27 Annual Chevy Showdown, Tucson, AZ Part 2 – Corvette Action

Here is Part 2  this is the Corvette action.

First I really liked this striping on this ’77 Vette.

 

Look closely at the next few photos the stripe moves from dark to almost white.

 

 

 

Oh...and the stance on this is just extraordinary!

 

One more 77 .

One on looker called this a plain jane Vette, I told him there's no such thing!!!

 

Here are the 50’s era Vettes.

 

A little video clip…I didn’t add the music.

 

 

And the 60’s Vettes.  The silver 63 is Steve Fagan’s.  Owner of Hot Rods and Classics, located here in Tucson.  They do great work including a lot of my engine work for the Mustang, which helped me win my First Car Show Trophy!!  His Corvette has taken two trophies in the last two shows.

Steve Fagan's 64

Little more of Steve’s StingRay

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Steve’s, posted with vodpod

The driver in the red Vette caused a few nervous moments as it took her a few tries to get into that parking spot.

Here’s another shot of the 60’s Vettes

1960's

Coming up next -the trucks!!!

Thanks for reading.

Tim

 

 

Toyota Drifter

These guys are having fun. Just proves you don’t need gobs of HP to have fun   . On a track with safety gear.    Come on…that’s fun!!!!

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Toyota Drifter, posted with vodpod

2007 Corvette Official Daytona 500 Pace Car Give-A-Way PIC 2

No it’s not real Corvette – but the Collector’s Promo Revell Model.  In the original box.

All you have to do is guess the year of the Corvette the part pictured belongs too!!!  First one to post the answer gets 1 point.  The first one that gets 4 correct wins the car.

I’ll post pics here.  You need to go here:

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Average-Guys-Car-Restoration-Mods-and-Racing/185827701454279

and post your answer….you have to include year of the Vette and the words “Average-Guys-Car-Restoration-Mods-and-Racing” in your post.

Here is the next pic:

 

Good Luck.

Tim

 

 

 

2007 Corvette Official Daytona 500 Pace Car Give-A-Way.

No it’s not real Corvette – but the Collector’s Promo Revell Model.  In the original box.

 

All you have to do is guess the year of the Corvette the part pictured belongs too!!!  First one to post the answer gets 1 point.  The first one that gets 4 correct wins the car.

I’ll post pics here.  You need to go here:

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Average-Guys-Car-Restoration-Mods-and-Racing/185827701454279

and post your answer….you have to include year of the Vette and the words “Average-Guys-Car-Restoration-Mods-and-Racing” in your post.

Here is the first pic:

Good Luck.

Tim

C6 Corvette – Roof Ruckus

When I first purchased my 07 Corvette and took my wife for a ride.  I was pretty jazzed and noticed the noise emanating  from the roof.

That was the first thing she noticed.  I was so caught up in the handling and power I was ok with the noise.  But after she mentioned it, I wasn’t able to ignore it quite as easily.

The squeaking was very profound and since our roads aren’t the best in the land, it crazy loud.  So the search was on for a cure.

Lots of help on-line including resetting (releasing the front latches) and closing them again.  This came with the sage advice “….I got the wife accustomed to helping me reset the top at stop lights…don’t do it while you are moving….”   I wonder if that little nugget was from a first person experience?

And for a while I would reset the top latches (not while moving) when the noise got frequent.  But that just couldn’t be a long-term solution……”ERRRRRKK….(braking noise)…..I brake for “soap boxes”!!!

I am frankly sick and tired of hearing for Corvette owners the following phrases…”that’s the nature of the beast”….”that’s just something you have to live with”…and the my favorite…”You’ll get use to it.”   That is all BS.  If things are broken…then they are broken.  If doesn’t work like it’s supposed to, then it needs attention.   I’ve heard that ever since I’ve owned my C6.  Those tired phrases, were used for the squeaking roof and the odd activity with my gas gauge after filling it up and the cold weather shifting issue.   No way dawg, I want this stuff fixed!!!  .

So back to top issue.  After checking with a few more Corvette buddies, I ran into to one that gave me this, every valuable tip.  He used it successfully.

Get out the lube…Dielectric grease the rollers / contact point for the front latches and the pins in the back. Lube up the rubber moldings /contact points of the moldings.

Di-Electric-Grease

Lube the rear posts.

Spray a little on a rag and wipe down the rubber weather-stripping.  You don’t need a lot.

I’ve only done one time and not since.  But I keep the rubber clean and no problems.

For those of you aren’t familiar with the top (I’ve talked to a couple that didn’t know the coupe had a removal top.) see the video below.

 

[vodpod id=Video.16243571&w=425&h=350&fv=%26rel%3D0%26border%3D0%26]

Top, posted with vodpod
Thanks for reading.
Tim

1924 Model T Touring Car – Give Away

Ok… time for another give away.

I have a National Motor Museum Mint die-cast car to give away.  It is the 10 millionth car Ford produced.  It was 1924 and the 1924 Model T Touring Car was the car of choice.

When new, the “real” car would cost between $295 and $380.  There were 773,102 produced and it was powered by the L-4.  With 176.7 cubic inches displaced it muscled out 20 Horse power.

In the original box and with Certificate and "baseball" card

How do you win?  Post of a good picture of your 1920-1950 engine, tell us what it is and get someone to like the pic.  The engine picture with the most Likes wins.

You can post it on our Facebook page located here:    https://www.facebook.com/pages/Average-Guys-Car-Restoration-Mods-and-Racing/185827701454279

You can’t win if you don’t play.

Thanks for reading.

Tim

Parking Lot Spot Light 1939 Ford Coupe

Well  I’m beginning to think that my local grocery store is really a car show 7 days a week!!!

Case in point is this ’39 Ford coupe I saw over the weekend.

Great Hub Caps, Great Paint.

You’ve got to love that split rear window.

Pretty stout looking tail pipes.

Besides the tail pipes I’m liking the chevron tail lights.

1939 brought hydraulic brakes to the Fords for that year.   Ford produced 487,031 cars that year, coming in second to Chevy.

Love the rolling fenders and the dog dish hup caps with the V8 log pressed into the centers.

Love the grill and the V8 and Ford badges.

You can't tell from my 'most excellent' photos, but there is a huge difference in the width of the rear vs. the front.

The V8 engine was the Flathead, which was originally developed in 1932.  For 1939 the flathead was the V8-91A, compression increased to 6.15:1, power rose to 90 hp.

This is a great looking car.

Thanks for reading.

Tim

Selling Cars Part 1

I love combing through ads for selling cars.  Every now and then you read some really good ones.

1.  ” 1960 Plymouth Fury donor car. Seems to be complete including chrome and emblems. Glass not broken. No bullet holes. Frame and floor pans rusted through. Guaranteed NOT to run. Absolutely as-is. Will help load; no hurry to move. Strip what you want and leave the rest if desired. No title. Worth ~$400 for scrap iron.”

2.   “I HAVE NO INTERIOR AND MOTOR IS ALL THERE BUT STUCK.”

3.  “…have to get rid of all my rides but a bike and my work truck.  I don’t know a lot about older cars like this besides that it runs and drives good and seems like a good deal to me.”

4.  “I purchased this car in late 2010 as a project car for my son and am now selling it due to his lack of fulfilling his obligations in order to keep it…..OH SNAP!!!”

Thanks for reading.

Tim

1955 Ford Sunliner


1957 Aston Martin – Restoration

I ran across this on Classic Recollections. I’m not a Aston guy, but this DB Mark III is pretty nice. The owner did a lot of work on this thing. Nicely done! Oh, but cleaning those wire wheels…..ya killin’ me!!

Thanks for reading

Tim

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Parking Lot Spot Light 74 Impala

Right on the verge of the gas crisis, the ’74 models were a mixed bag of old school horsepower and new school power choking fog reduction hardware.  This Impala was in fact still a V8 with the power of the a 1960’s 6 cylinder.

Now I love the Impala models and if you’ve read a recent post I wrote I think 4 doors are under valued and with the right tweaks can achieve the power desired to make them a muscle car.

This Chevy was sitting outside a local CVS store with a for sale sign.

4 door with stamped steel wheels and poverty hub caps

 

Still sporting chrome bumpers

 

 

I like the plain jane hood and front end.