and sh*tty brakesI love restos and restomods. Resto mods even more because when you restore an old car, you still have old technology like chokes and vapor locking.
and sh*tty brakesI love restos and restomods. Resto mods even more because when you restore an old car, you still have old technology like chokes and vapor locking.
Yes it is. I can not wait to get done with the beast. I am putting a lot of GM over the counter heavy duty parts on it (t.i. distributor, GM Crossram, heavy duty 12 bolt posi. With rear discbrakes, the J56 option) I been talking with one of the engineers that helped with the SCCA Trans AM racing in the late 60' and he is helping me build the 302 Chevy Engine to get the most out of it.That's JB Coppedge's Z. It's going to be a fabulous beast when he finishes the restoration.
I’m going off the top of my head now, but was it 67 or 68 when the Z-28 came on the market with the 302 emblem on the nose vs the following year the Z-28 emblem was the standard?Yes it is. I can not wait to get done with the beast. I am putting a lot of GM over the counter heavy duty parts on it (t.i. distributor, GM Crossram, heavy duty 12 bolt posi. With rear discbrakes, the J56 option) I been talking with one of the engineers that helped with the SCCA Trans AM racing in the late 60' and he is helping me build the 302 Chevy Engine to get the most out of it.
In 1967, the Z28 had no badging on them. The only on a 67Z was the racing strips.I’m going off the top of my head now, but was it 67 or 68 when the Z-28 came on the market with the 302 emblem on the nose vs the following year the Z-28 emblem was the standard?
We had a guy in HS that had one of those with the 302 emblem. Limited edition? BTW, it ran very fast.
I'm sure many of us have our "one that got away" stories. MIne was a 1969 GTO Judge Ram Air III automatic with factory AC, power windows, door locks, lighted vanity mirrors and the Hurst dual gate shifter. All of this documented on a copy of the factory invoice. Oh, it also had the functioning hood scoop doors with the complete air cleaner that sealed to the underside of the hood. Sigh.I ****ed up and sold a 68 Firebird Sprint ZE 6cyl 24valve dual overhead cams, factory 4 speed, polished. and ported intake, headers and 4bbl Carb. This is exact car I had below. I have regretted it everyday. Makes me sick when I see one. I had put a posi track and a 2 speed gear vender in it. It was fast and confused a lot of people.
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I'm sure many of us have our "one that got away" stories. MIne was a 1969 GTO Judge Ram Air III automatic with factory AC, power windows, door locks, lighted vanity mirrors and the Hurst dual gate shifter. All of this documented on a copy of the factory invoice. Oh, it also had the functioning hood scoop doors with the complete air cleaner that sealed to the underside of the hood. Sigh.
Yeah, my second "got away" was a 1967 GTO convertible. It was an early 1967 build out of Kansas City and didn't have a 400 like the 67s were supposed to. This one had a 389 tri-power engine. Man, I loved hearing those three Rochester 2GC carbs roar at WOT.Here's my "I was such an idiot for letting it go", story. Sold this '65 GTO in 1979 for $2k. I still kick myself 40+ years later!
Not a restoration of course but a lot of work went into that car at the time and was a long, drawn out convoluted process to get there. Several years earlier, I had bought a 66 GTO for $300. (pile of junk really) I blew the trashed motor in the first month and it took 6 months to save enough to rebuild another 389 as well as the original muncie 4 speed - work performed by my cousin and myself on my grandmother's garage floor. (she claimed to not see very well but dang if she couldn't point out each and every oil spot on the floor. lol) Got the motor/trans done with a nice cam and headers, reinstalled everything and then the car was stolen shortly after. I got it back - they didn't take anything valuable other than the Chevy rally wheels/tires. Lots of damage to the body though when they just dropped it to the ground after pulling the wheels (bumpers were off at the time).
Oh well. Wasn't really crazy about the '66 body style anyway ... a lady I worked with had a '65 body for sale with no motor or trans. Perfect, I thought. Think I paid $100 for it. I swapped everything over, had it painted and the result is what you see here. Damn, I was a stupid kid... stupid, stupid, stupid! lol
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I was looking at a 67 tonight on FB. 327, powerglide, all numbers matching. Body didn’t look too terribly bad. Stated to be needing a full restoration. $15kWish I could have kept this 1967 RS original 327 A/C car.
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