- Joined
- Jul 12, 2010
- Messages
- 5,403
- Reaction score
- 3,672
- Location
- Killingworth, CT
- My Car
- 71 Mach 1
71 XR-7 hardtop
71 Country Squire
65 hardtop
My car is an F-code as well. PS, PDB and used to be an auto. Now has a 4 speed & 9" rear. Next step is to finish the rebuild on a 351C and get it to where it should be, performance wise. I put my car on eBay back in '08 just to get a "value". Auction topped out around $15K, which is where I figured it would end up. Today it *might* hit $20k. I look at F code cars as the perfect canvas to make a car your own, and you're not "hurting" the value. That said, if I restore another car I want an M or Q code.
Only way to make any money on a restoration is to get the right car in the right condition at the right time and do all the work yourself - or have someone paying you to do the work on their car.
A friend of a friend has been a Mustang hoarder for 30+ years. The family owns a construction company and he's been storing shipping containers filled with all manner of high end cars and parts that need restoration. Pretty much anything from 69-73 with Q, R, S, M & J in the VIN. He's getting closer to retirement and was talking to my friend, who owns an autobody shop, about working on his collection. Long story short, he ended up opening his own body shop to do collision work, and his guys work on his cars in between insurance jobs. Smart, really smart.
Only way to make any money on a restoration is to get the right car in the right condition at the right time and do all the work yourself - or have someone paying you to do the work on their car.
A friend of a friend has been a Mustang hoarder for 30+ years. The family owns a construction company and he's been storing shipping containers filled with all manner of high end cars and parts that need restoration. Pretty much anything from 69-73 with Q, R, S, M & J in the VIN. He's getting closer to retirement and was talking to my friend, who owns an autobody shop, about working on his collection. Long story short, he ended up opening his own body shop to do collision work, and his guys work on his cars in between insurance jobs. Smart, really smart.