69 Runner
ADMIN wif a corner office (Deceased - RIP)
- Local time
- 12:43 AM
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2008
- Messages
- 6,912
- Reaction score
- 101
- Location
- In Absentia Texas
Cool.. Now do my Hemi car please
Guys, let me say first off that I absolutely enjoy seeing so many of you contribute your thoughts and opinions to our project. For those who think we have committed a great sin by resto-modding this car, let me assure you, NOTHING we've installed can't be undone. The next owner of the vehicle can return it to museum quality, if they choose. Nothing done to the car is irreversible. Remember this too, one year ago the XP was rotting away in a Tennessee field getting worse by the day - not better. If it hadn't been for the keen eye of Shafi Keisler, the support of sponsors and our production, it would most likely have been forgotten and never seen again. Whether you believe this car should be concourse or resto-mod, at the least there is now a car to enjoy.
Thanks for watching!
So tell us Rev, how does a car built on Chop Cut compare to one built on Overhaulin? Does that 69 Camaro from last year, or the Wagon from Season II, meet those same poor standards? Seems to me, if you can take a car a the dragstrip in the final episode, its gotta be pretty much done. We've both seen cars built slowly on budgets NOT on TV, in far worse condition. Owners cut corners all the time for any number of reasons. This TV production has nothing to do with the quality of the work. The builders have 8 or 9 months to do it right. The quality of the job has far more to do with the resources the builder allots to the project, than how the camera's effect the outcome... Just my 2 cents.
Hiya Dan.
Not intending to offend anyone, including you, I have a lot of respect for anyone that puts effort into these cars. You know I know Chip personally and he is an excellent craftsman and one of the nicest guys you will ever meet in this business. But the O'haulin cars always needed tweeking after the filming was done. Some more than others. I got more than my share after the cameras went home. I've also heard some pretty astounding stories of what folks had to pay for their "gifts".
You are a very knowledgable man and one day might even be pretty good at metal work. (We can hope). I am fond of the friendship we have formed. Be honest though, there are things that go on that aren't seen in the pixels of living room reality. To say that TV production has nothing to do with the quality of work is not entirely accurate. The Camaro for instance would've continued with the original body had there not been time constraints. In view of the metal work needed it was to everyones benefit to move over to the Dynacorn body. Otherwise you would have had three more weeks of metalwork for your viewers and we would've been behind on the build. As it was, the car debuted without functioning A/C, an inop tach, and a couple of other issues. These are things that I wouldn't let slide if I were delivering the car to a customer, but seeing how it was only TV.....
How well did that Merc drive at Hot August Nights? How come it wasn't at the drags in Famoso? Just being honest, Dan.
Kevin P. Henderson
Manager
D&P Classics.
Dan - That is all very well said, and I agree 1000% with it all. It's the owner's car, he/she can do with it as they please. It's great that it can all be undone and returned to original, but even if not, so what. It's their money, their car, and their vision. If people are so concerned about keeping it original, then they should pony up the money to buy and restore it the way they want to. Talk is cheap.
Kevin,
You know I think you're one of the best in the business. I've brought my cars to you more than once to work on them and what you do is superb. Geez, you even built my Vette and I don't think you cut any corners... did you? Yeah it needed some tweaking after breaking it in but, all these cars do. While, you're absolutely right, not everything is finished on the cars we feature once the camera's leave, that is a factor of the deadline to unveil the cars, more than the pressure of the camera's being present. Any customer who brings you a car and says "I need to unveil it at SEMA in 8 months", will face the same challenges we do. You know yourself how many beautiful cars are pushed into SEMA on Sunday night before the show opens. But, 8 or 9 months to do the job correctly, is much different than a few days on Chip's show. I've met Chip a couple of times and he is a very nice guy and a great craftsman. I'd love to own one of his cars. But, we both know that Overhaulin', Pimp My Ride, and others of that ilk do not have a quality build at the end of the day. Where I think we do. I don't think Chip would ever turn around a car in 10 days for a customer, do you? But, 6 to 8 months? I'm sure he could do that standing on his head. My concern is, people get the wrong idea about how we build vs. how other shows build. It's true that we'll never cover the 1,500 to 2,000 hours of labor it takes to do these cars on television; there just isn't the time for that. But, that's not to say those hours didn't happen. I think we show far more of the process and more importantly, the progress than other programs do. Yet, we get the same stigma applied to our builds as these "slam-bam" shows. Just ask yourself this, how much is left to do on a Chop Cut vehicle at the end of filming, vs what's left to do on an Overhaulin' project? While the Mercury didn't run at HAN, it did run two weeks later and we filmed it driving down Central Ave. in Riverside in all it's glory. I highly doubt two additional weeks would help an Overhaulin or PMR car. True? I've seen the facility where those cars go and it's often up to a year for the owner to get their car back in running condition.
You're always driving up in a different (killer) car during the shows. Where do they all come from Dan?
For a quarter your secret is safe with me.:eusa_whistle:
can't vouch for the rest of the riff raff on here though :edgy:
Wait, I keep forgetting, am I riff or raff?
(By the way, Dan loves it when you compare his show to that Two Guys Garage thing).:icon_axe: