Slowpoke Slim
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2017
- Messages
- 3,916
- Location
- Bismarck, ND
- Tractor
- Husqvarna YTH24V48 riding mower, Branson 3725CH
I could have gone my whole life without seeing that... excuse me while I go wash my eyes out with soap.
I could have gone my whole life without seeing that... excuse me while I go wash my eyes out with soap.
Perhaps someone with a name like “midniteoyl” should not be posting such pictures.
Might give the wrong impression. ��
I'm guessing Mr. pink ****** lost a bet.
I hope so anyway :laughing:
I love it! I haven't seen a car -> pickup truck 'conversion' in a long time.
I love it! I haven't seen a car -> pickup truck 'conversion' in a long time.
Photos deleted for brevity....
(All stock photos, I was too car-poor to afford photography at the time).
It was the color of the lefthand car, but a convertible like the right hand one. 
Yes the IBC Tote looks temporary, perched in that huge trunk. I sort of meant to assert they did it better in the old days, tongue-in-cheek as you noted.Hey Mr. Cali,
Can I risk assuming that you noticed that it is a car to pickup truck conversion- at least not a permanent one, and were being tongue-in-cheek as an intro into your bought cheap and don't have now reminiscence??
I fully remember riding in my older brother's '30 Merc "Cruiser"- he was 16 years older than I, and I must've been 4 or 5 years old..
It was the color of the lefthand car, but a convertible like the right hand one.
He sold it when he needed something more practical as kidlets came along...
Yes the IBC Tote looks temporary, perched in that huge trunk. I sort of meant to assert they did it better in the old days, tongue-in-cheek as you noted.
That, plus the topic reminded me of the injustice of me at age 16 having to give up cars that were perfectly obvious to me to become timeless classics of American design.
Years later, 1973, I saw a '36 Ford like I had. It was restored (couldn't have cost over $10~15k to do, they were extremely simple) and it had a $36k price tag on it. If only...
Those '50 Mercurys were one of the fastest cars of their day. A convertible, and if he had it cleaned up into a cruiser, that was a classic rod! :thumbsup:
Dunno, what would you estimate? The '36 Ford was extremely simple. A frame-off restoration assuming no dents and zero rust (a California car) would be easier than say an early Jeep. It even had mechanical brakes. (rod linkages, no hydraulics, for the kids on hereHave you checked what a good paint job cost?
Don't know. The $36k '36 Ford coupe - flaming red - was simply the most expensive car on a used car lot in Victoria BC. it looked flawless from walking by but the degree of restoration was unknown.Thousands plus any body work. What kind of work was done to the rest of the car.