>
To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Friday, October 30, 1998 12:49 PM
Subject: [FWDLK] Hello


>Hi,
>   My name is Steve Charette.  I just subscribed to the Forward Look
Mailing
>List.
>   I am a long time Mopar lover, and have owned at least one Mopar from
every
>year from 1962 to 1980, and many more since.  I currently have a 1968
>Barracuda, a 1984 Shelby Charger, a 1989 LeBaron GTC Turbo Coupe, the
wife's
>Eagle Vision, and my Ram.
>   The first car I ever test drove, was a 1957 Belvedere 2dr Sedan.  Mom
>wouldn't let me buy it because the clutch chattered.   I have always
admired
>the finned cars, (Grandpa was a Plymouth/Desoto Dealer in the late '50's)
but
>owning one was never a priority... until recently.
>   I had been entertaining the idea of assembling a daily driver from an
older
>car with updated mechanicals.  I was looking at 81-83 Imperials, and eyeing
a
>few 68-72 "C" bodies.  Then, one Sunday afternoon, I saw her.   Returning
home
>from Western Michigan one Sunday about 2 months ago, I nearly put the
wife's
>Vision into a field trying to get back to a gorgeous white 1959 New Yorker
2dr
>HT .  It was sitting in the front of a used car lot in rural central
Michigan,
>with $1500 on the windshield!!!  Save for 2 or 3 (probably critical) chrome
>pieces, and one baseball sized hole in the front fender, the body was
>incredible.  It looked like someone had swapped in an interior from a later
>Imperial, but it was nicely done.  After procuring the dealer's number,
(and
>my wife pried me away) I drove home.
>    At 9:00 the following morning, I excused myself from the meeting I was
in,
>and called the dealer.  The dealer's wife informed me that he was up north
>visiting his daughter, and would be home Wednesday morning.  The dealer's
wife
>told me the car ran and drove beautifully!  I went back to my meeting, and
>began plotting.
>    I took my car trailer to work with me on Wednesday morning, and told
the
>boss I would have to leave around 8:30.  After leaving right on schedule, I
>gassed up the Ram, and nosed her into the wind.  I thought I'd call the
>dealer, and have him get the paperwork ready.  After a brief exchange of
>salutations, I told him I was on the way to pick up the New Yorker.
>   I nearly cried when he told me that the car was sold!  He had gotten
home
>on Tuesday evening, and a trucker stopped (probably in the same field I
did)
>and ended up buying my dream car.  For $1300.  Dejected, I returned to
work.
>   I was sick.  That was the perfect car.  I was sure I'd never find
another
>one like her.  It even had air conditioning!
>   It gets worse.  I was taking my Barracuda up to get gas one afternoon
about
>two weeks later, and passed by a house about 5 miles from where I live (the
>lot the New Yorker had been on was about 75 miles away).  I approached a
>farmhouse with a semi parked behind the barn.  You'll never guess what was
>parked out front.
>   I've made a few attempts to contact the new owner, but have been
>unsuccessful.  I seriously doubt he'd consider parting with his treasure.
>   So, I've begun a new search (you were beginning to wonder if this story
had
>a point, weren't you?).  A new friend I've made recently suggested that I
join
>the Forward Look Mailing List (Thanks, Clay), and put the word out.
>   I'm looking for a '57 to '61 Chrysler, Plymouth or DeSoto, preferably a
2dr
>Hardtop or a Wagon.  I don't want to modify a nice original, a nice
>restorable, or anything with any historical significance.  I hope to find a
>car with a missing or broken drivetrain, needing some work, but not
completely
>scrap.
>   My plan is to install updated engine and transmission, most probably a
fuel
>injected 360 with an A-518 overdrive transmission, R-134a air conditioning,
>and other creature comforts.
>   Thank you for taking the time to read my long-winded introduction.  I
would
>appreciate any information that you could share with me.
>   Additionally, I have a small machine shop in which I fabricate, among
other
>things, heater delete cones for 1962-1965 B-Body cars.  If you have any
parts
>you need duplicated, fabricated, or repaired, I would enjoy talking with
you
>about it. I am currently researching reproducing heater delete parts for
1968
>A-Bodies as well.  What parts does the Forward Look crowd need?
>
>Thanks again,
>Steve Charette
>




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