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Adding a Hemi "DE-VALUE" a car ?

Post #16 - not all restorations are created equal. I've seen beautiful paint jobs with lousy interiors and then a 69 Charger with no work done to the front grill or tail lights. I've competed against guys who do restorations and BEAT their cars. Not just a little bit, I CRUSHED them.
 
Since when?
I don’t know my GTOs that well so wondered what the story was in that 71 that sold for 400K. It was a Judge vert and they said only 2 made in that color.
I know Ram IV converts are top dog in the Pontiac world other than Trans Am verts, but those were 70 only I think. So what was so special on that ‘71?
 
Then, it seems the Mopars aren't bringing good $$$ ? As compared to the Brand X stuff ? I didn't see it ,but a 71 GTO got 400k ? WUT ???
same deal different day at the auctions, status quo

seems the brand X get more $$$
57 BelAirs Trans Ams Impalas Camaros Chevelles Mustangs/Shelbys etc.
more respect if you will, if money means respect

the MoPar racecars don't get anywhere near the respect as far as price
they do on the track thou :poke:

some of the MoPars seemed to me
like they've risen noticeably in prices/value,
cars like RRs or GTXs & 69.5 A12s (gen 2 Charger are always more)
that'd normally go for $40k-$50k-ish selling for $60k-$75k-ish
the upper ends that used to get maybe occasionally
mid $60k-$70ks now get mid $70k-$80ks etc.
& even a few of the lower on the price rungs, A-bodies
a few I saw were pretty damn good prices for the seller/consigners
up significantly, since last year anyway

edited added;
GM & Ford cars sold a shitload more, especially the specialty cars
like COPO or Nickey, Yenko & Shelby etc.
some 2-1 or 4-1 or more even, compared to MoPars brands
they are popular 'some in the millions'
seems that they now carry a bigger price tag too
seems if they were popular back then
they carry a bigger price today
so, no rhyme or reason except for popularity
(is my thoughts)
 
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Did the restorer "de-value" the car itself by not using a 440-6bbl for it's originality.

Would not be a bit surprised to find that there was no original six pack or engine when the restoration/conversion started.
 
57 BelAirs Trans Ams Impalas Camaros Chevelles Mustangs/Shelbys etc.
more respect if you will, if money means respect

I'm looking at fully restored Bel Air's that are going for what you might get a project Charger for.
Most Mustangs, same thing.
Camaros, same thing. There is a classic car dealer in the next county and there is almost always at least one Camaro on the lot. I stopped in when a guy was buying a really nicely restored car for $27K.
 
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I'm looking at fully restored Bel Air's that are going for what you might get a project Charger for.
Most Mustangs, same thing.
Camaros, same thing. There is a classic car dealer in the next county and there is almost always at least on Camaro on the lot. I stopped in when a guy was buying a really nicely retired car for $27K.
Spell check is working you over. I think you meant one Camaro and restored car.
 
So you find a decent 6-pak ragtop - but the motor has a hole in the block and the 6-pak is long gone. You restore the car and have to decide on a motor ... a non-numbers matching block but chase down all the other correct parts (spending a bundle in the process for "numbers" stuff) OR a Hemi for the same money as the 6-pak. Its a toss-up that only the builder and subsequent buyer can answer BUT I'll go out on a limb and say the same car with a hemi would bring at least 15K more than a non numbers matching 440 6-pak.
 
As some have mentioned, I too think there's something squirrely going on with that 6bbl/hemi cuda vert. A resto-mod RR brought a good $$.
 
Then, a date-correct 440 block would make no difference ? I think it was a 426 popped in it.
Thats just me, the ( date code correct ) is just a sales pitch for the correct motor is long gone.
To me the 426 does help alot over say a 5.7 convert.
Just the value of the 426 alone carries weight.
Heck the 2nd gen hemi adds value to a 32 ford coupe :D.
 
I fell asleep reading it ^^^^, but thanks for your insight. I'm just curious what the "thinking" is out there.
My thinking is he is an idiot swapping a hemi into a car that already has REAL collector value,,when he could probably get the same clone money with a 318 car.
Before I read a single word of this thread, I pondered the question, and decided the only car that a hemi would DEvalue, would be a real sixpack car. I was wrong. It would devalue a documented maxwedge car too.
 
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That's the thing. IMO it devalued the six pack convt. If the car had been a 340, 318, 383 it would have added value (probably by about the value of the Hemi and it's associated parts). That's the way it's been over the years anyway. I swapped this 440+4X4 over to a Hemi and I probably should have kept it a 440. Again though the original 440 was long gone and someone before me had welded in frame connectors anyway.

cha se.JPG
 
Odds are the car had issues and / or Skeletons in its past causing the price
 
Are you serious ? That's probably the ultimate Hemi clone swap.

Yes, I'm about to take the Hemi (68) to a shop for rebuild. Then I'm going to put it in my lovely Inviolet white interior 71 Barracuda convertible.
 
Today is another day but wajjets are thinner. Today 67 Coronet R/T Hemi convertible, lo S163.
 
I am with Runcharger on this… a v code convertible would take a hit and would have been cheaper to put a 6 pack motor in it.. other convertibles like a 318 or /6 it would add value… Just my opinion..
 
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