Early 70s RR Shadow
One trick is to not have anything that says "LUCAS" on it fail (which would include anything that has electricity applied to it). And somehow they managed to remove the ground/return from the body! The other trick is not have to rely on the brakes for stopping. Then it's all good. Except maybe for the fuel delivery system. And parts that carry freon.My Porsche mechanic tells me these are a nightmare to work on.
Thought this could be entertaining (if not - moderators close it down). Guess the car in parts, rehab, or pieces.
Early 70s RR Shadow
At least it wasn't the first guess (thank you 2112).
I was born with cars flowing through my veins. When I was very little (4-5yo) my dad (who was a railroad engineer) would bet his friends that I could name any make, model & year of car that I saw. One day he was talking to a friend and they bet (just for fun). The next car coming by worried my dad that I wouldn't get it right. I looked and said "1951 Hudson Hornet". My dad always loved to tell that story RIP 2003. I miss him.You're such a "Richard"...How the heck did you guess?
I was born with cars flowing through my veins. When I was very little (4-5yo) my dad (who was a railroad engineer) would bet his friends that I could name any make, model & year of car that I saw. One day he was talking to a friend and they bet (just for fun). The next car coming by worried my dad that I wouldn't get it right. I looked and said "1951 Hudson Hornet". My dad always loved to tell that story RIP 2003. I miss him.
Most anyone can tell a 55 from a 56 or 57 Chevy. But it gets down to the minor differences I like. Like a 49 Ford has an exposed gas cap. A 50 Ford has a gas door. 64 Chevy pu has the "10" down low on the fender. 65 up high. 66 is square down low but different from the 64 and it has backup lights (64 & 65 do not). I could go on and on.
Someone posted a pic of a car at a Ford club meeting in Dallas here on the forum a couple of years ago. It said 56 Ford Crown Vic......but it was a 55. I still remember.
Ruins a good movie for me when they use another car for a scene and to me it is obviously not the same car. At least they could use the same year. One was a 79 Camaro and when it blew up it was an early 70s chrome bumper car.
This is way too scary. In the late 60s and early mid 70s my Dad would bet passengers in the car that I would be able to tell a car make and model just by looking at the front of the car while we were in transit - IN THE NIGHT TIME!!!!