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Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #105
The most favourite car of all cars on this earth was the XY GTHO Phase 3. The fastest 4 door production car in its sat in 1971. The funny thing is it could be bought for around $5,500 dollars in its day new. Limited numbers but available. Ever since it was first sold, it never dropped in value. Not even 2 years later when it was second hand. It was never bought as a second hand car for less than the original price. Now a version full of rust and needing thousands to restore (80-150 thousand dollars) will still return more than $500,000 if not more than $1,000,000. Which has happened before. I own a 2005 Nissan Pulsar Q. Automatic if that counts. Electric windows, air conditioning, power steering, cruise control, factor sunroof, and a few more options. I hope as unwanted it becomes a car that someone might appreciate. Especially considering a 18 year old car had 45,000 original kilometres on the clock. NO, not wound back or a dodgy done here. I am not even sure what to insure it for. Definitely not a market value policy. Sorry guys. It isn’t a GT Falcon. Not a GTS Monaro. Just a Nissan with almost minimal genuine miles. Body and interior rates as at least 8 out of 10. Here is the funny thing. It is my every day driver. I don’t ever want to sell it. Not fast. Not exciting. Very economical. Zippy yes. Easy to park. Very clean and almost new.
This digital world is too much for us insects to understand.

Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #106
@DJC You'll be pleased to know after 25 years of dreaming and looking, I finally got my dream car about a month or so ago. Two door LC Torana with a Holden V8 in it.

Paint me green with envy!

Still saving and looking for my 'project' - XR or XT GT with a 289 V8.

Only our ruthless best, from Board to bootstudders will get us no. 17

Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #107
Paint me green with envy!

Still saving and looking for my 'project' - XR or XT GT with a 289 V8.


An XR V8 was 2nd on my list, XB was third. They are bloody hard to find, XRs in particular. I got lucky with the LC, a few planets aligned and here we are. As I said, I looked for long enough.
2017-16th
2018-Wooden Spoon
2019-16th
2020-dare to dream? 11th is better than last I suppose
2021-Pi$$ or get off the pot
2022- Real Deal or more of the same? 0.6%
2023- "Raise the Standard" - M. Voss Another year wasted Bar Set
2024-Back to the drawing boardNo excuses, its time

Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #108
XB coupe would be my preference.

If not an XB, and XC would suffice. 
"everything you know is wrong"

Paul Hewson

Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #109
The car that I really want from that era, but can't afford,  is the Valiant Charger R/T E 49 with the straight six, triple Webers and 4 speed manual gearbox.

Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #110
The car that I really want from that era, but can't afford,  is the Valiant Charger R/T E 49 with the straight six, triple Webers and 4 speed manual gearbox.

A dear friend of mine, who's monthly tax bill is about the same as my annual gross, has got exactly that beast. Orange. A car you could just pull up a chair, sit down and stare at for hours.
Only our ruthless best, from Board to bootstudders will get us no. 17

Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #111
I nearly purchased my 1970s dream car a long time back, it was a unfinished / never started rebuild project, an Aston Martin DBS V8 from 1970, historically perhaps one of the first ever "Supercars". It had been flogged to death and left to rust in a paddock, the owner had purchased it to rebuild in factory livery, but after breaking it down he never really got started for any number of reasons. The panels and chassis were in reasonable condition in they were straight, but in addition to the corrosion the engine, cooling system and gearbox were complete rebuilds. He wanted $20K for it and I was tempted but it would be a lot of work. The technical stuff didn't worry me, back then in my youth my hobby was building high performance engines on the stand and finding ways to wedge them into old bodies, but it would be a lot of work. You don't / can't do this stuff for profit, so I baulked at it. It was eventually bought by someone and refurbished in factory colours, silver body with red / white leather interior, it recently sold for $250K.

Around the same time, a long time back, while part hunting for grey or red motor spares, I had a chat with a bloke who had owned the No.3 Holden, one of the first ten or so what is now called homologation builds, build for approval. He was a manager on the production line and he owned it for years then sold it to put a deposit on a new house, back then a house was about $16K so he probably sold it for a few hundred or maybe a thousand or so at most. Many years later he came across it on display at the car museum out near Calder Raceway valued at $1.3M. I think he said the Prime Minister at the time got No.1 and that's also in a museum somewhere as well, not sure what happened to No.2.
The Force Awakens!

Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #112
I nearly purchased my 1970s dream car a long time back, it was a unfinished / never started rebuild project, an Aston Martin DBS V8 from 1970, historically perhaps one of the first ever "Supercars". It had been flogged to death and left to rust in a paddock, the owner had purchased it to rebuild in factory livery, but after breaking it down he never really got started for any number of reasons. The panels and chassis were in reasonable condition in they were straight, but in addition to the corrosion the engine, cooling system and gearbox were complete rebuilds. He wanted $20K for it and I was tempted but it would be a lot of work. The technical stuff didn't worry me, back then in my youth my hobby was building high performance engines on the stand and finding ways to wedge them into old bodies, but it would be a lot of work. You don't / can't do this stuff for profit, so I baulked at it. It was eventually bought by someone and refurbished in factory colours, silver body with red / white leather interior, it recently sold for $250K.

Around the same time, a long time back, while part hunting for grey or red motor spares, I had a chat with a bloke who had owned the No.3 Holden, one of the first ten or so what is now called homologation builds, build for approval. He was a manager on the production line and he owned it for years then sold it to put a deposit on a new house, back then a house was about $16K so he probably sold it for a few hundred or maybe a thousand or so at most. Many years later he came across it on display at the car museum out near Calder Raceway valued at $1.3M. I think he said the Prime Minister at the time got No.1 and that's also in a museum somewhere as well, not sure what happened to No.2.
What is the "No.3 Holden" LP? Never heard of it, tried googling it but nothing really come up.
2017-16th
2018-Wooden Spoon
2019-16th
2020-dare to dream? 11th is better than last I suppose
2021-Pi$$ or get off the pot
2022- Real Deal or more of the same? 0.6%
2023- "Raise the Standard" - M. Voss Another year wasted Bar Set
2024-Back to the drawing boardNo excuses, its time

Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #113
I don't really have much interest in cars, but the notion of the No3 Holden did pique my curiosity. One least guess : the 3rd of 10 pilot cars that were built after the 5 prototypes. 

 

Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #114
The car that I really want from that era, but can't afford,  is the Valiant Charger R/T E 49 with the straight six, triple Webers and 4 speed manual gearbox.

In 'burnt orange' ?

Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #115
The car that I really want from that era, but can't afford,  is the Valiant Charger R/T E 49 with the straight six, triple Webers and 4 speed manual gearbox.
My Old Man had a VH Valiant Pacer, 265, triple, webbers, sucked fuel like there was no tomorrow. Kept it for around 12 months then traded it in for a more docile VJ Valiant Regal. Not sure how original it was, wish he kept it though.
2017-16th
2018-Wooden Spoon
2019-16th
2020-dare to dream? 11th is better than last I suppose
2021-Pi$$ or get off the pot
2022- Real Deal or more of the same? 0.6%
2023- "Raise the Standard" - M. Voss Another year wasted Bar Set
2024-Back to the drawing boardNo excuses, its time


Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #117
What is the "No.3 Holden" LP? Never heard of it, tried googling it but nothing really come up.
It's the 3rd FX ever produced, No.1 is in the National Museum.



The wikipedia article lists the first ten, the bloke I talked to was a manufacturing manager, I gather he was part of the engineering department. The article calls them pilot cars. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holden_48-215
The Force Awakens!

Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #118
I don't really have much interest in cars, but the notion of the No3 Holden did pique my curiosity. One least guess : the 3rd of 10 pilot cars that were built after the 5 prototypes.
That's correct, there were actually many prototypes and test builds, but the cars I refer to are the first official production run of 10. The person I meet had No.3 of 10.

Not sure what happened to the US built prototypes.
The Force Awakens!

Re: The classic/fave car thread

Reply #119
The car that I really want from that era, but can't afford,  is the Valiant Charger R/T E 49 with the straight six, triple Webers and 4 speed manual gearbox.
2017-16th
2018-Wooden Spoon
2019-16th
2020-dare to dream? 11th is better than last I suppose
2021-Pi$$ or get off the pot
2022- Real Deal or more of the same? 0.6%
2023- "Raise the Standard" - M. Voss Another year wasted Bar Set
2024-Back to the drawing boardNo excuses, its time