Thanks Rocket70! I know my passion for hot and historic boats ( I have four ) is excessive at times , and off-topic for a Mustang site, so thanks for bearing with me. My point, was not so much to brag about something I own, but to express my personal feeling about putting emphisis on an car that's made it this far, all in one piece, with original parts and paint. Some opinions were to not touch it. I simply don't agree, unless there is some statistical or historical good reason, to make the car totally unvaluable if you restore it. A good example is the original Eleanore.....if you restored it, it just becomes another sportsroof...., but leaving it all bent up and damaged, it's the real thing, you can't replicate that, makes sense then.
I touched on the word "patina" previously. To me, "Rat Rods", and purposly "patina-ed" vehicles are stupid........ Like I can't tell....they may as well hang a big neon sign on those vehicles that says "FAKE". Again, just my opinion.
I think it's fantastic to see a car that someone has taken the time, and spent the money, to restore back to how it was presented from the factory, and, on the flip side, there's plenty of room for those who modify engines, paintjobs, wheels, interiors, etc, into a custom or hot rodded Mustang. My opinion again, I think I'd leave a Boss car alone, and restore it as was. They're scarce, and a high water mark for First gen Mustangs.
You know, now and again someone will stop to admire my Mach 1, and invariably compliment the car saying "You don't see many of those, or very many all stock". I have to tell them it's stock, but hardly, technically, original. In the 32 years I've owned it, I have re-painted it twice (original color ), re-upholstered it twice ( replacement original kits), re-built the engine / trans / rear end/ suspensions , replaced the exhaust system ( stock manifolds with NPD dual exhaust kit, replaced the windshield glass, replace most all of the trim hardware throughout the years, re-done both bumpers, you name it. At this point, I've darned near replaced or repaired the whole vehicle as necessary, and yet, left it alone. To an admirer, it appears to have been "un-molested", but it's not "un-touched". Mission accomplished.
P.S., Sounds like Bob Hayward was a hot-rodder, who happened to get his feet wet. That's how it happens.