Some cool selling buying cars images:
scarlett
Image by sergeant killjoy
I remember a long time ago when Stephen King?s "Christine" was adapted to the big screen. It scared the crap outta me. Also because my mom had a Corvette Stingray that was the same color as the evil automobile in the movie? but that?s where the similarities ended.
My mom bought that car while she was doing her tour of duty for the Air Force in Hawaii (and coincidentally, got to see production of ?Magnum PI?- she LOVES Tom Selleck) and brought it back to the mainland with her. She?s short, about 5?0", and had to sit on a pillow just to see over the windshield.
She drove that thing until it couldn?t possibly go any farther. When she sold it, she looked as if she?d lost her best friend.
This photo is one of about 300 that I took at a classic car show here in California. After seeing the time, money, and attention that is paid to these classic cars, I can see how they would become interwoven into someone?s very being.
1958 Rambler
Image by Hugo90
This one I think I would enjoy for a daily driver. Probably not very quick, though, for today?s traffic.
The main theme of the fall meet at the Carlisle PA fairgrounds is the buying and selling of cars. I saw a social tent for visitors from Brazil and I heard some Scandinavian languages on the field. This show seems to do some volume and prices are lower than the big show in Hershey the next week.
CA Auto Museum 074
Image by How I See Life
1961 Chrysler Newport Station Wagon.
From the display: "Walter P. Chrysler founded the company bearing his name in 1925 from what had previously been the Maxwell Motor Company. He had earlier experience at Buick and Willys-Overland. Chrysler added the Plymouth, DeSoto, and Dodge nameplates to his corporation over time.
By the 1950?s, Chrysler had gained a reputation for engineering excellence but rather boring styling. The image of Chrysler cars began to change with the increasing influence of stylist Virgil Exner, who came to the company in 1949 from Studebaker.
By the late ?50s, Exner was bringing ever sleeker, wider, and stylish cars to market. The 1961 and ?62 Chryslers were noted for their canted, quad headlights that gave the cars a unique appearance.
This massive station wagon is a great example of the large, powerful family cars of the early ?60s. With its unique torsion bar front suspension, superb TorqueFlight automatic transmission (controlled by dash-mounted pushbuttons), and enough space for a family and all their "stuff", it was a great car for vacations and hauling all the things a suburban family needed.
In May 1961, Jurgen Vind, a Truckee construction company owner, bought the car in San Francisco. The car remained in the Vind family for the next 37 years, serving for daily commutes, family vacations, and as a first car for their daughter. The car survived near demolition in a terrible mudslide near Lake Tahoe in 1967. Placed in storage in the 1980s, the Vind family finally sold the car to Tom Ortiz in the ?90s and restoration was begun. Tom still owns the car and keeps it here for us to enjoy."
Source: http://carauctionsperth.net/auctions/nice-selling-buying-cars-photos-4/
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