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What was your first car?

Messages
10,883
Location
Portage, Wis.
My first car was a 1960 Bel-Air. I got it when I turned 16, in 2006. Unfortunately, I was t-boned in it and she met her demise. I really miss this car. Here's a pic the day it was delivered.

My60Chevy003.jpg
 

vitanola

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,254
Location
Gopher Prairie, MI
1919 Ford Coupe. I purchased it for $500 when I was fifteen it with my savings from weekend work.

An elderly neighbor helped me to get the car running, and I took my driving test in it. The interior was pretty rough, the top wood a little punky, and the paint was dull, save where there were brush stroles, runs and bristles, but the macine ran like a champ when we were through with it. I eventually fixed the top wood, re-covered the top, and uphoulstered the interior and seats with remnants from a fabric shop, and gave the exterior a Krylon paint job, and took the car off to College. I drove the car until i was able to replace it with a nice big Paige-Detriot 8 sedan, which unfortunately could not seem to pass a filling station. After a few months, traded the Paige, which was a nice unrestored original for a sharp, fully restored AACA Senior 1927 Ford Coupe, which I drove all through the 1980's and 1990's, until it was pretty well ready for a fresh restoration.
 
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Miss Golightly

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,312
Location
Dublin, Ireland
Thank you :) I thought I was too cool cruising by the high school when I was a teenager lol

I don't blame you - she's a honey! I just love American cars from that era and it's great to see so many of them still on the roads in the US in glorious condition. Here, in Ireland, you don't see that kind of style of car (although one or two people have imported some in the past few years - I think I saw a Thunderbird and definitely one or two Mustangs along the way) - you're more likely to see VW Beetles, Mini's and Morris Minors on the roads here (as old cars go).
 
Messages
10,883
Location
Portage, Wis.
I know a couple station wagon collectors that have imported some of the big old wagons over to Europe. They say they're tough to drive on the small European roads and that they're very expensive to fuel over there lol I think it'd be fun to have a big old car in Europe and stick out like a sore thumb.

I don't blame you - she's a honey! I just love American cars from that era and it's great to see so many of them still on the roads in the US in glorious condition. Here, in Ireland, you don't see that kind of style of car (although one or two people have imported some in the past few years - I think I saw a Thunderbird and definitely one or two Mustangs along the way) - you're more likely to see VW Beetles, Mini's and Morris Minors on the roads here (as old cars go).
 

Miss Golightly

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,312
Location
Dublin, Ireland
I know a couple station wagon collectors that have imported some of the big old wagons over to Europe. They say they're tough to drive on the small European roads and that they're very expensive to fuel over there lol I think it'd be fun to have a big old car in Europe and stick out like a sore thumb.

Believe me Tom, if I could have my dream car it would be one of those beauties - the only thing is, like you say, the cost of fuel here - well put it this way, I'd have to resign myself to surviving on breakfast cereal for a long, long time (.....but it would be so worth it!;))
 

DJH

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,352
Location
Ft Worth, TX
My first car was a 1960's something Morris Mini - painted to make it look like Paddy Hopkirk's in the Monte Carlo Rally.

I fitted some of the cool lights on the front as well. The photo is the real Mr. Hopkirk's one - I still think it is one of the coolest cars ever.

Screen-Shot-2012-03-09-at-L.png


Mine alas was an ordinary Mini 850 so when my friend wrecked his Mini Cooper we transplanted his engine into my car. Those original Minis were fun to drive and easy to work on - once you figured out how to get into such small spaces.
 

Big Man

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,781
Location
Nebo, NC
These are great stories of "first cars."

I remember well how my '62 Plymouth would run on back country dirt roads. One night in particular I had a car load of friends our riding around. While going down the road a rabbit jumped out and one of my buddies yelled "run it down." Of course the girls screamed, which only served as incentive to try to chase down the poor rabbit. I had the old Plymouth going good till we entered a slight curve at a little one-lane bridge over a creek. The Plymouth started sliding sideways, and we ended up crossing the bridge going backward with the girls screaming and boys yelling. If the old car was still around you could probably see the grip marks I put on the wheel that night. :eeek:

If my children ever drove like that I would have grounded them for life. But that was 1971, and "things were different then", right? [huh]
 

scottyrocks

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,161
Location
Isle of Langerhan, NY
My first car was a 1971 Toyota Corolla that I bought from my neighbor right across the street. The fact that it had a manual transmission made it as cool as it could possibly be, which wasn't very, both with me and the local crew I hung out with. No one else drove a stick.

Here's me an the frog shortly after I got it. I was about 17.

mentoyota1977_psped_16x9.jpg


It lasted about a year when I rear ended a car that someone had decided to left parked on the highway. Looking back on it, I should have invested the grand sum of $400 to have it fixed instead of buying with the POS I ended up with.

I still miss that car.
 

Angus Forbes

One of the Regulars
Messages
261
Location
Raleigh, NC, USA
We had a '59 Rambler when I was a kid -- until the day my father tried to start it on a cold morning and cracked the engine block. I always thought it looked like a Checker taxicab with a bad attitude.

I love it! We, too, had a 59 Rambler when I was a little kid. Tough but ugly.
 
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Angus Forbes

One of the Regulars
Messages
261
Location
Raleigh, NC, USA
My first car was a beautiful 1965 Volvo 122, bought in 1967. At the time, my dad had a 66 Pontiac Catalina, 421 with three 2-barrels, low restriction dual exhaust, a numerically-high limited slip rear end, the whole works. It was nominally rated at 376 HP, but was probably closer to 500 in reality -- faster than stink, and a real two-fisted drinker of gasoline!
 
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randooch

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,869
Location
Ukiah, California
1966 Volvo 122S. I saved up for the special vanity plates, too: BABAR. The car definitely resembled the lovable pachyderm.

I also installed an enormous air horn from a semi that I found in a junk pile. It was carefully hidden between the radiator and the grill, supplied from a converted propane tank behind the driver's seat, activated by pressing a valve under the dash. (Creative little bugger back then!)
 
Messages
12,734
Location
Northern California
70 Chevy Root Beer brown truck. It was Bad! It moved. The first car I owned was a dark blue 79 Camaro. I put it through a lot! Bought another blue Camaro before I went back to a Chevy truck again; also blue. It moves!
:D
 

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