Assessing restoration jobs

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==Overview==
 
==Overview==
Automobile restoration is a mega-dollar enterprise. Cars that sold originally for MUCH less than even the least expensive vehicle sold today can fetch hundreds of thousands of dollars at Barrett-Jackson, Gooding & Company, Kruse, Christie's, RM Auctions, and Sotheby's to name some of the better known auctions. Some [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Most_expensive_cars_sold_in_auction world records] for auctioned vehicles.
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Automobile restoration is a mega-dollar enterprise. Cars that sold originally for MUCH less than even the least expensive vehicle sold today can fetch hundreds of thousands of dollars at Barrett-Jackson, Gooding & Company, Kruse, Christie's, RM Auctions, and Sotheby's to name some of the better known auctions.  
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[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Most_expensive_cars_sold_in_auction Click] to see a Wiki page on world records for auctioned vehicles.
  
 
==Survivor vs. restoration==
 
==Survivor vs. restoration==
 
A car that is totally stock, including paint, engine, chassis, interior, etc. is worth more then one that is rebuilt and/or repainted to look like new. That means if the finish or interior or mechanicals are reasonably good condition it's better to leave it as a "survivor" in many cases than it is to do a less-than-perfect restoration. The value will be exceptional if it's a desirable vehicle and the money saved by NOT doing a restoration will only increase the profit margin of a survivor vehicle.
 
A car that is totally stock, including paint, engine, chassis, interior, etc. is worth more then one that is rebuilt and/or repainted to look like new. That means if the finish or interior or mechanicals are reasonably good condition it's better to leave it as a "survivor" in many cases than it is to do a less-than-perfect restoration. The value will be exceptional if it's a desirable vehicle and the money saved by NOT doing a restoration will only increase the profit margin of a survivor vehicle.
  
[http://www.autorestorermagazine.com/ar/ Auto Restorer Magazine.com] along with a host of other venues have featured articles about new muscle cars sold by the performance-orientated dealerships in the late 1960's into the 1970's, like:
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==Muscle cars==
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[http://www.autorestorermagazine.com/ar/ Auto Restorer Magazine.com] along with a host of other magazines and TV shows have featured articles on muscle cars sold at auction that were originally from performance-orientated dealerships that briefly flourished in the late 1960s into the 1970s, like:
  
 
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These cars have sold for huge amounts, rivaling even some of the classic cars of the thirties and European makes as well.
 
These cars have sold for huge amounts, rivaling even some of the classic cars of the thirties and European makes as well.
  
==TOO perfect?==
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==''Too'' perfect?==
 
Sometimes the mistake is made of restoring a vehicle to a "better than factory" state. There has been much written on how vehicles should be restored; instead of being perfect, they should have the same "flaws" like paint overspray, etc. as the original vehicles had coming straight off the assembly line to the dealership.
 
Sometimes the mistake is made of restoring a vehicle to a "better than factory" state. There has been much written on how vehicles should be restored; instead of being perfect, they should have the same "flaws" like paint overspray, etc. as the original vehicles had coming straight off the assembly line to the dealership.
  
  
 
[[Category:General hotrodding]]
 
[[Category:General hotrodding]]
[[Category:Undeveloped articles]]
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[[category:Body and exterior]]

Latest revision as of 11:24, 9 September 2023

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