Ray: Actually 99% of the cars in
this show were for sale and many buyers had them cleaned up as if they were
being judged. As opposed to a show, they called it a car coral.
Mine was not there because I went to talk to Coker tires about a set of radials
as the bias ties scare me that I have on there now, although like new WW tires.
Coker wanted, with discount about $170 a tire and I am not ready to pay
that. What I am thinking now is to buy some inexpensive radials locally
for daily driving and keep the spare set of wheels (the G78x15 polyester WW Remington’s
tires/rims mounted) to take to show whenever I get to that point.
I am having better results getting some
parts, like new OEM steering parts, boots for the u-joints, new OEM clip-on
mirrors ,etc out of Canada,
as Mopars have a long history up there and still are popular.
My next show is the Amelia Island Concurs
next to the Ritz-Carlton on Amelia Island
FL. RM has an auction on
Saturday and you are free to look at all of the cars Friday afternoon or
Saturday morning whether part of the auction or not. The show on
Sunday will have examples of cars that many will have only read about or seen
in a picture. Each year features a marquee and each year a famous car
personality. Bobby Unser and Carol Shelby are recent. The cost of
the Concours on Sunday is $40. Here is a link for anyone
interested:
http://www.ameliaconcours.org/home.asp
I have driven cars in the RM auction and
was in absolute heaven in a 300 gullwing, a Tucker, a real Chrysler Town
and Country (1948?) , a Cord with its weird solenoid control twist shift, a
Marmon (which was absolutely stunning).
Northeast Florida Hospice has benefited
from this annual event, to-date, for well over a million dollars so it is all
for a good cause. Actually some Hospice staff started it, it
became too big for part-timers to manage and was taken over by an organization
established by Bill Warner.
Hope to see some of you there. For
me it is a day trip since I live on the west side of the same county (45 miles
away).
Tom
From: Ray Jones
[mailto:hurst300@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Sunday, February 05, 2006
2:41 PM
To: Tom Taylor
Cc: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [FWDLK] Car show in Moultrie GA
Hi Tom;
I assume that all 1000 cars were NOT for sale, but most of them on display. If
so, and having only 20 Mopars there, was one of them yours? That would have
made 21.
I've also found that there are often more people looking/commenting on the
Mopars than the "Others" on display. How many 57 Chevys can you look
at in a day anyway? Of course, when you have a beautiful Chrysler 300 E and you
hear people saying to each other that "My dad had a Dodge just like that,
'cept it was a 4 door", it gets a little discouraging.
As to parts, yes only a few at most shows, but the owners don't know or care
much about them and they usually go cheap.
As to Father/son, my son and I looked for 4 years at every show/flea market
held at Carlisle, PA, that's 4-5 a year one of which is all
Mopar, and could not find a pair of front fenders for his '71 'Cuda. Then
finally, I found a pair, reasonably priced, and when we met up at noon, he had
found 3 sets, not including the set I found. Ya never know. We did often see
many families hunting parts there years ago.
Hoping to hit a few shows myself this year, Ray
On Feb 5, 2006, at 4:35 AM, Tom Taylor wrote:
I spent yesterday walking
around the event looking at parts and cars for sale. Out of probably 1000
vehicles maybe 20 MOPARS were present and out of that, two 1950 Plymouths, a 42
Chrysler, an early 60s Desoto and the rest Darts and either real or cloned Superbird
and Charger 500. There was one hemi-challenger that was a pretty
car.
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As to be expected, the majority of
the vehicles there were 55-57 Chevy, street rods and a lot of older and
somewhat newer trucks. I guess we are all sitting on gold mines once
Forward look cars catch on. There was a really nice Javelin there
advertised for $7500 and some junk more popular cars there for same
money. Guess Javelins are not the deal these days. Those old bullet
nose Studes are still about the ugliest car I have seen leave a factory but I
also understand that a warthog’s mama thinks he is cute. (IMHO)
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As to be expected, there was zip
there for Mopar parts.
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I did get by the Coker Tire trailer
and eyeballed the Goodrich WW tires that would fit my car and now just mulling
giving up my beer budget to buy a set.
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Happy Superbowl watching. I
have the DVD set so I can watch the commercials later should I fall
asleep. For the millions per minute paid for these ads, they are
generally good to watch.
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I was impressed that one father had
his 6
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th
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or 7
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th
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grade son with him and they were looking for parts for a Studebaker
that was to be the son’s project. The boy had a sign made of
cardboard around him like a sandwich board stating that he needed parts for
that particular car. I thought that was cool. Might as well as had
one of those for myself but the kid was braver.
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Tom Taylor
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55 Coronet
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