1967 'cuda
Well-Known Member
I've been a gearhead all of my life. My son Spencer never expressed any interest in cars until after he joined the Army. When he graduated basics he came home and told me that he wanted to buy a Chevelle.
Although I tend to lean heavily towards Chrysler products (I've owned Chevys too) I was thrilled that he wanted a muscle car. We bought a 1968 SS clone big block and we drove it from Nebraska to his base in Georgia. After his first tour of Iraq he told me he really wanted to find a '68 Charger R/T that we could fix up. So we searched across the country for a candidate to restore when he came home on leave again. We didn't have much time to find a car he could afford, and we knew we were most likely going to have to travel to pick one up. That would take time too. He saw one advertized down in Oklahoma but there were no pictures of it. The guy told him it was rust free, straight, and in primer. It would take us a day to get there and we didn't have time to mess around. So we borrowed a friend's truck figuring that we'd rent a trailer after we got down there if the car was acceptable. Ignore the date stamps on the pictures, - they're inaccurate.
Thought I'd upload a few pictures of the Charger as it looked when we first got it back from Oklahoma. - Before the work began. Although we weren't sure what the body was like beneath the primer, there were indications of bondo all over. Previous owner claimed body was really straight and rust free. yeah, right.
We had borrowed Bill Wenske's truck to make the journey. The U-HAUL trailer rented in Oklahoma worked great.
If you zoom in on the grill in this photo you can see how twisted/melted it was. The front blinkers were melted too.
Tires and wheels were scabs put on it just to get it to roll. Keep in mind there was no engine, transmission, drive shaft, radiator, usable interior, or almost anything else other than the shell. Half of the brake hardware was missing. Windshield was starting to fog around the edges. It was hard to find a whole lot of positive things to say about the car. But, serial numbers confirm that it is a true RT. Or at least what's left of one.
too bad we didn't get the factory wheel with the car. - as you can see it had air conditioning and it's needing a whole lot of TLC
inside rear shot shows surface rust, but is solid
Spence, Spence, Spence, I can\t wait for you to come home and start working on the car again
1st day we took off the doors, fenders, trunk, hood, bumpers, tail lights, glass, grill assembly cleaned out the rotted interior (carpet and headliner)and then took it to the car wash to try to get the smell out of the car
demolition was a lot faster than reassembly will be
sitting under the tree. at least it's in the shade
The hemi would have fit, but we got enough headaches with the Charger without trying to shoehorn it in
the parts actually look better inside the shop than they did on the car
OMG
rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust and more rust
the rear valance is too mangled to repair. anything's fixable, but bent and rusted are a bad combo
previously owned by the Flintstones?
definitely got some rust in this lower rear quarter - once again, it seems minor, but won't know for sure until it's stripped
it looks like it's lurking behind the trees
I didn't hate the Dukes of Hazard, but I think it's ridiculous how many people decided to create their own clone car. As you can tell from the color, the previous owner was sending this car to the same fate. I feel like we rescued it
Although I tend to lean heavily towards Chrysler products (I've owned Chevys too) I was thrilled that he wanted a muscle car. We bought a 1968 SS clone big block and we drove it from Nebraska to his base in Georgia. After his first tour of Iraq he told me he really wanted to find a '68 Charger R/T that we could fix up. So we searched across the country for a candidate to restore when he came home on leave again. We didn't have much time to find a car he could afford, and we knew we were most likely going to have to travel to pick one up. That would take time too. He saw one advertized down in Oklahoma but there were no pictures of it. The guy told him it was rust free, straight, and in primer. It would take us a day to get there and we didn't have time to mess around. So we borrowed a friend's truck figuring that we'd rent a trailer after we got down there if the car was acceptable. Ignore the date stamps on the pictures, - they're inaccurate.
Thought I'd upload a few pictures of the Charger as it looked when we first got it back from Oklahoma. - Before the work began. Although we weren't sure what the body was like beneath the primer, there were indications of bondo all over. Previous owner claimed body was really straight and rust free. yeah, right.
We had borrowed Bill Wenske's truck to make the journey. The U-HAUL trailer rented in Oklahoma worked great.
If you zoom in on the grill in this photo you can see how twisted/melted it was. The front blinkers were melted too.
Tires and wheels were scabs put on it just to get it to roll. Keep in mind there was no engine, transmission, drive shaft, radiator, usable interior, or almost anything else other than the shell. Half of the brake hardware was missing. Windshield was starting to fog around the edges. It was hard to find a whole lot of positive things to say about the car. But, serial numbers confirm that it is a true RT. Or at least what's left of one.
too bad we didn't get the factory wheel with the car. - as you can see it had air conditioning and it's needing a whole lot of TLC
inside rear shot shows surface rust, but is solid
Spence, Spence, Spence, I can\t wait for you to come home and start working on the car again
1st day we took off the doors, fenders, trunk, hood, bumpers, tail lights, glass, grill assembly cleaned out the rotted interior (carpet and headliner)and then took it to the car wash to try to get the smell out of the car
demolition was a lot faster than reassembly will be
sitting under the tree. at least it's in the shade
The hemi would have fit, but we got enough headaches with the Charger without trying to shoehorn it in
the parts actually look better inside the shop than they did on the car
OMG
rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust rust and more rust
the rear valance is too mangled to repair. anything's fixable, but bent and rusted are a bad combo
previously owned by the Flintstones?
definitely got some rust in this lower rear quarter - once again, it seems minor, but won't know for sure until it's stripped
it looks like it's lurking behind the trees
I didn't hate the Dukes of Hazard, but I think it's ridiculous how many people decided to create their own clone car. As you can tell from the color, the previous owner was sending this car to the same fate. I feel like we rescued it