Oh man, only 1721.4 miles on it and he tore it apart? Dang, that hurts! As has been said before, they can only be original once. I think this is definetly one of those cases where too little would have been a lot better then too much. This comment is not forward look related, but my 68 Roadrunner only has 69,000 or so miles on it. I am just fixing the previous owner's wreck damage, replacing a few odds and ends, then I am going to slap the plates on it and drive it! If the motor gets tired later, or if I ever get a shop built where I can scatter a car with impunity out of the weather, then I will pull it apart and have at it. My 58 Saratoga is not going to be blown apart either, I would rather keep it intact. I got a busted quarter panel to deal with as well as a rotten trunk floor, but from the rear doors forward, the car is decent except for a few small holes in the rocker panels. Sometimes if you take them down too far, they never go back together. Better it was left under a tree somewhere then for that to happen. Welcome back Dave! by the way. Dave Stragand wrote: > I second this!!! > > I am currently working on a car that was 100% completely and totally > disassembled by the previous owner. The car only had 1721.4 miles on it when > he did this. The result? > > - many pieces were lost or damaged, some beyond repair > - things that worked fine before are no longer working > - the cost of 'consumables' like gaskets and other items that need to be > replaced on every teardown went through the roof > - the reassembly task was so massive he never even tried. > > -Dave > > PS - To All: I'm back home and tomorrow morning I'm setting off to try and get > > the calendar printed. > > richard main wrote: > > > Anthony Knight , > > > > A very great temptation to new restorers of old Plymouthsis to completely > > tear down a car. The very common outcome is nothing happens thereafter > > (except the parts get lost or broken). I've bought several in this > > condition. > > > > Do yourself a favor, select an area to work on, then get the parts for the > > job before you tear it down. Finish the job, then move to the next. One > > more piece of advice, DON'T FIX IT IF IT WORKS.
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