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Last post on May 23, 2013 at 12:12 PM
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#26831 of 29636 Re: . [berri]
by fintail
Nov 16, 2012 (8:09 am)
Oh yeah, Netherlands and Germany too - but those are all weekend fun cars. I am spotting normal stuff still in use.
A few today - early Durango, another Dodge truck, 2 more Sebring convertibles, an older LeBaron convertible, early 1930s British car - maybe a Rover (only caught a short glimpse), driven by a couple who were at least as old as the car, a couple nice looking MB W126, MB W123 in taxi duty, Porsche 928...
And a couple odd taxis (shown with other local taxis for comparison)
And this trifecta - CTS, Saab 9000, and early 70s Aston. A big clump of oddity for this area:
Nov 16, 2012 (8:34 am)
In the center photo, I remember liking the revisions to the DeVille/Concours line that included opening up the rear wheel opening. Lemko, what year was that?
#26833 of 29636 Re: I'd love to 'spot' this car...in my garage! [uplanderguy]
by Mr_Shiftright HOST
Nov 16, 2012 (9:23 am)
Yep, kinda an over the top price. The market has gotten softer since then as well. Everyone's nervous right now. But sure, having such ridiculously low miles really does help---A LOT---price guides out the window! ----however, the market is not for cars with 10K original miles on them--that's an outlier, as we say for normal Avanti pricing. But on that day, on that one sale, it's worth whatever the person wishes to pay for it.
#26834 of 29636 Re: . [uplanderguy]
by fintail
Nov 16, 2012 (12:17 pm)
I'm not lemko, but I want to say that was around 1998?
Just saw another oddball - 78-80 Malibu 6 window sedan doing taxi duty in downtown Zurich. It looked like a higher line model - two tone (kind of a gold/bronze and creme/beige) with fancy wire wheel covers. Looked to be in excellent condition.
Also had a Bentley Arnage from ~2000 parked on the sidewalk near me earlier. Took the owner 3 turns of the key to start it...not a good sign.
#26835 of 29636 Low-mileage, original Vega GT
by uplanderguy
Nov 17, 2012 (3:41 am)
...no wonder they sold, they were nicer-looking than other small cars IMHO. I remember when our dealer got their "Millionth Vega" replica car in...Dad and I wondered how they got the "Millionth Vega" (before we knew about the replicas!).
I'd post this over on the GM forum, but it'd probably make some people's heads explode over there:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KO7oShmrNLg
#26836 of 29636 Re: Low-mileage, original Vega GT [uplanderguy]
by fintail
Nov 17, 2012 (9:12 am)
The Vega was pretty handsome, esp with small bumpers. The wagon version was especially cleanly styled. Shame it looked so good on paper when the first years were so bad. Could have been a winner..
Odd sightings in Switzerland/Austria today - Sunfire GT, 90s Blazer, Audi C2 200 Turbo, couple of ~20 year old Jags, older Range Rover, MB C43 AMG, BMW E39 wagon with Alpina badging, 80s 2 door Landcruiser, older G-wagen, most everything else no older than the late 90s.
Also visited this museum, which is a must see for those into prewar Rolls - huge variety of Phantom II especially.
#26837 of 29636 Re: Low-mileage, original Vega GT [uplanderguy]
by Mr_Shiftright HOST
Nov 17, 2012 (12:15 pm)
The Vega would have been a huge hit were it not for the crapola engine and horrendous labor problems at the plant that built them. Too bad they couldn't have hired the Germans to build it.
#26838 of 29636 Re: Low-mileage, original Vega GT [Mr_Shiftright]
by uplanderguy
Nov 17, 2012 (1:17 pm)
Although they had labor problems at Lordstown, when tooled for the Vega, it was regarded as the most automated auto assembly plant in the world. There was sabotage during some of the strikes (line speed was an issue), but I think more than 'fit', the problem was short-cut engineering and cost savings. By '75 or '76, they were considerably better, but too late.
As a teen back then, and from a Chevy family, I always wanted a '75 GT Kammback, red with the white side stripes, stick, and roof rack. Never happened.
Consumer Reports, I remember, showed a 'better than average' repair record for the one-year-old '71 Vega...before the negatives of engine cooling and body rust reared their ugly heads. I wish I knew what they gave the '71 in its subsequent years, but I don't recall.
Nov 17, 2012 (4:36 pm)
I just saw an old Ferrari in Champaign, Il today with historic New Jersey plates. I believe it was a 250, but not 100% positive. It was also odd the driver had a GPS unit hanging from the windshield. I can't imagine he drove it here from the east coast. I was able to roll my window down and hear that sweet italian engine note.
#26840 of 29636 Re: 60's Ferrari [dieselone]
by berri
Nov 18, 2012 (8:50 am)
Maybe they were in town for the Choking (I mean fighting) Illini game! Need to bring back Chief Illiniwek - wait, they stunk then too.